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- Former Justice Department official says Trump is 'basically calling for the shooting of protesters'
- Lessons from Japan on containing coronavirus could help U.S. reopen safely
- How should the U.S. respond to China's Hong Kong power grab?
- Israel police kill Palestinian they mistakenly thought was armed
- Trudeau: Canadians watching US unrest and police violence in ‘shock and horror’
- Pope presides over virus prayer in hint normalcy returning
- Italy records 111 new coronavirus deaths, 416 new cases
- Biden demands justice in George Floyd death
- FBI's top lawyer, Dana Boente, ousted amid Fox News criticism for role in Flynn investigation
- China-India border: Why tensions are rising between the neighbours
- Five drug companies told to recall diabetes medication amid cancer fears
- Brazil virus death toll hits 28,834, surpassing hard-hit France
- Airlines schedule major increase in flights in July as pressure mounts on ministers to ease quarantine
- Elon Musk's SpaceX rocket launches into space
- Supreme Court rejects challenge to limits on church services
- Parolled Australian fears re-arrest in Bulgaria, seeks new trial
- Trump’s campaign tries to recapture its magic on the virtual campaign trail. Will it succeed?
- A Tennessee police chief had a message for fellow law enforcement: turn in your badge if 'you don't have an issue' with George Floyd's death
- Deleting Facebook, downloading VPNs: How Hong Kongers are preparing for a draconian law
- Thirteen years later, mother of Fort Drum soldier found dead after disappearing from bar seeks answers
- Grimes shares nickname for son with Elon Musk X Æ A-Xii
- Back off, Trump. Germany wants to Make Europe Strong Again.
- New report alleges killings, mass detentions in Ethiopia
- U.S. high court rejects church challenges to state pandemic rules
- Trump announces probe of Chinese companies listed in US
- George Floyd autopsy shows no signs of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation, attributes death to 'being restrained, his underlying health conditions, and any potential intoxicants in his system'
- Las Vegas hotel-casinos are reopening. Here's when and what you need to know
- Rudy Giuliani calls for resignations of mayor of Minneapolis, governor of Minnesota
- Revealed: the worrying links between Huawei, our universities and China
- Will Trump dispute the 2020 election results? His tweets this week suggest so
- Moderna starts dosing patients in mid-stage coronavirus vaccine study
- Derek Chauvin, officer arrested in George Floyd's death, has a record of shootings and complaints
- Afghan reporter killed as govt says ready for Taliban dialogue
- Judge Blocks Missouri Health Dept. from Shuttering State’s Only Remaining Planned Parenthood
- Elon Musk's biggest worry about SpaceX's first astronaut mission isn't the rocket launch — it's the spaceship's return to Earth
- Could smoking be banned in Nevada casinos in wake of COVID-19? Don't count on it.
- Hong Kong: China fury amid global pressure over security law
- GOP eyes flipping Michigan senate seat
- France, Britain, Germany 'regret' U.S. end to Iran nuclear waivers
- Merkel won't attend G7 summit in person if US goes ahead
- Minneapolis police officer who knelt on George Floyd’s neck had 18 previous internal complaints against him
- Amy Klobuchar's position on 2006 shooting by officer in George Floyd death 'could cost her VP role'
Posted: 29 May 2020 01:43 PM PDT |
Lessons from Japan on containing coronavirus could help U.S. reopen safely Posted: 29 May 2020 09:01 AM PDT |
How should the U.S. respond to China's Hong Kong power grab? Posted: 29 May 2020 12:46 PM PDT |
Israel police kill Palestinian they mistakenly thought was armed Posted: 30 May 2020 12:53 PM PDT Israeli police in annexed east Jerusalem on Saturday shot dead a disabled Palestinian they mistakenly thought was armed with a pistol, prompting furious condemnation from the Palestinians. The incident happened in the alleys of the walled Old City near Lions' Gate, an access point mainly used by Palestinians. "Police units on patrol there spotted a suspect with a suspicious object that looked like a pistol," an Israeli police statement said. |
Trudeau: Canadians watching US unrest and police violence in ‘shock and horror’ Posted: 29 May 2020 11:25 AM PDT Prime minister condemned racism and called on Canada to 'stand together in solidarity' against racial hate as protests continue in US * George Floyd killing – follow live updatesCanadians are watching unrest and police violence in the United States in "shock and horror", Justin Trudeau said on Friday – but the prime minister cautioned that his country also has entrenched problems with racism. The city of Minneapolis has been rocked by a third night of violent protests over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, after a white police officer knelt on his neck as he lay on the ground following arrest. "Many Canadians of diverse backgrounds are watching, like all Canadians are, the news out of the United States with shock and with horror," Trudeau told reporters at a daily briefing."Anti-black racism – racism – is real. It's in the United States but it's also in Canada and we know people are facing systemic discrimination, unconscious bias and anti-black racism every single day," said Trudeau, calling on the country to "stand together in solidarity" against racial hate. "We have work to do as well in Canada." Racial inequities continue to persist throughout the country – a grim reality that is often apparent during interactions with police. In December 2018, the province of Ontario released a landmark report that found black residents in Toronto – the country's largest city – are 20 times more likely to be shot dead by the police than white residents. "It's a very Canadian tradition to speak in platitudes, to refer to the underground railroad and to speak about Canada as a haven and a place that acknowledges its past mistakes," said Robyn Maynard, author of Policing Black Lives. "But we continue to see similar structural harms and structural kinds of violence as we do in places where leaders make more overtly vitriolic statements towards black communities."Last month, 26-year-old D'Andre Campbell was shot dead by police inside his own home, north of Toronto, after Campbell himself called 911.Earlier this week, the family of Regis Korchinski-Paquet said a police officer shoved the young woman over the balcony of the family's 24th-floor apartment, where she fell to her death. The case is currently under investigation by an arms-length police watchdog.Maynard also pointed out the coronavirus pandemic continues to have a disproportionate impact on black and indigenous residents, who are overrepresented in the country's prison population."We continue to see prisons and jails being epicentres of outbreaks," she said. "Yet there is failure on the part of the federal government to meaningfully release to release prisoners."Trudeau's unprompted remarks marked a notable departure for a leader who has gone to great lengths to avoid irritating his US counterpart, Donald Trump.Canadian prime ministers have traditionally refrained from discussing political and social turmoil in the US – Canada's main ally and largest trading partner. Justin Trudeau has long spoken about the need to tackle racism, but his re-election campaign was marred by pictures of him in blackface as a young man. |
Pope presides over virus prayer in hint normalcy returning Posted: 30 May 2020 12:14 PM PDT Pope Francis prayed Saturday for an end to the coronavirus pandemic and the development of a vaccine as he presided over an outdoor gathering that signaled a semblance of normalcy returning to the Vatican after a coronavirus lockdown lasting more than two months. Francis was joined in the Vatican Gardens by a representative sampling of people on the front lines of the emergency: a doctor, a nurse, a hospital chaplain, a pharmacist, a journalist and a civil protection official. A recovered COVID-19 patient, a person with a relative who died during Italy's outbreak, and the parents of a baby born during the emergency also were among the pope's more than 100 guests for the prayer at the grotto dedicated to the Virgin Mary. |
Italy records 111 new coronavirus deaths, 416 new cases Posted: 30 May 2020 09:31 AM PDT |
Biden demands justice in George Floyd death Posted: 29 May 2020 11:43 AM PDT |
FBI's top lawyer, Dana Boente, ousted amid Fox News criticism for role in Flynn investigation Posted: 30 May 2020 03:43 PM PDT |
China-India border: Why tensions are rising between the neighbours Posted: 29 May 2020 09:33 PM PDT |
Five drug companies told to recall diabetes medication amid cancer fears Posted: 29 May 2020 11:53 AM PDT Five US pharmaceutical companies have been told to recall their versions of a type of diabetes medication after tests found worrying levels of a chemical linked to cancer.Several batches of metformin, which is widely used to reduce excess blood sugar in type 2 diabetes patients, tested positive for unsafe levels of N-Nitrosodimethylamine, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said on Thursday. |
Brazil virus death toll hits 28,834, surpassing hard-hit France Posted: 30 May 2020 04:32 PM PDT Brasília (AFP) - Brazil on Saturday reached 28,834 coronavirus fatalities, authorities said, surpassing hard-hit France and becoming the country with the world's fourth-highest death toll. At the epicenter of South America's coronavirus outbreak, Brazil also saw an increase of 33,274 cases in the past 24 hours -- a new daily record, the Health Ministry said. Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro remain the hardest-hit states in Brazil in terms of sheer numbers, while per capita rates are higher in the country's impoverished north and northeast, where health facilities are reaching capacity. |
Posted: 30 May 2020 11:44 AM PDT Airlines have scheduled a dramatic increase in flights in July in anticipation that Governments will lift travel restrictions for holidaymakers and save the industry from potential collapse, according to data seen by The Sunday Telegraph. The companies which have already laid off tens of thousands of workers are banking on a "V-shaped" recovery by scheduling 161,200 passenger flights and 29.5 million seats for July, just eight per cent down on last year's July timetables. The strategy to open up business travel and holiday routes to hotspot favourites like Greece, Italy, France and Spain comes as most European countries are preparing to lift their quarantines or open their borders in mid June or at least by July 1. It will increase pressure on Boris Johnson to make good his suggestion last week that the UK's quarantine - to be introduced on June 8 - could be replaced with "air bridges" to low-risk holiday destinations when it is reviewed on June 29. One senior industry source claimed: "The sense is that they might quietly do a U-turn after the first review period. Grant Shapps [the Transport Secretary] is against quarantine, the Treasury are against it, Beis is against it and DCMS hate it." The exclusive data, from Cirium, a travel analytics firm, shows how the coronavirus pandemic devastated the aviation industry as it tore across the world. Scheduled passengers were 22.5 million in February, 10 per cent up on last year before it slumped by 93 per cent in April and May. It has risen in June to 38.5 per cent down on last year, as the Far East has opened up, and rises to just minus eight per cent in July as airlines anticipate Europe unlocking. June and July are "scheduled" rather than actual flights, which will depend on quarantines easing in June and July. Germany has lifted restrictions, Italy wants to resume travel on June 15, and Spain and Portugal are aiming for July 1. France hopes to drop border controls to and from EU countries after June 15 except with countries that impose quarantine on a "reciprocal" basis, namely the UK. Greece has excluded the UK from a "white list" of 29 countries it judges are low-risk enough from which to accept tourists from June 15 without quarantine although it will open up to more countries after it reviews their infection rates at the end of June. British Airways says it is aiming for a "meaningful return" to flying in July, RyanAir plans to ramp up flights to at least 40 per cent of its normal July schedule and EasyJet, which has laid off one in three staff, hopes to operate 30 per cent of its pre-crisis timetable from July to September. Paul Charles, chief executive of PC Consultancy, which advises the tourist industry, said Britain's quarantine risked "killing" the economy. "Travel companies have not had any bookings for April or May. They are worried that if they don't get them in June, they will go under," he said. The Airport Operators' Association (AOA) has urged ministers to aim for the first "air bridges" to "low risk" destinations by June 8 so that holidaymakers can sidestep quarantine and the requirement to self-isolate for 14 days on their return to the UK. The Department for Transport will shortly publish new guidelines for "safe" travel which will include face coverings or masks throughout the journey, temperature checks, social distancing in airports and contactless travel including for check-ins and payments. An AOA spokesman said: "Once these guidelines are agreed and given that they are based on a common European baseline, this puts in place the right conditions for opening up air bridges to low-risk countries." The Home Office which has led the moves to introduce quarantine has, however, warned that it will block attempts to lift the quarantine unless it is safe and there is no risk of it sparking a second wave of coronavirus. A Department for Transport source said: "There is certainly a willingness in Government to do as much for this Summer as is safe." Post-coronavirus air travel: No travel if you have symptoms If ill, no cost re-booking or refunds up to six hours before flying Face masks or coverings from arrival at airport to leaving terminal at destination Only passengers in the terminal, no tearful goodbyes at departure gates Contact-less electronic check-in and boarding Social distancing and one-way systems for waiting and queuing passengers Airports' association pressing for temperature checks Exemption from two-metre rule on plane No on-board duty free, reduced food and drink service, pre-packaged food and cashless payments |
Elon Musk's SpaceX rocket launches into space Posted: 30 May 2020 01:16 PM PDT |
Supreme Court rejects challenge to limits on church services Posted: 29 May 2020 09:34 PM PDT A divided Supreme Court on Friday rejected an emergency appeal by a California church that challenged state limits on attendance at worship services that have been imposed to contain the spread of the coronavirus. Over the dissent of the four more conservative justices, Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court's four liberals in turning away a request from the South Bay United Pentecostal Church in Chula Vista, California, in the San Diego area. |
Parolled Australian fears re-arrest in Bulgaria, seeks new trial Posted: 30 May 2020 10:22 AM PDT Jock Palfreeman, 33, who served 11 years of a 20-year sentence for murder and attempted murder in the 2007 stabbing of two Bulgarians, was released on parole in September. Palfreeman said he was "completely shocked" by the systemic lawlessness in Bulgarian jails, adding that 90% of prisoners were not allowed to do any work. |
Trump’s campaign tries to recapture its magic on the virtual campaign trail. Will it succeed? Posted: 30 May 2020 02:00 AM PDT |
Posted: 30 May 2020 10:18 AM PDT |
Deleting Facebook, downloading VPNs: How Hong Kongers are preparing for a draconian law Posted: 30 May 2020 11:23 AM PDT |
Posted: 30 May 2020 08:09 AM PDT Patrick Rust, 24, was last seen on March 16, 2007, at a bar in Watertown, New York, called "Clueless." The soldier had just finished two tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was stationed in New York at Fort Drum and had just received news he was being assigned to Fort Lewis, Washington, where he'd be trained to become a staff sergeant. Six months later, a farmer found Patrick's skeletal remains in a field about five miles from the bar. The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office is inves |
Grimes shares nickname for son with Elon Musk X Æ A-Xii Posted: 30 May 2020 01:49 AM PDT |
Back off, Trump. Germany wants to Make Europe Strong Again. Posted: 30 May 2020 05:57 AM PDT |
New report alleges killings, mass detentions in Ethiopia Posted: 29 May 2020 01:32 AM PDT A new report by the rights group Amnesty International accuses Ethiopia's security forces of extrajudicial killings and mass detentions even as the country's reformist prime minister was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. The report issued Friday says security forces killed at least 25 people in 2019 in the East Guji and West Guji zones of the restive Oromia region amid suspicions of supporting a rebel group, the Oromo Liberation Army, and a once-exiled opposition group. The government of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who was awarded the peace prize in December for sweeping political reforms and restoring ties with neighboring Eritrea after two decades of hostilities, acknowledged that "the reform process has at times experienced bumps" but called the report "a one-sided snapshot security analysis that fails to appropriately capture the broader political trajectory and security developments." |
U.S. high court rejects church challenges to state pandemic rules Posted: 29 May 2020 04:22 PM PDT The U.S. Supreme Court rejected challenges on Friday to curbs on religious services in California and Illinois during the coronavirus pandemic. In the California dispute, the nine justices split 5-4 in rejecting a bid by South Bay United Pentecostal Church in Chula Vista to block the rules issued by Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat. Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court's four liberal justices in the majority. |
Trump announces probe of Chinese companies listed in US Posted: 29 May 2020 01:10 PM PDT US President Donald Trump on Friday ordered a probe into the actions of Chinese companies listed on American financial markets as tensions flared anew between the world's two biggest economies. The announcement followed Beijing's move to implement a new security law on semi-autonomous Hong Kong that critics say would stifle freedom, as well as with Trump's claims that China obfuscated the origins of the coronavirus that has killed more than 100,000 people in the United States. "I'm instructing my presidential working group on financial markets to study the differing practices of Chinese companies listed on the US financial markets with the goal of protecting American investors," Trump said, without providing details on what steps his administration might take. |
Posted: 30 May 2020 07:58 AM PDT |
Las Vegas hotel-casinos are reopening. Here's when and what you need to know Posted: 29 May 2020 03:06 PM PDT |
Rudy Giuliani calls for resignations of mayor of Minneapolis, governor of Minnesota Posted: 29 May 2020 06:57 PM PDT |
Revealed: the worrying links between Huawei, our universities and China Posted: 29 May 2020 11:20 AM PDT With its cast iron replica of Budapest's Liberty Bridge and its pale-stoned version of Versailles, visitors to Huawei's research centre in Dongguan could be forgiven for thinking they were in Europe. It is a benign – if eccentric – tribute. But other attempts to forge close ties to the Western culture have much more serious implications. The Telegraph can disclose today that the controversial Chinese telecoms giant backed 17 scientific papers with UK universities, about cutting-edge "dual use" technologies – which can have civilian applications but can also be used in military technology. At least 15 of the papers focused on technology that experts claim could be used to communicate with swarms of drones or on highly advanced image recognition software that experts claim could be used for extreme levels of surveillance. All of them involve collaborations between British universities, including at Edinburgh and Exeter, and Chinese universities heavily involved in military research and named as "high risk" by an Australian think tank. |
Will Trump dispute the 2020 election results? His tweets this week suggest so Posted: 29 May 2020 03:34 AM PDT Trump's attack on mail-in ballots raise the possibility that, if he loses in November, he would reject the validity of the voteUnhinged as it may be for the president to accuse, without a scintilla of evidence, a morning television host of murder, that particular conspiracy theory was not the most disturbing accusation to issue from Trump's Twitter feed this week. No, that prize goes to his tweet from 26 May, claiming:> There is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent. Mail boxes will be robbed, ballots will be forged & even illegally printed out & fraudulently signed … This will be a Rigged Election. No way!The president's defamation of Joe Scarborough is no more than an extreme version of something we have seen throughout Trump's tenure in office: his ability to deflect attention from one colossal misstep by simply committing a fresh outrage. The fact that even a handful of Republicans have expressed mild regret at Trump's bizarre accusation only underscores that it has served its instrumental purpose. For the moment, the news cycle is consumed not with the fact that 100,000 Americans have died in a pandemic that the White House recklessly insisted posed no threat; instead, all attention is riveted on the spectacle of a sitting president accusing an opponent in the "lame stream media" of homicide. Trump's attack on mail-in ballots, by contrast, is far more ominous. Here, the president is defaming not an individual but the integrity of our electoral process, confidence in which is a key to a stable democratic order. And the purpose of this attack is not distraction but pointedly political. The politics of disenfranchisement has emerged as a staple of Republican electoral strategy, and the reasons for targeting mail-in ballots are not hard to divine. The bulk of such ballots are cast in urban areas, where Democratic voters predominate, and as the nation continues to grapple with the Covid-19 outbreak, we can expect millions of urban voters to cast mail-in ballots in November as a hedge against the obvious health risks that come with in-person voting. Trump's tweets serve, then, the politics of voter suppression. But that is only one aspect of the dark logic behind the tweets. Far more alarmingly, Trump's attack on the reliability of mail-in votes establishes the groundwork for a radical refusal to acknowledge electoral defeat. In contrast to ballots cast in-person on 3 November, mail-in ballots often cannot be fully counted until several days after the election. This means that in a very tight race, the results announced on election day may be no more than provisional; and second, because of the demographic patterns I mentioned above, the full counting of ballots may well swing the outcome in the favor of Democratic candidates. The 2018 Arizona senatorial race witnessed a particularly dramatic case of this effect, dubbed the "blue shift" by election law expert Ned Foley. On election day, Martha McSally, the Republican candidate, enjoyed a 15,000-vote lead over her Democratic rival, Kyrsten Sinema. By the time the state's canvassing had ended, however, McSally found herself defeated by Sinema by some 56,000 votes – a swing of 71,000 thousand votes. Trump is more than familiar with the phenomenon of blue shift. Also in 2018, when the senatorial race in Florida saw Republican Rick Scott's lead over Bill Nelson shrink from over 56,000 on election day to an uncomfortable 10,000 by the time the state completed its canvass, Trump had urgently tweeted:> The Florida Election should be called in favor of Rick Scott…in that large numbers of ballots showed up from nowhere, and many ballots are missing or forged. An honest vote count is no longer possible—ballots massively infected. Must go with Election Night! Recall that in 2016, Trump's margin of victory over Hillary Clinton was a combined 70,000 votes in the swing states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. It is more than possible that Trump could narrowly capture these states on 3 November, only to see his victory vanish as mail-in ballots are tallied in the days following the election. His tweet from Tuesday tells us how he would respond to such a loss. He will reject it as a product of fraud. That is an eventuality – or even a certainty – that the nation must prepare itself for. * Lawrence Douglas is the author, most recently, of Will He Go? Trump and the Looming Electoral Meltdown in 2020, published by Twelve/Hachette on 19 May. Douglas holds the James J Grosfeld chair in law, jurisprudence and social thought, at Amherst College, Massachusetts, and is also a contributing opinion writer for the Guardian US. |
Moderna starts dosing patients in mid-stage coronavirus vaccine study Posted: 29 May 2020 02:20 PM PDT There are currently about 10 coronavirus vaccines being tested in humans and experts have predicted that a safe and effective vaccine could take 12 to 18 months from the start of development. Earlier this month, Moderna had released https://in.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-moderna/coronavirus-vaccine-from-moderna-appears-safe-shows-promise-in-data-from-eight-people-idINKBN22U1KQ early-stage data that showed the vaccine, mRNA-1273, was safe and produced protective antibodies in a small group of healthy volunteers. |
Posted: 29 May 2020 07:45 PM PDT |
Afghan reporter killed as govt says ready for Taliban dialogue Posted: 30 May 2020 01:47 PM PDT A roadside bomb killed a television journalist in Kabul on Saturday, soon after a top Afghan official appointed to lead peace talks with the Taliban said his team was ready for the long-delayed dialogue. The blast, which targeted a minibus carrying 15 employees of private television channel Khurshid TV, was claimed by the Islamic State group, according to SITE Intelligence which monitors jihadist activity. The attack, which the government called "heinous", claimed the lives of a reporter and a driver, and punctuated an overall reduction in violence that has followed on from a three-day ceasefire the Taliban instigated May 24. |
Judge Blocks Missouri Health Dept. from Shuttering State’s Only Remaining Planned Parenthood Posted: 29 May 2020 11:51 AM PDT A state judge on Friday declared that Missouri's sole remaining Planned Parenthood clinic will be allowed to remain open, ruling that the health department was in error not to renew the license of the St. Louis clinic."Planned Parenthood has demonstrated that it provides safe and legal abortion care. In over 4,000 abortions provided since 2018, the Department has only identified two causes to deny its license," Missouri Administrative Hearing Commissioner Sreenivasa Rao Dandamudi wrote in his ruling."Ultimately, we have no concerns with the substance of Planned Parenthood's quality assurance review, and there are no other indications of deficient practices," the commissioner continued. "Therefore, Planned Parenthood is entitled to renewal of its abortion facility license."The Missouri Department of Public Health last year attempted to close the St. Louis Planned Parenthood by refusing to renew its license over allegations that the facility performed "failed abortions" that led to more surgeries and put one of the mothers' lives at risk.If the clinic had been forced to close permanently, Missouri would have become the only state to have zero abortion clinics since 1974, the year after the Supreme Court decided Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion nationwide."It is a sad day when the health and safety of women is sacrificed in the name of abortion access," said Jeanne Mancini, President of March for Life, adding that the St. Louis Planned Parenthood has "demonstrated consistently that they value profits above the health and safety of women.""Their numerous deficiencies, which Planned Parenthood refused to correct when given the opportunity, merited closure. The women of Missouri deserve better," Mancini said.Missouri's Republican governor, Mike Parson, signed a law last year prohibiting abortions after eight weeks, one of a number of extremely restrictive state abortion laws designed to spark court challenges that could potentially lead to the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the Supreme Court. |
Posted: 30 May 2020 11:41 AM PDT |
Could smoking be banned in Nevada casinos in wake of COVID-19? Don't count on it. Posted: 30 May 2020 09:40 AM PDT |
Hong Kong: China fury amid global pressure over security law Posted: 29 May 2020 11:02 AM PDT |
GOP eyes flipping Michigan senate seat Posted: 29 May 2020 10:27 PM PDT As Republicans work to maintain their control of the Senate in November, they're looking to flip seats in some key battleground states. That includes Michigan, where two challengers are looking to unseat incumbent Democratic Senator Gary Peters. Riley Beggin, a political reporter for Bridge Magazine, spoke with CBS News about the contest. |
France, Britain, Germany 'regret' U.S. end to Iran nuclear waivers Posted: 30 May 2020 01:46 AM PDT France, Germany and Britain on Saturday criticised a U.S. decision to end sanctions waivers allowing work on Iranian nuclear sites designed to prevent weapons development. "We deeply regret the U.S. decision to end the three waivers," the three European countries said in a joint statement. "These projects, endorsed by U.N. Security Council Resolution 2231, serve the non-proliferation interests of all and provide the international community with assurances of the exclusively peaceful and safe nature of Iranian nuclear activities." |
Merkel won't attend G7 summit in person if US goes ahead Posted: 30 May 2020 01:09 AM PDT Chancellor Angela Merkel will not personally attend a meeting in the U.S. with the leaders of the world's major economies if President Donald Trump goes ahead with it, unless the course of the coronavirus spread changes by then, her office said Saturday. After canceling the Group of Seven summit, originally scheduled for June 10-12 at Camp David, Trump said a week ago that he was again considering hosting an in-person meeting of world leaders because it would be a "great sign to all" of things returning to normal during the pandemic. |
Posted: 29 May 2020 12:09 AM PDT The Minneapolis police officer who was filmed kneeling on George Floyd's neck for several minutes even as he said "I can't breathe" has previously been the subject of multiple complaints filed to the Minneapolis Police Department's Internal Affairs Division, it has emerged.Mr Chauvin, who has been fired along with the other three police officers who apprehended Mr Floyd, was reported to the division 18 times. According to a police summary, only two of the complaints were "closed with discipline". |
Posted: 29 May 2020 09:57 AM PDT Amy Klobuchar's decision as a Minneapolis prosecutor in 2006 not to bring charges against the police officer filmed kneeling on the neck of George Floyd could cost her the role of vice president, critics have said.With Joe Biden asking Ms Klobuchar to undergo official vetting to be his running mate in November, the death of Mr Floyd has renewed scrutiny of her record as a district attorney that reportedly brought zero charges against police involved in 40 deaths during her tenure. |
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