There are growing concerns that the heat and humidity at the Tokyo Olympics next summer may pose a danger to athletes. Earlier this month, a worker at an Olympic construction site in the city died from heat stroke. Across the country, a heat wave beginning in late July killed at least 57 people. Organizers say they are taking measures to combat the potential hazards, as Henry Ridgwell reports from the Japanese capital.
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Month: August 2019
Britain’s Dilemma: US or Europe
It was music to the ears of Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson. The British will be able to strike a “fantastic deal” with the United States once Britain has thrown off the “anchor” of the European Union, U.S. President Donald Trump told Johnson during a convivial bilateral meeting at the G-7 summit in the French resort of Biarritz, where they breakfasted Sunday on scrambled eggs and veal sausages.”We’re going to do a very big trade deal, bigger than we’ve ever had with the U.K., and now at some point they won’t have the obstacle, they won’t have the anchor around their ankle, because that’s what they have,” Trump said. Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets U.S. President Donald Trump for bilateral talks during the G-7 summit in Biarritz, France Aug. 25, 2019.Later, U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton said the special relationship had “never been stronger.” “Enjoyed accompanying Donald Trump at his working breakfast with Boris Johnson where we collaborated on ways to further deepen our security and economic relationship with the UK,” Bolton tweeted. The U.S. embrace was welcome news for Johnson, who has invested politically in a close relationship with Trump and presented a fast-tracked Anglo-American trade deal as a major ingredient in the “global Britain” future he and other Brexiters have advertised. Johnson has been buoyed by Trump’s praise of him since he succeeded Theresa May as prime minister. The U.S. leader has described him as “Britain Trump” and talked enthusiastically about the trans-Atlantic partnership the pair will forge.Widening riftsFor a Britain struggling to work out its place in the world after it relinquishes its membership in the European Union, set for Oct. 31, the future challenge will be to balance relations between the U.S. and Europe, analysts say.Johnson can’t afford to fall out with Britain’s European neighbors, especially if he wants to find a way out of the Brexit impasse and leave on good terms with the EU and a future trade deal.Maintaining the balance won’t be easy amid widening rifts between Washington and Brussels on a host of key issues, including climate change, relations with Russia, rising nationalism, the role of multilateralism, and raging economic warfare between the U.S. and China. Analysts say it will be made trickier by having to deal with a U.S. president who sees diplomacy as a zero-sum game, and French President Emmanuel Macron, who appears eager to define dividing lines between Europe and the U.S.On Sunday, Macron surprised fellow G-7 leaders by announcing that Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif would fly to Biarritz for unexpected talks on the summit’s sidelines — a bid to revive the 2015 nuclear accord from which the U.S. withdrew last year.An Iranian government plane is seen on the tarmac at Biarritz airport in Anglet during the G-7 summit in Biarritz, France, Aug. 25, 2019.Britain has long had to navigate between the U.S. and Europe, and since World War II has positioned itself as the diplomatic interface between Washington and the Europeans. Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair used to talk about Britain being a trans-Atlantic bridge. That go-between role will likely be more difficult to pull off in the coming years, especially if Britain crashes out of the EU acrimoniously and without an exit deal, which analysts say could poison Britain’s relations with Europe.’Agonizing choices’ aheadBrexit has coincided with an apparent inflection point in trans-Atlantic relations, with the U.S. and western Europe drifting further apart with unpredictable policy shifts.”Agonizing choices face the United Kingdom this year, some of them immediate and obvious,” according to former Conservative lawmaker and columnist Matthew Parris. “But the biggest is less apparent, yet will shape our nation’s future in a way that no wrangles about EU deals ever can. Does Britain’s destiny lie with the States? As two global blocs, Europe and America, diverge, we shall be making that decision whether we know it or not.” French President Emmanuel Macron attends a joint press conference with U.S. President Donald Trump (not seen) at the end of the G-7 summit in Biarritz, France, Aug. 26, 2019.Britain is as divided on that — whether its future lies with Europe or America — as it is on the immediate issue of Brexit itself. Do its economic fortunes lie to the West or East? Is it more culturally and philosophically tied with the U.S. or Europe? The dilemma is further complicated by the likelihood that even after Brexit, Europe will remain its single largest trading partner. But Britain will need to compensate for the likely loss of post-Brexit trade with Europe and is eager for a trade deal with the U.S.At his first G-7 summit as prime minister, Johnson trod a careful line — announcing Britain may be leaving the EU but maintaining that it isn’t leaving Europe. He maintained unity with the Europeans on Iran, climate change, international trade and Russia, pushing back, along with other EU leaders, on Trump’s idea for Russia to be readmitted to the G-7, from which it was ejected after Moscow’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea.Despite that, Johnson appeared not to disrupt his relationship with Trump. Even British detractors of the new prime minister acknowledged Monday he managed to maintain poise on the geopolitical high wire he has to tread. Johnson may have been aided inadvertently by Macron’s decision as summit host not to issue a final communique, avoiding the kind of highly public dust-ups that derailed last year’s event in Canada.
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DOJ Moves to Add More Marijuana Growers for Research
The Justice Department is moving forward to expand the number of marijuana growers for federally-authorized cannabis research.
Uttam Dhillon, the acting administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, says Monday’s move would give researchers a wider variety of cannabis to study. He says the DEA supports additional marijuana research.
The DEA says the number of people registered to conduct research with marijuana and extracts has jumped more than 40 percent in the last two years. The agency is also planning to propose new regulations to govern the marijuana growers’ program.
Researchers at federally-funded entities have faced legal barriers in recent years because marijuana remains illegal under federal law, even as a growing number of states have legalized medical and so-called recreational marijuana.
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Trump, Macron Highlight Unity at G-7 Despite Differences
President Donald Trump and French President Emanuel Macron said there was unity on major issues at the G-7 summit in France, despite differences on display during the gathering that was dominated by trade issues, Iran’s nuclear program and the fires scorching the Amazon.At the joint news conference Monday, Trump spoke of “tremendous unity” at the summit, while Macron said all parties “have managed to find real points of convergence.”Iran meeting
On Iran, Macron said he hoped for the meeting in the near future between Trump and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.”If the circumstances were correct, I would certainly agree to that,” Trump said while stressing that Iran cannot have nuclear weapons or ballistic missiles.Macron reiterated his commitment to the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement that Trump pulled out of last year. Trump again called it a bad deal.US-China trade
During the summit, G-7 leaders here have expressed concern about the escalation of the U.S.-China trade fight.Trump said the U.S. has received a positive call from Beijing on the issue. “They want to get something done,” he said.Russia
On the issue of Russia, Trump has been at odds with most other G7 leaders about his desire to readmit Moscow into the group.In 2014, G-8 members suspended Russian membership over the annexation of Crimea, a territory part of Ukraine which Moscow still now occupies.Trump said Russia would be an “asset” to the G-7 and again blamed on its annexation of Crimea on his predecessor President Barack Obama.
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Thousands Flee Violence in Cameroon’s English-Speaking Regions
Tens of thousands of people have deserted Cameroon’s conflict prone English-speaking regions after a bloody weekend. Fighting between the military and separatists left at least 40 people dead, and a prominent Catholic bishop was abducted. The renewed fighting comes after a military tribunal ordered separatist leaders imprisoned for life. The new violence has dashed hopes that schools would re-open this week, after being closed for three years.Six hundred people wait at Amour Mezam, a bus terminal in Cameroon’s northwestern town of Bamenda, seeking rides to French-speaking towns. Like other bus companies in this area, the agency here has been overwhelmed with thousands of travelers leaving the English-speaking area over the past week.Eunice Tanlaka, a 32-year-old, says bus station officials have promised she and her two children will be able to get on the next bus for Yaounde, the capital.”I have been tired the whole day, the children have been tired, the fatigue is just too much,” said Tanlaka. “Talk less of the transport fare that has been increased. It has not been easy on us, seriously.”Tanlaka said she is leaving Bamenda because separatist groups ordered businesses closed for at least two weeks, and attacked people who defied their instructions.23-year-old Elizabeth Mbunwe says she left the English-speaking town of Ndop when a military attack against separatist fighters killed six civilians, including a baby.”How can you be fighting for someone and then you kill them? The military says they are for the people but then again turn to kill them,” said Mbunwe. “So, it is a whole confusing situation and we do not know who to walk to for help.”The government says at least 40 people were killed in renewed fighting between the military and separatist fighters in the English-speaking towns of Ndop, Bafut, Kumbo, Bamenda, Mamfe and Kumba.At least eight people, including the Catholic bishop of the Kumbo diocese, George Nkuo, were kidnapped. The bishop was released when priests and hundreds of Catholics started marching to the bush areas where the separatists hide, demanding his freedom. The military says it is hunting for the other kidnapping victims.Deben Tchoffo, governor of the English-speaking northwest region, says he has deployed troops to protect the population. He urged people not to flee and to assist the government in assuring their own security.”Within our system of popular defense, I call on everybody, the population, traditional rulers, the administrative authorities, to revamp and remobilize the vigilante groups in the cities, the villages and the remote areas of the region,” said Tchoffo. “We also need the contribution of the population to ease the task of the security forces”The recent attacks began after a Yaoundé military tribunal said it had found separatist leader Julius Ayuk Tabe and his nine supporters guilty of secession, terrorism and hostility against the state. The tribunal handed down life prison sentences.Separatists on social media ordered everyone in Cameroon’s English-speaking western regions to stay home to protest the sentences. They vow that schools will not open in the region until their leader is freed.Violence erupted in the English-speaking regions in 2016 when teachers and lawyers protested alleged discrimination at the hands of the French-speaking majority.
The government responded with a crackdown that sparked an armed movement for an independent English-speaking state.
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Observers Urge Social Media Platforms to Keep Scrutinizing China-Backed Accounts
Three U.S. social media giants – Facebook, Twitter and Google’s YouTube – have taken action to remove hundreds of accounts with alleged ties to the Chinese government’s manipulation of opinion about the months-long anti-government movement in Hong Kong.But analysts said more needs to be done, as China’s global media drive to control information beyond its borders has become so “irrevocable” that it poses a threat to democratic development and press freedom throughout the world.YouTube said last week that it has suspended 210 channels, which “behaved in a coordinated manner while uploading videos related to the ongoing protests in Hong Kong.” Those channels were suspected to be part of a Beijing-backed campaign to influence opinion about the city’s political unrest.The move followed similar measures announced by Twitter and Facebook earlier last week to stop the distribution of disinformation content, for example, likening the anti-government protests in Hong Kong to the terrorist group Islamic State.Protesters use bamboo sticks as they face riot police during a protest in Hong Kong, Aug. 25, 2019.Hate SpeechSuch comparison is not only misleading, but also a distortion from the political reality, said Hong Kong political commentator Sang Pu.“They also want to create a kind of hate speech among the [Hong Kong] people. So this means, this information of hate speech, fake news, they are [spread] all around the world,” Sang said.Twitter said it had disabled 936 accounts originating from within China, and Facebook followed suit, removing seven pages, three groups and five accounts involved in what it called “coordinated inauthentic behavior.”“We welcome the decision of Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to close accounts with ties to the Beijing regime, which are suspected to have distributed disinformation content regarding Hong Kong,” said Cedric Alviani, the director of Reporters Without Borders (RSF) East Asia bureau in Taipei.RSF urged the public to pay special attention to the source of the news they receive and to report content that purposefully presents a distorted image of reality.The group’s report in March titled ‘China’s Pursuit of a New World Media Order’ said that disinformation and propaganda are two of Beijing’s favorite weapons against critical voices.Protesting the blocking of accounts by Twitter and Facebook, China’s Foreign Ministry Spokesman Geng Shuang said “Chinese living abroad should have the right to express their opinion and the stance of 1.4 billion Chinese on Hong Kong affairs.”UnderestimationWhile lauding their efforts, Sang Pu urged the three western platforms to continue their scrutiny as they may have underestimated the number of accounts China uses to amplify its messages worldwide. Blocked in China, most western social media including Twitter can only be accessed using virtual private networks (VPNs).But Twitter said some accounts accessed its platform from unblocked IP addresses originating in China.Evidently, Chinese authorities were behind it, said Zhou Shuguang, a prominent citizen journalist and blogger from China who currently lives in Taiwan.“Some private companies and groups hired by the [Chinese] government have, in an organized manner, registered lots of virtual accounts or created Twitter bots to spread fake news on Twitter,” Zhou said.“[China’s] 50 cent army and Twitter bots, along with its self-employed 50 cent army, work together. That’s how China achieves its propaganda goals,” he added. 50 Cent ArmyThe 50 cent army is a colloquial term for Chinese internet commentators whom the authorities hire to help amplify their messages online at a rate of 50 cents per post.Zhou said that most western social media platforms are able and entitled to delete China-sponsored manipulative accounts, but it’s tricky to manage real accounts owned by the so-called self-employed 50 cent army. They are often heavily influenced by China’s state-controlled news outlets and social media – the likes of Weibo and WeChat, which Sang said pose another serious threat to the world’s press freedom since they are not blocked outside of China.Global Media Campaign“They’ve all been brainwashed by this fake news. And not just the mainland Chinese, and also for foreigners who watch those things and they may be brainwashed bit by bit by all this fake news and disinformation, hate speech and discussion. So, we need to be very careful about all these things,” the commentator said.Sang expressed worries that the global media campaign, which China initiated a decade ago at an initial budget of $6.3 billion, has been “ongoing, more precise, in-depth and also irrevocable.”The campaign aims to enhance China’s global influence and image through the overseas expansion of state media and paid ads or editorials in overseas news outlets including social media platforms.To combat China’s manipulation, Sang said that it’s important that the public check facts about news they hear and that other social media platforms follow suit to remove questionable accounts.Judicial action is further needed to root out any hidden forces that aim to spread fake news and disinformation online, he added.
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Indonesia To Move Capital from Jakarta to East Kalimantan
Indonesia’s president announced Monday that the country’s capital will move from overcrowded, sinking and polluted Jakarta to a site in sparsely populated East Kalimantan province on Borneo island, known for rainforests and orangutans.President Joko Widodo said intense studies over the past three years had resulted in the choice of the location on the eastern side of Borneo island.
The new capital city, which has not yet been named, will be in the middle of the vast archipelago nation and already has relatively complete infrastructure because it is near the cities of Balikpapan and Samarinda, Widodo said.He said the burden has been become too heavy on Jakarta on Java island as the center of government, finance, business, trade and services as well as the location of the country’s largest airport and seaport.Widodo said the decision was made not to move the capital elsewhere on Java because the country’s wealth and people are highly concentrated there and should be spread out.Currently 54% of the country’s nearly 270 million people live on Java, the country’s most densely populated area.“We couldn’t continue to allow the burden on Jakarta and Java island to increase in terms of population density,” Widodo said at a news conference in Jakarta’s presidential palace. “Economic disparities between Java and elsewhere would also increase”In an interview with The Associated Press last month, Widodo said he wants to separate the center of government from the country’s business and economic center in Jakarta.Jakarta is an archetypical Asian mega-city with 10 million people, or 30 million including those in its greater metropolitan area. It is prone to earthquakes and flooding and is rapidly sinking due to uncontrolled extraction of ground water. The ground water is highly contaminated as are its rivers. Congestion is estimated to cost the economy $6.5 billion a year.Mineral-rich East Kalimantan was once almost completely covered by rainforests, but illegal logging has removed many of its original growth. It is home to only 3.5 million people and is surrounded by Kutai National Park, known for orangutans and other primates and mammals.Widodo said the relocation of the capital to a 180,000-hectare (444,780-acre) site will take up a decade and cost as much as 466 trillion rupiah ($32.5 billion), of which 19% will come from the state budget and the rest will be funded by cooperation between the government and business entities and by direct investment by state-run companies and the private sector.He said the studies determined that the best site is between two districts, North Penajam Paser and Kutai Kertanegara, an area that has minimal risk of disasters such as floods, earthquakes, tsunamis, forest fires, volcanic eruptions or landslides in the seismically active nation.
Indonesia’s founding father and first president, Sukarno, once planned to relocate the country’s capital to Palangkaraya in Central Kalimantan province.Infrastructure improvement has been Widodo’s signature policy and helped him win a second term in April elections.Decades of discussions about building a new capital on Borneo island moved forward in April when Widodo approved a general relocation plan. He appealed for support for the move in an annual national address on the eve of Indonesia’s independence day on Aug. 16.He said Monday that his government is still drafting a law on the new capital which will need to be approved by Parliament.
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Democratic Republic of Congo Announces Government 8 Months after Vote
The Democratic Republic of Congo has announced a coalition government.The announcement comes eight months after President Felix Tshisekedi won a long-delayed presidential election.”The government is finally here,” Prime Minister Sylvestre Ilunga Ilukamba said Monday. “The president has signed the decree and we will begin work soon.”Under the power-sharing deal, 23 posts are going to members of Tshisekedi’s Direction for Change, while the remaining 42 will be filled by members of former president Joseph Kabila’s Common Front for Congo.The December vote was marred by disorganization at many polling stations, including missing voter rolls and malfunctioning electronic voting machines that pushed the vote well into nighttime hours, forcing election officials to conduct their activities by flashlight. A election observer mission set up by the Catholic Church said it had received at least 544 reports of malfunctioning voting machines.Violence also overshadowed the vote, with four people killed in eastern South Kivu, including a police officer and an election official, over accusations of voter fraud.The election to replace outgoing President Joseph Kabila was originally set to take place in 2016, but was called off when Kabila refused to step down after the end of his mandate. Kabila had ruled the DRC since his father’s assassination in 2001.The election was initially scheduled for December 23, but was postponed by a week because of a warehouse fire in the capital Kinshasha earlier in the month that destroyed thousands of voting machines.Election officials also decided to postpone the election in three cities until March. The eastern cities of Beni and Butembo were stricken with Ebola. The western city of Yumbi was experiencing ethnic violence. The move to delay the vote in the three locations affected more than one million voters.
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Russian Weather Agency Says Radioactive Isotopes Found After Accident
Russia’s state meteorological agency says it found several radioactive isotopes in samples it took following a recent accident at a northern military base during a weapons test.Roshydromet said in a statement on August 26 that it found strontium, barium and lanthanum in test samples in nearby Severodvinsk, but added that there was no danger to the public at large.The August 8 accident in the northern Russian region of Arkhangelsk, which killed at least five people and injured several others, raised concerns of atmospheric contamination after emergency officials reported a spike in background radiation levels.“I’m absolutely positive, and I have every reason to affirm the absence of any factors endangering the health and lives of people in the Arkhangelsk region, both on August 8 and at the present,” Interfax quoted regional Governor Igor Orlov as saying on August 26 after the Roshydromet statement was released.“There are no residents of the region or medical professionals who have been or are exposed as a result of the incident,” Orlov added.Some U.S. officials have said they believe radioactive elements were involved in the accident, and many analysts have focused attention on a nuclear-powered cruise missile that President Vladimir Putin announced was under development last year.The White Sea bay where both the shipbuilding port and the regional capital, Arkhangelsk, are located were ordered closed for swimming and fishing due to the presence of toxic rocket fuel.Following the accident, there were reports of panic buying of iodine drops in the shipbuilding town of Severodvinsk. Iodine is often taken to protect the thyroid gland from some types of radiation.Roshydromet said a cloud of inert radioactive gases formed as a result of a decay of the isotopes and was the cause of the brief spike in radiation in Severodvinsk.The isotopes were Strontium-91, Barium-139, Barium-140, and Lanthanum-140, which have half-lives of 9.3 hours, 83 minutes, 12.8 days, and 40 hours respectively, it said.
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Botswana Considers Free HIV/AIDS Drugs for Migrants
Mary Banda – not her real name – is a 35-year-old HIV positive sex worker from neighboring Zambia who cannot afford life-prolonging anti-retroviral drugs.Like many sex workers living with HIV in Botswana, she also cannot afford to travel back home to receive free treatment.That is why Banda welcomes legislation before the Botswana cabinet that, if passed, would provide free ARVs to HIV positive foreigners. “If they do that it will be a good idea because some of us are dying here,” she said. “Maybe someone will be getting (the) tablets back home, and when they get finished, they don’t have money to go back and take the tablets.”
Banda says a number of sex workers she knew in Botswana have died from AIDS-related illnesses due to lack of treatment.
Immigrants and sex workers in Botswana afflicted with the HIV virus that causes AIDS could get a lifeline as the southern African country is due to decide on offering free Anti-Retroviral (ARV) treatment to foreigners. An estimated 30,000 migrants have HIV in Botswana, which has the third highest HIV prevalence in the world. Experts say refusing to offer free ARV treatment is making it harder for Botswana to eradicate the virus.
Tosh Beka, who is head of the sex worker rights group Sisonke, says Botswana has about 1,500 foreign sex workers in need of ARV treatment.“If they are infected and are not getting any help and we are saying we want zero infections, then it means we are doing nothing,” he said.
Botswana’s has an estimated 30,000 HIV positive foreigners but only 7,000 are getting treatment, according to the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR).
PEPFAR coordinator Dan Craun-Selka says the agency supports offering free ARVs for all and has pledged to provide funding to Botswana. “Once the government changes this policy, it will help bring about epidemic controls in this country,” he said. “That is something that really needs to take place. We have discussed this with ministries and it’s now with the cabinet for their decision.”
Botswana became the first country in southern Africa to provide free ARV treatment to HIV positive citizens.
The measure has been partially credited with reducing Botswana’s high rate of HIV infection from 25 percent of the population down to 21 percent.
But Botswana still has the third highest HIV prevalence in the world, after Lesotho and eSwatini.National AIDS Coordinating Agency director Richard Matlhare says free treatment for HIV positive foreigners would further reduce the virus’s spread. “We must look at the overall bigger picture of ending AIDS and not leaving anyone behind,” he said. “On the other hand, we must look at the prevailing policies on the ground, and the cabinet must make a determination.”Botswana’s cabinet is expected to make a decision before the country holds general elections in October.
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NAACP Delegation Visits Ghana for ‘Year of Return’
It’s called the “Year of Return,” where people of African descent are encouraged to go to Ghana to mark 400 years since the first enslaved Africans were brought to what became the United States. This week, a delegation from the U.S. civil rights organization National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is in Ghana visiting the sites of their ancestors. It was a last-minute decision for Morandon Henry to come to Ghana. So far, the NAACP board of directors member has found his visit inspiring, emotional and rewarding.He is part of the group of almost 300 touring Ghana this week. On Thursday, he and some members visited the former home of W. E. B. Du Bois, the African American civil rights activist, historian and a co-founder of the NAACP who moved to Ghana in his later years. Today, his home is a museum and his final resting place in a leafy suburb of Ghana’s capital, Accra.“It is monumental, because he is one of the founders of our organization. And just to come and see the work him and his wife did when they came to Ghana was monumental for me. It was emotional, but just to see it in person was life-changing for me,” Henry said.The group has met with the president of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo, visited significant cultural and historic sites and taken part in business and labor forums. NAACP President Derrick Johnson says the journey is about reconnection.“It’s an opportunity for the NAACP, our member supporters and African Americans to reconnect with Africa to ensure that the African diaspora strengthens over time. But more importantly for us, to understand the journey that brought us to America,” Johnson said.Judy McKoy who is from the U.S. state of California had traced her ancestry to West Africa and wanted more people to see Ghana, a nation she found to be beautiful. She is behind the push to see Ghana and other African nations as top tourist destinations. Ghana hopes to attract half a million people for the Year of Return.“This is a beautiful place to come. I would come over and over again, and I hope everyone is getting that message that when you go on vacation, it’s not just to Eurocentric countries. Africa is a continent to be reckoned with,” McKoy said.The Year of Return campaign was launched by President Akufo-Addo in Washington, D.C., in 2018. So far, a number of high-profile visitors have made the trip to Ghana, including members of the Congressional Black Caucus, who visited last month.
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NAACP Delegation Visits Ghana for Year of Return
It’s called the “Year of Return”, where people of African descent are encouraged to come to Ghana to mark 400 years since the first enslaved Africans were brought to what became the United States. This week a delegation from U.S. civil rights organization, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, or NAACP, is in Ghana visiting the sites of their ancestors. Stacey Knott reports from Accra.
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Trump at G-7 Optimistic About Deals with China, Japan, Iran
G-7 leaders are closing their summit Monday with discussions about the climate and digital transformation, though those issues are likely to be overshadowed by a closing joint news conference with U.S. President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron.Trump grabbed early headlines Monday as he expressed optimism to reporters for trade deals with China and Japan, as well as prospects for an agreement with Iran. Those comments came while Trump sat next to Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sissi in what is usually a brief encounter with reporters before leaders go into a private meeting. Trump took questions for about 10 minutes.Trump downplayed any sense of tension between himself and French President Emmanuel Macron, after the French leader met Sunday with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.”I knew he was coming in, and I respected the fact that he was coming in,” said Trump, who added that he gave Macron his approval.Trump, who withdrew from the international agreement on Iran’s nuclear deal last year, said new negotiations would include Iran’s nuclear program and its ballistic missiles. He criticized the length of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action as being too short.”Iran has a chance to really build themselves up and be a very great nation, greater than before. But they have to stop terrorism,” Trump said.At the summit, Macron introduced a plan to defuse rising tensions in the Gulf by partially lifting the U.S. oil embargo on Iran in exchange for Tehran’s returning to full compliance to the 2015 deal that restricts its nuclear program.French President Emmanuel Macron and President Donald Trump participate in a G-7 Working Session on the Global Economy, Foreign Policy, and Security Affairs the G-7 summit in Biarritz, France August 25, 2019.He told LCI television that members had agreed on a joint action on Iran.Trump continues to resist pressure from his G-7 counterparts to rejoin the nuclear pact with Iran, a deal that’s considered a signature achievement of the Obama administration. After abandoning the pact, he slapped crippling sanctions on Tehran.China trade tensionsG-7 leaders here have expressed concern about the escalation of the U.S.-China trade fight, with summit host Macron saying he hopes for leaders to pull back from an all-out trade war.”I want to convince all our partners that tensions, and trade tensions in particular are bad for everybody,” he said in a speech.Speaking alongside Trump during a working breakfast meeting, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson publicly refuted Trump’s statement that other leaders have not pressured him to give up the trade war with China, believed to be causing uncertainty in the global economy and volatility in stock markets.”Just to register the faint, sheep-like note of our view on the trade war, we’re in favor of trade peace on the whole, and dialing it down if we can,” Johnson said.Johnson is seen as a natural ally to Trump due to similarities in their populist policies and Brexit. Trump, in his comments Monday, seemed optimistic about reaching a trade deal with China, saying, “I think we’re going to make a deal.”He said China had contacted U.S. trade officials by phone seeking to return to the negotiating table.”We are going to start talking very seriously. We’ll see how that goes,” Trump said.
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Trump: China Wants to Resume Trade Talks
U.S. President Donald Trump said Monday that China has reached out to resume trade negotiations, a move that comes after the two nations announced their latest round of reciprocal tariff hikes.Speaking at the meeting of G-7 leaders in France, Trump told reporters that China had called top U.S. trade representatives “and said let’s get back to the table.”He called the willingness to resume talks “a very positive development for the world.””They want to get something done. Now, maybe it won’t get done, but this is the first time I’ve seen them where they really do want to make a deal, and I think that’s a very positive step.”Trump declined to comment about whether he had been directly in touch with Chinese President Xi Jinping, but he repeatedly praised Xi, calling him a “great leader.”His comments followed those by China’s top trade negotiator Vice Premier Liu He, who said Monday that China is willing to negotiate with the United States to end the ongoing trade battle, and that China opposes “the escalation of the trade war.”The developments did little to soothe major stock markets in Japan, China and Hong Kong, which all traded down Monday.Last week, before heading to France to meet with leaders of some of the world’s leading economies, Trump boosted tariffs on $550 billion with of Chinese products shipped to the United States after China said it would raise tariffs on $75 billion worth of U.S. exports to Japan.The U.S.-China tariff war has roiled world stock markets for weeks, with wild gyrations in market performance, depending on the tariff announcements coming out of Washington and Beijing and then regaining ground when some hopeful signs surface that the world’s two biggest economies might yet reach a trade agreement in the coming months. On Friday, U.S. stock indexes plummeted more than 2% after China first announced the tariff hike on the $75 billion worth of U.S. exports, followed hours later by Trump saying he would increase existing tariffs on $250 billion of Chinese goods from 25% to 30% as of Oct. 1. In addition, he said a new round of tariffs on another $300 billion in Chinese exports would be increased from 10% to 15%. The first batch of those tariffs are set to take effect Sept. 1.Monday, after Trump’s comments, U.S. stock futures climbed, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average looking set to open 200 points higher.
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Nigerian Human Trafficking Victims Rebuild Their Lives After Returning Home
Nigeria’s agency for combating human trafficking is repatriating and re-settling women who have been subjected to forced labor and prostitution after being smuggled into Europe on false promises of working at well-paying jobs. Thousands of Nigerian women have been trafficked in recent years, though some were lucky enough to be able to return to their country. Timothy Obiezu takes a closer look at the story of some human trafficking victims who are now back in Nigeria rebuilding their lives.
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Hong Kong Police Draw Guns, Arrest 36 in Latest Protest
Hong Kong police drew their guns and fired a warning shot Sunday night after protesters attacked officers with sticks and rods, and brought out water cannon trucks for the first time, an escalation in the summerlong protests that have shaken the city’s government and residents.The day’s main showdown took place on a major drag in the outlying Tsuen Wan district following a protest march that ended in a nearby park. While a large crowd rallied in the park, a group of hard-line protesters took over a main street, strewing bamboo poles on the pavement and lining up orange and white traffic barriers and cones to obstruct police.After hoisting warning flags, police used tear gas to try to disperse the crowd. Protesters responded by throwing bricks and gasoline bombs toward the police. The result was a surreal scene of small fires and scattered paving bricks on the street between the two sides, rising clouds of tear gas and green and blue laser lights pointed by the protesters at the police.The protesters eventually decided to abandon their position. Two water cannon trucks and a phalanx of police vehicles with flashing lights joined riot police on foot as they advanced up the street. They met little resistance. Television footage showed a water cannon being fired once, but perhaps more as a test, as it didn’t appear to reach the retreating protesters.Officers pulled their guns after a group of remaining protesters chased them down a street with sticks and rods, calling them “gangsters.” The officers held up their shields to defend themselves as they retreated. Police said that one officer fell to the ground and six drew their pistols after they were surrounded, with one firing the warning shot.Some protesters said they’re resorting to violence because the government has not responded to their peaceful demonstrations.“The escalation you’re seeing now is just a product of our government’s indifference toward the people of Hong Kong,” said Rory Wong, who was at the showdown after the march.One neighborhood resident, Dong Wong, complained about the tear gas.“I live on the 15th floor and I can even smell it at home,” he said. “I have four dogs, sneezing, sneezing all day. … The protesters didn’t do anything, they just blocked the road to protect themselves.”Police said they arrested 36 people, including a 12-year-old, for offenses such as unlawful assembly, possession of an offensive weapon and assaulting police officers.Earlier Sunday, tens of thousands of umbrella-carrying protesters marched in the rain. Many filled Tsuen Wan Park, the endpoint of the rally, chanting, “Fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong,” the South China Morning Post newspaper reported.The march in Hong Kong’s New Territories started near the Kwai Fong train station, which has become a focal point for protesters after police used tear gas there earlier this month. Police with riot gear could be seen moving into position along the march route.Protesters have taken to the semiautonomous Chinese territory’s streets for more than two months. Their demands include democratic elections and an investigation into police use of force to quell the protests.A large group clashed with police on Saturday after a march in the Kowloon Bay neighborhood, building barricades and setting fires in the streets. Police said they arrested 29 people for various offenses, including unlawful assembly, possession of offensive weapons and assaulting police officers.The clashes, while not as prolonged or violent as some earlier ones, ended a brief lull in the violence. The protests, which began in early June, had turned largely peaceful the previous weekend, after weeks of escalating violence.In nearby Macao, another Chinese territory, a pro-Beijing committee chose a businessman as the gambling hub’s next leader with little of the controversy surrounding the government in Hong Kong.Ho Iat-seng, running unopposed, will succeed current leader Chui Sai-on in December. Asked about the protests in Hong Kong, the 62-year-old Ho said they would end eventually, like a major typhoon.Protesters in Hong Kong have demanded that the city’s leader, Carrie Lam, also chosen by a pro-Beijing committee, step down, though that demand has evolved into a broader call for fully democratic elections.
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Tens of Thousands of Rohingya Mark ‘Genocide Day’
Tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees rallied to mark the second anniversary of their exodus out of Myanmar.Almost 200,000 Rohingya participated in a peaceful gathering, which was attended by UN officials, at the Kutupalong camp in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar on Sunday.More than a million Rohingya Muslims from Myanmar’s Rakhine state now live in southern Bangladesh in the world’s largest refugee settlement. The majority having fled military-led violence in 2017 that the United Nations says was executed with “genocidal intent”.Refugees say Myanmar’s security forces and Buddhist civilians carried out mass killings and gang rapes during weeks of “clearance operations”. Myanmar has denied the charges, saying only that the military was conducting legitimate operations against Rohingya insurgents who attacked police posts.The rally was held days after Bangladesh, with the help of the U.N. refugee agency, attempted to begin the repatriation of some 3,000 Rohingyas. But none of the refugees agreed to return to Myanmar without being granted a citizenship and guaranteed basic rights.The UNHCR said that building confidence was essential for repatriation.For centuries, Myanmar has refused to recognize the Rohingya as legitimate residents of the country. They were denied citizenship and subjected to tight restrictions on freedom of movement.A U.N investigation last year recommended the prosecution of Myanmar’s top military commanders on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity for the crackdown but Myanmar rejected the allegations.Last week, another U.N. fact-finding mission on Myanmar released a new report concluding that rapes of Rohingya women by the state security forces were systemic and demonstrated the intent to commit genocide.
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Divisions Between Trump and Leaders Spill Out at G-7
At a meeting of leaders of the most advanced democracies in Biarritz, France, deep divisions are coming out into the open between U.S. President Donald Trump and his counterparts on issues including the trade war with China, how to handle Iran and bringing Russia back into the group. White House Correspondent Patsy Widakuswara is there covering the G-7 summit and brings this report
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Sudan Flood Death Toll Reaches 62: State Media
Heavy rainfall and flash floods have killed 62 people in Sudan and left 98 others injured, the official SUNA news agency reported on Sunday.Sudan has been hit by torrential rains since the start of July, affecting nearly 200,000 people in at least 15 states across the country including the capital Khartoum.The worst affected area is the White Nile state in the south.Flooding of the Nile river remains “the biggest problem”, SUNA said, citing a health ministry official.On Friday the United Nations said 54 people had died due to the heavy rains.It said more than 37,000 homes had been destroyed or damaged, quoting figures from the government body it partners with in the crisis response.”Humanitarians are concerned by the high likelihood of more flash floods,” the UN said, adding that the rainy season was expected to last until October.The floods are having a lasting humanitarian impact on communities, with cut roads, damaged water points, lost livestock and the spread of water-borne diseases by insects.The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said an extra $150 million were needed from donors to respond to surging waters, in addition to the $1.1 billion required for the overall humanitarian situation in Sudan.
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Sudan PM Seeks End toCountry’s Pariah Status
Sudan’s new prime minister says in an interview that ending his country’s international pariah status and drastically cutting military spending are prerequisites for rescuing a faltering economy.Abdalla Hamdok, a well-known economist, told The Associated Press on Sunday that he has already talked to U.S. officials about removing Sudan from Washington’s list of countries sponsoring terrorism and portrayed their reaction as positive. He says that “a democratic Sudan is not a threat to anybody in the world.”He also hopes to drastically cut Sudan’s military spending which he says makes up a large chunk of the state budget.Hamdok was sworn in last week as the leader of Sudan’s transitional government. His appointment came four months after the overthrow of autocratic leader Omar al-Bashir, who ruled for nearly three decades.
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Iran’s Envoy Makes Surprise Visit at Site of G-7 Summit
Last updated at 2:40p.m.Iran’s top diplomat, Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, showed up Sunday at the French city hosting the G7 summit of top world leaders, but did not meet with U.S. officials during the brief visit.Zarif’s appearance in Biarritz, where U.S. President Donald Trump has been meeting with leaders of six other countries, came as a surprise. When asked about the development, Trump had no comment.But Zarif’s visit was at the behest of French President Emmanuel Macron, who has had talks with his Iranian counterpart, Hassan Rouhani, about tensions in the Persian Gulf region that stem from Trump’s withdrawal last year from the 2015 international accord aimed at restraining Tehran’s nuclear weapons program.Macron had met with Zarif on Friday in Paris before the summit opened, but invited him back to the Atlantic coastal town where the summit is being held after tense exchanges among the world leaders about Iran at their Saturday night dinner.Demonstrators of the National Council of Resistance of Iran demonstrate on the Trocadero square Friday, Aug. 23, 2019 in Paris as Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif is in France. Poster reads: get out.Asked about a possible Trump meeting with Zarif, a French diplomat said, “Not at this stage.” But U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin noted that Trump has in the past not “set preconditions” on negotiations with Iran.Macron had lunch with Trump on Saturday, and, according to French sources, outlined his plan to ease the West’s tensions with Iran. The French leader is calling for allowing Iran to export its oil for a short time, fully implement the 2015 agreement, reduce conflict in the Gulf region and open new talks.Macron has sought to salvage the international agreement, but Trump has accused the French leader of sending “mixed signals” to Iran over possible talks with Washington.”Iran is in serious financial trouble,” Trump said on Twitter earlier this month, because of the U.S. leader’s reimposition of sanctions against Iran as he abrogated the accord. “They want desperately to talk to the U.S.,” Trump said, “but are given mixed signals from all of those purporting to represent us, including President Macron of France.”
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Elizabeth Warren’s Rise Started by Looking at the Bottom
As a young scholar, Elizabeth Warren traveled to federal courthouses, studying families overwhelmed by debt. She brought along a photocopier, gathering reams of statistics as she tried to answer one question: Why were these folks going bankrupt?
Warren, then a law professor, wasn’t satisfied with textbook explanations; she wanted to hear directly from people drowning in debt. So she sat in courtrooms, listening to one hard-luck story after another. She interviewed lawyers and judges, duplicated bankruptcy filings on a sturdy copier _ nicknamed R2-D2 _ that she hauled around to save printing costs. And she was joined in her research by two professor-colleagues who teamed with her to study those documents and build a database.
Warren had suspected bankruptcy court might be a last stop for deadbeats, or maybe the very poor. Instead, she discovered mostly middle-class people, many of them homeowners with college degrees who’d suffered one bad break – an illness, a divorce, a job loss. It was the kind of cruel twist that seemed all too familiar: When Warren was 12 years old, her father, a carpet salesman, had a heart attack. The family’s station wagon was repossessed, and her mother went to work in a minimum-wage job at Sears to pay the bills.
Warren’s foray into bankruptcy was the first step in a four-decade journey that has come to define her public profile and shape her worldview. As a law professor, bankruptcy expert, consumer watchdog, Massachusetts senator and Democratic presidential candidate, Warren has consistently championed economic reforms – with mixed results – to boost the middle class.
“The American middle class was in a lot more trouble than anyone had previously thought,” she told The Associated Press, describing her research, “and year by year, the stories have gotten worse. … The game has become a little more tilted and a little more tilted against hardworking families.”
Warren has carved out a niche as a merciless critic of credit card companies, big banks, lobbyists and Wall Street financiers, blaming them for policies and practices she has labeled as predatory, greedy or corrupt. At the same time, she cites her bankruptcy studies for revealing the real damage caused by these economic forces. It ultimately led to her prescient warnings about the economic collapse of 2008. And she continues to point to her focus on the middle class as she warns of another on the horizon.
“I’ve spent most of my career getting to the bottom of what’s happening to working families in America,” Warren recently wrote in a post titled “The Coming Economic Crash and How to Stop It.”
Childhood challenges
Warren’s own childhood was steeped in financial insecurity. She often describes her Oklahoma upbringing as “the ragged edge of the middle class.” After her father recovered, he found work as a janitor. But there wasn’t money for college until Elizabeth Herring – the youngest of four and the only girl – parlayed her champion debating skills into a full scholarship.
She married at 19, became a mother at 22, divorced and remarried. After a brief stint as a speech therapist, she changed careers, attended Rutgers Law School and eventually landed a job at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law.
She asked to teach bankruptcy, she recalled in “A Fighting Chance,” her memoir, because she wanted to know what led people to “the edge of disaster,” but thought the question seemed too personal to ask openly.
Bankruptcy law can seem dense and dry, but Warren saw pain, guilt and hope among those filing into bankruptcy court. The prospect of second chances appealed to her, as she later explained to one of her students at Harvard Law School. U.S. Rep. Joe Kennedy III, a Massachusetts Democrat, recalls sitting in her office one day asking her to explain some nuance of the bankruptcy code.
“I turned to her at one point and said, `You know, you could have taught anything. Why on God’s green earth did you possibly pick bankruptcy?’ ” recalls Kennedy, who has endorsed Warren’s candidacy. “And I still remember the answer. She said because it’s about the way in which people can get to pick themselves up and we help them start again after they fall.”
It wasn’t just the topic but how Warren and her colleagues pursued their research that set them apart.
Their work began in the early 1980s, when legal scholars tended to focus on businesses and academic papers. But Warren joined two university colleagues in Austin – Jay Westbrook, a law professor and bankruptcy expert, and Teresa Sullivan, a sociologist – for an on-the-ground study. They visited bankruptcy courts in Illinois, Pennsylvania and Texas.
In research that continued over the decade, the three read through more than 1,500 bankruptcy filings, interviewed hundreds facing financial ruin and analyzed the findings from the database.
At the time, the bankruptcy rate was doubling and some experts thought debtors were reckless spenders; one study found almost a third of the people in bankruptcy could have repaid a significant part of their debts. Warren was skeptical, too.
“I knew that my family had been through a lot of tough times, but nobody had actually declared bankruptcy,” she recalled in the interview.
But those suspicions were dismissed after she and her colleagues discovered many debtors’ lives had been upended by things beyond their control. She saw that in questionnaires in which debtors explained why they’d filed for bankruptcy.
In her memoir, Warren recalls one unforgettable response: “Wife died of cancer. Left $65,000 in medical bills after insurance … worked five part-time jobs to meet rent, utilities, phone, food and insurance.”
Some of Warren’s friends from her Texas days speculate her political allegiances shifted because she saw her own family in these struggles. Before her Harvard years, she was registered as an independent, then a Republican and finally a Democrat in 1996.
Westbrook says he and Warren didn’t talk much about politics during their research, but he assumed she was a moderate Republican who turned more progressive, rejecting a creditor-friendly view that debtors were largely responsible for their predicament. The more they learned, he says, the more they identified with those coming to court.
“They were sort of the middle-class people that could have been our parents or the people next door,” he says.
Warren and her Texas colleagues summed up their findings in a book, “As We Forgive Our Debtors: Bankruptcy and Consumer Credit in America.”
Arrival in Washington
Warren’s credentials as a bankruptcy expert brought her to Washington. In 1995, she was appointed by a former Oklahoma congressman – he and Warren were high school debating acquaintances – to the National Bankruptcy Review Commission.
Two years later, the panel proposed a series of recommendations to Congress, including strengthening the ability to collect child support from those who’ve filed for bankruptcy and standardizing how much property could be kept by a bankrupt family and under what conditions.
Warren’s focus remained on families caught in an economic squeeze. In 2003, she joined her daughter, Amelia Warren Tyagi, to write “The Two-Income Trap: Why Middle-Class Parents Are (Still) Going Broke.” One conclusion: “Having a child now is the single best predictor that a woman will end up in financial disaster.”
That book thrust Warren into the TV spotlight – both mother and daughter appeared on “Dr. Phil”- but growing scrutiny of her research brought out the critics, too.
In 2005, Warren was part of a team that published a study that had surveyed nearly 1,800 people who’d filed for bankruptcy in five federal courts and found nearly half cited medical causes.
But a group of researchers that analyzed that data concluded medical bills contributed to just 17% of personal bankruptcies and said those affected tended to be closer to poverty rather than the middle class.
In a rebuttal, Warren’s team said their critics had ignored large parts of the debtors’ own reports of their financial troubles and unfairly portrayed them as deadbeats.
Craig Garthwaite, a health economist at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern, is among those who disagree with Warren’s conclusions about medical bankruptcy.
“If you ask any economist – pick one at random, show them the study – the statistical methods are not sound,” he says. I don't think that Sen. Warren has the tools to correctly write that study from her training ... for the same reason I don't write law articles.''
Obamacare” and
Garthwaite says the findings exaggerate the degree to which medical bills are responsible for bankruptcy. "Are you getting at the causal role of medical debt in bankruptcy or simply the presence of medical debt of those who go bankrupt? These are hard questions to answer. ... Just because a number is big doesn't make it right.''
He also says the Warren team's results have been used as talking points by progressive policymakers to argue for increased government regulation of the health care sector,Medicare for All.''
mildly demagogic” and said her problem was not with the bankruptcy bill but with credit card company usury rates. Warren replied:
Warren cited her research to bolster her fight against bankruptcy legislation - first pushed in the late 1990s by banks and credit card companies - that would make it harder for people to erase their debts. Proponents argued this was a necessary step because too many people who could afford to repay their debts were filing for bankruptcy.
At odds with Biden
In 2002, Warren wrote a New York Times op-ed that maintained the legislation would be particularly devastating to women, who far outnumbered men when filing for bankruptcy. She called out then-Sen. Joe Biden, who supported the measure, noting many banks and credit card companies were incorporated in his home state of Delaware.
Warren remained a fierce opponent for seven years, maintaining that the legislation would impose new pressures on people who weren't irresponsible, just unlucky. In a 2005 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing that has since gone viral, Warren clashed with Biden in sometimes-tense exchanges over bankruptcy courts, credit card companies and interest rates.
At one point, Biden called Warren's argumentIf you're not going to fix that problem, you can't take away the last shred of protection from these families.''
I got it. OK. You’re very good, professor.”
To which Biden responded:
Warren likened the bill’s passage to losing a David vs. Goliath battle. “David really did get the slingshot shoved down his throat sideways,” she wrote in her memoir. “It hurt then, and it still hurts now.”
And it was not to be forgotten. When Biden announced his presidential bid in April, Warren immediately reminded the public they were opponents in the bankruptcy wars, declaring the former vice president had chosen credit card companies over “millions of hardworking families.”
Warren’s willingness to challenge Biden or other Democrats doesn’t surprise friends or former colleagues.
Lynn LoPucki, a professor at the UCLA School of Law who has co-written several legal texts with Warren, says the senator has long been outspoken and blunt.
“She doesn’t have a public persona and then say something different in private,” he says.
Warren is also known for her folksy manner – uttering an occasional golly gee'' or
holy cow” – and her skill at translating arcane financial terms into everyday language.
“She’s really effective in communicating with the public, which most academics are not,” says Michael Barr, dean of the Gerald Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan who met Warren when he was a top Treasury Department official in the Obama administration. I think she has a real way of connecting with ordinary families.''
She’s always been really good at … telling important stories and bringing out important themes, but also having the head for all the underlying data.”
Warren was equally adept at educating senators and staff on Capitol Hill, says Melissa Jacoby, a professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law who was an attorney on the 1995 bankruptcy commission.
"Elizabeth can take a very complicated set of rules that most people think has nothing to do with their lives and in a small amount of time explain why they should care very deeply about it,'' Jacoby says.
Warren moved from bankruptcy into consumer advocacy shortly after the 2008 election as the nation’s financial system was on the brink of collapse. Then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid tapped her to be on a congressional oversight panel to monitor the $700 billion bank bailout package.
Warren used her new platform to lobby for a program she’d first proposed years earlier that seemed particularly timely: the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a watchdog agency that would better regulate mortgages, student loans, credit cards and other financial products.
After much political wrangling, the bureau was created under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. Though President Barack Obama asked Warren to set up the agency, Republican opposition prevented her from getting the director’s job.
But Warren was back in Washington a few years later – as a U.S. senator. At age 63, she won her first race for public office, ousting Republican Sen. Scott Brown.
Now as a presidential candidate, Warren is on the campaign trail with a long list of policy proposals and a call for structural changes in the government.
In her memoir, she lamented her frustration a decade earlier chairing the bailout panel that “couldn’t change a system that seemed hell-bent on protecting the big guys and leaving everyone else on the side of the road.”
But she also said that experience taught her an important lesson:
“When you have no real power, go public, really public. The public is where the real power is.”
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Placido Domingo to Perform for First Time Since Accusations
Placido Domingo returns to the stage at the Salzburg Festival on Sunday in his first appearance since nine women accused him of sexual harassment in a report by The Associated Press.
The case has divided the opera world. Two U.S. opera houses immediately canceled planned appearances. European opera houses have so far confirmed engagements scheduled through November 2020, in what some see as an effort to slow a perceived rush to judgment in the (hash)MeToo movement.
The 78-year-old star, who rose to global fame as a tenor, will sing the baritone role of Miller in performance of “Luisa Miller.”
He has received unwavering support from the festival, as well as his co-stars. Domingo appears smiling in an Instagram posted this week by co-star Nino Machaidze alongside tenor Piotr Beczala and conductor James Conlon.
The AP story published last week detailed extensive allegations of sexual harassment by nine women against Domingo that spanned decades, starting in the 1980s. The women accused Domingo of using his power at the LA Opera, where he has been the longtime general director, and elsewhere to try to pressure them into sexual relationships. Several of the woman said he dangled jobs and then sometimes punished them professionally if they refused his advances. Allegations included repeated phone calls, invitations to hotel rooms and his apartment, and unwanted touching and kisses.
In a statement to the AP, Domingo called the allegations “deeply troubling and, as presented inaccurate” and said he believed his interactions with the women to be consensual. He hasn’t spoken publicly about the allegations since the article was published.
Culture writer Hedwig Kainberger wrote in the Salzburger Nachrichten this week that there is no reason for Domingo not to sing at the festival. She noted that he has never had the sort of political power at the Salzburg festival that he has in some U.S. opera houses.
“However, Placido Domingo has benefited a lot from public fame,” Kainberger added. “Therefore, in addition to the jubilation, he should also bear the criticism, listen to the protests, participate in the clarification and muster the courage to make any confessions.”
Culture editor Gert Korentschnig wrote in in the Vienna daily Kurier on Sunday that such cancellations absent a guilty verdict in a court of law are “an excessive exaggeration of political correctness,” and that the focus should be not on individual singers but on the system as a whole.
“Is opera, where the artists and above all female artists, depend on the goodwill of the artistic director, conductor or singer, a hoard of power abuse?” he asked. “The Domingo case is more than a pummeling of a superstar. It is a cry against suppression and machoism throughout the music business.”
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Former Illinois Congressman Challenges Trump for Republican Presidential Nomination
Joe Walsh, a former Illinois congressman and now a conservative radio talk show host, said Sunday he is launching a challenge to President Donald Trump for the 2020 Republican presidential nomination.The 57-year-old Walsh, who served one term in the House of Representatives before losing a re-election bid in 2012, announced his long-shot candidacy on ABC News’s “This Week” talk show.”I’m running because he’s unfit,” Walsh said of Trump, describing him as “incompetent,” “a bigot,” and “a narcissist,” characterizations opposition Democrats often aim at Trump, who is seeking a second four-year term. “Somebody needs to step up and there needs to be an alternative,” Walsh said.Trump’s national approval ratings in polls of all voters remain mired in the low 40% range, but are twice that among Republican voters who continue to approve of his 2 1/2-year performance in office.About two dozen Democrats are seeking their party’s nomination to oppose Trump in the Nov. 3, 2020 election, while Walsh is the second Republican trying to wrest the Republican nomination from Trump. Former Massachusetts Governor Bill Weld announced his candidacy in April, but has gained little support.Walsh said of Trump, “The country is sick of this guy’s tantrum, he’s a child.” Walsh, an immigration hard-liner like Trump, said he would challenge Trump with conservative views and on moral grounds.
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