Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Trump says Biden is 'against God'
- Most of the coronavirus tests the U.S. does are worthless. But there's a solution that could actually work — and stop the spread.
- The Russian owner who abandoned the ship full of ammonium nitrate that caused the Beirut explosion has been questioned by police in Cyprus, reports say
- ICE detained hundreds of Mississippi chicken plant workers. Now managers are charged
- A Sampling of Work From Mexico City’s Top Talents
- Hong Kong: US imposes sanctions on chief executive Carrie Lam
- Manchin counters Obama on eliminating filibuster: 'I will do everything I can to prevent it'
- California hotel brawl near Disneyland involves about 100 people, police say
- Marijuana sent him to prison for decades. Now he has COVID-19 and is seeking release.
- Texas cancer researcher murdered on jog
- #DontCallMeMurzyn: Black Women in Poland Are Powering the Campaign Against a Racial Slur
- The National Rifle Association faces its worst nightmare: accountability
- U.S. officials find 'sophisticated' smuggling tunnel on Mexican border
- Trump’s Last Gasp Could Be a Supreme Court Justice in January
- Ohio governor tested negative hours after positive COVID-19 test. How can that happen?
- Students say they were suspended and others threatened with 'consequences' for posting photos of their school's packed hallways
- Biden rows back from interview where he said Latinos are 'incredibly diverse' unlike African Americans
- Christiane Lemieux and Anthropologie Team Up for the Launch of Her Newest Collection
- Decades after they last saw each other, homecoming king and queen reunited by chance on a dating app
- Kerala plane crash: 17 dead after Air India plane breaks in two at Calicut
- CNN’s Poppy Harlow Confronts Larry Kudlow With All the Times He’s Been Wrong About the Coronavirus
- 40K Katy ISD students chose to stay home and learn virtually
- No pajamas allowed during remote classes at Illinois school district, officials say
- New 2020 election map predicts resounding victory for Biden against Trump
- Louisville caravan calls on Mitch McConnell to extend $600 supplement to jobless benefits
- India landslide: Dozens feared dead after flooding in Kerala
- Captain astonished that his ship delivered Beirut explosive
- Putin’s Got Big Problems in Russia’s Provinces
- Former Saudi official accuses Mohammad bin Salman of 'sending hit squad' to kill him
- Germany will test all arrivals from 'risky' countries like the US as daily new cases top 1,000 for the first time in 3 months
- Kasich and Sanders to join forces for a night of unity at Democratic convention
- GOP appeals after Judge dismisses lawsuit over House's proxy voting system established due to COVID-19
- A Florida man has been arrested over claims he spat on a child's face and told him: 'You now have coronavirus'
- Letters to the Editor: Jackie Lacey's husband has a right to protect his home. Why charge him with assault?
- Philippines defends coronavirus response after soaring cases
- Mauritius facing catastrophe as oil starts leaking from a shipwreck near pristine coral reefs
- Trump ‘is so much anti-life,’ Kentucky Catholic bishop says in abortion discussion
- Majority of Black Americans don't want less police, new poll says
- Utah protesters face charges with potential life sentence
- California's Apple Fire has burned more than 28,000 acres. A 'vehicle malfunction' caused the blaze.
Trump says Biden is 'against God' Posted: 06 Aug 2020 01:26 PM PDT |
Posted: 06 Aug 2020 08:48 AM PDT |
Posted: 07 Aug 2020 03:47 AM PDT |
ICE detained hundreds of Mississippi chicken plant workers. Now managers are charged Posted: 06 Aug 2020 01:59 PM PDT |
A Sampling of Work From Mexico City’s Top Talents Posted: 07 Aug 2020 05:00 AM PDT |
Hong Kong: US imposes sanctions on chief executive Carrie Lam Posted: 07 Aug 2020 10:57 AM PDT |
Manchin counters Obama on eliminating filibuster: 'I will do everything I can to prevent it' Posted: 06 Aug 2020 03:48 PM PDT |
California hotel brawl near Disneyland involves about 100 people, police say Posted: 06 Aug 2020 09:24 AM PDT |
Marijuana sent him to prison for decades. Now he has COVID-19 and is seeking release. Posted: 06 Aug 2020 09:33 AM PDT |
Texas cancer researcher murdered on jog Posted: 06 Aug 2020 06:26 AM PDT |
#DontCallMeMurzyn: Black Women in Poland Are Powering the Campaign Against a Racial Slur Posted: 07 Aug 2020 09:25 AM PDT |
The National Rifle Association faces its worst nightmare: accountability Posted: 07 Aug 2020 06:20 AM PDT |
U.S. officials find 'sophisticated' smuggling tunnel on Mexican border Posted: 07 Aug 2020 10:58 AM PDT The tunnel was found on Tuesday in the desert near San Luis, Arizona by federal agents led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's investigative arm, the agency said in a press release Friday. Authorities have located hundreds of tunnels over the years under the Southwest border, saying they are used by drug cartels and criminal organizations to smuggle narcotics, people and weapons back and forth between the two countries. The tunnel found this week measured 3 feet by 4 feet (91 cm by 1.22 meters) and included a "ventilation system, water lines, electrical wiring, rail system, [and] extensive reinforcement," ICE said. |
Trump’s Last Gasp Could Be a Supreme Court Justice in January Posted: 06 Aug 2020 02:05 AM PDT Close your eyes and picture Jan. 3, 2021: The Capitol is teeming with 35 newly sworn-in Senators, four of whom have given the Democrats a 51-50 majority with the vice president-elect's tie-breaking vote; Republican Senate rule has ended and, with their enlarged House majority, Democrats now control both branches of government for the first time in twelve years.President-elect Biden and his team are busy crafting an ambitious legislative program, dealing with transition tasks of agency appointments and anticipated judicial nominations and planning the upcoming inauguration. Democrats are happy. Exciting opportunity is in the air. But within a few days, the Democrats' party crashes to a halt with the news that a Supreme Court opening has suddenly materialized, and the opening comes from the progressive wing of the court. The immediate assumption is that the 51-50 Democratic majority will ensure that a new nominee will reflect the judicial profile of her predecessor. Not so fast: Between Jan. 3 and Inauguration Day on Jan. 20, outgoing Vice President Mike Pence will still cast tie-breaking votes. And worse, Donald Trump is the undisputed president until noon on the 20th, able to nominate SCOTUS and other judicial nominees, all lifetime appointments.Here's a Preview of America's 2020 Nightmare if Trump LosesTrump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have quietly assembled a short list of conservative SCOTUS nominees, hoping for a vacancy to arise. Should the opening develop days before the November election, or during the transition period between the election and the Inauguration, Trump and McConnell would be ready to shove through their nominee within days. McConnell's 2016 rebuke of Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland to the court—"Let the people decide!"—has been retooled to "We're still in power!"As late as Jan. 3, Trump—rejected by American voters—and McConnell, stripped of his abusive leadership powers, would likely be prepared to ram through a SCOTUS nomination that would shift the court's ideological balance to the far right for a generation to come.Should that opening occur before Jan. 3, McConnell would certainly use Senate rules and practices to schedule an up-or-down confirmation vote with his 53-47 Republican majority. And even after the new 50-50 Senate is sworn in on Jan. 3, McConnell could potentially use Vice President Pence to break any Democratic effort to organize and prevent a Republican SCOTUS confirmation.A Far-Fetched Scenario?As long as the Senate has existed, tradition and bipartisan collegiality have smoothed the transfer of power from one party to the other after an election. Leaders of both parties hashed out committee apportionment, budgets, and so on, during the November-December transition period. The opening day schedule, introduction of priority legislation, and speeches has long been regulated by tradition. After the 2000 election and its resulting 50-50 split, outgoing Democratic leader Tom Daschle and incoming leader Trent Lott worked to ease partisan differences and hand the leadership reins to Republicans. But next Jan. 3 may be wildly different. If the November election results in a 50-50 split in the Senate—an entirely likely scenario, with four Democratic pickups and a loss in Alabama—emotions may be raw and even vindictive. The past four years of bitter division and personal hostilities have created a toxic Senate environment. This scenario has happened before, though with no dire results. After the 2000 election, with a split Senate, Al Gore provided the tie-breaking vote that gave Democrats the majority for the 17 days before George W. Bush's Inauguration.Potholes in the Trump/McConnell PathSenate rules experts doubt that McConnell could attempt to force through a SCOTUS nominee in 17 days or less, citing a number of Senate procedural roadblocks, such as the requirement that a nomination must "lay over" for one week, and that the nomination must be voted out of the Judiciary Committee before Senate floor consideration. "The majority may be deterred from doing what they want by the institution's inherited rules of procedure," notes James Wallner, a senior fellow at the R Street Institute and former executive director of the Senate Steering Committee. "A last-minute effort to confirm a Supreme Court nominee would be extraordinary."However, any Senate rule can be overridden by a simple Senate majority vote, a procedure that McConnell has aggressively invoked for the Kavanaugh and Gorsuch nominations. And until noon on Jan. 20, Mike Pence can, as president of the Senate, break any tie vote, and give Republicans a continued majority status to conduct committee business. Senate precedence has given vice presidents a wide berth to exercise that vote.The potential for a last-minute conservative SCOTUS appointment by a defeated Trump and defanged McConnell is real and frightening. Perhaps one or two Republican Senators would resist such a frantic power grab. Yet despite a handful of senators who have exhibited a willingness to rise above party and challenge Trump, 50 surviving Republicans may be willing to shove through another conservative justice, or a handful of lower court nominees at the last minute. Certainly an embittered, angry, loser Trump would love nothing more than to use his last days in the White House to deal Democrats a vicious blow.The only sure prevention of this nightmare rests in a Democratic wave election on Nov. 3 that ejects not only Trump and Pence from the White House, but at least five Republican incumbents as well.And for good measure, the surprise defeat of the Trump Senate enablers who have gotten us in this mess to start with.Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Ohio governor tested negative hours after positive COVID-19 test. How can that happen? Posted: 07 Aug 2020 09:54 AM PDT |
Posted: 06 Aug 2020 11:22 AM PDT |
Posted: 07 Aug 2020 05:15 AM PDT |
Christiane Lemieux and Anthropologie Team Up for the Launch of Her Newest Collection Posted: 07 Aug 2020 11:06 AM PDT |
Decades after they last saw each other, homecoming king and queen reunited by chance on a dating app Posted: 07 Aug 2020 03:00 AM PDT |
Kerala plane crash: 17 dead after Air India plane breaks in two at Calicut Posted: 07 Aug 2020 02:38 PM PDT |
CNN’s Poppy Harlow Confronts Larry Kudlow With All the Times He’s Been Wrong About the Coronavirus Posted: 07 Aug 2020 08:49 AM PDT White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow doesn't have the best track record when it comes to predictions. And CNN anchor Poppy Harlow was more than ready with the receipts when he came on her show to talk about the coronavirus fallout Friday morning. Harlow began her interview by asking Kudlow if he and President Donald Trump are "worried" about the slowdown in the recovery. "I don't know that there's a slowdown. These job numbers will go up and down," Kudlow replied. When Harlow noted that only 1.8 million jobs were added in July compared to 4.8 million in June, he said, "That is true, and it's going to be uneven as it always is." Kudlow continued to push the administration's argument that a $600 weekly federal unemployment benefit has been a "disincentive" for Americans to go back to work. And when Harlow asked for evidence, he pointed to a University of Chicago study that supposedly supports that claim. "But, Larry, the University of Chicago survey, it doesn't conclude what you're arguing," Harlow said. "I know you don't want to incentivize people to go to work when it's a dangerous situation for them to go because the virus is not under control," she added, noting that she talked to the author of that study who said "it's a mistake to draw the conclusion as you have been and the White House has been that right now it's a disincentive to go back to work." All Kudlow could say in response was, "We can argue one academic versus another, I think history shows this is probably not sustainable in the long term." > Asked to explain why he's been wrong about the coronavirus at every turn -- he said the virus was "contained" in February, for instance -- Kudlow takes umbrage with Poppy Harlow for "nitpicking" pic.twitter.com/bNvNP8Qj4r> > -- Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) August 7, 2020But the most contentious moment of the interview came later when Harlow confronted Kudlow for his rhetoric over the past several months about the pandemic itself. "I'm wondering why you have consistently downplayed the severity of the pandemic," she said. "Back on February 25th you said 'it's pretty close to airtight.' February 28th, 'It's not going to sink the American economy,' March 6th, 'Let's not overreact, America should stay at work.' And just on June 12th, 'There is no emergency, there is no second wave,' but since June 12th, 45,978 Americans have died from COVID."Kudlow attempted to defend his consistent downplaying of the virus' severity but after a few moments he just resorted to attacking his interviewer. "I kind of resent your little nitpicking here because I don't know what that has to do with today's job numbers," he said."I'm not nitpicking, Larry," Harlow replied. "I think people listen to you and the president when you say things about the pandemic." Ultimately, he may have been chastened enough to acknowledge his own fallibility when it comes to predicting the future. "I think, again, the health guidelines that we have put out are in fact working, so I'm keeping my fingers crossed, maybe prayerfully, that we've seen the worst of this extension so we'll see what happens." "We all are, Larry," Harlow said. CNN's Brianna Keilar Comes at Trump Campaign's Mercedes Schlapp for Falsely Smearing Her Military HusbandRead more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
40K Katy ISD students chose to stay home and learn virtually Posted: 07 Aug 2020 05:29 PM PDT |
No pajamas allowed during remote classes at Illinois school district, officials say Posted: 07 Aug 2020 11:09 AM PDT |
New 2020 election map predicts resounding victory for Biden against Trump Posted: 07 Aug 2020 08:04 AM PDT With months to go until one of the most unprecedented elections in American history, anything can happen — but at least one new prediction has forecasted a resounding victory for Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee.The first 2020 battleground electoral map by NBC News was released on Friday, showing the former vice president with a lead of 334 electoral votes. |
Louisville caravan calls on Mitch McConnell to extend $600 supplement to jobless benefits Posted: 06 Aug 2020 03:49 PM PDT |
India landslide: Dozens feared dead after flooding in Kerala Posted: 07 Aug 2020 07:55 AM PDT |
Captain astonished that his ship delivered Beirut explosive Posted: 06 Aug 2020 01:38 PM PDT When Boris Prokoshev, a former sea captain spending his retirement years in a Russian village, woke up and found an email saying a ship he once commanded had carried the ammonium nitrate that blew up swathes of Beirut, he was astonished. "I didn't understand anything," he told The Associated Press on Thursday from Verkhnee Buu, 1300 kilometers (800 miles) south of Moscow. The email was from a journalist, he said, and titled with the name of the MV Rhosus, which he had captained on a voyage that he was never paid for. |
Putin’s Got Big Problems in Russia’s Provinces Posted: 07 Aug 2020 01:37 AM PDT MOSCOW—The city of Khabarovsk, a sprawling, industrial metropolis about 5,000 miles east of the capital—the Bolsheviks turned it into a hub for serving Siberian prison camps, in the middle of nowhere by design—is about as far from the seat of Russian power as geographically possible. But it's suddenly at the center of Russian politics these days. For the past three weeks, thousands of people have come out daily in Khabarovsk to protest the country's top-down rule, what President Vladimir Putin once called his "vertical of power. "Wake up, cities, our Motherland is in trouble," protesters chanted in the rain one Friday evening. Banners that read, "Putin, you lost my trust!" and "Down with the Tsar!" floated above people's heads.Despite the Kremlin's best efforts to hide them, problems have been bubbling up in Russia's provinces, transforming local issues into the most dynamic arena for dissent, protest, and opposition in the country's political system and fueling Russia's version of post-lockdown unrest. The arrest of Khabarovsk's popular regional governor sparked the anti-Putin uprising that has drawn up to 60,000 people into the streets in this usually sleepy backwater. The arrested governor was a member of the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, which had for years been loyal to Putin. Yet even the party's leader, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, told The Daily Beast that the provincial protests could spread, as people are fed up with the lies and media manipulation in the Putin system. "This is a genuine, wonderful, peaceful protest, but federal television channels do not cover them, and that offends people," he said.Millions of Russians are still watching the Far East rallies online. People are outraged by unemployment, corruption, pollution, and failing government. "For as long as we have a one-party system, you will have the Khabarovsk protests," Zhirinovsky recently declared from the tribune of the State Duma. "I have suggested to them a long time ago to have at least two parties, but they want to have the majority," Zhirinovsky told The Daily Beast about Putin's United Russia party. Putin continues the tradition of single-party system that began under Lenin, Zhirinovsky said.Two thousand miles away from Khabarovsk sits another provincial city, Norilsk, with its giant factory that is the source of a fifth of the world's nickel and half of the precious metal palladium. Norilsk is the world's northernmost city and also Russia's most polluted; visitors stepping off a plane are greeted by air that leaves an unforgettable metallic taste in the mouth. But even by Norilsk's own abysmal standards, this summer was a horrific one for the environment: Its factory, Norilsk Nickel, spilled hundreds of thousands of gallons of red-hued diesel fuel into what locals now call "rivers of blood." The rain smells of chemicals. The diesel fuel spill was caused by the collapse of a rust-covered storage tank at a heat and power plant on May 29. Local bureaucrats and the factory kept quiet about the disaster for two days as the red, oily rivers spread pollutants through the fragile tundra environment in what Greenpeace would later call the "biggest environmental catastrophe in the history of Russia's Arctic." Authorities initially tried to hide the disaster, in the same way state television channels have attempted to ignore the protests in Khabarovsk. Russians only learned of the spill from social media. Six weeks later, with still no word of any official reprimand for the spill, the factory dumped another round of toxic waste—this time, intentionally—right onto the tundra.Two reporters from the independent paper Novaya Gazeta, Yelena Kostyuchenko and Yuri Kozyrev, had traveled to Norilsk after the spill to see the pollution with their own eyes. The reporters discovered a stream with orange bubbles and a lake covered in white foam, surrounded by dead trees. But it had nothing to do with the diesel spill. "Two large pipes were pumping and dumping white toxic waste with a sharp chemical smell onto the tundra when we arrived," Kostyuchenko told The Daily Beast. Novaya Gazeta's report raised the alarm with local prosecutors and police, so the factory sent a bulldozer to quickly dismantle the pipes. Then, the bulldozer accidentally crushed a police car while backing up. Environmentalists witnessed a wild scene: A huge number of Norilsk Nickel's security services were demolishing their factory's pipes in front of police and officials from the emergency ministry and Russia's natural resources regulatory agency, Rospotrebnadzor.Meanwhile, some Russian politicians started to call for the Kremlin to take control of the factory—owned by the country's richest oligarch, Vladimir Potanin—and nationalize it. Potanin, a former member of the Communist Party, obtained the Norilsk factory on the cheap during the privatization of the 1990s. Since then, he's seemed untouchable. After all, according to Kremlin-watcher Mikhail Zygar, the billionaire has always paid up for problems at the factory in the only currency that counts: loyalty to the Russian president. "People like Potanin are happy to pay for all [Putin's] projects, for anything he ever wants," said Zygar, author of All the Kremlin's Men: Inside the Court of Vladimir Putin. Soviet and post-Soviet bureaucrats have a long history of attempting to hide the truth about disasters from the public, no matter how deadly—most famously after the 1986 nuclear accident in Chernobyl. Last year, an experimental missile exploded in the Arctic, releasing radioactivity into the air, and the official reaction was silence. So, too, in the first days after the fuel spill. Officials were even reluctant to break the bad news to Putin himself. "One has to earn the right to report bad news to Vladimir Vladimirovich," said Sergei Markov, a political analyst close to the Kremlin. "It must have taken a few days before the decision-makers on various steps of power figured out who would be the one to break the news."On the fifth day after the fuel spill, four people lined up shoulder to shoulder to report the truth about the accident to Putin in an online meeting: the oligarch Potanin; Svetlana Radionova, the head of Rospotrebnadzor; Yevgeny Zinichev, the minister of emergency situations; and Viktor Uss, the Krasnoyarsk regional governor.Zinichev told the president that "the event itself, the emergency situation, was localized on June 1. We have installed booms, so there is no development." Radionova, in contrast, talked about "unprecedented" pollution. "We registered an increase by dozens of thousands of times," after the diesel fuel spilled into the rivers, she told Putin.Potanin was the last to speak. He promised to dip into his wealth and pay for the damage. The accident would cost "not a ruble from the state budget." Putin wanted to know how much, exactly, the company was going to pay. The billionaire paused.Putin pressed Potanin on how much money he was willing to pay to compensate for the damage. "Billions and billions" of rubles, or tens of millions of dollars, the oligarch finally told the president. "And how much does one reserve tank cost that you are going to replace now? If you replaced it on time, there would not have been such damage and such cost to the environment," the president replied.According to Forbes Real Time, which gauges wealth, in the weeks after the accident Potanin's net worth dropped by more than $3.6 billion, but he is currently worth $23 billion, which still allows him the title of Russia's richest man. The World Wide Fund for Nature has addressed an open letter to Potanin, calling him personally to "take the full responsibility" for polluting the Arctic. But money for the clean-up aside, Potanin is unlikely to face real repercussions for the spill. Earlier this summer Putin's inspector, Radionova, flew to Norilsk to calculate fines for the factory—but, according to Transparency International, she flew there on Potanin's own Bombardier Challenger private jet, instead of taking a regular flight. Radionova has also been accused of corruption by the foundation of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, which revealed documents for luxurious real estate in Moscow and Nice that suggest Radionova is the owner. "Such wealth cannot be explained. It is so outrageous," Navalny said in his report on YouTube, viewed by more than 3 million people. Meanwhile, experts warn that Russia is ill-equipped to prevent another environmental disaster. After the diesel spill, a member of the board of directors at Norilsk Nickel, Yevgeny Shvarts, admitted on a television talk show that the storage tank that had collapsed was the newest piece of equipment at his company. "This is terrifying: One of Russia's richest companies considers a tank made in 1985 their newest piece of equipment. That means things are much worse than we thought," the show's host, Vladimir Slivyak, told to The Daily Beast. He expressed concern that many other Russian factories are also storing diesel fuel in even older tanks: "Such accidents might take place any time." Read more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Former Saudi official accuses Mohammad bin Salman of 'sending hit squad' to kill him Posted: 06 Aug 2020 02:24 PM PDT A former senior Saudi intelligence official has claimed that Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman sent a hit squad to Canada in an attempt to kill him. In a 107-page complaint, filed in a Washington DC court, Saad Aljabri claimed the assassins were intercepted by Canadian authorities. The incident was alleged to have happened less than two weeks after Jamal Khashoggi, the Washington Post columnist and Saudi dissident, was killed in the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul. Mr Aljabri, who was living in self-imposed exile in Toronto, was said to have clashed with the crown prince over issues including the decision to go to war in Yemen, and was dismissed from his cabinet role in 2015. He is suing the crown prince and 24 others for an unset amount of damages In his complaint Mr Aljabri claimed the crown prince "dispatched a hit squad" to Canada in October 2018. The complaint said: "(A) team of Saudi nationals travelled across the Atlantic Ocean from Saudi Arabia ... with the intention of killing Dr Saad." |
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Kasich and Sanders to join forces for a night of unity at Democratic convention Posted: 07 Aug 2020 01:30 AM PDT |
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Philippines defends coronavirus response after soaring cases Posted: 07 Aug 2020 01:26 AM PDT The Philippines has seen a jump in coronavirus infections due to intensified testing, the presidential spokesman said on Friday, defending the country's response to the pandemic after overtaking Indonesia to record the most cases in Southeast Asia. It prompted authorities to reimpose a lockdown in and around Manila earlier this week. "While we do not want to see these numbers, this is a result of our intensified testing," Harry Roque, spokesman of President Rodrigo Duterte, told a briefing. |
Mauritius facing catastrophe as oil starts leaking from a shipwreck near pristine coral reefs Posted: 07 Aug 2020 08:56 AM PDT The island nation of Mauritius is facing an environmental crisis after a huge container ship ran aground and started to leak oil into an area home to some of the finest coral reefs in the world. Efforts to pump oil out of the ship have failed, and now there are fears that the carrier could start to break up, leading to an even greater leak and causing catastrophic damage on the island's pristine coastline. "We are in an environmental crisis situation," said the environment minister, Kavy Ramano, The carrier MV Wakashio, which belongs to a Japanese company and flew a Panamanian-flagged, was en route from China to Brazil when it ran aground near Pointe d'Esny on the island's southeastern coast on 25 July. The vessel's crew have been evacuated safely and the container was not carrying a cargo load when wrecked. However, the 1,000ft vessel was carrying 90 tonnes of lubricant oil, 200 tonnes of diesel and 3,800 tonnes of bunker fuel, according to local media outlets. Now the oil is spreading out of the ship rapidly, according to Sunil Dowarkasing, Greengate Consulting, a Mauritian environmental consultancy, who was on the beach in sight of wreck. "It's really very bad because now despite all the measures, the oil has already reached the shores of Mauritius and polluted the shorelines. You can see fish dying. The situation is out of control," Mr Dowarkasing told The Telegraph. Mr Dowarkasing said that the wreck was near four major wildlife and maritime sanctuaries, which contained flora and fauna unique to the island. He added that there was a 100-year-old 'brain' coral nearby in the Blue Bay Marine Park. "Thousands of species around the pristine lagoons of Blue Bay, Pointe d'Esny and Mahebourg are at risk of drowning in a sea of pollution, with dire consequences for Mauritius' economy, food security and health," Happy Khambule from Greenpeace Africa told The Telegraph in a statement. Mauritius, which lies some 600 miles east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, is a major tourist hotspot and tax haven for international corporations and African oligarchs. The country of 1.2m depends on its seas for food and for tourism, boasting some of the finest coral reefs in the world. The Mauritian government has asked the French Indian Ocean island of La Reunion for assistance. "This is the first time that we are faced with a catastrophe of this kind and we are insufficiently equipped to handle this problem," said fishing minister, Sudheer Maudhoo. |
Trump ‘is so much anti-life,’ Kentucky Catholic bishop says in abortion discussion Posted: 07 Aug 2020 08:53 AM PDT |
Majority of Black Americans don't want less police, new poll says Posted: 07 Aug 2020 04:27 AM PDT |
Utah protesters face charges with potential life sentence Posted: 06 Aug 2020 01:36 PM PDT Some Black Lives Matter protesters in Salt Lake City could face up to life in prison if they're convicted of splashing red paint and smashing windows during a protest, a potential punishment that stands out among demonstrators arrested around the country and one that critics say doesn't fit the alleged crime. Prosecutors said Wednesday that's justified because the protesters worked together to cause thousands of dollars in damage, but watchdogs called the use of the 1990s-era law troubling, especially in the context of criminal justice reform and minority communities. "This is so far beyond just the enforcement of the law, it feels retaliatory," said Madalena McNeil, who is facing a potential life sentence over felony criminal mischief and riot charges. |
Posted: 06 Aug 2020 08:57 AM PDT |
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