Ecological disaster looms as ship with dangerous goods aboard sinks off Sri Lankan coast #SootinClaimon.Com

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Ecological disaster looms as ship with dangerous goods aboard sinks off Sri Lankan coast


A fire-ravaged container ship began to sink off the western coast of Sri Lanka on Wednesday, increasing the likelihood that oil and dangerous goods will leak into the ocean and exacerbate what is already one of the worst environmental crises in the countrys history.

Ecological disaster looms as ship with dangerous goods aboard sinks off Sri Lankan coast

“The ship is going down,” said navy spokesperson Indika de Silva, Agence France-Presse reported. “The stern of the ship is underwater, the water level is above the deck.”

“As parts of the vessel are underwater, there is greater risk of pollution,” wrote Andrew Leahy, a spokesperson for X-Press Feeders, which operates the ship, in a message to The Washington Post. “The aft of the vessel is sitting on the bottom.”

A tugboat tried to tow the Singapore-flagged MV X-Press Pearl to deeper water Wednesday without success, he added.

The Sri Lankan navy had warned of severe pollution if the ship were to go down at its current location just outside the port of Colombo, the South Asian country’s largest city.

Billions of tiny plastic pellets, or “nurdles,” that the ship was carrying floated into the sea after the fire started and began to blanket Sri Lanka’s yellow-sand beaches, reaching as far as 75 miles to the south. Dead fish, birds and sea turtles began to wash up on shore. Scientists have warned that ocean currents could eventually carry the pellets to beaches on the other side of the island nation, killing more wildlife and damaging sensitive ecosystems.

The X-Press Pearl is also carrying around 350 metric tons of fuel oil and the sinking further alarmed environmentalists, who were struggling to understand the amount and impact of debris already shed by the ship.

“This is the worst possible scenario,” said Muditha Katuwawala of Pearl Protectors, a Sri Lankan marine conservation organization. “With [the ship] sinking, what happens is that all that oil might come out … that is going to be so much more pollution.”

The cargo ship was loaded in Dubai and bound for Malaysia, according to an X-Press Feeders account of the incident. The crew noticed a leak in a container of nitric acid and asked to offload it at both the western Indian port of Hazira and the Qatari port of Hamad, but those requests were denied, the company said.

The origins of the fire go back to May 20, when the crew noticed smoke rising from the cargo hold, according to a company statement. The smoke quickly gave way to flames that enveloped part of the X-Press Pearl. Powerful explosions rocked the ship, forcing the evacuation of its crew.

Of the 1,486 containers aboard the ship before the blaze, 81 contained dangerous goods, including 25 metric tons of nitric acid, according to X-Press Feeders.

Authorities suspect the nitric acid was the source of the fire. The Sri Lankan navy has said the ship was also carrying caustic soda, sodium methoxide and methane.

Katuwawala said precise contents of the ship were not completely known – there is an ongoing police investigation into the incident – adding to uncertainty over the ecological impact of the disaster.

“We don’t know if there are additional containers [of plastic pellets] inside that could spill out,” he said, estimating that 3 billion to 4 billion tiny granules had already leaked. “If it sinks, all those containers, whatever the cargo is inside, will spill out.”

Published : June 03, 2021

By : The Washington Post · Michael E. Miller

Johnson says lockdown easing on course but urges caution #SootinClaimon.Com

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Johnson says lockdown easing on course but urges caution


Boris Johnson indicated his government remains on course to lift lockdown restrictions this month, a day after the U.K. recorded no new Covid-19 deaths for the first time since the pandemic began.

Johnson says lockdown easing on course but urges caution

“Ican see nothing in the data at the moment that means we cannot go ahead” with the fourth and final stage of unlocking the economy in England on June 21, the British prime minister said in a pooled interview Wednesday. “But we’ve got to be so cautious,” he warned, given the recent rise in infections.

With the U.K. registering more than 127,000 coronavirus deaths since the start of the pandemic, the highest total in Europe, the zero fatalities reported on Tuesday is being viewed as a highly symbolic moment — even though the daily death toll is likely to creep up again due to reporting delays over last weekend’s public holiday.

The positive news has bolstered calls from business and members of Johnson’s ruling Conservative Party to stick to the prime minister’s own “road map” for easing restrictions.

But Johnson stopped short of promising to do so, saying data on the effectiveness of the vaccines to protect against a new virus strain remains “ambiguous.”

“The best the scientists can say at the moment is we just need to give it a little bit longer” before making a decision, he said.

Ministers will analyze data on hospitalizations and deaths over the next two weeks, with a special focus on the impact of the so-called Delta virus variant first identified in India. Cases have been rising again in recent weeks, and the government wants to see that the link between infections and serious illness has been broken by the vaccination drive.

The final stage of Johnson’s “road map” aims to remove all legal limits on social contact, which would see nightclubs reopen, crowds pack out stadiums again, and large-scale weddings and festivals take place.

Pressure is building on Johnson to stick to the schedule. The Independent Business Network, which represents family-run firms, said the case for delaying the U.K.’s “freedom day” was “entirely without merit.”

“To not reopen would impede our economic opportunities and be devastating for sectors including entertainment and hospitality, who have already been decimated by three consecutive lockdowns,” IBN chairman John Longworth said in an emailed statement, adding that all of the most vulnerable people will have been vaccinated by June 21.

Pleas from business were backed up by John Bell, a professor of medicine at Oxford University who advises the government’s vaccine task force. The latest figures look “pretty good,” he told the BBC on Wednesday. “I’m pretty encouraged by what I see.”

Bell said a “balance” is needed as new strains emerge. “If we scamper down a rabbit hole every time we see a new variant, we’re going to spend a long time huddled away,” he said. “This disease is here to stay, probably forever.”

Iain Duncan Smith, the former Conservative leader, said the vaccines are proving to be a “very strong protection” against the virus. “What we’re doing here is we will be delaying for a reason that completely escapes me,” he told Times Radio.

The U.K. is expected to hit the milestone of three quarters of adults receiving their first dose of the vaccine on Wednesday, with Hancock expected to hail the achievements of scientists and the National Health Service at a speech to the Jenner Institute at the University of Oxford, which developed a coronavirus vaccine in collaboration with AstraZeneca Plc.

“I was told a vaccine had never been developed against any human coronavirus,” he will say, according to his office. “We dared to believe, and we started early.”

Published : June 03, 2021

By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Emily Ashton

Melbourne lockdown extended another seven days as covid cluster grows #SootinClaimon.Com

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Melbourne lockdown extended another seven days as covid cluster grows


Melbournes lockdown will be extended beyond the initial seven days announced last week as authorities struggle to contain a Covid-19 cluster thats grown to 60 and is more infectious than seen in the Australian citys previous outbreaks.

Melbourne lockdown extended another seven days as covid cluster grows

The current restrictions will remain in place in Melbourne for a further seven days, Victoria state acting Premier James Merlino told reporters in Melbourne on Wednesday. The lockdown in the city and the rest of the state started on Friday. Restrictions in regional areas of Victoria are proposed to begin easing from 11:59pm on Thursday.

“If we let this thing run its course, it will explode,” Merlino said. “We’ve got to run this to ground because if we don’t, people will die.”

The city of 5 million people has been the epicenter of Australia’s battle to eliminate Covid-19 cases within the community, and is now in its fourth lockdown since the pandemic began. The current cluster originated from a breach in a hotel in neighboring South Australia state being used to quarantine Australians returning from overseas.

The outbreak shows the limitations of Australia’s strategy to eliminate the virus from the community through tight border controls. While day-to-day life for most Australians has largely returned to normal this year, cases have sometimes leaked into the community, triggering localized lockdowns and internal travel bans implemented by states and territories that have caused upheaval to the retail and tourism industries.

In a bid to ease pressure on Melbourne businesses, the Victorian government has announced support for small and medium-sized businesses of $357 million (A$460 million). Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s federal government has ruled out further financial support.

Morrison’s government is under pressure to relocate quarantine facilities away from hotels in the central business districts of major cities by funding purpose-built facilities in regional areas. He’s also been criticized for a slow rollout of the vaccine program, with about 4.3 million people in the nation of 26 million so far receiving their first jab.

Mark Butler, the health spokesman for the opposition Labor party, told reporters in Canberra on Wednesday that it was estimated the state’s lockdown could be costing the national economy about A$1 billion a week.

Morrison’s government should “be seeking proposals for a network of facilities to take the pressure off our hotel system, which is leaking the virus almost on a weekly and fortnightly basis and was built for tourism purposes,” Butler said.

‘We have stepped up to the plate in supporting business and the federal government needs to do exactly the same thing,” Victoria’s Merlino said, calling for wage subsidies for workers waylaid by the lockdown. “Victorian businesses are absolutely devastated by this lockdown, as are families and businesses.”

Genome sequencing has confirmed the cases in Victoria are from the variant that was first detected in India. Merlino said in a separate statement on Wednesday that authorities had discerned that one in 10 current cases had caught the variant of the virus now spreading in Victoria from a stranger.

“People brushing against each other in a small shop,” he said. “Getting a take-away coffee from the same cafe. Being in the same place, at the same time for mere moments. Just walking past someone you’ve never met can mean the virus is jumping to a whole new network.”

Published : June 03, 2021

By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Jason Scott

Asean sees over 22,500 new Covid-19 cases #SootinClaimon.Com

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Asean sees over 22,500 new Covid-19 cases


The number of Covid-19 cases in Southeast Asia crossed 4.07 million, with 22,747 new cases reported on Wednesday, higher than Tuesday’s 20,360, while there were 507 more deaths, an increase from Tuesday’s 307.

Asean sees over 22,500 new Covid-19 cases

Covid-19 deaths in Asean now stand at 79,702.

Malaysia saw 7,703 new patients and 126 deaths on Wednesday, bringing the cumulative cases in the neighbouring country to 587,165, while the death toll was 2,993.

Analysts predicted that the number of deaths in Malaysia could reach 26,000 by September, with at least 200 daily deaths from June to August.

Singapore reported 31 new cases on Wednesday, bringing the cumulative cases there to 62,100 patients and a total of 33 deaths. So far, 61,481 people have been cured and discharged.

The city-state’s Public Health Ministry has allowed private hospitals to import the Sinovac vaccine after it was approved by the World Health Organisation for emergency use.

Published : June 03, 2021

By : THE NATION

NASA targets Venus with plans to send its first probes there in more than 30 years #SootinClaimon.Com

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NASA targets Venus with plans to send its first probes there in more than 30 years


For years, Mars has been all the rage at NASA. The space agency sent a series rovers there, including Perseverance, a car-sized vehicle that landed earlier this year with a small helicopter attached to it. The space agency has been focused as well on the moon and has vowed to return astronauts there in the coming years for the first time since 1972.

NASA targets Venus with plans to send its first probes there in more than 30 years

But on Wednesday NASA administrator Bill Nelson said the space agency would set its sights on a world that has not received much attention in decades: Venus, the fiery mystery of a planet that’s Earth’s closet planetary neighbor. In an address at NASA headquarters, Nelson said the agency would send not one but two missions there in an effort hailed by scientists as long overdue.

NASA has not sent a probe to Venus in more than 30 years despite its relative proximity and the belief among many that studying what takes place there might help scientists better understand Earth. Though Venus is “hot, hellish and unforgiving” in NASA’s words, it has “so many characteristics similar to ours.”

Nelson said the missions would study “how Venus became an inferno-like world capable of melting lead at the surface. . . . We hope these missions will further our understanding of how Earth evolved and why it’s habitable when others in our solar system are not.”

To investigate how Venus evolved, NASA said it is funding two missions. One, dubbed DAVINCI+, would send a probe plunging through the planet’s dense atmosphere to understand why it is, as NASA said, “a runaway hothouse compared to the Earth’s.” The mission’s name is an acronym for Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble Gases, Chemistry and Imaging Plus.

The mission would also study whether the planet ever had an ocean and take high-resolution images of the surface in an effort to understand if the planet’s surface is made up of plates that shift over eons similar to the makeup of Earth.

The second mission is called VERITAS and would map Venus’ topography with radar to chart its elevations as well as map infrared emissions to study rock types. VERITAS stands for Venus Emissivity, Radio Science, InSAR, Topography, and Spectroscopy.

“It’s astounding how little we know about Venus, but the combined results of these missions will tell us about the planet from the clouds in its sky through the volcanoes on its surface all the way down to its very core,” said Tom Wagner, a scientist at the space agency who was involved in picking the missions. “It will be as if we rediscovered the planet.”

The Venus missions were chosen among a group of finalists that also included a mission that would have explored Jupiter’s moon, Io. Another would have studied Triton, an active icy moon of Neptune.

But Venus, which Nelson said was “an emerging area of research for NASA,” won the day. NASA said it would award approximately $500 million for each of the Venus missions for development, and that they would launch in the 2028-2030 time frame. Lockheed Martin would design, build and operate both spacecraft, the company said.

The Soviet Union was intensely interested in Venus, sending more than 30 spacecraft to fly by or land on the planet between 1961 and 1985, according to a timeline posted on the NASA website. NASA, which sent probes into the Venusian atmosphere in 1978, last dispatched a spacecraft to Venus in 1990. That craft, Magellan, orbited the planet for four years, mapping it, before plunging into the atmosphere and burning up.

Published : June 03, 2021

By : The Washington Post · Christian Davenport

JBS works to restart meat processing plants, easing fears of price increases and shortages #SootinClaimon.Com

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JBS works to restart meat processing plants, easing fears of price increases and shortages


JBS said its systems are coming back online after a massive cyberattack threatened to knock out significant pieces of its global meat supply network, easing worries that the breach would usher in shortages and higher beef and pork prices.

JBS works to restart meat processing plants, easing fears of price increases and shortages

The ransomware attack, which the FBI attributed Wednesday to a Russian-linked group known as both REvil and Sodinokibi, came as consumers already are paying more for steaks, chops and roasts. The coronavirus pandemic disrupted operations for many meat processors, creating production bottlenecks just as demand was surging.

“We saw on Tuesday that prices did not freak out, and what that tells you is that it’s not going to make prices skyrocket,” said Grady Ferguson, senior research analyst at Gro Intelligence. “Right now, it looks like they are getting back on track,” he said, adding “there is not going to be empty store shelves and people looting for hot dogs and things like that.”

In a statement late Tuesday, the Brazil-based company said the “vast majority” of its plants would be operational Wednesday. The breach affected all of its U.S. meatpacking facilities, according to the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, and JBS had suspended operations at its nine beef processing plants. Several of its pork, poultry and prepared-food plants were working Tuesday, and its beef plant in Canada had started running again.

The size of JBS’s operations heightened concerns of a major market shock. As the world’s largest meat supplier, the company runs more than 150 facilities and processes nearly one-quarter of the nation’s beef and one-fifth of its pork.

“It would have been extremely costly if this attack had been a little more pernicious,” Ferguson said.

The hack was the latest targeting a critical piece of infrastructure, underscoring the vulnerability of corporations, government agencies and civil society groups. Three weeks ago, a ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline disrupted the East Coast’s fuel network, setting off panic buying and temporary gasoline shortages across several states.

Like in the pipeline hack, the suspected perpetrators of the JBS breach have links to Russia. “We have attributed the JBS attack to REvil and Sodinokibi and are working diligently to bring the threat actors to justice,” the FBI said in a statement. “We continue to focus our efforts on imposing risk and consequences and holding the responsible cyber actors accountable.”

Assaf Dahan, the head of Nocturnus Threat Research at Cybereason, said REvil is known for targeting big companies, which presumably have the resources to pay a large ransom and the financial incentive to restore operations swiftly.

“The REvil cartel usually goes for the big fish,” he said. “They are known for asking for ludicrous amounts of money from the victims, in the millions.”

Ransomware attacks have become a lucrative enterprise for hackers, who find ways into companies’ networks through phishing or by exploiting outdated technology. Once they gain access, criminal hackers will commonly take control of key parts of an organization’s systems and demand a ransom to unlock them.

Hackers walked away with $4.4 million in the Colonial ransomware attack, according to chief executive Joseph Blount. Federal officials have linked the breach to a Russian-based group called DarkSide that researchers say has extracted $46 million in ransom payments so far this year. Though acknowledging the payment was “highly controversial” because it might incentivize bad actors to pursue more attacks, Blount said it was “the right thing to do for the country,” given the critical importance of his company’s infrastructure.

The Colonial breach prompted President Joe Biden to press Moscow to take “decisive action” against ransomware networks operating out of Russia. “They have some responsibility to deal with this,” he said.

After JBS informed the White House of the cyberattack Sunday, U.S. officials engaged directly with their Russian counterparts. The FBI considers combating cybercrime one of its highest priorities.

Biden is scheduled to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva this month.

JBS did not respond to inquiries Wednesday about the status of its plants. But the chief executive of its U.S. operations said the company was “not sparing any resources to fight this threat,” according to a statement released Tuesday.

“We have cybersecurity plans in place to address these types of issues and we are successfully executing those plans,” CEO Andre Nogueira said.

The attack on a major industry player comes as an array of companies grapple with extraordinary consumer demand and supply disruptions tied to the ongoing public health crisis.

“This year, demand has been off the charts,” said Steve Meyer, consulting economist for the National Pork Producers Council and the National Pork Board. Meyer pointed to the rounds of stimulus checks and the rebounding of the food service sector as factors driving up the demand for meat.

While food production is one of the nation’s 16 critical infrastructure sectors as defined by the Department of Homeland Security, the harvesting of animal meat poses unique supply chain challenges.

Livestock must be raised and fed, and unlike with crops, producers have fewer options to store the animals when the logistical pipeline gets backed up.

“If corn demand goes down, you leave it in the bin, and it stays the same, but animals, you can’t do that to them,” Meyer said.

“Cybersecurity is going to be an awfully big issue,” he said. “I have to think we are going to see more of this instead of less, and that is going to be a problem for all of us.”

Published : June 03, 2021

By : The Washington Post · Hamza Shaban

Japans much-maligned vaccine campaign quietly gathers speed #SootinClaimon.Com

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Japans much-maligned vaccine campaign quietly gathers speed


After some false starts, Japans much-delayed vaccine rollout is quietly picking up steam.

Japans much-maligned vaccine campaign quietly gathers speed

The seven-day average of doses has quadrupled in just two weeks, with about a quarter of the nearly 14 million shots given coming in the past week alone. A flurry of initiatives are being implemented or floated to further ramp up the drive — among them an expansion of those qualified to administer the shots as well as mass vaccination at workplaces and in “nighttime entertainment” districts.

Japan has faced criticism for the pace of its inoculation drive, which on paper began in February but struggled to get off the ground until last month. Facing initial uncertainties over supplies, shortages of medical personnel, and burdened by a decentralized medical system, it seemed as if the campaign would take years. Japan’s strict approval process that required local clinical trials for foreign vaccines also added to the delay in the rollout.

More than 10 million people have now received at least one dose. While that percentage of the population — 8.2% — still lags other developed countries, some critics of the nation’s inoculation effort say things are going better than they might have thought.

“For the vaccination program per se, I think Japan is doing exceptionally well, unlike the past,” said Kentaro Iwata, a Japanese infectious disease expert who has been an outspoken critic of many policy decisions during the pandemic. He praised the rollout despite considering Japan to be a “developing nation” when it comes to vaccines.

Japan is now administering close to 500,000 doses a day, a similar pace to the European Union earlier this year. The country is also dosing a larger percentage of its population each day than the global-leading U.S., where uptake is slowing after over half the population received at least one dose.

A resurgence in virus cases in April added further pressure on the government to accelerate its vaccine push. A third state of emergency was declared for Tokyo and other major cities, which was extended twice to end on June 20. Daily new infections have gradually been falling since mid-May.

The success of the vaccine program is crucial to Suga’s fate. He took over as premier in September, when Japan had largely dodged the pandemic. But as the country battled more deadly third and fourth waves, Suga made the vaccine drive central to his survival, declaring a goal of a system that can deliver a million shots every day — ambitious for a rollout that was then administering about 100,000 doses daily.

Support for Suga’s cabinet has slumped to its lowest since he took office in September amid widespread dissatisfaction with his handling of the pandemic and vaccine rollout. About 72% of respondents to a poll published by the Nikkei newspaper this week said they didn’t feel the vaccine program was going well, while 77% said the government’s failure to prepare was at least partly to blame.

Japan has so far targeted medical workers and the elderly, with more than 4.5 million of each receiving at least one dose — that’s more than 15% of the 35 million people 65 or older. With the oldest population in the world, that group makes up a larger section of the populace than in most other countries. Almost 96% of Covid-related deaths in Japan have occurred in the over-60s. The country has seen nearly 13,000 deaths since the pandemic began.

While Japan has avoided linking vaccination rates to the Olympics, they could provide extra impetus to ensure the unpopular Games can go ahead. Suga aims to have administered both doses to those 65 and over by the end of July, with the Games set to open on July 23. While that goal is still some way off, some see it as achievable as further large-scale centers come online.

“With sufficient vaccine supplies now available, the next crucial challenge is vaccine delivery,” wrote SMBC Nikko Securities Inc. economists Naoto Sekiguchi and Junichi Makino. They estimate that vaccination of the elderly will be complete by mid-July in their base case, or by August in their conservative outlook. “It’s possible the end-July target may be missed, but likely not by much.”

The two large-scale centers run by the country’s Self-Defense Forces administered a combined 66,000 doses in their first week of operation, Kyodo reported. Using Moderna Inc.’s vaccine, the centers help take some of the slack off local authorities.

Pharmacists and retired nurses are now being drafted to assist with administration. Holding mass vaccinations at workplaces is the next idea likely to be tried, including workers under 65, and could start as early as June 21, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato said Tuesday. The plan aims to utilize on-site doctors at workplaces who often administer the flu vaccine to workers, the Nikkei reported. Nomura Holdings Inc. and Daiwa Securities Group Inc. are among companies considering vaccinations for employees.

Elsewhere, Toyota Motor Corp. is using its just-in-time production system to speed up vaccinations in Toyota city, where the automaker is based. Shared workspace provider TKP Corp. offered to lend its offices as vaccination sites for free, Kyodo reported. And Rakuten Inc. billionaire Hiroshi Mikitani is offering the stadium of his Vissel Kobe football team as a mass-vaccination center from Monday. The club also drafted its star player, former Barcelona ace Andres Iniesta, in a video encouraging people to get vaccinated.

Officials are also floating a plan to hold mass vaccinations in the “nighttime entertainment” districts — home to host and hostess bars as well as the sex trade — which have been cited as a persistent source of outbreaks and are believed to have been the main contributor to a surge last summer, FNN reported.

Major hurdles remain in the way of the Japanese rollout, like the population’s history of vaccine hesitancy and the lack of clarity around which age groups will be inoculated when, with a decentralized system meaning it’s up to local authorities to decide how and when to handle the next stage of the campaign.

Health Minister Norihisa Tamura told NHK on Sunday that he wanted local authorities to start giving vaccines to under-65s at the same time as those with underlying conditions to avoid any further holdup.

Published : June 03, 2021

By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Gearoid Reidy

Biden, at Tulsa massacre event, promises to ramp up fight for voting rights #SootinClaimon.Com

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Biden, at Tulsa massacre event, promises to ramp up fight for voting rights


TULSA, Okla. – President Joe Biden promised Tuesday to “fight like heck” against Republican efforts to restrict voting, using the anniversary of a racist massacre here to respond to Democrats growing anxiety that his low-key approach was threatening fair elections and their own electoral future.

Biden, at Tulsa massacre event, promises to ramp up fight for voting rights

Biden announced he was tapping Vice President Kamala Harris to marshal an effort against the increasing array of Republican-led state laws that restrict voting in various ways, a campaign Biden condemned as “un-American.”

“This sacred right is under assault with incredible intensity like I’ve never seen,” Biden said, adding that June should be a “month of action” on Capitol Hill and taking what appeared to be a shot at Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, suggesting they often side with Republicans.

The president has been under pressure to show more urgency in the face of a GOP push that includes efforts to overturn the last presidential election, former president Donald Trump’s false insistence that he won, and Republican resistance to Democrats’ voting rights laws in Congress. Democrats in Texas over the weekend blocked a restrictive voting law, at least temporarily, by walking out of the statehouse.

Biden, the first president to visit Tulsa to commemorate the 1921 massacre, which included numerous atrocities and destroyed a prosperous Black community, delivered a searing speech that recounted the events in great detail and sought to “fill the silence” about the killing.

The massacre, which killed as many as 300 people and destroyed more than 1,250 homes, destroyed what was known as Black Wall Street, a thriving community of African Americans.

“For much too long, the history of what took place here was told in silence, cloaked in darkness,” he said. “But just because history is silent, it doesn’t mean that it did not take place.”

Biden portrayed the effort to come to grips with the spasm of racist killing, and what it revealed about the bigotry and hatred in American life, as critical to a process of healing and rebuilding that is still underway in the country more broadly.

“We can’t just choose what we want to know, and not what we should know,” Biden said. “We should know the good, the bad – everything. That’s what great nations do. They come to terms with their dark sides.”

Biden’s trip to Tulsa presented a vivid contrast with Trump’s visit a year ago to hold a campaign rally as the coronavirus was raging across the country. Trump was met with protests, and Black residents urged him and Vice President Mike Pence not to visit the Greenwood District, where Biden spoke Tuesday, given what many African Americans viewed as their objectionable record on race.

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, a Republican, drove to Tulsa with his wife, Sarah, to greet Biden. Sarah Stitt had enlisted the Museum of the Bible to help Vernon AME Church preserve its “Book of Redemption,” a ledger of Black families who contributed to rebuilding Greenwood after the 1921 destruction. The newly restored artifact was unveiled Monday.

The governor’s relations with Black organizers in Tulsa have been strained. Stitt was booted from a commission on the massacre last month after signing legislation that critics said promoted opposition to the teaching of “critical race theory,” the intellectual movement to examine the ways policies and laws perpetuate systemic racism.

Stitt said that the legislation was “politicized” and that he’s long supported teaching the hard parts of Oklahoma history, including the Tulsa massacre and injustices against Native Americans.

“It was an honor to receive him to Oklahoma, and I’m glad that he was able to make this trip,” Stitt said of Biden. “It was so important to Tulsa and to the racial reconciliation we’ve been praying for here for Oklahoma, specifically for Tulsa. So we’re excited to have him.”

Before his speech, Biden met with three survivors of the massacre, all more than a century old, and toured the Greenwood Cultural Center, which honors the city’s Black community.

“We do ourselves no favors by pretending none of this ever happened,” Biden said. He added, “I come here to help fill the silence, because in silence, wounds deepen. And painful as it is, only in remembrance do wounds heal.”

The trip to Tulsa comes after more than a year of unrest and protest in response to high-profile incidents of police brutality, punctuated by the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed in police custody in Minneapolis. Biden has promised to put racial equity at the center of his agenda, and the president has signed executive orders and tailored his legislative proposals to address it.

Tuesday’s events brought together the long perspective of historical memory with the immediacy of political fights. The conflict over voting rights and restrictions is quickly becoming one of the defining battles of the post-Trump era, playing out across the country and in Washington.

Democrats argue that communities of color will be disproportionately hurt by the spate of new GOP laws, potentially dooming their hopes of keeping control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections.

The House has passed a sweeping voting rights bill that is aimed in part at counteracting the GOP-led measures that have cropped up in various states. But in the Senate, Manchin has voiced opposition to the bill, and because that chamber is split 50-50 between the parties, his stance is enough to hamstring the legislation.

Biden said he would “fight with every tool at my disposal” to get the law passed. He added that “the current assault is not just an echo of distant history – in 2020, we faced restrictive laws, lawsuits, threats of intimidation, voter purges and more.”

It was the sort of forceful language many Democrats and activists hoped Biden would use long ago. The president at one point took something of a defensive tone.

“I hear all the folks on TV saying, ‘Why didn’t Biden get this done?’ ” he said. “Because Biden only has a majority of effectively four votes in the House and two in the Senate, with two members of the Senate who vote more with my Republican friends.”

That was an apparent reference to Manchin and Sinema, although Sinema supports the Democrats’ bill and neither senator votes more often with Republicans. Biden did not specify how he would ramp up his efforts, adding only that he would have more to say on the subject later.

The Democrats’ bill includes national standards for voter registration and mail-in voting, as well also provisions that Republicans consider much too far afield, such as a requirement that states create nonpartisan redistricting commissions.

In tapping Harris to oversee the voting rights efforts, Biden has tasked her with another difficult issue, in addition to leading the administration’s work on the root causes of immigration in Latin America. The vice president said she would be meeting with voting rights groups, community organizations and the private sector in the coming days and weeks.

“The work ahead of us is to make voting accessible to all American voters, and to make sure every vote is counted through a free, fair, and transparent process,” Harris said in a statement. “This is the work of democracy.”

As he commemorated the massacre, Biden also outlined new steps to close the wealth gap between Black and White Americans. According to a report by the Center for American Progress, the median wealth of White households was $189,100 in 2019 compared with $24,100 for Black households. The gap widened in 2020 as the pandemic hit minority communities harder than White ones, according to the report.

The president detailed a raft of policies intended to bolster homeownership and help minority small businesses and entrepreneurs, including using federal purchasing power to pump more money into minority-owned businesses and setting aside $10 billion in infrastructure funds to rebuild disadvantaged neighborhoods. He also plans to shore up the Fair Housing Act in ways that would allow the agency to better enforce the law, with the goal of increasing Black homeownership.

The policies – some of which had already been announced – were intended to show that the president was taking action, not just engaging in a commemoration, to support the Black community in Tulsa and elsewhere. The policies will affect the entire country, but they are designed to boost communities like Tulsa, administration officials said during a conference call with reporters Monday night.

But Biden’s proposals drew immediate criticism from the nation’s most prominent civil rights group, the NAACP, whose leader complained that they omitted the canceling of student debt, one of the most effective ways to shrink the wealth gap, according to some researchers.

“Components of the plan are encouraging, but it fails to address the student loan debt crisis that disproportionately affects African Americans,” said Derrick Johnson, president of the NAACP. “You cannot begin to address the racial wealth gap without addressing the student loan debt crisis.”

Although he applauded Biden’s focus on homeownership as a way to build wealth, Johnson said many African Americans would not qualify for the necessary loans because of a high debt-to-income ratio. That’s particularly true, he said, among government workers.

“That must be addressed if there is going to be a question of dealing with the racial wealth gap,” Johnson said. He supports cutting as much $50,000 per person in student debt but said it is not a “magic number.”

During his campaign, Biden said he supported erasing $10,000 per person in federal student debt, but he has done little publicly to move forward on that in the early phase of his presidency. Administration aides were pressed repeatedly about omitting student loan forgiveness from the president’s plan Monday night.

“I certainly appreciate the interest in the topic, and it’s useful to hear a sustained interest on this call,” an administration official told reporters Monday.

In April, White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain said Biden had requested a memo to determine whether the administration has the ability to wipe out student debt via executive action, as many activists have said. At the time, Klain said the memo would be done in “weeks.”

But administration officials said Monday there was no update about the status of the memo.

As Biden pitched his agenda, he urged Americans to reckon with their country’s history, saying there is a need to address the century-long impacts of events like the Tulsa massacre on modern Black communities.

“Chronic underinvestment from state and federal governments denied Greenwood even just a chance to rebuild,” he said. “We must find the courage to change the things we know we can change. That’s what Vice President Harris and I are focused on, along with our entire administration.”

Published : June 02, 2021

By : The Washington Post · Tyler Pager, Annie Linskey

Asean sees over 20,000 new Covid-19 cases #SootinClaimon.Com

#SootinClaimon.Com : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40001570

Asean sees over 20,000 new Covid-19 cases


The number of Covid-19 cases in Southeast Asia crossed 4.04 million, with 20,360 new cases reported on Tuesday – lower than Monday’s tally of 25,642.

Asean sees over 20,000 new Covid-19 cases

There were 307 new deaths, decreasing from Monday’s 374.

Covid-19 deaths in Asean now total 79,195.

Vietnam reported 251 new cases on Tuesday, bringing the cumulative cases in that country to 7,572 patients and a total of 48 deaths. So far, 3,043 people have been cured and discharged.

Vietnam’s deputy prime minister said the government would procure 150 million vaccine doses to fulfill the goal of inoculating 75 per cent of the population to achieve herd immunity by the end of the year. He also vowed to cooperate with the private sector and local administration organisations in distributing the vaccine throughout the country.

Laos reported 17 new cases on Tuesday, bringing the cumulative cases in the neighbouring country to 1,929 patients and three deaths. So far, 1,599 people have recovered and left hospital.

Laotian authorities announced that the country would soon receive more than 100,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine under the Covax programme from the World Health Organisation.

Published : June 02, 2021

By : THE NATION

Myanmar Junta moves Aung San Suu Kyi to unknown location #SootinClaimon.Com

#SootinClaimon.Com : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

https://www.nationthailand.com/international/40001568

Myanmar Junta moves Aung San Suu Kyi to unknown location


Myanmars junta has moved the nations civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi and ex-president Win Myint from their residences in the capital to an “unknown location,” according to allies whove expressed serious concerns for their safety.

Myanmar Junta moves Aung San Suu Kyi to unknown location

The two have been held by the country’s powerful military since it seized power in a coup on Feb. 1.

“We’ve heard from reliable sources that President Win Myint and State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi have been moved to another unknown location,” the shadow government formed by Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party and allies, also known as the National Unity Government, said in a statement Monday.

Suu Kyi, who once defended the military’s brutal crackdown on Rohingya minorities at the International Court of Justice, is facing six criminal charges including violating state secrets and incitement. Win Myint is also charged with incitement and breaching Covid-19 restrictions.

The head of the legal defense team for both leaders, Khin Maung Zaw, said Suu Kyi had told lawyers during a meeting before her court appearance on May 24 that she had been moved one night earlier to an unfamiliar location.

“After the court hearing, we lawyers have no contact with her at all,” he said. “She’s a much-loved leader of our state so we have been extremely concerned about her safety since Day 1, and such concerns are still there.”

Labeling the regime a “terrorist military council,” the National Unity Government reiterated its efforts to ensure accountability and justice and urged the junta to take responsibility for their actions after the coup and against ethnic nationalities.

Published : June 02, 2021

By : Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Khine Lin Kyaw