3 Service Members Receive Nation’s Highest Military Award at White House Ceremony

Three American service members were honored with the Medal of Honor — the nation’s highest military award — Thursday at the White House in a ceremony presided over by President Joe Biden. 

Master Sergeant Earl Plumlee, a special forces soldier and the only living honoree among the three, was cited for his actions during an engagement in Afghanistan in 2013.

“Throughout the entire engagement, Plumlee repeatedly placed himself in extreme danger to protect his team and the base, and to defeat the enemy,” the Army wrote in its citation for Plumlee. 

“It’s humbling to be nominated for this award and to be in this company,” Plumlee told reporters Wednesday during a news briefing. “The medal I’ll receive tomorrow will be presented to me, but it’s by no means mine.” 

Sergeant 1st Class Alwyn Cashe, the first African American recipient of the award since the September 11, 2001, attacks, pulled several of his fellow soldiers from a burning vehicle in Iraq in 2005 despite second- and third-degree burns over 72% of his body. 

“Without regard for his personal safety,” his posthumous Silver Star award citation reads, “Cashe pulled the driver from the vehicle after having already suffered minor injuries, and then rushed back inside three times to extract six trapped soldiers and their Iraqi interpreter as his own fuel-soaked uniform caught fire.” 

He was 35. 

Sergeant 1st Class Christopher Celiz, an Army Ranger, used his body to shield his fellow soldiers when they came under attack in Afghanistan in 2018. He then positioned himself to shield fellow soldiers and the cockpit of a helicopter that was evacuating a wounded soldier.

As the helicopter took off, Celiz ran for cover but was wounded. Instead of motioning for the helicopter to retrieve him, he waved it off, preventing further injuries. 

“I saw three rounds go by his back foot as he was running for cover, and he skipped like he had been hit,” said 2nd Lieutenant David White, who served under Celiz. “He looked up at the helicopter as he collapsed to his hands and knees, and I saw him raise his hand as he was looking up and wave them off, like, ‘Don’t come back for me.'” 

He was 32. 

“Today, we honor three outstanding soldiers whose actions embody the highest ideals of selfless service,” Biden said during the ceremony. “We also remember the high prices that military members and their families are willing to pay on behalf of our nation.” 

Celiz and Plumlee are the 19th and 20th service members awarded the Medal of Honor for actions in Afghanistan. Cashe is the seventh from the Iraq War to receive the honor. 

Some information in this report came from The Associated Press.

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European Drug Regulator Recommends 2 New COVID Treatments

The European Union’s drug regulator, the European Medicines Agency, on Thursday recommended two new treatments against COVID-19 for use among EU member nations, as well as offer advice on the use of another, pending its authorization.

In separate statements on its website, the EMA recommended the use of Swedish-made drug Kineret and U.S.-made Xevudy for treatment of COVID-19.

The EMA had previously approved Kineret for use as an anti-inflammatory medicine. But in their recommendation Thursday, the agency recommended its use as a treatment for adult COVID-19 patients also suffering from pneumonia requiring supplemental oxygen and at risk of developing severe respiratory failure.

They said Kineret could reduce the inflammation associated with COVID-19, decreasing lower airway damage, and preventing development of severe respiratory failure. The drug is manufactured by the Swedish Orphan Biovitrum pharmaceutical company.

The EMA also recommended GlaxoSmithKline’s recommended Xevudy for treating adults and children suffering from COVID-19 who do not require supplemental oxygen and are at increased risk of the disease becoming severe. The EMA cited data indicating Xevudy, a monoclonal antibody drug, was effective in preventing severe COVID-19 symptoms and preventing hospitalization.

The agency also offered advice for the use of Pfizer’s COVID-19 treatment pill Paxlovid. While the medicine is not yet authorized in the EU, the EMA said it can be used to treat adults who do not require supplemental oxygen and who are at increased risk of progressing to severe disease.

They say Paxlovid should be administered as soon as possible after diagnosis of COVID-19 and within five days of the start of symptoms.

The agency’s advice can now be used to support those EU nations choosing to recommend use of Paxlovid before formal EMU authorization.

The EMA said it will continue with its rolling review of the drug.

Some information for this report was provided by Agence France-Presse.

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Germany Health Minister Says Boosters at Center of COVID-19 Strategy

New German Health Minister Karl Lauterbach said Thursday he is seeking to secure additional doses of COVID-19 vaccine for a swift booster vaccine offensive, which is the center of the government’s strategy for fighting off the new omicron variant of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

Speaking at his first COVID-19 briefing, along with Lothar Wieler, president of the Robert Koch Institute for Infectious Diseases (RKI), Lauterbach said 1.5 million booster vaccinations were given Wednesday alone, the nation’s highest single-day total so far.

Germany’s vaccination efforts have picked back up, with an average of some 988,000 people per day being inoculated over the past week.

But Lauterbach said the campaign has slowed because they do not have enough vaccine, and he is negotiating with other countries, including Romania, Poland, Portugal and Bulgaria to get additional doses.

The country said it also hoped to receive millions of booster shots adapted to the omicron variant from BioNtech/Pfizer in the first quarter of next year.

Wieler of RKI told reporters omicron is already spreading fast in places like Britain and Denmark. He said Germany has registered a few hundred cases of the variant and it has been found in all 16 states.

The RKI president also said the delta variant still dominates in Germany, adding that it “is only a question of time until omicron takes over.”

“We expect that this will make the situation even worse for everyone.”

Lauterbach said the strategy of government health officials is to try to “keep [impact of] the omicron variant as small as possible” through a fast booster vaccination campaign in an effort to prevent an overload of the health system “and possibly of society in its entirety.”

Currently, 70% of Germany’s population of 83 million have been fully vaccinated, below the government’s minimum target of 75%. So far, 27.6% also have received a booster shot, a figure that is rising quickly. 

Some information for this report came from The Associated Press and Reuters.

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Libyan Joint Military Committee Meets With UN Envoy Amid Tensions

A militia blockade of the interim government’s headquarters in Tripoli appears to have ended Thursday, amid strong tensions in the Libyan capital just over a week before scheduled presidential elections. U.N. envoy Stephanie Williams met with key military leaders to try to prevent any violence which might jeopardize the elections.  

U.N. special envoy to Libya Stephanie Williams met with rival political and military forces from eastern and western Libya in the port city of Sirte Thursday afternoon, hours after an Islamist militia group ended its siege of interim government headquarters in the capital Tripoli. 

Tensions reportedly remain high in Tripoli just over a week before scheduled presidential elections.

Islamist militia commander Salah Badie issued a video statement late Wednesday threatening to scuttle the planned December 24 election and claiming that he will throw U.N. envoy Williams out of Libya.

The head of Libya’s High National Election Commission, Emad al Sayah, told journalists several days ago that preparations for the election are continuing on schedule.

He said that he affirms to the Libyan people and political leaders that his committee will not ignore its obligation to hold free and fair elections, respecting the rights of all parties involved.

Saudi-owned al Arabiya TV, however, reported that another member of the commission called the December 24 election date “wishful thinking.”

Libya analyst Aya Burweila tells VOA that “fair elections are possible provided that candidates who violate the U.N. Roadmap and the electoral law…..are removed from the list of candidates and foreign monitors are sent to polling stations to minimize the appetite of militia cartels in Tripoli who are hostile to elections.”

One former U.N. Libya envoy, Lebanon’s Tarek al Mitri, told Arab media that the “only way to stabilize Libya is to dismantle the militias causing havoc in the country.” 

Burweila agrees, arguing that such militias are likely to “attack and intimidate voters.” Libyans, she adds, “are fed up and determined to exercise their basic right to choose their own government and take their country back after seven years of foreign-appointed rule and militia occupation….”

However, Libyan analyst Ezzedin Naguil told Al Arabiya TV that he thinks “both Russia and Turkey are unlikely to remove their militia forces from Libya until they achieve their strategic goals, which will likely involve tough international negotiations.”

The leaders of two of Libya’s closest neighbors, Algerian President Abdel Mejid Tebboune and Tunisian President Qais Saeed, met Wednesday to encourage Libyans to vote. 

Tebboune insisted that it is up to the people to decide their fate.

He says that the solution in Libya is in the hands of the Libyan people and they must get rid of mercenaries and foreign forces and deal with each other.

Libya’s parliament is due to meet in the eastern city of Beida early next week to make a final decision on whether to hold the election as scheduled.

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The Inside Story-Omicron Outlook-TRANSCRIPT

TRANSCRIPT 

The Inside Story: Omicron’s Ominous Outlook 

Episode 17 – December 9, 2021 

 

 

Show Opening Graphic: 

 

Voice of CAROLYN PRESUTTI, VOA Correspondent: 

  

Travel restrictions are back as OMICRON is the latest variant testing the world’s defenses against the coronavirus.   

  

 

Dr. Anthony Fauci, Chief Medical Adviser to the President: 

 

We needed to buy some time to be able to prepare, understand what’s going on. What is the nature of this infection. 

 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

As Omicron spreads, find out how to protect you and your family.  

  

And go inside the effectiveness of vaccines on The Inside Story: Omicron’s Ominous Outlook.  

  

 

 

The Inside Story:  

 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

Hi, I’m Carolyn Presutti reporting from Washington.  

 

As most of the northern hemisphere heads inside for the winter months, a new coronavirus variant is threatening to extend a pandemic that is nearing the two-year mark. 

  

First identified three weeks ago by scientists in South Africa, the World Health Organization named the variant Omicron —continuing through the Greek alphabet to identify the variants of the virus. More on that a bit later in the show.   

 

But this variant is now showing up all over the world, including the United States.   

 

As public health officials gather data about Omicron’s impact and transmission, travel restrictions and testing requirements are being re-introduced. All, just in time for another holiday travel season.  

 

Let’s go inside the US response with VOA White House Bureau Chief Patsy Widakuswara. 

 

 

 

PATSY WIDAKUSWARA, VOA White House Bureau Chief: 

  

Planning to visit the United States? Be prepared to follow more stringent COVID-19 protocols.  

 

In addition to being fully vaccinated, starting next week inbound travelers, regardless of nationality, must show a negative test within one day of departure, instead of three days under the previous rule. 

 

 

  

U.S. President Joe Biden: 

  

This tighter testing timetable provides an additional degree of protection as scientists continue to study the omicron variant. And we are extending the requirement to wear masks for travel on aircraft, trains, public transportation through the winter months. 

  

 

 

PATSY WIDAKUSWARA: 

 

President Joe Biden announced the measures Thursday, together with plans to increase vaccine and booster outreach for seniors and children and making COVID tests free and more widely available – a multipronged strategy to deal with the new omicron variant and avoid lockdowns. 

  

An individual who traveled from South Africa tested positive in California on Wednesday; the first omicron case detected in the U.S. The Biden administration has restricted travel from nine African countries including South Africa, where the variant was first detected. 

  

In the next 100 days, the U.S. will also send an additional 200 million doses of COVID vaccine abroad. 

 

 

 

U.S. President Joe Biden: 

  

I’ll always make sure that our people are protected first. But vaccinating the world is not just a moral tool, a moral obligation that we have, in my view – it’s how we protect Americans as we’re seeing with this new variant. 

  

 

 

PATSY WIDAKUSWARA: 

 

Doses will also be sent to conflict zones and other humanitarian settings such as refugee camps, part of a deal brokered by the administration between Johnson and Johnson and the international vaccine sharing mechanism COVAX, to immunize people not reached by government programs. 

  

 

 

Jen Psaki, White House Press Secretary: 

  

We work through trusted global health partners like the United Nations, other NGOs that are trusted who can get humanitarian assistance and aid, including vaccine doses into communities. 

 

 

  

PATSY WIDAKUSWARA: 

 

A recent Duke University analysis said that to reach the U.N.’s year-end goal of vaccinating at least 40 percent of the world’s population, low and lower middle-income countries need an additional 650 million doses beyond what they are scheduled to receive from COVAX. 

 

 

 

Krishna Udayakumar, Duke Global Health Innovation Center: 

 

That might seem like a lot, but we have also projected that high income countries – so members of the G-7 and the European Union – will likely have more than 800 million excess doses available that they can reallocate after taking care of domestic needs, after taking care of boosters. 

  

 

 

 

 

 

PATSY WIDAKUSWARA: 

 

While equitable distribution of doses remains an issue, in many parts of the world the bigger problem may be skepticism that COVID vaccines are safe and effective. The Biden administration says it is also helping other countries overcome vaccine hesitancy in their population.  Patsy Widakuswara, VOA News, at the White House. 

 

 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

Global travel being the way it is, scientists will always be several days behind a new variant’s spread.   

 

As of our taping, more than 30 countries have started travel restrictions since the discovery of Omicron.  

 

And more than 30 countries have reported COVID cases of the Omicron variant.  

 

Which raises the question: How effective ARE travel bans and restrictions?  

 

Well VOA’s Saqeb Ul Islam goes INSIDE — traveling through COVID.  

 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM, VOA Reporter: 

 

American Portia Steele with halfway to Kruger National Park outside Johannesburg when she heard about new U.S. travel restrictions targeting South Africa, where the Omicron variant of the coronavirus was first detected. 

 

 

Portia Steele, American Traveler: 

 

I was getting text messages from my friends and family about how they were restricting travel in the UK, expecting maybe that they would restrict travel back to the US. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM: 

Steele shortened her first ever trip to South Africa from ten to only two days and booked four different flights back to U.S. before the restrictions took hold. 

 

 

 

Portia Steele – American Traveler: 

There were a lot of U.S. citizens tearful at the United counter, at the Delta counter, at the KLM counter, trying to figure out ways to get home. 

 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM: 

Steele was required to have a vaccination card, a negative COVID test, and a negative rapid test at the airport to board a flight from Johannesburg.  In the U.S., she was greeted by officials with the Centers for Disease Control, given a self-testing kit, and then went into self-quarantine. 

 

 

Portia Steele , American Traveler: 

 

Traveling during the COVID era is knowing that things can change at any given moment and that people have to be malleable, So I just caution to anybody just be flexible because you never know what’s going to happen if you’re abroad. 

 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM: 

But nearly two years into the pandemic, some are questioning it the sudden travel restrictions are effective. 

 

 

Dr. Patrick Jackson, Infectious Disease Researcher: 

 

I think the travel restrictions really are not helping us at all and are probably counterproductive. 

 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM: 

Dr. Patrick Jackson is an infectious disease researcher at University of Virginia.  

 

He says it’s almost certain the world will see more coronavirus variants in areas with low vaccination rates, like South Africa. He’s calling on countries to focus more on getting people vaccinated than on restricting travel. 

 

 

Dr. Patrick Jackson, Infectious Disease Researcher: 

 

One of the major failures of our pandemic policy so far has been not giving vaccines to the developing world and ensuring that the global population can get vaccinated. 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM: 

Dr. Anthony Fauci is the country’s leading infectious disease expert and the president’s chief medical adviser. After the first U.S. Omicron case was detected days ago, Fauci renewed calls for people to get vaccinated and defended the new White House travel restrictions.  

  

 

Dr. Anthony Fauci, Chief Medical Adviser to the President: 

 

No one feels, I certainly don’t think, a travel ban is going to prevent people who are infected from coming to the United States. But we needed to buy some time to be able to prepare, understand what’s going on. What is the nature of this infection, what is the nature of transmissibility? 

 

 

 

SAQIB UL ISLAM: 

More than thirty countries have closed their borders and more have imposed stricter measures in response to Omicron. As researchers try to learn more about this latest variant, officials say it’s imperative that more people around the world get vaccinated. 

  

Saqib Ul Islam, VOA News, Washington. 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

  

More than 5 million people worldwide have died from COVID-19 —–FIVE million – and the number keeps rising.   

Experts agree: the vaccines represent your best defense against this virus.  

  

But if you are confused about the science of vaccines – the steps and methods involved in producing them – you are not alone.  

  

In fact, scientists often manipulate one virus to protect another when making a vaccine.  

  

But don’t worry — VOA’s Carol Pearson can explain. She shows us how one approach in making a vaccine has been effective against polio, measles, Ebola and a host of other viruses.  

  

 

 

CAROL PEARSON, VOA Correspondent: 

 

People can get COVD-19 even though they have been fully vaccinated, but that does not mean the vaccine has failed.   

    

Those who are fully vaccinated against this virus are, so far, much less likely to end up in a hospital or on a ventilator.    

    

    

 

Dr. Andrea Cox, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine: 

 

The goal of vaccination is to reduce the severity of disease in almost all vaccines in use, and not to prevent infection entirely.  

    

 

   

CAROL PEARSON: 

 

The oldest method to make a vaccine uses either a live virus that is too weak to reproduce — scientists call it a live attenuated virus — or a dead virus that, because it is dead, can’t reproduce, but can still cause an immune response.   

    

Polio vaccines have used both dead and weakened live polioviruses as vectors with great success.   

 

Many countries are now polio-free. In 2021, only two children in the entire world contracted the wild polio virus.   

   

    

Three COVID-19 vaccines use weakened adenoviruses — benign viruses that cause colds — as their vectors. Vectors are simply delivery systems used to introduce a more dangerous virus, either a weakened live virus or a dead one.   

       

The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine uses a weakened chimpanzee adenovirus that does not infect humans.  Sputnik V and the Johnson & Johnson vaccines use weakened human adenoviruses.    

  

With all three vaccines, scientists remove a gene from the coronavirus’ spike protein and put it into the adenoviruses.   

    

Once injected, the viruses enter the cells and start to produce the spike protein. Then, the body mounts an attack.  Remember, the spike protein is only a part of the coronavirus and doesn’t cause COVID-19. So, there’s no danger of getting the illness from the vaccine.   

    

 

    

Dr. Andrea Cox, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine: 

 

You don’t just mount an immune response to the adenovirus, but you also mount an immune response to the protein that it encodes, the spike protein that is part of the virus causing COVID.   

    

 

 

CAROL PEARSON: 

 

The World Health Organization has authorized use of the AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson vaccines but not Sputnik V. The WHO says it needs more data from the Sputnik trials.  

  

Cox says of the three vaccines that use an adenovirus, scientists favor the AstraZeneca and the Johnson & Johnson vaccines.   

    

 

 

Dr. Andrea Cox, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine: 

 

We know the most about the AstraZeneca and the Johnson and Johnson vaccines because they have been given to tens of millions, if not 100 million people worldwide. So, we know the most about their side-effect profiles and their immune responses. We have far less data on the Sputnik vaccine just because it has been used far less frequently and there are simply fewer international studies that have assessed it. 

 

 

   

CAROL PEARSON: 

 

While some people choose not to get a vaccine, others are willing to travel long distances to get one. Hondurans are willing to cross a river to get the vaccine in neighboring Nicaragua.   

 

The pandemic is far from over. Some scientists expect COVID to be with us for 3 to 4 years.  

 

And even with the best scientists in the world working on vaccines and treatments, doctors are concerned that as the virus continues to infect unvaccinated people and mutate, at some point, the vaccines we have now won’t be able to offer full protection against COVID-19.  Carol Pearson, VOA News. 

 

 

 

Voice of Unidentified Narrator:  

 

Early in the pandemic, herd immunity was often referred to as the long-term goal in the fight against COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Epidemiologists refer to herd immunity as the tipping point, when enough people are protected from the virus that the community can return to routine life. But variants of the virus and low vaccination rates have prolonged that goal. 

   

Herd immunity is when a significant portion of a community is immune to an infectious disease, making it harder for the disease to spread. 

  

Herd immunity offers the entire community protection and can be achieved either through recovery from a previous infection or through vaccination.  

 

Once people gain protection from an infectious disease such as COVID-19, it makes it more difficult for the disease to spread within the community, even to those unable to get vaccinated due to serious allergic reactions to the vaccines.  

 

Public health officials say it is unknown how long herd immunity may last. 

   

It is currently unknown how many people need to be vaccinated for COVID-19 to gain herd immunity, which is complicated by individual vaccine hesitancy, and uneven rollout and access to the vaccines. 

    

 

 

 

 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

While doctors are working to learn more about the Omicron variant’s transmissibility, there is still much that is unknown.  

  

Dr. Neil Vora is a Pandemic Prevention Fellow at Conservation International.   

  

Since the discovery of the coronavirus in early 20-20, Dr. Vora has helped develop and lead New York City’s COVID-19 contact tracing program.  

  

In his own words, he takes us inside — and tells us what we know and what we yet don’t yet know about the Omicron variant — and how we can protect ourselves.  

 

  

 

Dr. Neil Vora, Conservation International, Columbia University:  

 

There’s a lot of questions around omicron in terms of how transmissible is 

it, how dangerous is it.  And these are questions that scientists are very actively trying  

to answer right now because of the very important public health implications that Omicron  

has.  

 
My name is Neil Vlora. I’m a physician with Conservation International. I worked on  

viruses from Ebola to Zika. And most recently my last assignment with CDC was to lead New  

York City’s covid contact tracing program. Currently I now work for Conservation International,  

where I focus on addressing the upstream drivers that lead viruses to jump from animals into  

people.  

 

If you look back since the 1940s at least the number of new infectious diseases that have  

emerged has. Over time and most of those new infectious diseases have originated from  

animals, particularly wildlife. And the reason why these new infectious diseases are increasingly 

 emerging is because of human activities that place humans in closer contact to wildlife. 

 

In particular It’s the clearing of tropical rainforests, because by doing that, people are coming 

into close contact with the displaced wildlife that no longer have a home. Reason number two  

is because of the trade in wildlife both legal and illegal around the world. When people move  

animals around for food or for pets or for whatever the reason, there are opportunities for the viruses that that circulate in those wildlife to move along with those animals and then jump  

over and infect people. And reason number three is. Of poor infection control practices during  

the raising of livestock that creates opportunities for viruses to jump species.  

 

And so, for those three reasons we are seeing animal viruses increasingly infect humans.  

The findings in the mutations that this virus has that would suggest that the protein that the  

virus uses to attach to cells has changed. And so that might lead to changes in how effective thevaccines are.  

 

The bottom line you know regardless of all of the uncertainty in terms of transmissibility of Omicron, how severe the illness is that American causes is that we still have preventative measures available at our fingertips. Right now, that is wearing masks, keeping social distancing, and getting vaccinated. And, you know, the data that we have available suggests that all of  

those preventative measures are still applicable to Omicron. So everyone should still take thoseprecautions so that they can reduce their chances of getting sick and reduce the chances of  

spreading the virus to other people. 

 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

Earlier, I said the World Health Organization uses Greek letters to identify COVID variants.  

 

Well, Omicron is the 15th letter of the Greek alphabet; but it’s only the 5th designated as a higher “variant of concern”.  Plus, it’s the first with that classification since the Delta variant was discovered in early April.  

 

So, why use the Greek alphabet? To avoid the stigma of connecting a variant with the country where it was first discovered and its people.  

 

But its detection can still negatively affect a region. South Africa was dealt a financial blow when travel to and from the country paused after the discovery of Omicron. 

 

From inside Johannesburg, VOA’s Linda Givetash says the South African economy was already struggling.  

 

 

 

LINDA GIVETASH, VOA Reporter:  

 

This historical site and museum at the center of the Apartheid struggle in South Africa is normally bustling with tourists. 

 

Since the discovery of the omicron coronavirus variant last week, foreign visitors have vanished. The United Kingdom was the first to halt flights to South Africa, with the United States and other countries quickly following suit. 

 

People working in the tourism industry say panic over the new variant is decimating business, just as travel was starting to pick up over the past two months. 

Wayne Barnes, MoAfrika Tours Sales Manager: 

 

When the U.K. actually opened up and took us off the red list, we started seeing an increase [in] numbers [of] travelers from all around the world started to support us again. So, their decisions are definitely affecting, you know, everybody around the world on their decisions. 

 

 

 

LINDA GIVETASH: 

 

And the decision blindsided many. 

 

Barnes says his company lost over $30,000 to refunds in just one day for canceled December bookings. 

 

Tour guides went from leading groups of over 40 people last week to no one today. 

 

 

 

 

Thabang Moleya, Tour Guide: 

 

I’m very hurt at the moment, namely, because things were starting to look like we were starting to be working normally, that which will remind us of life before COVID. 

 

 

 

LINDA GIVETASH: 

 

It’s not just the tourism industry that’s hurting. 

 

From vehicle suppliers to website developers, the collapse of travel is having a domino effect across the economy. 

 

Nearly 47% of South Africans were jobless last quarter, according to government statistics released this week. 

 

It’s a bleak landscape for parents and breadwinners like Thabang Moleya who are again facing layoffs. 

 

 

 

 

 

Thabang Moleya, Tour Guide: 

 

At some point, I wanted to come up with an idea of what one can do. Also, it was not easy for one to find any job. I’m just hoping and believing that one day one would work again, the world would travel again. 

 

 

 

LINDA GIVETASH: 

 

But economists say recovery is years away. And locking down will only slow that recovery and make life harder for the poorest. 

 

 

 

Dawie Roodt, Economist: 

 

The biggest killer out there is not a virus or TB, or AIDS or anything, the biggest killer out there is poverty. It might be necessary to prevent larger crowds to get together and things like that. But it’s not necessarily necessary to stop airlines from flying and to necessarily stop people from going, stay at home [and] not go to work, or stay at home and not go to the factory and things like that. 

 

 

 

LINDA GIVETASH: 

 

For those who have managed to cling to their jobs, the situation still feels demoralizing. 

 

 

 

Mbali Ngema, Johannesburg Tourism Ambassador: 

 

Before, you used to have that thing of waking up in the morning to say I’m going to work, I’m going to see new people, I’m going to meet new people. But due to this, you just wake up and you sit and you do nothing. 

 

 

 

LINDA GIVETASH: 

 

Until scientists better understand the omicron variant and politicians change their views on travel, South Africans will have to continue waiting for normal life to return.  Linda Givetash, for VOA News, Johannesburg. 

 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

 In our press freedom spotlight this week -   

  

Journalists from Belarus, Guatemala, and beyond were honored at this year’s International Press Freedom Awards.  

 

The awards are presented annually by the nonprofit Committee to Protect Journalists.  They are given to winners who are reporting under increasingly hostile conditions. 

  

VOA’s Julie Taboh introduces us to several of the honorees in this week’s Press Freedom spotlight.   

 

 

 

 

JULIE TABOH, VOA Correspondent:  

 

Aye Chan Naing is executive director and chief editor of the Voice of Burma, or DVB.     

     

His independent news outlet suffered in the aftermath of Myanmar’s military coup when the junta seized power and started cracking down on media.      

 

Naing has been in exile in Norway where DVB now broadcasts via satellite, into Burma ((also known as Myanmar.))    

 

 

Aye Chan Naing, Democratic Voice of Burma Executive Director:     

 

The military have arrested over 100 journalists after the coup in February 2021. And still about 50 people are still being detained in prison.    

 

 

 

JULIE TABOH: 

Including more than a dozen of his own journalists.     

 

Naing is one of the recipients of the Committee to Protect Journalists’ 2021 International Press Freedom Awards.     

 

 

Aye Chan Naing, Democratic Voice of Burma Executive Director: 

 

I think this award will highlight the plight of our journalists on the ground, who are in prison, but also who are still struggling to report, risking their life, risking their future. 

    

 

JULIE TABOH: 

 

Also honored are journalists from Belarus, Guatemala, and Mozambique for their reporting at a time of dire conditions for media in their respective countries.    

 

   

     

Joel Simon, Committee to Protect Journalists Executive Director: 

 

I think that our honorees recognize, and we recognize, that the environment for independent journalism has changed everywhere, including in the United States. The challenges are greater, that period of profound optimism that existed when I started this job 25 years ago, unfortunately, that’s no longer the case.  

 

 

 

JULIE TABOH: 

Anastasia Mejia knows first-hand.   

 

The Guatemalan journalist was the only reporter covering a protest in her hometown of Joyabaj in August of 2020. She was later detained.     

 

 

Anastasia Mejía, Guatemalan Journalist: 

 

I was deprived of my liberty for 36 days; the hearings were postponed in order to delay the process. 

     

 

JULIE TABOH: 

A judge ruled that she was not guilty. But Mejía is still afraid.     

     

 

Anastasia Mejía, Guatemalan Journalist: 

 

If I keep talking, they will kill me, they will destroy my family. 

 

 

JULIE TABOH: 

Joel Simon says that while he feels guardedly optimistic about the future of journalism, he is also a realist.     

 

 

    

Joel Simon, Committee to Protect Journalists Executive Director: 

 

Press freedom or freedom of expression is the battle of the information age, and we must prevail, and we must know that we’re in a really difficult and prolonged struggle.       

 

 

 

JULIE TABOH: 

As for Aye Chan Naing, he also remains in the struggle for press freedom.     

     

 

Aye Chan Naing, Democratic Voice of Burma Executive Director: 

 

I think it’s a really bright future; now, almost more than 10 months after the coup, the military [[is]] never really able to silence the country and silence the people, and we’re getting tons of information from around the country.  

     

The first time when I left Burma in 1988, it took 20 years before I could go back to Burma. And my hope is this time around, it won’t take that long.     

    

 

JULIE TABOH: 

Julie Taboh, VOA News. 

CAROLYN PRESUTTI: 

 

That’s all for now.     

 

I’m Carolyn Presutti.  

 

Follow me on Twitter at CarolynVOA.  

 

Connect with us on Instagram and Facebook at VOANews.  

   

And stay up to date any time of the day online at VOANews.com.   

 

For all of those behind the scenes who brought you today’s show, thanks for joining us and stay safe out there.   

 

We’ll see you again next week for The Inside Story.  

 

### 

 

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US, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Britain Voice Support for Sudanese Political Deal

The United States and three other countries voiced encouragement Thursday over a political deal to reinstate Abdalla Hamdok as Sudan’s prime minister.

Sudanese military leaders struck a deal with civilian political forces on November 21 to return Hamdok to power after he was deposed in an October 25 military coup and spent nearly four weeks under house arrest.

The deal empowers Hamdok to lead a government during a political transition expected to last until 2023 while sharing power with the military.

Members of major political parties and Sudan’s influential protest movement have opposed the agreement, with some calling it a betrayal.

The November deal is meant to be based on an earlier agreement reached between the military and civilian political forces after the ouster of Omar al-Bashir in 2019, when they had agreed to share power until elections.

The agreement sparked massive street protests in Khartoum and other cities days after it was reached. As of late November, at least 40 unarmed protesters had been killed by excessive force used by the country’s security forces during nationwide protests since the coup, according to Amnesty International, which attributed the death toll to the Sudanese Doctors Committee.

“We urge signatories to live up to the commitments made in the political agreement,” the U.S., Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Britain said in a joint statement. “In this respect we note with appreciation the recent releases of political detainees, and the establishment of a committee of investigation to ensure that those responsible for violence against protestors are held accountable.

The military coup occurred after weeks of escalating tensions between military and civilian leaders over Sudan’s transition to democracy.

The coup has threatened to derail the process that began after the ouster of longtime autocrat Bashir in a popular uprising in 2019.

Some information in this report also came from Reuters.

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US State Department: Terrorism Still a ‘Pervasive Threat Worldwide’

Terrorist groups remained “a persistent and pervasive threat worldwide” through last year, the U.S. State Department concluded in a new assessment on Thursday. 

 

“The United States and its partners made significant major strides against terrorist organizations,” the report concluded about Western anti-terrorism efforts through the end of 2020, the last year of former President Donald Trump’s White House tenure. However, it said “the terrorism threat has become more geographically dispersed in regions around the world.” 

 

The report said that although the Islamic State terrorist group lost all the territory it had seized in Iraq and Syria, “the organization and its branches continued to mount a worldwide terrorism campaign, carrying out deadly attacks globally,” killing more people in 2020 than in any previous year. 

 

The report said that al-Qaida and its affiliates faced the “significant” loss of two key leaders, yet their networks “continued to exploit under-governed spaces, conflict zones, and security gaps in the Middle East to acquire terrorist resources and conduct terrorist attacks.” 

 

The State Department concluded that al-Qaida “bolstered its presence abroad, particularly in the Middle East and Africa, where affiliates AQAP, al-Shabab in the Horn of Africa, and Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin in the Sahel remain among the most active and dangerous terrorist groups in the world.” 

 

In addition, it said, “Iran continued to support acts of terrorism regionally and globally during 2020. Regionally, Iran supported proxies and partner groups in Bahrain, Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen, including Hezbollah and Hamas.” 

The report said senior al-Qaida officials “continued to reside in Iran and facilitate terrorist operations from there. Globally, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Qods Force remained the primary Iranian actors involved in supporting terrorist recruitment, financing, and plots across Europe, Africa, and Asia, and both Americas.” 

 

The State Department report said the global COVID-19 pandemic “complicated the terrorist landscape, creating both challenges and opportunities for terrorist groups. While the pandemic disrupted terrorist travel, financing, and operations, terrorist groups adapted their approaches and appeals, using the internet to continue radicalizing others to violence and inspiring attacks worldwide.” 

 

The Islamic State “exploited the crisis to reinforce violent extremist narratives, proclaiming to followers that the virus was ‘God’s wrath upon the West,’” the report concluded. 

 

Despite the ongoing terrorist threat, the report said the U.S. “continued to play a major role” in prosecuting IS foreign terrorist fighters and in marshaling allied countries to fight global terrorism. 

 

It said that to ensure that Islamic State fighters captured by the Syrian Democratic Forces never return to the battlefield, “the United States continued to lead by example in bringing back its citizens and prosecuting them when appropriate,” including 10 charged with an array of terrorism-related crimes. 

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Rights Groups: Amhara Forces in Ethiopia Committed Atrocities in Tigray

Rights groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch say forces from Ethiopia’s Amhara region have committed a series of atrocities in the neighboring Tigray region.

According to the two group’s reports, released Thursday, Amhara region militia forces are carrying out mass detentions and killing civilians in western Tigray.

Joanne Mariner, Director of Crisis Response at Amnesty International, says “The new onslaught of abuses by Amhara forces against Tigrayan civilians remaining in several towns in Western Tigray should ring alarm bells.”

Mariner also called on immediate intervention to prevent further atrocities on ethnic Tigrayans in detention facilities.

The rights groups said they learned of the atrocities from victims, witnesses and residents of Western Tigray.

The rights group says Amhara region police officers, police militias and a civilian militia group known as Fanos have systematically rounded up Tigrayans in the towns of Adebai, Humera, and Rawyan since early November.

According to the report, the Amhara forces are also involved in looting shops and villages. Witnesses say the forces also shoot locals when they attempt to flee.

Both rights groups called on the Ethiopia government and its allies to stop targeting civilians, release the detainees, and allow humanitarian agencies access to Western Tigray.

They asked the international community to put pressure on the government and pave the way for an international investigation.

Amnesty International says it has sought a comment from Ethiopian authorities on the matter but got no response.

Western Tigray is a disputed area between Tigray and Amhara regions. Amhara forces entered this fertile area following the outbreak of hostilities between the federal government and Tigrayan forces in November 2020.

On Friday, the U.N. Human Rights Council will hold special session on the situation in Northern Ethiopia following the request by the EU. But Ethiopia objects to the move and said the decision is politically motivated.

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Pro-Ethiopian Government Forces Behind New Wave of Violence in Tigray, Rights Groups

Pro-government forces in Ethiopia are responsible for a new wave of violence in the country’s northern Tigray region involving “mass detentions, killings and forced expulsions of ethnic Tigrayans,” two human rights groups said Thursday.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International issued a joint statement based on interviews with more than 30 witnesses and relatives who alleged the regional Amhara security forces carried out the abuses on Tigrayan civilians with guns, machetes and knives.

The rights groups said the forces attacked and killed Tigrayans trying to escape the renewed violence in November and December in the western part of the region. Scores of Tigrayans in detention are subjected to torture, starvation and other “life threatening conditions” while being denied medical care, the groups said.

Other civilians were taken away and remain unaccounted for, they said. 

“Without urgent international action to prevent further atrocities, Tigrayans, particularly those in detention, are at grave risk,” Amnesty International crisis response director Joanne Mariner said in the statement.

The allegations come one day before the U.N. Human Rights Council holds a special meeting to consider appointing an international team to investigate the extensive violations that have occurred during Ethiopia’s 13-month war.

The war began with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s deployment of troops to Tigray in response to the Tigray People’s Liberation Front’s seizure of military bases. 

The ensuing conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced several million from their homes and left more than 9 million people dependent on food aid. 

The Amhara regional government did not immediately comment on the allegations.

Agence France-Presse and the Associated Press provided some information for this report.

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EU Leaders Meet in Brussels to Strategize Against Omicron

Leaders of European Union member states are meeting in Brussels Thursday seeking a unified approach to the new omicron coronavirus variant to avoid widespread lockdowns and closed borders. 

Ahead of the summit, the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control on Wednesday said the new, highly transmissible omicron is likely to become the dominant variant in the region as early as next month.

In the midst of the festive holiday season, many leaders of nations which are heavily dependent on tourism expressed reluctance to close borders or add additional travel restrictions, such as mandatory testing.

But several nations ahead of the summit have already done so, at least through the holidays, with Italy implementing mandatory testing even for vaccinated travelers. 

The consensus going into Thursday’s meeting was that vaccination and booster programs needed to be accelerated. 

The other looming issue for EU leaders is ongoing tensions with Russia, which has amassed troops at the border with Ukraine, leading many in the international community to believe an invasion may be imminent.

European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen on Wednesday promised “unprecedented measures” should Russia escalate the situation. EU nations are divided between those in the east that think sanctions should be imposed immediately, and others like France and Germany who fear that could provoke an invasion. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin this week held video phone calls with European leaders and British Prime minister Boris Johnson, saying he was seeking negotiations guaranteeing the NATO alliance will not expand further east in Europe. ​

 

Some information for this report was provided by The Associated Press, Reuters, and Agence France-Presse. 

 

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‘Flash Mob-Style’ Thefts Challenge Stores and Holiday Shoppers

A series of “flash mob-style” thefts in U.S. stores this holiday season is leading to higher security and a lot of finger-pointing. Matt Dibble reports. Michelle Quinn contributed to this report.

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End of an Era: Airbus Delivers Last A380 Superjumbo to Emirates 

Airbus is set to deliver the final A380 superjumbo to Dubai’s Emirates on Thursday, marking the end of a 14-year run that gave Europe an instantly recognized symbol across the globe but failed to fulfil the commercial vision of its designers. 

 

Production of the world’s largest airliner — capable of seating 500 people on two decks together with perks like showers in first class — has ended after 272 were built compared with the 1,000 or more once predicted. 

 

Airbus, a planemaking conglomerate drawn together from separate entities in Britain, France, Germany and Spain to carry out their brainchild of mega-jets to beat congestion, pulled the plug in 2019 after airlines went for smaller, leaner models. 

 

Thursday’s handover is expected to be low key, partly because of COVID restrictions and also because Airbus is these days focusing its PR on environmental benefits of smaller jets. 

 

That’s in stark contrast to the spectacular light show that revealed the new behemoth in front of European leaders in 2005. 

 

Emirates is by far the largest buyer and still believes in the superjumbo’s ability to lure passengers. Even though no more A380s will be built, it will keep flying them for years. Many airlines disagree and have axed the A380 during the pandemic. 

 

Airline president Tim Clark refuses to bow to sceptics who say the days of spacious four-engined jets like the A380 are numbered as an airline seat becomes a commodity like any other. 

 

“I don’t share that view at all … And I still believe there is a place for the A380,” Clark recently told reporters. 

 

“Technocrats and accountants said it was not fit for purpose … That doesn’t resonate with our travelling public. They absolutely love that airplane,” he said. 

 

Shower talks

 The A380’s demise left deserted one of the world’s largest buildings, a 122,500-square-metre assembly plant in Toulouse. 

Airbus plans to use part of it to build some of the bread-and-butter narrowbody models that dominate sales like a deal with Qantas announced earlier on Thursday. 

But it is in Hamburg that some of the most striking features of the A380 evolved. 

 

Clark recalled how he huddled with Airbus developers in northern Germany to persuade Airbus chiefs in France to pay for the engineering needed to make in-flight showers a reality. 

 

“There was a lot of arm-folding and my friends in France were a little circumspect,” Clark said. 

 

“I had to sit with friends in the development unit in Hamburg having to build the showers, and then asked Toulouse management to see how it could be done, and so they bought in.” 

 

That innovation generated headlines but did not translate into sales needed to keep the A380 going. 

 

The plane was designed in the 1990s when travel demand was soaring and China offered seemingly unlimited potential. 

 

By the time the first delivery came in 2007, the plane was more than two years late. And when Emirates got its first A380 a year later, the emerging financial crisis was already forcing analysts to trim their forecasts for the biggest jets. 

 

Boeing was meanwhile capturing orders for a revolutionary new 787 Dreamliner, to be followed by the Airbus A350. 

 

“There was a slowing down of appetite and enthusiasm. We didn’t share that view; we put this great [A380] aircraft to work,” Clark said on the sidelines of an airlines meeting. 

 

“We have what I think is one of the most beautiful aircraft ever flown.” 

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NYC Russian Community Takes Pride in Cops Speaking Their Language

Of the 77 police precincts in New York City, three have Russian-speaking immigrants as commanding officers. It’s a point of pride for the local Russian community that makes its home here. Misha Gutkin has the story, narrated by Anna Rice. Camera – Alexander Barash.

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Jittery Ukrainian Villagers ‘Fear That a Big War Will Start’

Liudmyla Momot wipes away tears as she searches for clothes and household items to salvage from the ruins of her home that was shelled by Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

Her village of Nevelske, northwest of the rebel-held city of Donetsk, is only about 3 kilometers from the line of contact between the separatists and the Ukrainian military and has been emptied of all but five people.

Small arms fire frequently is heard in the daytime, giving way to the booms of light artillery and mortar shelling after dusk.

With the bloody conflict now more than 7 years old, there are fears in Ukraine and the West that a buildup of armed forces on Russia’s side of the border could lead to an invasion or the resumption of full-scale hostilities.

Rebels targeted Nevelske with shelling twice in the last month, damaging or destroying 16 of the village’s 50 houses and rattling the handful of nervous residents who remain.

“The worse Ukraine-Russia relations are, the more we simple people are suffering,” said 68-year-old Momot, who has worked at a dairy farm all her life.

Now with no home, “who could have imagined that? I was preparing for the winter, stocking up coal and firewood.”

After the shell hit her house, Momot fled to a nearby settlement where her son lives. But the anxiety has followed her there.

“We fear that a big war will start. People are scared and packed up their bags,” said Momot, who collected some blankets, warm clothes and other items in the debris.

The conflict in the eastern industrial heartland known as the Donbas erupted in April 2014, weeks after Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula following the ouster of Ukraine’s Moscow-friendly former president. Ukraine and the West have accused Russia of supporting the rebels with troops and weapons, but Moscow says that Russians who joined the fight were volunteers acting on their own.

More than 14,000 people have been killed in fighting that has driven more than 2 million people from their homes in the east.

When the conflict began, Nevelske had a population of 286. Now, the five older people who remain in the ruined village collect rainwater for drinking and cooking. Between shipments of humanitarian aid, they rely on eating stale bread.

“We have grown accustomed to the shelling,” said 84-year-old Halyna Moroka, who has stayed in Nevelske with her disabled son.

 

A 2015 peace agreement brokered by France and Germany ended large-scale battles, but frequent skirmishes have continued. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which monitors the shaky cease-fire, has reported an increasing number of such incidents, with both sides trading the blame for truce violations.

“The security situation along the contact line is still of concern, with a high level of kinetic activity,” Mikko Kinnune, the OSCE representative for the group that involves representatives of Ukraine, Russia and the rebels, said earlier this month.

Amid the recent Russian troop buildup, Washington and its allies have warned Moscow that it will pay a high economic price if it attacks Ukraine. Moscow denies having such intentions and accused Ukraine of planning to reclaim control of rebel-held territory, something Kyiv has rejected.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has urged the West to provide guarantees that NATO won’t expand to include Ukraine or deploy the alliance’s forces and weapons there, calling that a “red line” for Moscow. The U.S. and its allies have refused to make such a pledge, but U.S. President Joe Biden and Putin decided last week to hold talks to discuss Russian concerns.

The geopolitical threats resonate in Nevelske on those few occasions that the village has power, enabling its remaining residents to watch Russian television news.

“We don’t want war!” exclaimed 75-year-old Kateryna Shklyar, who shares her fears with her husband, Dmytro. Their daughter and grandchildren live in nearby Krasnohorivka, a Ukrainian-controlled western suburb of Donetsk.

“For how long will this torment last?” asked Shklyar. “It has worn out our souls and hearts. You can’t call that life, but we have no place to go.”

Humanitarian groups provide basic supplies to Nevelske and other villages and even try to offer housing in safer areas, but their resources are limited.

“I just survive each day, trying to make it to the evening, and my soul aches,” said Moroka, who has lost vision in one eye but can’t get any medical help.

“We are frightened,” she added. “It’s really scary to sit here and wait for death. It’s horrible!” 

 

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US Senate Democrats Lack Unanimity on Biden’s Social, Climate Package

Democrats in the U.S. Senate appear to have one key holdout in their push to pass a major social and environmental bill before next week’s Christmas holiday.

The Associated Press, Reuters and other news organizations reported Wednesday that based on information from people familiar with ongoing negotiations, Senator Joe Manchin is objecting to a piece of the legislation that extends an expiring child tax credit program for one year.

He told reporters Wednesday that he has “always been for child tax credits” and that reports about his opposition to including them in the legislation were “a lot of bad rumors.”

Manchin has expressed his opposition to the total size of the package of programs advocated by President Joe Biden. Democrats initially pursued a $3.5 trillion plan before cutting it to about $2 trillion to try to ease passage.

The proposals include expanding health care programs, universal prekindergarten, clean energy investments, and cutting prescription drug costs. Democrats want to pay for them with tax increases on big corporations and the wealthy.

With only a narrow majority in the Senate, and Republicans opposed to the package, Democrats need all members of their caucus to support it.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer had set a goal of getting approval by the Dec. 25 Christmas holiday.

White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters during a briefing Wednesday that the Biden administration is still hopeful of meeting that goal.

“We are optimistic that we will get this done before Christmas, and that is our focus, that is our hope, and that’s what we’re working towards,” Jean-Pierre said.

She said Biden and Manchin have had “two great conversations” this week.

When asked Wednesday if he believes the bill will be passed before the end of the year, Biden told a reporter: “I hope so. It’s going to be close.”

The child tax credit up for extension is an expanded program that sent families monthly checks beginning in July. Most received $300 for each child under the age of 6, and $250 for children ages 6-17.

Without an extension, the program would revert to its previous form, a credit of $2,000 per child when filing annual tax returns instead of receiving monthly checks.

Senate Democrats are also considering whether to prioritize voting rights legislation, which Republicans also opposed, as the year comes to a close.

“If we can get the congressional voting rights done, we should do it,” Biden told a reporter when asked about the issue Wednesday. “If we can’t, we got to keep going. There’s nothing domestically more important than voting rights. It’s the single-biggest issue.”

Some information for this report came from the Associated Press and Reuters. 

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Israel to Donate 1 Million COVID Vaccines to African Nations

The Israeli government on Wednesday said it was donating 1 million coronavirus vaccines to the U.N.-backed COVAX program.

The Foreign Ministry said the AstraZeneca vaccines would be transferred in the coming weeks, a decision that was part of Israel’s strengthening ties with the African countries.

“I am delighted that Israel can contribute and be a partner in eradicating the pandemic around the world,” said Foreign Minister Yair Lapid.

The announcement said the vaccines would reach close to a quarter of African countries, though it did not provide a list. Israel has close ties with a number of African nations, including Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda. Israel also established relations with Sudan last year as part of a series of U.S.-brokered accords.

COVAX is a global initiative that aims to provide coronavirus vaccines to poorer nations. Wealthier countries have acquired the most of the world’s vaccine supplies, causing vast inequality in access to jabs.

Israel was one of the first countries to vaccinate its population. Early this year, it came under criticism for not sharing enough of its supplies with the Palestinians.

Since then, Israel has vaccinated tens of thousands of Palestinians who work in Israel and its settlements, and the Palestinians have procured vaccines from COVAX and other sources. 

 

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Biden Pledges Increased Assistance to Tornado-Ravaged Kentucky

President Joe Biden toured the aftermath of a deadly tornado strike that rampaged through the middle of the United States, doing the most damage in the state of Kentucky. Dozens were killed in that state alone, and more than 100 people are missing. VOA White House Correspondent Anita Powell reports from the White House.

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Foreign Disinformation Stokes Fears of Violence in US

Ongoing efforts by foreign intelligence services and global terrorist organizations to seed the United States with disinformation appear to be working, raising new fears of a terrorist attack in the coming weeks, according to a senior Homeland Security official.

The warning, while largely consistent with the department’s most recent anti-terrorism bulletin issued in November, comes as the country prepares for the Christmas holiday and New Year celebrations, along with the one-year anniversary of the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol.

“The threat is more volatile,” John Cohen, the senior most official at DHS’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis, told a virtual forum Wednesday.

“We’ve made progress. We’re continuing to make progress on a day-to-day basis,” Cohen added. “But we still have a ways to go.”

November’s anti-terrorism bulletin warned that the U.S. was facing “a significant threat” from domestic extremists for the remainder of 2021 and extending into early 2022.

But Cohen told the forum, hosted by the George Washington University Program on Extremism, the risks have become more unpredictable due to “a significant level of activity by foreign intelligence organizations,” many gaining traction with unrelenting disinformation campaigns that he described as both persistent and highly sophisticated.

“What makes the environment more volatile, from my perspective, is that the narratives that are being promoted by these threat actors are rapidly finding their way into the mainstream media ecosystem where they’re being amplified by public figures, in the media, in government,” he said.

“Their objective may be political or ratings-based,” Cohen said. “But in the current threat environment, the broader that these narratives are shared and spread, the higher the likelihood that they will be consumed by an individual who will use it as a justification for violence.”

Other warnings

This is not the first time Cohen has warned about the dangers of disinformation from foreign intelligence services and terror groups. Nor is he alone in his concerns.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas warned Tuesday of “serious and significant” ramifications from the spread of disinformation.

“False narratives present a threat to our security,” Mayorkas said during the Bloomberg Technology Forum. “We need our leaders to step up and fight against it because the words of leaders, they matter quite a bit. They can be very influential in the public discourse.”

Former intelligence officials and analysts have told VOA the groundwork for the latest destabilizing efforts was laid before the 2020 election, with Russia in particular finding ways to ingratiate a stable of influence peddlers to U.S. audiences on the far right and the far left.

“Generally speaking, getting Kremlin- or Beijing-friendly narratives to be repeated by mainstream outlets is the ultimate end goal of those running malign influence campaigns,” Bret Schafer, a digital disinformation fellow with the Washington-based Alliance for Securing Democracy, told VOA via email.

“It’s far more effective to have messages come from known and trusted sources within a society than from without, so influential figures and outlets have long been targeted by those seeking to influence American public opinion,” he added.

U.S. officials believe Iran and China have copied the Russian playbook, with varying degrees of success.

This past July, social media giant Facebook announced it took down an Iranian campaign known as Tortoiseshell, which aimed to manipulate American military personnel and defense contractors on social media. 

That effort by Tehran followed an email campaign launched just ahead of the U.S. 2020 elections aimed at intimidating U.S. voters.

And as far back as March 2020, senior State Department officials said Russia, China and Iran were finding ways to amplify each other’s disinformation campaigns regarding the origins and the spread of the coronavirus, which causes COVID-19.

According to U.S. officials and analysts, these sorts of efforts have only continued to gain in popularity, with a variety of adversaries focused on using many of those same issues to reach and possibly influence vulnerable Americans.

“The first part is, can you rally an audience to do something awful or change a vote or that sort of thing, which is an enduring sort of campaign,” Clint Watts, a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, told VOA.

Watts, a former FBI special agent, said the second part of these influence operations is potentially even more dangerous.

“It’s the acute scenario, which means putting [social media] accounts under cover to look like and talk like Americans into spaces where they know there are people that have a propensity to violence,” he said. “It’s a numbers game. … You throw the idea out and if your audience is large enough, and the larger audience gets it, the greater the chance that one of them will pick up on that and run with it.”

Best defense: informed citizens

Top U.S. law enforcement officials have raised concerns, though this past March, FBI Director Christopher Wray said the bureau’s efforts can only do so much.

“At the end of the day, no amount of FBI investigating can by itself sufficiently insulate our country from this threat,” Wray said at the time. “Our best defense is a well-informed public.”

Nonetheless, Cohen, the senior intelligence official at the Department of Homeland Security, said Wednesday that helping make sure the American public can see through some of these influence operations has been difficult.

“Trying to educate the public that, depending on where they get their information, they may be specifically being targeted with disinformation, that is the biggest challenge we’re facing right now,” Cohen said. “For a subset of our population, they’re not going to believe what the government is telling them.”

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Germany Expels 2 Russian Diplomats Over 2019 Killing

Germany is expelling two Russian diplomats over what a German court said was a Russian-ordered killing of a German citizen of Chechen origin in Berlin in 2019. 

In the high-profile incident, Zelimkhan “Tornike” Khangoshvili was gunned down in a Berlin park. 

On Wednesday, a German court found Russian Vadim Krasikov guilty of murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment, saying he was working for Russian authorities who had provided him with a false identity and other resources.

Calling the murder a “grave breach of German law and the sovereignty of the Federal Republic of Germany,” Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock summoned the Russian ambassador to discuss the case and expel the two diplomats. 

In 2004, Khangoshvili was involved in an attack on a Russian police station that left police and civilians dead. 

“There is no doubt that Khangoshvili bears responsibility for people’s deaths,” Judge Olaf Arnoldi said, adding that Russian authorities wanted “revenge and retribution” for the attack. 

“Khangoshvili had given up the fight against the Russian Federation years before. He had not held a weapon in his hands since 2008,” Arnoldi said. “This was not an act of self-defense by Russia. This was and is nothing other than state terrorism.” 

In December 2019, Russian President Vladimir Putin called Khangoshvili a “terrorist and murderer.” 

While living in Georgia in 2015, Khangoshvili survived an assassination attempt. He later moved to Ukraine and then to Berlin. 

Russia’s ambassador in Berlin denied Russian involvement in Khangoshvili’s murder. 

“We consider the verdict an unobjective, politically motivated decision that seriously aggravates already complicated Russian-German relations,” Russian Ambassador Sergei Nechayev said, adding it was “an unfriendly act that won’t go unanswered.” 

“The absurd notion about Russia’s involvement in the wrongdoing during the entire course of the trial was being methodically imposed on the public, was being weaved into the general anti-Russian background, but wasn’t in the end proved with convincing evidence,” he said. 

Some information in this report comes from Reuters and The Associated Press. 

 

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US Federal Reserve Signals 3 Interest Rate Hikes in 2022

Policymakers at the U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve, moved aggressively Wednesday to fight raging inflation in consumer prices for American shoppers and businesses. 

The policymakers announced they soon would end their stimulus to fight the economic damage from the coronavirus pandemic and signaled they could increase their benchmark interest rate three times next year. 

With consumer prices surging at an annualized 6.8% pace in November, the biggest jump in nearly four decades, the Fed said it will move faster to wind down its vast asset purchase program by March, rather than the initial goal of mid-2022, that it had used to boost the world’s biggest economy from the ravages of the pandemic. 

The Fed, in a statement after a two-day policy meeting in Washington, said the bond purchases could be ended faster “in light of inflation developments and the further improvement in the labor market.” 

For the moment, the central bank kept its benchmark interest rate near zero, a widely watched standard that influences the interest rates that consumers pay to borrow money to buy such big-ticket items as cars, and businesses pay to expand their operations or buy machinery. 

But the central bank said as it ends its purchase of billions of dollars of bonds, it could then hike its benchmark rate by a quarter of a percentage point three times in 2022, to keep inflation from getting out of hand without causing other problems in the American economy. 

“Economic developments and changes in the outlook warrant this evolution of monetary policy,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell told reporters during a post-meeting news conference. “The economy has been making rapid progress toward maximum employment.” 

While only a small percentage of consumers need to buy a new or used car, everyone needs to eat, and most American adults drive a vehicle of some sort. So, they have been especially hit in recent months by sharply rising food prices and increasing prices for gasoline, although gas prices are now receding again as world crude oil prices drop. 

One recent poll showed that 80% of Americans think prices at grocery stores especially are too high.

Powell presaged Wednesday’s policy shift two weeks ago when he said the central bank needed to act to keep inflation in check. 

“Almost all forecasters do expect that inflation will be coming down meaningfully in the second half of next year,” Powell said. “But we can’t act as though we’re sure of that. We’re not at all sure of that.” 

The end-of-meeting Fed statement said, “Progress on vaccinations and an easing of supply constraints are expected to support continued gains in economic activity and employment as well as a reduction in inflation.” 

But it said, “Risks to the economic outlook remain, including from new variants of the virus.” 

 

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Freelance Journalist Accredited to The Associated Press detained in Ethiopia

A freelance video journalist accredited to The Associated Press in Ethiopia has been detained by police in the capital, Addis Ababa, the news organization said Wednesday.

Amir Aman Kiyaro was detained under the country’s new war-related state of emergency powers on November 28 after returning home from a reporting trip. He has not been charged.

Officials with the Ethiopian Media Authority, the prime minister’s office, the Foreign Ministry and other government offices have not responded to repeated requests from the AP for information about him since his detention.

State media on Wednesday reported his detention, citing federal police, and said he was accused of “serving the purposes” of a terrorist group by interviewing it. The report said local journalists Thomas Engida and Addisu Muluneh also were detained.

Federal police inspector Tesfaye Olani told state media that the journalists violated the state of emergency law and Ethiopia’s anti-terrorism law and the violations could lead to seven to 15 years behind bars.

In a statement, AP Executive Editor Julie Pace urged that Kiyaro be freed: “The Associated Press is extremely concerned that AP freelancer Amir Aman Kiyaro has been detained by the Ethiopian government, accused of promoting terrorism. These are baseless allegations. Kiyaro is an independent journalist who has done important work in Ethiopia on all sides of the conflict. We call on the Ethiopian government to release Kiyaro immediately.”

She said the AP until now had chosen to keep the case out of the public eye while the news organization worked on potential diplomatic channels.

Ethiopia’s government in November declared a state of emergency, which includes sweeping powers of detention, after a year of war as rival forces from the country’s northern Tigray region in collaboration with the Oromo Liberation Army moved closer to the capital. The government this year declared both the Tigray forces and the OLA as terrorist groups.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed in the war that erupted in November 2020. The Tigray forces say they are pressuring the government to lift a deadly blockade on their region but also want Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to step aside. Mediation efforts by the United States and African Union for a cease-fire have made little progress.

Kiyaro has covered both sides of the war this year for the AP, including groundbreaking reporting on the alleged mass killings by Tigray forces in the community of Chenna Teklehaymanot after the fighters in recent months moved into Ethiopia’s neighboring Amhara region.

In late November, the country’s state of emergency command sought to restrict media reporting on the war, forbidding the sharing of nonofficial information on “military-related movements, battlefront results and situations.” Foreign media have been barred from Tigray for much of the war, with communications links severed.

The government-created Ethiopian Human Rights Commission on Wednesday said it was monitoring the situation of four other local journalists detained in recent weeks.

Last month, it said it was alarmed by the conditions of the detentions of perhaps thousands of people who have been swept up under the state of emergency. It urged authorities to immediately release people detained without “evidence establishing reasonable grounds for suspicion.”

Spokespeople for the commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Kiyaro.

“Ethiopia has again become one of the worst jailers of journalists in sub-Saharan Africa,” the Committee to Protect Journalists said in a statement last week, describing the media environment as “hostile” three years after the prime minister took office and his government freed journalists as part of sweeping political reforms that have since been eroded.

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Turkey Steps Up Drive to Influence Africa with Istanbul Summit

Istanbul hosts a two-day African Summit this week, the latest effort by Turkey to expand its diplomatic and economic influence in Africa. For VOA, Dorian Jones reports from Istanbul.

Produced by: Marcus Harton

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NASA Probe Becomes First Spacecraft to Enter Sun’s Atmosphere

The U.S. space agency NASA says its Parker Solar Probe this week became the first spacecraft to enter the Sun’s atmosphere, also known as the corona. 

The space agency announced the news Tuesday at a press conference during a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in New Orleans. 

In a statement, NASA scientists said the probe actually entered the Sun’s corona April 18, but it took until now to get the data and examine it to confirm it had accomplished its mission. 

NASA said while the Sun doesn’t have a solid surface, it does have a superheated corona made of solar material bound to the Sun by gravity and magnetic forces. The point at which those forces are too weak to contain material ejected from the sun is considered the edge of the corona, an area scientists call the Alfvén critical surface. 

NASA says the Parker probe crossed this boundry about 13 million kilometers above the surface of the sun. Until they were able to examine the data from the probe, scientists were not exactly sure where the area was. 

The scientists say during the flyby, which lasted only a few hours, the solar probe passed into and out of the corona several times. The data it gathered in doing so proved what some had predicted — that the Alfvén critical surface isn’t shaped like a smooth ball, but has it has spikes and valleys that wrinkle the surface. 

The Parker Solar Probe was launched in 2018 and was intended to exactly what it is doing: flying closer to the sun than any spacecraft has done before. NASA scientists compare what the probe has accomplished to landing on the moon. As the mission continues, the agency says, it will help scientists uncover critical information about Earth’s closest star and its influence on the solar system. 

A paper on the achievement was also published Tuesday in the scientific journal Physical Review Letters. 

Some information for this report was provided by the Associated Press.

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US Senate Passes $770 Billion Defense Bill, Biden’s Signature Next

The U.S. Senate voted overwhelmingly on Wednesday for a version of the National Defense Authorization Act, or NDAA, that authorizes $770 billion in defense spending — $25 billion more than requested by President Joe Biden —sending the measure to the White House for the president’s signature. 

The vote was 89-10, with strong support from both Democrats and Republicans for the annual legislation setting policy for the Department of Defense. The House of Representatives passed it by 363-70 last week. 

Biden is expected to sign the bill, but the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment on its passage on Wednesday. 

The NDAA is closely watched by a broad swath of industry and other interests because it is one of the only major pieces of legislation that becomes law every year and because it addresses a wide range of issues. 

The NDAA has become law every year for six decades. 

Authorizing about 5% more military spending than last year, the fiscal 2022 NDAA is a compromise after intense negotiations between House and Senate Democrats and Republicans after being stalled by disputes over China and Russia policy. 

It includes a 2.7% pay increase for the troops, and more aircraft and Navy ship purchases, in addition to strategies for dealing with geopolitical threats, especially Russia and China. 

The NDAA includes $300 million for the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, which provides support to Ukraine’s armed forces, $4 billion for the European Defense Initiative and $150 million for Baltic security cooperation. 

On China, the bill includes $7.1 billion for the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and a statement of congressional support for the defense of Taiwan, as well as a ban on the Department of Defense procuring products produced with forced labor from China’s Xinjiang region. 

It also includes an overhaul of the military justice system to take decisions on whether to prosecute cases of rape, sexual assault and some other major crimes out of the hands of military commanders. 

The change was a partial victory for activists because it did not strip military commanders of the authority to prosecute all felonies. It came after advocates led by Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand waged a yearslong effort to change the system in response to the thousands of cases of sexual assault among service members, many of which are never prosecuted. 

The bill does not include some provisions included in earlier versions, notably one that would have required women to register for the military draft. The proposal had faced stiff opposition from a handful of socially conservative Republican lawmakers who thought it would erode traditional gender roles, threatening to stymie the entire NDAA. 

 

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