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Tag: US & Canada

  • Sterling beats Cejudo to retain UFC bantamweight title

    Sterling beats Cejudo to retain UFC bantamweight title

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    Former two-division champion Henry Cejudo, returning to the UFC after a three-year absence, lost by split decision to Sterling.

    Aljamain Sterling has defeated Henry Cejudo by split decision in the main event of UFC 288 in Newark, New Jersey, to retain his bantamweight title and potentially send the former UFC two-division champion back into retirement.

    Sterling took the cards 48-47, 47-48, 48-47 in the closely contested bout on Saturday evening.

    Cejudo, returning to the octagon after a three-year absence, had been the betting favourite coming into the fight.

    “I wasn’t sure which way the decision was gonna go,” Sterling said. “I wish I could have done a little bit better but Henry’s a [expletive] dog, he’s a legend and it’s no easy task to run through him like I did everybody else.”

    He improved to 23-3 and Cejudo fell to 16-2.

    Sterling, 33, landed more total strikes, 174-110 over Cejudo, including a 110-63 advantage in signature strikes.

    Sterling won the 135-pound title via disqualification due to an illegal strike in a bout he was handily losing to Petr Yan in 2021. He solidified his claim to the crown by winning a rematch via split decision a year later.

    Bantamweight challenger Sean O’Malley stepped inside the cage after Sterling’s victory on Saturday, stripped off his jacket and stood nose-to-nose with him as the two fighters launched into profanity-laced tirades against each other and eventually needed to be separated.

    They might get their championship match later this summer. UFC President Dana White wanted Sterling-O’Malley to fight in August in Boston – and not late night in New Jersey.

    Cejudo reacts after losing to Sterling [Frank Franklin II/AP Photo]

    Cejudo, 36, is the only person to win an Olympic gold medal and a UFC titles. He once held the bantamweight and flyweight titles – becoming one of just four UFC fighters to simultaneously hold belts in two divisions. But he abruptly retired at his peak in 2020, vacating both crowns.

    Cejudo said he was a “little confused” about his future plans and would return home to his family – his wife is expecting the couple’s second child – and think hard about his fight future. He was wildly cheered through all five rounds by 17,559 fans that paid to watch Cejudo try to turn back the clock.

    “Who knows, this may be the last time in the octagon,” he said.

    Sterling, a Long Island, New York native, successfully defended the bantamweight championship for a record third time.

    Earlier in the evening, Belal Muhammad (23-3, 1 NC) landed enough stiff kicks to Gilbert Burns’ upper body to earn a unanimous decision victory in the 170-pound five-round fight.

    Muhammad and Burns exchanged a few kicks in the third and the crowd let the fighters have it at the end of another round on the card that suffered from a deficiency of sustained action. Burns appeared to hurt his left shoulder on a failed takedown attempt and couldn’t muster much offence, one reason for a methodical pace.

    Muhammad was booed when he was announced as the 50-45, 49-46, 49-46 winner and then told the crowd, “New Jersey, you suck.”

    The win stamped Muhammad – who took the fight on just over two-weeks’ notice and extended his winning streak to five and his unbeaten streak to 10 straight fights – as a top contender for a title shot against Leon Edwards.

    Movsar Evloev defeated Diego Lopes by unanimous decision in a fight Lopes accepted on five-days notice after an injury forced Bryce Mitchell to drop out. Yan Xiaonan clobbered former UFC strawweight champion Jéssica Andrade with a big right and pounded away at her fallen foe for a TKO victory at 2:20 of the first round.

    Yan’s victory could set her up for a 115-pound championship match against fellow Chinese fighter Zhang Weili.

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  • Nine people shot, wounded at mall in Texas; gunman dead

    Nine people shot, wounded at mall in Texas; gunman dead

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    A gunman has shot and wounded multiple people at a busy shopping mall in the city of Dallas in the United States, killing an unknown number of people.

    Emergency officials said at least nine wounded people, including children, were rushed to hospitals in Dallas, Texas, on Saturday.

    The gunman, whom authorities said they believe acted alone, was killed by a police officer after he began firing outside of the Allen Premium Outlets mall in Allen, a suburb north of Dallas, the police said.

    “He heard gunshots, went to the gunshots, engaged the suspect and neutralised the suspect,” the city’s police chief Brian Harvey said at a press conference. “He also then called for ambulances.”

    Harvey confirmed there had been fatalities but declined to give a death toll, saying, “we do not have an accurate count”.

    Allen fire department chief Jon Boyd told the same press conference that his department took at least nine victims with gunshot wounds to area hospitals. He did not say what condition the victims were in and added there could have been more people wounded.

    Medical City Healthcare, a Dallas-area hospital system, said in a written statement it was treating eight people between the ages of 5 and 61.

    Their conditions were unknown.

    Shoppers evacuate as law enforcement officers respond to a shooting in the Dallas area’s Allen Premium Outlets in this still image from video [ABC Affiliate WFAA via Reuters]

    TV aerial images showed hundreds of people calmly walking out of the mall, located about 40 km(25 miles) northeast of Dallas, after the violence unfolded, many with their hands up as dozens of police stood guard.

    The footage also showed blood on sidewalks outside the mall and white sheets covering what appeared to be bodies.

    Fontayne Payton, 35, told the Associated Press news agency that he was at the H&M store when he heard the sound of gunshots through the headphones he was wearing.

    “It was so loud, it sounded like it was right outside,” Payton said.

    People in the store scattered before employees ushered the group into the fitting rooms and then a lockable back room, he said. When they were given the all-clear to leave, Payton saw the store had broken windows and a trail of blood to the door. Discarded sandals and bloodied clothes were laying nearby.

    Once outside, Payton saw bodies.

    “I pray it wasn’t kids, but it looked like kids,” he said. The bodies were covered in white towels, slumped over bags on the ground, he said.

    “It broke me when I walked out to see that,” he said.

    Further away, he saw the body of a heavyset man wearing all black. He assumed it was the gunman, Payton said, because unlike the other bodies it had not been covered up.

    A second unidentified witness told local ABC affiliate WFAA TV that the gunman was “walking down the sidewalk just … shooting his gun outside,” and that “he was just shooting his gun everywhere for the most part”.

    Texas Governor Greg Abbott, calling the shooting an “unspeakable tragedy,” said in a written statement that the state was prepared to offer any assistance local authorities may need.

    Allen, Texas, is a community of about 100,000 people.

    Mass shootings have become commonplace in the US, with at least 198 so far in 2023, the most at this point in the year since at least 2016, according to the Gun Violence Archive.

    The nonprofit group defines a mass shooting as any in which four or more people are wounded or killed, not including the gunman.

    The US has the highest rate of gun deaths of any developed country, with 49,000 recorded in 2021, up from 45,000 the year before.

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  • US high court halts execution of man who received ‘unfair’ trial

    US high court halts execution of man who received ‘unfair’ trial

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    The United States Supreme Court has blocked Oklahoma from executing death-row inmate Richard Glossip for his role in a 1997 murder-for-hire, after the state’s attorney general agreed his life should be spared.

    While it is rare for the conservative-dominated court to put executions on hold, it is even more unusual for a prosecutor to side with the inmate.

    Glossip was scheduled to be put to death on May 18, despite statements by new Oklahoma Attorney General Gentner Drummond that the defendant did not receive a fair trial.

    An Oklahoma appeals court subsequently upheld Glossip’s conviction, and the state’s pardon and parole board was deadlocked in a vote to grant him clemency.

    The high court put the execution on hold indefinitely while it reviews the case. Justice Neil Gorsuch took no part in the decision, presumably because he dealt with the case earlier as an appeals court judge.

    “There is nothing more harrowing than the thought of executing a man who the state now admits has never received a fair trial,” Glossip’s lawyer Don Knight said in a statement. “Our hope is that the court will reverse the decision of the [Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals] and vacate Mr Glossip’s conviction once and for all.”

    Drummond, a Republican and the state’s top prosecutor, supported a high court reprieve for Glossip, telling the justices, “Glossip’s trial was unfair and unreliable”. In a statement, he said he was grateful for the high court’s decision.

    “I will continue working to ensure justice prevails in this important case,” Drummond said.

    But Drummond has also said he does not believe Glossip is innocent of the murder-for-hire killing of his former boss, Barry Van Treese, in 1997.

    Another man, Justin Sneed, admitted to robbing and killing Van Treese after Glossip promised to pay him $10,000. Sneed received a life sentence in exchange for his testimony and was the key witness against Glossip.

    The Associated Press left a phone message on Friday for Van Treese’s brother, Ken Van Treese. It was not immediately returned.

    Former Oklahoma County District Attorney David Prater has long said he believes Glossip persuaded Sneed to kill Van Treese. He said that, while Sneed’s testimony was the most compelling part of the case, there was plenty of evidence to corroborate it.

    “When police came to talk to Glossip about Van Treese’s whereabouts, he directed [officers] away from the room he knew Van Treese was in,” Prater said on Friday. “At any point, Glossip had the opportunity to tell the police that Sneed did this. He never did that. He even helped Sneed clean up everything.”

    He added Sneed and Glossip also had a large amount of cash that Prater believes they stole from Van Treese’s car.

    “In light of Gentner Drummond’s position regarding the stay, I don’t feel like the Supreme Court had much of a choice,” Prater said. “But the truth will come out.”

    Two separate independent investigations have revealed problems with the prosecution’s case.

    Drummond said Sneed lied on the stand about his psychiatric condition and his reason for taking the mood-stabilising drug lithium. He also said prosecutors knew Sneed was lying.

    Also, evidence was destroyed, Drummond said.

    Some Republican state legislators who support the death penalty have joined the growing chorus of Glossip supporters who are seeking to overturn his conviction.

    “We’re just ecstatic,” state Representative Kevin McDugle in a brief telephone interview with the Associated Press on Friday.

    Glossip’s case has been to the Supreme Court before. He was given a reprieve in 2015, although the court later ruled 5-4 against him in a case involving the drugs used in lethal executions.

    Glossip has been just hours away from being executed three separate times. His last scheduled execution, in September 2015, was halted just moments before he was to be led to the death chamber, after prison officials realised they had received the wrong lethal drug.

    That mix-up helped prompt a nearly seven-year moratorium on the death penalty in Oklahoma.

    Glossip’s case attracted international attention after actress Susan Sarandon — who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of death penalty opponent Sister Helen Prejean in the 1995 movie Dead Man Walking — took up his cause in real life. Prejean herself has served as Glossip’s spiritual adviser and frequently visited him in prison.

    His case also was featured in the 2017 documentary film Killing Richard Glossip.

    Glossip is the first inmate who was granted a reprieve by the current justices since their term began in October. The court rejected pleas from 15 others, including Darryl Barwick who was executed in Florida on Wednesday.

    But in a similar situation to Glossip’s, the justices in January ordered a Texas appeals court to look again at the case of a death-row inmate who also had the backing of prosecutors. The inmate, Areli Escobar, was convicted and sentenced to death based on forensic evidence that a judge later found to be flawed.

    The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, however, overturned the judge’s order for a new trial, even though the newly elected prosecutor in Travis County, Texas, was no longer standing behind the conviction. When Escobar appealed to the Supreme Court, the prosecutor supported his bid. Escobar was not facing imminent execution.

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  • Proud Boys: Ex-leader found guilty of Jan 6 seditious conspiracy

    Proud Boys: Ex-leader found guilty of Jan 6 seditious conspiracy

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    US prosecutors allege far-right group members acted as ‘Trump’s army’ during storming of Capitol on January 6, 2021.

    The former leader of the far-right Proud Boys group, Enrique Tarrio, and three other deputies have been found guilty of seditious conspiracy in an alleged plot to attack the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, and prevent a peaceful transfer of power.

    A jury in Washington, DC delivered the guilty verdict on Thursday against Tarrio, Ethan Nordean, Joseph Biggs, and Zachary Rehl.

    However, the jurors were unable to reach a verdict on seditious conspiracy – a relatively rare charge that can carry up to 20 years in prison – against a fifth defendant, Dominic Pezzola.

    All five men also were found guilty of an array of lesser crimes, including obstructing the US Congress, civil disorder and destroying government property.

    The defence had argued that Tarrio and the other Proud Boys were being scapegoated for the deadly storming of the US Capitol, which followed claims by former President Donald Trump that the 2020 US election that he lost to Joe Biden had been stolen.

    “It was Donald Trump’s words. It was his motivation. It was his anger that caused what occurred on January 6th in your beautiful and amazing city,” defence lawyer Nayib Hassan said during closing arguments.

    Tarrio was not in Washington, DC during the Capitol riot because he had been arrested two days earlier in a separate case and ordered out of the city. But prosecutors alleged that he organised and directed the attack by Proud Boys who stormed the Capitol that day.

    Prosecutor Conor Mulroe said the Proud Boys leaders “saw themselves as Donald Trump’s army, fighting to keep their preferred leader in power no matter what the law or the courts had to say about it” and were prepared for “all-out war”.

    Prosecutors hinged their case on a trove of messages that Proud Boys leaders and members privately exchanged in encrypted chats – and publicly posted on social media – before, during and after the Capitol riot.

    Lawyers for the defence argued that the prosecution had not presented sufficient evidence given the severity of the seditious conspiracy charge.

    Nicholas Smith, a lawyer for former Proud Boys chapter leader Nordean, said during closing statements that prosecutors had built their case on “misdirection and innuendo”.

    But Mulroe, the prosecutor, argued during the trial that conspiracy can be an unspoken and implicit “mutual understanding, reached with a wink and a nod”.

    Trump had also helped to stoke the perception that the Proud Boys were taking direct commands from him.

    “Proud Boys – stand back and stand by,” Trump said during a September 2020 presidential debate, when asked to explicitly condemn the far-right group of self-described “Western chauvinists”.

    In October of last year, Proud Boys member Jeremy Joseph Bertino pleaded guilty to a seditious conspiracy charge and agreed to cooperate with the Department of Justice’s investigation into the riot.

    Federal prosecutors also have secured seditious conspiracy convictions against the founder and members of another far-right group, the Oath Keepers.

    More than 1,000 people have been charged so far in relation to the storming of the US Capitol, while the Department of Justice has also continued to probe Trump’s role in the incident.

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  • Djokovic can play at US Open as vaccine mandate to end

    Djokovic can play at US Open as vaccine mandate to end

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    Djokovic can play after missing out on the US Open last year and being denied entry into the country earlier this year.

    Men’s tennis world number one Novak Djokovic will be able to compete at the US Open this year after the United States government announced plans to end its COVID-19 vaccination requirements for international travellers on May 11.

    The White House said on Monday that the requirements will end when the coronavirus public health emergency ends next week.

    Djokovic, one of the most high-profile athletes not vaccinated against COVID-19, missed the US Open in 2022 due to his vaccine status.

    The 35-year-old Serb was unable to enter the country this year after unsuccessfully applying to the US government for special permission to play at the Masters tournaments in Indian Wells and Miami.

    Djokovic missed last year’s Australian Open and was deported from the country due to his vaccine status and has said he would skip grand slams rather than have a COVID shot.

    However, with ease of restrictions by the Australian government later in 2022, the Serb took part in and won the 2023 edition of the tournament in Melbourne to equal Rafael Nadal’s record of 22 men’s grand slam titles.

    While Djokovic has refused to explicitly say whether he received any shots to protect against the coronavirus, he would not have needed an exemption to enter Australia in 2022 if he were fully vaccinated.

    In April 2020, he issued a statement saying: “Personally I am opposed to the vaccination against COVID-19 in order to be able to travel. But if it becomes compulsory, I will have to make a decision whether to do it or not.”

    Months later, he and his wife tested positive for the illness caused by the coronavirus after a series of exhibition matches he organised without social distancing or masking.

    In January 2022, Djokovic knew he had tested positive for COVID-19 when he attended a newspaper interview and photoshoot at his tennis centre in Serbia, admitting he made an “error of judgement” and should have immediately gone into isolation.

    Djokovic has won three of his 22 major titles at the US Open.

    This year’s tournament will be held from August 28 to September 10.

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  • US Treasury says government may default on debt as early as June

    US Treasury says government may default on debt as early as June

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    A letter from US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warns of potential ‘harm to business and consumer confidence’.

    United States Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has sent a letter to Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy warning him that the federal government could hit its spending limit by June 1 if Congress does not raise the debt ceiling.

    In the letter published on Monday, Yellen said available data points to early June as the period when the government will no longer be able to cover its expenses should Congress fail to raise the limit before then.

    “Given the current projections, it is imperative that Congress act as soon as possible to increase or suspend the debt limit in a way that provides longer-term certainty that the government will continue to make its payments,” the letter reads.

    Though Yellen’s letter indicates the US could enter default as early as June 1, the treasury secretary also noted that it is “impossible to predict with certainty the exact date when Treasury will be unable to pay the government’s bills”.

    Monday’s letter comes as US President Joe Biden reportedly called for a May 9 meeting with Democratic and Republican leaders to discuss spending and the debt limit.

    Experts have warned that a possible default would have dire impacts on the US economy: It could cause the US’s credit rating to fall, leading to higher interest rates and a possible recession.

    Raising the US spending limits is a largely routine procedure but one that has become increasingly contentious in recent years. To raise the debt ceiling this year, Republicans in Congress are pushing for steep cuts to social programmes in exchange for their support.

    The Biden administration has called for an increase to the debt ceiling without conditions, stating that debates over various programmes can be hashed out during negotiations on the yearly budget.

    His concerns were echoed by fellow Democrats in the aftermath of Yellen’s letter, who called for a “clean” debt limit increase without haggling or addendums.

    “We have about a month until the U.S. defaults on paying its debt. Let’s be clear — this isn’t new spending,” Virginia Senator Mark Warner tweeted on Monday. “This is about paying bills we’ve already incurred. We cannot unleash economic catastrophe on the American people.”

    Last week, the Republican-led House of Representatives passed a bill that agreed to raise the debt ceiling by $1.5 trillion in exchange for $4.5 trillion in spending cuts for programmes like healthcare for low-income communities, renewable energy and transportation.

    The bill is considered dead on arrival in the Democrat-controlled US Senate, and Biden has stated that he would veto it. But its passage in the House is considered a victory for McCarthy, who has since called for Democrats to “do their job” to approve the bill and avoid a default.

    “In our history, we have never defaulted on our debt or failed to pay our bills,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement following the vote.

    “President Biden will never force middle class and working families to bear the burden of tax cuts for the wealthiest, as this bill does. The President has made clear this bill has no chance of becoming law.”

    On Monday, the Congressional Budget Office also stated that it saw an increased risk of the government running out of funds by early June due to tax receipts that were lower than expected.

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  • Joe Biden laughs off age jokes at annual US media gathering

    Joe Biden laughs off age jokes at annual US media gathering

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    At the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner, comedy mixes with somber calls to free reporters.

    United States President Joe Biden was the subject of several pointed jokes at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner while taking the opportunity to hit back with a few of his own.

    Washington’s political and media elites gathered on Saturday night in the US capital for an annual event whose mood ranged from traditional comedy gags to somber calls to free reporters imprisoned abroad.

    Headlining the after-dinner entertainment was Daily Show correspondent Roy Wood Jr, who gleefully mocked Biden, 80, for running for a second term, which could mean Biden would still be president at age 86.

    Wood noted recent angry protests in France against raising the retirement age.

    Comedian Roy Wood Jr was the host of this year’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in Washington, DC [Al Drago/Reuters]

    “They rioted because they didn’t want to work until 64. Meanwhile, in America, we have an 80-year-old man begging us for four more years of work,” he joked.

    When it was his turn at the microphone, Biden took a jab at House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and a recent bill Republicans passed that would lift the debt ceiling in exchange for a series of budget cuts, including some of Biden’s key legislative achievements.

    “The last time Republicans voted for something that hapless, it took 15 tries,” Biden said, referring to the number of votes in the House of Representatives that McCarthy needed to become speaker in January.

    Biden even made a couple of self-deprecating jokes, mostly surrounding criticism of his age as he mounts a bid for re-election.

    He also targeted CNN presenter Don Lemon, who was sacked after making sexist and ageist remarks on air.

    “Call me old,” Biden said. “I call it being seasoned. You say I am ancient. I say I’m wise. You say I’m over the hill. Don Lemon would say that’s a man in his prime.”

    ‘Journalism not a crime’

    Biden also spoke about several American journalists held in other countries.

    “We are here to send a message to the country and, quite frankly, to the world: The free press is a pillar, maybe the pillar, of a free society, not the enemy,” Biden said in his speech.

    After arriving at the dinner, the president and first lady, Jill Biden, met privately with the parents of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who has been imprisoned in Russia since March.

    He was charged with spying despite strong denials from his employer and the US government. Some guests wore buttons with “Free Evan” printed on them.

    Also among the 2,600 people attending the gala was Debra Tice, the mother of Austin Tice, who has not been heard from since disappearing at a checkpoint in Syria in 2012. US officials say they operate under the assumption that he is alive and are working to try to bring him home.

    “Journalism is not a crime. Evan and Austin should be released immediately along with every other American detained abroad,” Biden said. “I promise you, I am working like hell to get them home.”

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  • Why did Iran seize a US-bound tanker in the Gulf of Oman?

    Why did Iran seize a US-bound tanker in the Gulf of Oman?

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    Neither side has acknowledged whether Iran’s capture of the Turkish-operated fuel tanker was a tit-for-tat move.

    Tehran, Iran – Iran and the United States have again found themselves on opposite sides as they provided contradictory accounts of events that led to Tehran’s seizure of an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman.

    Iran’s state television on Friday showed footage of the country’s navy commandos boarding the Marshall Islands-flagged tanker Advantage Sweet in a helicopter operation a day earlier.

    The Turkish-operated, Chinese-owned tanker entered the Gulf of Oman after moving through the Strait of Hormuz and was reportedly bound for Houston, Texas carrying Kuwaiti crude oil for US energy firm Chevron Corp.

    Iran said the tanker collided with an unidentified Iranian vessel hours before its seizure, leading to several crew members falling overboard and going missing and others getting injured. The tanker then fled the scene and ignored radio calls for eight hours before its seizure based on a court order, the Iranian army said.

    “We repeatedly called on the vessel to stop so we can conduct a more comprehensive investigation, but there was no cooperation,” Mostafa Tajodini, deputy for operations at the Iranian navy, told state media.

    The vessel’s manager, a Turkish firm called Advantage Tankers, said similar experiences have shown that crew members – all 24 of whom are Indian – are in no danger.

    The Middle East-based US Navy 5th Fleet had said Iran’s actions constituted a violation of international law and called on Tehran to immediately release the tanker.

    “Iran’s continued harassment of vessels and interference with navigational rights in regional waters are a threat to maritime security and the global economy,” it said, adding this was at least the fifth commercial vessel taken by Iran in the past two years.

    Tit-for-tat move

    On Friday, the Reuters news agency reported the seizure of the vessel came as a response to the confiscation of an oil tanker by the US in an effort to enforce its unilateral sanctions on Tehran.

    The report said the Iran-linked tanker was the Marshall Islands-flagged Suez Rajan that had a Greece-based manager and was last reported to be positioned near Southern Africa before being seized several days prior to the taking of the Advantage Sweet vessel by Iran.

    There are precedents for such tit-for-tat moves, with the US trying to confiscate a cargo of Iranian oil near Greece last year, prompting Tehran to seize two Greek tankers and hold them for months. The supreme court in Greece ultimately ordered the cargo returned to Iran, and the Greek vessels were also released.

    Washington imposed its harshest-ever sanctions on Iran, which include a major focus on impeding Tehran’s oil sales, after former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from a 2015 nuclear deal with world powers in 2018.

    Amid deadlocked efforts to restore the nuclear accord, which put curbs on Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of sanctions, Iran has been circumventing the embargoes and steadily boosting its oil sales.

    Twelve US senators on Thursday urged President Joe Biden to remove Treasury Department policy hurdles that have impeded the seizure of more Iranian oil shipments in a call that is likely to increase tensions.

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  • Months after major storms, California braces for snow-fed floods

    Months after major storms, California braces for snow-fed floods

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    Los Angeles, California, US – In early March, dairy farmer Tom Barcellos watched as the Tule River burst its banks, flooding the area around his farm in Tulare County, a centre of agricultural production in the California’s San Joaquin Valley.

    “The river broke out in a number of places. My farm didn’t get flooded, but a lot of neighbours did,” Barcellos, a lifelong farmer, told Al Jazeera on a recent phone call. “We were on river watch, keeping debris and trees from plugging up the diversion structures.”

    At the time, the state was weathering the last storms in a series of 13 atmospheric rivers, bands of intense moisture that brought heavy rain to some regions, heavy snow to others.

    Now, the winter storms have ended. But farmers like Barcellos are still dealing with the fallout, as flood waters linger — or resurge in some areas, as the record-setting snowfall thaws in the mountains.

    Communities like Tulare County, downstream from California’s mountain ranges, are bracing for the worst. “It all depends on how quickly the snow melts. A big melt hitting all at once could overwhelm our capacity, and we could experience another round of flooding,” Barcellos said. “Mother nature is in control.”

    Tulare County officials estimated that the storms and flooding have already caused about $40m in damages.

    Barcellos explained that, even if farmers in the area evacuate their livestock, their businesses are still harmed. Many dairy farmers also grow feed for cows on their land. So when one farm is flooded, the impact is felt by many others who have to find new sources of feed, often from further away.

    “One neighbour had to move all of his cows, and his feed is still underwater,” said Barcellos. “So we’re indirectly impacted, but we’re going to feel it in our pocketbook.”

    ‘Feast or famine’

    The melting snowpack has already started to make its presence felt across the state. Yosemite National Park, one of California’s most famous outdoor destinations, nestled in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, is scheduled to close on Friday as rivers are swollen with runoff from the warming snow.

    The possibility of further flooding has caused headaches in parts of the state where excess rainfall from the atmospheric rivers was already an issue.

    Communities in places like Tulare and Kings County, two hubs of agricultural production that border each other in the San Joaquin Valley, have already seen wide swathes of farmland submerged under floodwater.

    “In regions of the Central Valley that have experienced flooding, we hear from farm labourers who are worried about the potential impact more flooding could have on opportunities to work,” said Ephraim Camacho, a community worker with California Rural Legal Assistance, an organisation that advocates for low-income communities in rural parts of the state. “It’s hard to stop working if you have bills and you’re already not being paid much.”

    In Kings County, residents have started to witness the reemergence of Tulare Lake, once the largest body of freshwater west of the Mississippi River. Stretching more than 2,072sq kilometres (800sq miles), it was drained to make room for farmland and disappeared by the mid-20th century.

    Water fills the Tulare lakebed outside of Corcoran, California, in March [David Swanson/Reuters]

    But aerial images last month from NASA, the US space agency, show the lake reclaiming dry, brown patches of lands, filling the landscape with greens and blues. The rainfall in the area had brought relief to California’s extreme drought, the driest 22-year period in nearly 1,200 years.

    “California’s weather is feast or famine. You have long stretches of dry winters punctuated by very wet winters,” Chad Hecht, a meteorologist at the Centre for Western Weather and Water Extremes at University of California, San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography, told Al Jazeera on a phone call. “That’s been especially true over the last 10 years.”

    What happens next, Hecht added, is largely dependent on what kind of weather the region experiences during the next several months.

    “If there’s a lot of hot weather and the snow melts very quickly, there could be more flooding. If it melts at a more incremental rate, that makes things more manageable,” he said.

    Impacted residents

    The stakes of that snowmelt are considerable for California’s agricultural sector.

    In 2021, Kings and Tulare counties produced more than $2.3bn and $8bn worth of agricultural products respectively. But the winter storms from December through March devastated recent crops. More rising water could create further challenges for farmers after a difficult few months.

    “You can take steps to prepare, but when that volume of water comes, all you can do is hope it comes at a manageable pace,” said Barcellos, the dairy farmer.

    Still, Barcellos said that people in the region have been coping with flooding for decades, and he remembered Tulare Lake reemerging in years of exceptional rainfall such as 1969 and 1983.

    “People were taking olds cars and stacking them to help build up the levees,” he remembered. “Everybody was pitching in.”

    Michael Claiborne, a lawyer at the Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountability, which focuses on issues of inequality in California’s rural areas, told Al Jazeera that residents in towns like Allensworth, located on the shores of the former Tulare Lake, are worried about the possibility of further evacuations after being displaced by floodwaters during the atmospheric rivers.

    “In the areas around Tulare Lake, some people were evacuated out of their homes on very short notice. So there’s anxiety about the possibility of more flooding,” said Claiborne. “If you’re from a low-income household, it’s even more difficult to leave home and put your life on pause.”

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  • US Justice Dept sues Tennessee over transgender healthcare law

    US Justice Dept sues Tennessee over transgender healthcare law

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    The law, passed in the state’s Republican-led statehouse, prohibits youth from receiving gender-affirming care.

    The United States Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit challenging Tennessee’s new law banning transgender youth from receiving gender-affirming care, one of the several laws the state’s Republican-dominated legislature enacted this year aimed at LGBTQ+ people.

    The federal government is seeking to invalidate the statute because “no person should be denied access to necessary medical care just because of their transgender status”, Assistant US Attorney General Kristen Clarke said in a statement.

    The Justice Department said the law violates the US Constitution’s equal protection clause by discriminating on the basis of both sex and transgender status.

    “The right to consider your health and medically approved treatment options with your family and doctors is a right that everyone should have, including transgender children, who are especially vulnerable to serious risks of depression, anxiety and suicide,” Clarke added.

    The federal lawsuit comes after Clarke sent a letter to all state attorneys general last month warning them that federal law protects transgender youth against discrimination. The Justice Department also intervened last year in a lawsuit challenging a similar ban on transgender medical care for young people. That lawsuit is ongoing.

    Republican Governor Bill Lee signed off on prohibiting gender-affirming care for minors earlier this year.

    The Tennessee legislature has a Republican majority in both its upper and lower chambers [File: Mark Humphrey/AP Photo]

    The bill was the first proposal filed in this year’s legislative session. Republican leaders did so in response to video surfacing on social media last year of a Nashville doctor touting that gender-affirming procedures are “huge money makers” for hospitals.

    That hospital has since paused its transgender services for young people.

    Republican lawmakers also advanced legislation designed to severely limit where drag shows can take place, making Tennessee the first state to do so. A federal judge has temporarily blocked the statute from being implemented.

    Nationally, Republican legislators have proposed hundreds of laws aimed at transgender people, with at least 14 states restricting or banning gender-affirming care for minors.

    Under Tennessee’s law – set to take effect on July 1 – doctors will be prohibited from prescribing puberty blockers or hormones, or providing other gender-affirming care to anyone under 18. The law spells out a handful of exceptions, including allowing doctors to perform such medical services if the patient’s care begins before the law goes into effect. In those cases, care must end by March 31, 2024.

    Healthcare providers who violate the ban would be subject to regulatory discipline and could be sued by the state attorney general or private parties. Violations carry a $25,000 penalty.

    A spokesperson for the Tennessee Attorney General’s office did not immediately respond to requests from the Associated Press for comment.

    The Justice Department’s lawsuit is the second complaint challenging the new Tennessee law. Last week, three transgender children and their parents sued the state, claiming the law violates the equal protection clause in the 14th Amendment of the Constitution because it excludes treatment for gender dysphoria while allowing the same treatments to be used for other conditions.

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  • Harry Belafonte, US actor and civil rights activist, dies at 96

    Harry Belafonte, US actor and civil rights activist, dies at 96

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    Harry Belafonte, a singer, songwriter and groundbreaking actor who started his entertainment career belting, Day O, in his 1950s hit song “Banana Boat” before turning to political activism, has died at the age of 96, the New York Times reported.

    The cause of Belafonte’s death was congestive heart failure, his longtime spokesperson Ken Sunshine told the Times on Tuesday.

    As a Black leading man who explored racial themes in 1950s movies, Belafonte would later move on to working with his friend Martin Luther King Jr during the United States civil rights movement in the early 1960s.

    He became the driving force behind the celebrity-studded, famine-fighting hit song, We Are the World, in the 1980s.

    Belafonte once said he was in a constant state of rebellion that was driven by anger.

    “I’ve got to be a part of whatever the rebellion is that tries to change all this,” he told the New York Times in 2001. “The anger is a necessary fuel. Rebellion is healthy.”

    Belafonte was born in New York City’s borough of Manhattan but spent his early childhood in his family’s native Jamaica. Handsome and suave, he came to be known as the “King of Calypso” early in his career.

    He was the first Black person allowed to perform in many plush nightspots and also had racial breakthroughs in movies at a time when segregation prevailed in much of the US.

    Belafonte speaks as he accepts the Spingarn Award during the 44th Annual NAACP Image Awards in 2013 [Mario Anzuoni/Reuters]

    In, Island in the Sun, in 1954, his character entertained notions of a relationship with a white woman played by Joan Fontaine, which reportedly triggered threats to burn down theatres in the US South. In 1959’s, Odds Against Tomorrow, Belafonte played a bank robber with a racist partner.

    In the 1960s, he campaigned with King, and in the 1980s, he worked to end apartheid in South Africa and coordinated Nelson Mandela‘s first visit to the US.

    ‘We are the world’

    Belafonte travelled the world as a goodwill ambassador for UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund, in 1987 and later started an AIDS foundation. In 2014, he received an Academy Award for his humanitarian work.

    Belafonte provided the impetus for We Are the World, the 1985 all-star musical collaboration that raised money for famine relief in Ethiopia. After seeing a grim news report on the famine, he wanted to do something similar to the fund-raising song, Do They Know It’s Christmas?, by the British supergroup Band Aid a year earlier.

    We Are the World featured superstars such as Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Ray Charles and Diana Ross and raised millions of dollars.

    “A lot of people say to me, ‘When as an artist did you decide to become an activist?’” Belafonte said in a National Public Radio interview in 2011. “I say to them, ‘I was long an activist before I became an artist.’”

    Even in his late 80s, Belafonte was still speaking out on race and income equality and urging President Barack Obama to do more to help the poor. He was a co-chair of the Women’s March on Washington held the day after Donald Trump was inaugurated as president in January 2017.

    Harry Belafonte with Jesse Jackson during a march
    Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, right-centre, leads a march with Belafonte, left, and others in downtown Atlanta to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act in 2005 [Steve Schaefer TLC/Reuters]

    Belafonte’s politics made headlines in January 2006 during a trip to Venezuela when he called President George W Bush “the greatest terrorist in the world”. That same month, he compared the US Homeland Security Department with the Gestapo of Nazi Germany.

    An anthology of his music was released to mark Belafonte’s 90th birthday on March 1, 2017. A few weeks before the launch, Belafonte told Rolling Stone magazine that singing was a way for him to express injustices in the world.

    “It gave me a chance to make political commentary, to make social statements, to talk about things that I found that were unpleasant – and things that I found that were inspiring,” he said.

    Early years

    Born Harold George Bellanfanti in New York’s Harlem neighbourhood, he moved to Jamaica before returning to New York to attend high school.

    He had described his father as an abusive drunk who abandoned him and his mother, leaving Belafonte with a longing for a stable family. He drew strength from his mother, an uneducated domestic worker, who instilled an activist spirit in him.

    “We were instructed to never capitulate, to never yield, to always resist oppression,” Belafonte told Yes! magazine.

    During World War II, those principles led him to join the US Navy, which also provided stability after he dropped out of high school.

    “The Navy came as a place of relief for me,” Belafonte told Yes! “But I was also driven by the belief that Hitler had to be defeated.

    “My commitment sustained itself after the war. Wherever I found resistance to oppression, whether in Africa, in Latin America, certainly here in America in the South, I joined that resistance.”

    After the Navy, Belafonte worked as a janitor in an apartment building and as a stagehand at the American Negro Theater before getting roles and studying with Marlon Brando and Sidney Poitier, another pioneering Black actor who would become a close friend.

    Hollywood celebrities pose on the steps of a plane in 1963
    Hollywood celebrities, including Belafonte, pose on the steps before boarding an aeroplane for the March on Washington in 1963 [Ed Widdis/AP Photo]

    He also appeared on Broadway in, Almanac, winning a Tony Award, and in the movie, Carmen Jones, in 1954.

    Belafonte’s third album, Calypso, became the first by a single performer to sell more than one million copies. Banana Boat, a song about Caribbean dock workers with its resounding call of “Day O”, made him a star. Surgery to remove a node on his vocal cords in the 1960s, however, reduced his voice to a raspy whisper.

    In 1959, he began producing films and teamed with Poitier to produce, Buck and the Preacher, and, Uptown Saturday Night. In 1984, he produced, Beat Street, one of the first movies about break-dancing and hip-hop culture.

    Belafonte was the first Black performer to win a major Emmy in 1960 with his appearance on a television variety special. He also won Grammy Awards in 1960 and 1965 and received a lifetime achievement Grammy in 2000 but voiced frustration at the limits on Black artists in show business. In 1994, Belafonte was awarded the National Medal of Arts.

    Belafonte was married three times. He and his first wife Marguerite Byrd had two children, including actress-model Shari Belafonte. He also had two children with second wife Julia Robinson, a former dancer.

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  • US Republican presidential hopefuls head to Taiwan, Japan

    US Republican presidential hopefuls head to Taiwan, Japan

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    The visits come amid heightened tension over self-ruled Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own territory.

    The Republican governor of the US state of Virginia has met Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen as Republican hopefuls for the United States 2024 presidential race seek to lift their campaigns with international tours.

    Glenn Youngkin, a former hedge fund manager who pulled off a surprise win in the Virginia governor’s race, met Tsai Ing-wen in Taipei on Tuesday as part of a trade mission, their offices said.

    Taiwan is “an important partner and model of prosperity for nations across the globe,” Youngkin said as he announced the establishment of a Taiwan-Virginia economic development office.

    Tsai said she was happy to receive friends from the US, adding that Taipei has always enjoyed strong links with the state of Virginia.

    “That Governor Youngkin has chosen Taiwan as the destination for his first overseas trip since taking office is especially significant,” she said.

    The governor, a rising Republican star and considered a possible contender for the 2024 nomination — although he has yet to declare his candidacy — is also due to visit South Korea and Japan.

    Florida governor and potential rival Ron DeSantis, who is also on an international tour, is already in Tokyo and met Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Monday. The Republican Party’s early frontrunner is former President Donald Trump, who declared his candidacy last November.

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis stopped in Japan as part of a four-nation tour that will also include South Korea, Israel and the UK [Kimimasa Mayama/Pool via Reuters]

    DeSantis praised Japan as a “great ally” to the US and welcomed a five-year, $315bn military expansion Japan launched last year in the face of an increasingly powerful China and as North Korea steps up its missile launches.

    “We very much applaud your efforts to bolster your defences. We understand it’s a tough neighbourhood out here … and we really believe that a strong Japan is good for America, and a strong America is good for Japan,” said DeSantis, who will also travel to South Korea, Israel and the United Kingdom.

    The visits come amid heightened tension in the region over democratic Taiwan, which Beijing claims as its own and refusing to rule out the use of force to achieve its objectives.

    China staged days of war games after US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, also a Republican, met Tsai in California earlier this month.

    Beijing claims Tsai is a “separatist” who wants independence.

    She says it is up to the people of Taiwan to determine their future.

    The US has formal relations with Beijing but is Taiwan’s most important international supporter.

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  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 424

    Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 424

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    Here is the situation on Saturday, April 22, 2023:

    Diplomacy and law

    • Russia has announced the tit-for-tat expulsion of more than 20 German diplomats following the removal of Russian embassy staff from Germany. Berlin was destroying ties with Moscow, Russian state media said.
    • Jack Teixeira, the US Air National Guardsman accused of leaking classified documents about the war in Ukraine to a small group of gamers, had been posting confidential material months earlier than previously known and to a much larger chat group, the New York Times has reported, citing online postings it had seen.

    Fighting

    • Russia’s Defence Ministry has reported the capture of three more city blocks by Russian forces fighting in the western part of the destroyed Ukrainian city of Bakhmut.
    • At least five Russian missiles have hit the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv and surrounding districts late on Saturday night, causing some damage to civilian buildings, local officials said. Kharkiv regional governor Oleh Sinegubov said one missile hit a house in the village of Kotliary, while another sparked a major fire in the city.
    • Seventeen apartment buildings have been evacuated in the Russian city of Belgorod near the Ukrainian border after an explosive device was found at the site where a bomb was accidentally dropped by a Russian warplane on Thursday. Russia has acknowledged that one of its Su-34 bombers had accidentally caused the explosion.
    • The son of Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has fought alongside the Wagner mercenary force in Ukraine, according to Wagner’s chief Yevgeny Prigozhin. Peskov’s son, Nikolay Peskov, who lived in the United Kingdom for several years and is also known as Nikolai Choles, previously told the tabloid KP in Moscow that he fought in Ukraine because he considered it his duty.

    Aid and economy

    • A cargo of Russian fertiliser seized by Latvia last year is being shipped to Kenya by the UN World Food Programme, Latvia said. It was not immediately clear if Russia approved of the shipment.
    • Ukrainian state-owned gas company Naftogaz has held talks with Exxon Mobil Corp, Halliburton and Chevron about projects in Ukraine, the Financial Times reported.

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  • Guantanamo Bay prisoners show signs of ‘accelerated ageing’: ICRC

    Guantanamo Bay prisoners show signs of ‘accelerated ageing’: ICRC

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    The Guantanamo prison camp has come to symbolise the brutality of the US’s so-called ‘war on terror’.

    Prisoners who have been held for years by the United States at the Guantanamo Bay detention facility are showing signs of “accelerated ageing”, a senior official of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has said.

    Patrick Hamilton, the ICRC’s head of delegation for the US and Canada, said on Friday that the “physical and mental health needs are growing and becoming increasingly challenging” for those still imprisoned at Guantanamo Bay.

    “We’re calling on the US administration and Congress to work together to find adequate and sustainable solutions to address these issues,” Hamilton said in a statement.

    “Action should be taken as a matter of priority.”

    The Guantanamo prison camp in Cuba was established by US Republican Party President George W Bush in 2002 to house foreign suspects following the 2001 plane attacks on New York and the Pentagon, which killed some 3,000 people.

    The camp came to symbolise the brutality of the US’s so-called “war on terror” because of harsh interrogation methods that critics have said amounted to torture.

    Hamilton’s comments on the health of the prisoners came after a visit to the facility in March following a 20-year hiatus. He said he was “struck by how those who are still detained today are experiencing the symptoms of accelerated ageing, worsened by the cumulative effects of their experiences and years spent in detention”.

    He called for detainees to receive adequate mental and physical healthcare as well as more frequent family contact.

    The US defence department “is currently reviewing the report”, a Pentagon spokesperson told the Reuters news agency.

    There were 40 detainees at Guantanamo when US President Joe Biden, a Democrat, took office in 2021. The Biden administration has said it wants to close the facility but has not presented a plan for doing so. About 30 detainees remain at the prison.

    Two Pakistani brothers held at Guantanamo Bay without trial for more than 20 years were freed by the US in February and returned home. Abdul, 55, and Mohammed Rabbani, 53, were reunited with their families after a formal questioning by Pakistani authorities.

    Hamilton called on Washington to resolve the fate of the detainees, urging action to transfer out those eligible.

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  • Tesla share price tanks nearly 10% on Musk comments

    Tesla share price tanks nearly 10% on Musk comments

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    Tesla has already slashed prices six times this year and chief Elon Musk suggested more such moves ahead.

    Tesla’s shares sank nearly 10 percent on Thursday after Chief Executive Elon Musk signaled the electric vehicle maker will keep cutting prices to drive up demand even after taking a big hit to margins.

    The stock was trading at $163, dragging down other automakers. At least 15 analysts lowered their price targets on Tesla, whose market value was on track to drop by $50bn to about $517bn, if losses hold. That would put Tesla’s value below that of Meta Platforms Inc for the first time since 2021.

    “Facing a volatile macroeconomic backdrop and weakening demand, Tesla continues to prioritize units over near-term profits,” said analysts at Canaccord Genuity.

    Tesla’s gross profit margins fell in the first quarter to the lowest in more than two years, missing market estimates, after the company kicked off a global price war in January to defend its dominance in the US and make inroads in China, its second-largest market.

    Tesla’s automotive gross margin, excluding regulatory credits and leasing, stood at 18.3 percent, missing the above 20 percent target provided in January by Tesla CFO Zachary Kirkhorn. A higher gross margin means a company retains more capital, which it can then use to pay for other costs or service its debt.

    Tesla has already slashed prices six times this year and Musk suggested more such moves ahead, saying the company will put sales growth ahead of profit in a weak economy.

    “We’ve taken a view that pushing for higher volumes and a larger fleet is the right choice here versus a lower volume and a higher margin,” he said.

    Investors dumped automakers from Europe to the United States on fears that margins will be sacrificed for maintaining share in a market that is slowing.

    “Long-term we believe this (Tesla’s price cuts) is the right strategy and leverages their cost leadership position. However, this does not come without pain as we now believe margins will get worse before they get better,” RBC analyst Tom Narayan said.

    US automakers ranging from Ford Motor Co to startups such as Lucid Group Inc fell between 3.3 percent and 4.4 percent.

    France-based Renault, whose finance chief said the company will not drastically cut prices on its EVs amid Tesla’s downward “spiral”, was down 7.6 percent, while Germany’s Volkswagen fell 3.5 percent.

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  • Parking garage collapses in New York City, killing at least one

    Parking garage collapses in New York City, killing at least one

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    No foul play is suspected in the US structure’s collapse, which took place near Pace University in lower Manhattan.

    A four-story parking structure has collapsed in the United States city of New York on Tuesday, killing at least one worker and injuring five others who were in the building, authorities said.

    Emergency personnel deployed robotic devices after firefighters were pulled back from the fallen structure because of unstable conditions. Those robots continued to check the site for any further casualties, but authorities said they believed everyone who was in the building had been accounted for.

    The collapsed parking garage was commonly used by students and faculty at Pace University in the US [Andrew Shulman, Twitter via @MobileHealthInc/Reuters]

    No foul play was suspected. “We have no reason to believe that it was anything other than a structural collapse,” City Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell told reporters.

    Video footage from the scene, cited by CBS and ABC TV news affiliates, showed a rescue operation underway and multiple cars stacked on top of one another amid crumpled slabs of concrete.

    One person was pronounced dead on the scene, four more were taken to area hospitals for injuries and a sixth individual who was hurt declined medical treatment, said John Esposito, the chief of fire operations for the New York City Fire Department.

    He described all six as workers who were in the parking structure when it collapsed.

    “This was an extremely dangerous situation for our firefighters,” he said in a late-afternoon news briefing.

    Pace University, a nearby academic institution in lower Manhattan whose students, faculty and staff use the parking structure, was evacuated as a precaution, authorities said.

    “This building is completely unstable,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams told reporters.

    Witnesses said the collapse was swift and without warning.

    “It all happened so fast,” said Thai Nguyen, 35, who lives in Chinatown and is a manager of the nearby Kollective Klub. “Our store is two buildings from the parking garage, and we also have a hotel next to us. People ran inside asking if they could take refuge inside our store.”

    “It felt like an earthquake,” Liam Gaeta, a Pace University student, told an ABC News affiliate. He said he heard “a large noise and a big rumbling, and then we all got evacuated”.

    A police officer holds yellow caution tape as firefighters with a truck and ladder work in the narrow street behind him
    Firefighters work at the site of a collapsed parking garage in New York City [Brendan McDermid/Reuters]

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  • S Korea, Japan, US to deepen security ties amid N Korea threat

    S Korea, Japan, US to deepen security ties amid N Korea threat

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    Allies condemn ‘in the strongest terms’ Pyongyang’s latest weapons test, and urge end to ‘destabilization’.

    Japan, South Korea and the United States have agreed to enhance security cooperation in response to rising threats from North Korea, as they condemned the country’s test of its first-ever solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

    Defence officials from the three countries discussed the regularisation of missile defence exercises and anti-submarine exercises as a deterrence as well as response to North Korea’s “nuclear and missile threats”. They also discussed ways to resume trilateral exercises, according to a joint statement issued on Friday at the end of the 13th Defence Trilateral Talks in Washington, DC.

    They “condemned in the strongest terms the DPRK’s repeated violations of United Nations Security Council resolutions (UNSCRs), including its continuous nuclear and missile provocations and illicit ship-to-ship transfers”.

    DPRK is the acronym for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, North Korea’s official name.

    The statement also urged Pyongyang to “stop all destabilizing activities immediately” and “reaffirmed that a DPRK nuclear test, if conducted, would be met with a strong and resolute response from the international community”.

    North Korea last tested a nuclear weapon in 2017 but the rapid expansion of its military arsenal in recent years has raised concern it may be preparing to resume nuclear testing.

    Leader Kim Jong Un was shown in state media on Friday supervising with his family the test of the solid-fuel Hwasong-18, which was described as a “miraculous success“.

    Kim has ordered a rapid modernisation of the country’s weaponry with a record number of tests in 2022.

    Developing solid-fuel technology, which is safer to use, easier to manoeuvre and faster to deploy than liquid-propelled variants, was a key part of Kim’s arms development plans.

    Testing this year has ramped up amid large-scale joint military exercises by US and South Korean forces that Pyongyang claims are a rehearsal for invasion.

    Talks on denuclearisation have been stalled since 2019 when a high-profile summit between Kim and then-US President Donald Trump collapsed.

    The three defence officials repeated a call for North Korea to return to talks.

    The “path to dialogue” remains open, the statement said.

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  • US targets El Chapo sons, Chinese workers in sweeping drug action

    US targets El Chapo sons, Chinese workers in sweeping drug action

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    United States authorities have targeted four sons of the notorious Mexican drug lord El Chapo – known as the “Chapitos” – as well as individuals connected to Chinese chemical firms in a sweeping action meant to address fentanyl trafficking.

    On Friday, US Attorney General Merrick Garland called the drug enterprise run by the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel the “largest, most violent, and most prolific fentanyl trafficking operation in the world”.

    Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco said the indictments “target every element of the Sinaloa Cartel’s trafficking network” as part of what she called a “relentless campaign to disrupt the production, the distribution, the trafficking of fentanyl”.

    Officials said the Sinaloa cartel has been led in recent years by Ivan Guzman Salazar, 40, Alfredo Guzman Salazar, 37, Joaquin Guzman Lopez, 36, and Ovidio Guzman Lopez, 33 – all sons of notorious leader Joaquin Guzman Loera, also known as “El Chapo”, who is currently serving a life prison sentence in the US.

    Three of those sons, Ivan, Alfredo, and Joaquin, remain at large, while Ovidio was arrested by Mexican authorities in January. He remains in custody pending his extradition to the US.

    All four were charged along with 24 others with fentanyl trafficking, weapons and money, among several other charges, which were brought forth in three separate federal jurisdictions: The Southern District of New York, the Northern District of Illinois, and the District of Columbia.

    The individuals charged included “manufacturers and distributors” of the cartel’s fentanyl, “managers” of its armed security apparatus, and money launderers, as well several men identified as employees of companies in China “that manufacture fentanyl precursor chemicals”, authorities said.

    Speaking at a news conference on Friday, US Drug Enforcement Agency Administrator Anne Milgram said the Sinaloa cartel expanded into the fentanyl trade when El Chapo’s sons took over.

    “Let me be clear that the Chapitos pioneered the manufacture and trafficking of the deadliest drug our country has ever faced and they are responsible for the massive influx of fentanyl into the United States,” she said.

    “As a direct result of their actions, we have lost hundreds of thousands of American lives,” she said.

    Fentanyl is currently the “leading cause of death for Americans ages 18 to 49”, according to the US government. The drug has fuelled an opioid epidemic, with fatal overdoses increasing by about 94 percent between 2019 and 2021.

    Milgram further detailed what she described as a brutal campaign by the Chapitos to boost business and “get Americans hooked”, including by adding the drug to cocaine, heroin, or illegal methamphetamines, or by disguising it as pills similar to prescription drugs.

    “To dominate the fentanyl supply chain the Chapitos kill, kidnap and torture anyone who gets in the way,” Milgram said. “In Mexico, they fed their enemies alive to tigers, electrocuted them, waterboarded them, and shot them at close range with a 50-calibre machine gun.”

    The Department of State on Friday also announced up to $56m in rewards for information leading to the capture of the accused.

    The DOJ indictments accompanied the latest series of sanctions against Chinese firms and individuals identified as chemical suppliers to fentanyl makers.

    The Department of the Treasury on Friday named two China-based firms, which it said contributed or attempted to contribute to “activities or transactions that have materially contributed to, or pose a significant risk of materially contributing to, the international proliferation of illicit drugs or their means of production”.

    Among those sanctioned was Ana Gabriela Rubio Zea, who the department described as a “Guatemala-based broker” of the chemical precursor.

    Officials said Rubio Zea used “her expertise and contacts” to evade detection by customs officials, at times disguising the chemicals in food containers.

    She was also charged in the DOJ indictment.

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  • US arrests man in probe into classified Pentagon documents leak

    US arrests man in probe into classified Pentagon documents leak

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    DEVELOPING STORY,

    US attorney general says member of US Air Force National Guard arrested in relation to leak of military intelligence.

    Authorities in the United States have arrested a man in relation to the leak of classified US military intelligence documents, the US Justice Department has announced.

    US Attorney General Merrick Garland said on Thursday that Jack Teixeira was arrested in connection with a probe into “alleged unauthorised removal, retention and transmission of classified national defence information”.

    “Teixeira is an employee of the United States Air Force National Guard,” Garland told reporters during a brief news conference.

    “FBI agents took Teixeira into custody earlier this afternoon without incident.”

    The leak of the classified Pentagon documents, which were shared online, has dominated headlines in recent days as US President Joe Biden’s administration promised to get to the bottom of what happened.

    The files have purported to show American military assessments of the war in Ukraine, as well as issues related to some of the US’s top allies, such as Israel and South Korea.

    They have also raised questions about alleged spying by Washington, as one of the latest leaks indicated the US was monitoring United Nations chief Antonio Guterres because it believed he was too soft on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine.

    On Thursday, The New York Times reported that about half a dozen FBI agents armed with rifles pushed onto Teixeira’s Massachusetts property to make the arrest.

    The newspaper said the 21-year-old is believed to be the leader of a small, gaming chat group where the documents were leaked over the past few months.

    The arrest is expected to raise questions about how one of the most high-profile US intelligence leak in years could have been caused by such a young, low-ranking servicemember.

    “One of the strange things about the leaks from the very beginning was that this was a really odd place for them to show up,” David Silbey, an associate professor at Cornell University who specialises in defence policy and military history, told Al Jazeera before news of the arrest.

    “If it had been a sort of espionage act, why put them on a random Discord server? You wouldn’t reveal it publicly anyway; you’d just pass it back to Russia. If it was a leak to share with the public, it’s about the worst possible way to leak it.”

    But regardless of the intent, Silbey added that the leak remains “significant”.

    During a news conference earlier on Thursday, a spokesman for the US Department of Defense said the leak was “a deliberate, criminal act”.

    “We continue to work around the clock along with the interagency and the intelligence community to better understand the scope, scale and impact of these leaks,” Pat Ryder told reporters, stressing that the department could not comment on the Department of Justice’s ongoing investigation.

    “We continue to review a variety of factors as it relates to safeguarding classified materials,” he said. “This includes examining and updating distribution lists, assessing how and where intelligence products are shared, and a variety of other steps.”

    This is a developing story. More to follow.

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  • US appeals court preserves limited access to abortion pill

    US appeals court preserves limited access to abortion pill

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    The abortion pill mifepristone will remain available in the United States for now but with significant restrictions, including a requirement for in-person doctor visits to obtain the drug, a federal appeals court ruled late on Wednesday.

    The New Orleans-based Fifth US Circuit Court of Appeals put on hold part of last Friday’s order by US District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk in Amarillo, Texas, that had suspended the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the drug while he hears a lawsuit by anti-abortion groups seeking to ban it.

    The Biden administration and the maker of brand-name mifepristone, Danco Laboratories, had quickly asked for an emergency stay of that order.

    However, the appeals court declined to block portions of Kacsmaryk’s order that effectively reinstate restrictions on the pill’s distribution that had been lifted since 2016. In addition to a requirement of in-person doctor visits to prescribe and dispense the drug, those restrictions include limiting its use to the first seven weeks of pregnancy, down from the current 10.

    Kacsmaryk’s order is set to take effect on Friday.

    Wednesday’s ruling came from a panel of three Fifth Circuit judges, two appointed by then-President Donald Trump and one by George W Bush, both Republicans. Judge Catharina Haynes, the Bush appointee, partly dissented, saying she would have temporarily blocked Kacsmaryk’s order entirely.

    The emergency stay is meant to remain in place until the Fifth Circuit can hear the Biden administration’s appeal of Kacsmaryk’s order more fully. That appeal may be heard by a different panel.

    The administration, the anti-abortion groups or both could also seek to appeal immediately to the US Supreme Court.

    The FDA and lawyers for the groups could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Conflicting decisions

    Kacsmaryk’s ruling apparently conflicts with a different federal judge’s decision, also issued last Friday, ordering the FDA to maintain access to mifepristone with no new restrictions in 17 states and the District of Columbia. The Biden administration has asked the judge in that case to clarify his order in light of Kacsmaryk’s.

    The lawsuit before Kacsmaryk was filed against the FDA in November by four anti-abortion medical associations led by the recently formed Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine and four anti-abortion doctors. They contend the agency used an improper process when it approved mifepristone in 2000 and did not adequately consider the drug’s safety when used by girls aged under 18 to terminate a pregnancy.

    Both judges’ rulings last week were preliminary injunctions meant to remain in effect while the lawsuits are pending, and are not final.

    However, Kacsmaryk said he thought the anti-abortion groups were likely to succeed on the merits, writing that the FDA “acquiesced on its legitimate safety concerns – in violation of its statutory duty – based on plainly unsound reasoning and studies that did not support its conclusions” when it approved mifepristone.

    The Fifth Circuit majority on Wednesday said that the groups’ challenge to the original 2000 approval had been filed too late. However, it said the challenges to the FDA’s later actions, including the changes in 2016 and its recent decision to allow mifepristone to be prescribed by telemedicine and dispensed by mail, were timely.

    It said that the government’s arguments for an emergency stay of the ruling focused on the potential harm of pulling mifepristone from the market entirely but that it was “difficult to argue” that the 2016 changes “were so critical to the public given that the nation operated – and mifepristone was administered to millions of women – without them for sixteen years”.

    The court agreed with Kacsmaryk that doctors and groups had standing to bring the lawsuit.

    “As a result of FDA’s failure to regulate this potent drug, these doctors have had to devote significant time and resources to caring for women experiencing mifepristone’s harmful effects,” the panel majority wrote.

    Hundreds of biotech and pharmaceutical company executives on Monday signed an open letter calling for the reversal of Kacsmaryk’s ruling, saying it undermines the FDA’s authority and ignores decades of scientific evidence on the drug’s safety.

    The other ruling, ensuring access to mifepristone, was issued by US District Judge Thomas Rice in Spokane, Washington. It arises from a lawsuit brought by a group of Democratic-led states challenging federal safety restrictions for mifepristone.

    Dozens of legal briefs have been filed in the two cases, with mainstream medical associations like the American Medical Association and American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, abortion rights groups and Democratic politicians supporting the drug’s approval, and anti-abortion groups and Republican politicians opposing it.

    Mifepristone is part of a two-drug regimen, administered in combination with misoprostol, for medication abortions in the first 10 weeks of pregnancy. The drugs account for more than half of all abortions in the country.

    Some abortion providers have said that if mifepristone is unavailable, they would switch to a misoprostol-only regimen for a medication abortion, which is not as effective. It is not yet clear how widely available it would be.

    Some Democratic-led states have begun stockpiling the drugs since Kacsmaryk’s ruling.

    Abortion has emerged as a potent political issue in the US since the Supreme Court overturned its landmark 1973 Roe v Wade ruling recognising a constitutional right to abortion, leaving the issue for states to decide.

    Polls show that support for abortion rights helped Democrats outperform in November’s midterm elections, an anti-abortion amendment to the Kansas state constitution failed in August and Wisconsin voters last week flipped the state’s supreme court to a liberal majority after a campaign that featured abortion.

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