Saturday, May 16, 2026

Coronavirus: Joy in Downing Street at handling of pandemic is predicated on one big bet

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There is a lot to cheer about right now in 10 Downing Street.

The government has managed to stick to its timetable – devised two months ago – for lifting lockdown, almost incredibly having the overt assent of the Labour Party to today’s plan.

The governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are all remaining under stronger forms of lockdown, meaning more misery for voters there, with devolved administrations now having to potentially play catch up with Westminster in the coming weeks.

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Lockdown restrictions are being loosened in England

Coronavirus is undoubtedly in abeyance, according to almost every measurement.

Furthermore according to YouGov tonight a plurality of voters agreeing with Boris Johnson’s judgement around lockdown lifting measures – unlike last time.

Coronavirus
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Coronavirus is in abeyance in the UK

Also the daily news conferences, once a necessity born of crisis but now a millstone around ministers’ neck, are gone for good.

Plus an opportunity to reshape Britain, and more importantly take out internal Whitehall critics, all under the cover of coronavirus as well as Brexit.

There’s more to cheer about.

There is no internal Tory opposition of note – no leader for those Conservative rebels that occasionally mutter in private – and an 80 strong majority going nowhere.

Meanwhile Keir Starmer is facing questions from his left wing demanding to know why he’s backing the government tonight: Jeremy Corbyn’s support base has not completely disappeared.

And the cherry on the cake is that the prime minister is now able to legally hold his wedding ceremony soon after 4 July – even if curiously Mr Johnson did not include this in the top three aims for the coming week.

From Dominic Cummings’ point of view, what’s not to like?

All of this predicated on one massive bet by Mr Johnson’s government: that COVID-19 is not returning to the UK in a big way.

You only had to look at the tone and body language of the two scientists who have guided the nation over the last three months to know that they are are not as confident as their political master on this critical question.

Consider this by England’s chief medical officer at the final daily briefing.



Professor Chris Whitty would be surprised if coronavirus situation wasn't around next spring







Whitty sees current situation going into next year

Chris Whitty said: “I would be surprised and delighted if we weren’t in this current situation through the winter and into next spring. I think then, let’s regroup and work out where we are.

“I expect there to be a significant amount of coronavirus circulating at least into that time, and I think it is going to be quite optimistic for science to come fully to the rescue over that kind of timeframe.

“But I have an absolute confidence in the capacity of science to overcome infectious diseases – it has done that repeatedly and it will do that for this virus, whether that is by drugs, vaccines or indeed other things that may come into play.

“For the medium-to-long term, I’m optimistic.

“But for the short-to-medium term, until this time next year, certainly I think we should be planning for this, for what I consider to be the long haul into 2021.”

A worker bee, the symbol of Manchester is seen painted onto the floor with a message Thank You NHS outside the new NHS Nightingale North West hospital inside Manchester Central, Manchester which is open for patients as the UK continues in lockdown to help curb the spread of the coronavirus. PA Photo. Picture date: Tuesday April 14, 2020. See PA story HEALTH Coronavirus. Photo credit should read: Peter Byrne/PA Wire
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The virus has seen thousands die around the world

Mr Johnson insisted he was taking a cautious approach, just days after telling me that there was little to no chance of a national level lockdown in the event of another coronavirus spike, because the government has honed the “whackamole” approach of local lockdown measures.

The Treasury would struggle to pay for another furlough scheme, while the public appetite for a second lockdown is limited.

Mr Johnson is going to adopt an optimistic tone in the coming days, with speeches about jobs, and plans to rejuvenate the economy.

The nation needs to play its part in getting back on our feet. But so to does the virus that continues to catch the world by surprise. Lets just hope someone has read them the Downing Street script.

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5,489 New COVID-19 Cases: Texas Reports New All-Time Daily High

Texas is reporting an all-time high in new COVID-19 cases, Gov. Greg Abbott says. Here, visitors to Six Flag Fiesta Texas in San Antonio pass through a thermal screening area on Friday. The park opened at 50% capacity.

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Texas is reporting an all-time high in new COVID-19 cases, Gov. Greg Abbott says. Here, visitors to Six Flag Fiesta Texas in San Antonio pass through a thermal screening area on Friday. The park opened at 50% capacity.

Eric Gay/AP

“Today, Texas will report an all-time high in the number of cases of people testing positive” for the coronavirus, says Gov. Greg Abbott adding that for the first time, his state would surpass 5,000 new cases in a single day.

Hours later, the Texas Department of State Health Services reported 5,489 new cases.

Abbott initially revealed the daunting new record during an interview with TV station KBTX, in which he urged people to take the deadly disease seriously, telling them to wear a mask in public, stay home when possible, and take other precautions.

“The hospitalization rate is at an all-time high,” he said. “The coronavirus is serious. It’s spreading in Brazos County, across the entire state of Texas.”

Texas is seeing a sharp rise in cases; it was just days ago that the state crossed the 4,000-case mark for the first time in its daily tally.

New cases have hit the Houston area so hard that the Texas Children’s Hospital is now admitting adult patients. The move comes despite the fact that Houston is home to the massive Texas Medical Center — deemed the largest medical center in the world.

“Texas Children’s is committed to providing additional capacity through ICU and acute care beds across our hospital campuses to take on both pediatric and adult patients,” the hospital said in a statement sent to NPR.

The adult patients include people who are COVID-19 positive and other cases. Those diagnosed with the coronavirus are being cared for in an expanded Special Isolation Unit, according to Texas Children’s Hospital.

The dramatic new numbers do not represent a second wave in Texas, which was among the first states to start the reopening process. The state health department’s graph of daily new case shows a steady rise since the COVID-19 pandemic began to take hold in March. The curve began to arc even higher earlier this month, continuing with Tuesday’s spike.

The number of new coronavirus cases has risen briskly in Texas during the month of June, sharpening an overall rise since cases crossed the 1,000-patient mark in March. The state now has 120,370 cases.

Texas Department of State Health Services / Screenshot by NPR


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Texas Department of State Health Services / Screenshot by NPR

The number of new coronavirus cases has risen briskly in Texas during the month of June, sharpening an overall rise since cases crossed the 1,000-patient mark in March. The state now has 120,370 cases.

Texas Department of State Health Services / Screenshot by NPR

Abbott has urged people to observe social and physical restrictions to curb the coronavirus in his state. He recently called the idea of shutting down the Texas economy again “the last option” to fight COVID-19. But on Tuesday, he also said agencies will clamp down on bars that have allowed overcrowding since restrictions began to lift.

And the governor hinted at the possibility of new limits, referring to “additional announcements that may be coming later today” or sometime this week.

“COVID-19 is now spreading at an unacceptable rate in the state of Texas, and it must be corralled,” Abbott said on Monday.

Calling on people to follow safety rules about washing their hands, social distancing, and wearing face coverings, he added, “Texans have shown that we don’t have to choose between jobs and health—we can have both. We can protect lives while also restoring livelihoods.”

Texas now has 120,370 cases, trailing New York, California, New Jersey and Illinois.

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Intel: House Republicans greenlight annexation as Trump administration waivers

Jun 23, 2020

The majority of the House Republican caucus signed onto a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday backing any decision he makes on annexing the West Bank “independent of outside pressure,” even as Donald Trump administration officials convene this week to decide whether they should give Israel the greenlight to proceed in July.

“We are aware of and deeply concerned by threats being expressed by some to retaliate against Israel as it makes decisions to ensure defensible borders,” wrote 116 House Republicans led by Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., Whip Steve Scalise, R-La., and Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney, R-Wyo. “It is shortsighted to threaten relations with Israel, a long-time friend and critical ally that shares our democratic values.”

They go on to reiterate support for Trump’s peace plan, which endorses the annexation of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and the entire Jordan Valley, while vowing to “stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel and oppose any effort to apply pressure.”

Why it matters: The letter, a lobbying priority for the Republican Jewish Coalition, comes after a slew of pro-Israel Democrats have warned Netanyahu against annexation. And although the White House laid the groundwork for annexation in his January peace plan, the Trump administration has grown warier of Netanyahu’s July target date in recent months. Trump himself may attend meetings this week on the issue with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, US envoy to Israel David Friedman, presidential adviser Jared Kushner and Israeli-Palestinian peace envoy Avi Berkowitz.

The Trump administration has asked Netanyahu to obtain support from his rival coalition partner Defense Minister Benny Gantz before pursuing annexation. Gantz in turn says he will not throw his weight behind annexation without support from Jordan’s King Abdullah II, who staunchly opposes the plan.

What’s next: Netanyahu is reportedly pushing for an early annexation date in case former Vice President Joe Biden succeeds in ousting Trump from the White House in November. Biden has warned Israel against annexation but has also resisted the push from progressive groups to use military aid as leverage.

Know more: Mazal Mualem explains why Trump’s endorsement is crucial for Netanyahu’s annexation plan. And Rina Bassist reports on Gantz’s latest annexation remarks.



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China Quietly Shipping Grain to North Korea, Port Sources Say

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Ships carrying grain labelled as “construction materials” have been sailing from a northeastern Chinese port to nearby North Korea, dockworkers told RFA, describing a secret operation run at night kept to avoid international scrutiny.

North Korea, which has struggled with chronic food insecurity for decades, suffered a huge economic shock in January when the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic prompted a complete shutdown of the Sino-Korean border.

The coronavirus lockdown followed drought and poor harvests in the impoverished country, whose trade options are limited by international sanctions aimed at depriving Pyongyang of cash for its nuclear and missile programs.

Chinese rice and corn are put on ships in the Chinese border city of Dandong. From there the ships sail about 100 nautical miles to Nampo, southwest of the North Korean capital Pyongyang, a Chinese source of Korean descent from Dandong, told RFA’s Korean service.

The source, who requested anonymity to speak freely, had been hired recently as a dockworker loading the ships at nighttime. The cargo is labelled as construction materials according to the source, who described daily shipping activity in mid-June but added that the scale of the operation was unknown.

“These days, they are loading shipments of food here in Dandong port every night.”

“These ships used to carry emergency supplies and construction materials to North Korea, but now they are being used to transport food,” the source told RFA’s Korean Service June 14, after he had worked a week as a day laborer at the port.

“This food is being exported by a certain Chinese trading company which has a dry materials contract with a state-run trading agency in North Korea. The company pays 200 yuan [U.S. $28.29] per day to each laborer loading the ships,” the worker said.

“But it’s all done in secret so no one can figure out how much food is being shipped, and if North Korea is paying for imported food or if the Chinese government is providing it for free,” added the source.

“The trading company keeps it all a secret by saying that the cargo heading to North Korea is construction materials, not food,” the source said.

Food shortages and coronavirus

China is believed to be North Korea’s largest aid donor, but Beijing releases few figures and prefers to provide relief on a bilateral basis. Most other donors give humanitarian aid through UN agencies and NGOs, subject to monitoring.

International sanctions on North Korea do not prohibit humanitarian assistance, but they make fertilizer hard for the North to obtain and aid groups say the restrictions hamper operations.

Another source, a trader from Dandong who asked not to be named, confirmed to RFA that ships carrying food are leaving the port nightly, sent by “a local trading company in China, which has been trading with a North Korean state-run trading company for many years.”

“China is sending food aid to North Korea, which is suffering from chronic food shortages and the coronavirus crisis,” the second source said.

The Dandong dockworker said shifts start very late at night.

“Work begins at night, [often later than 10 p.m.] After being fully loaded, the ships sail for Nampo, and return after three days. But since there are several ships transporting the food, we’re working at the port every night,” the dockworker said.

“We don’t have any information about when the food shipments will end because of all the secrecy of the project,” the dockworker said.

The Dandong trader said that under the UN sanctions regime, North Korean ships cannot sail into Dandong to retrieve the food, so the North Korean trading company must instead pay a premium for the Chinese company to deliver it.

“In 2016, North Korean ships were banned from entering Dandong under a UN resolution that imposed sanctions on North Korea for its nuclear and missile development tests. That’s why all the ships involved are Chinese,” said the Dandong trader.

RFA reported in January that Beijing had agreed to send food by rail from Dandong, which is across the Yalu River from North Kora’s Sinuiju city, causing a backup in freight traffic.

Sources said they were puzzled as to why the food aid was needed, especially since North Korea was not reporting any food crisis at the time.

Recurring food shortages

According to estimates from the South Korean Unification Ministry, North Korea will produce only 4.64 million tons of grain this year, about 860,000 tons shy of the 5.5 million tons it needs to adequately feed its citizens.

Earlier this month, the World Food Program (WFP) said humanitarian assistance is needed for more than 10 million people, nearly 40 percent of the country’s population.

The WFP hopes to provide food aid to about 1.2 million North Koreans this year.

North Korean state media said the country experienced its worst drought in 37 years last year, prompting warnings of a food crisis following 2018 harvest that had been the worst in a decade.

Two UN agencies, the World Food Program and the Food and Agriculture Organization, were at that time concerned that the June 2019 harvest of crops like wheat and barley would be extremely low after the prolonged drought.

A report released by the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in May 2019 said that 10.9 million people — more than 43 percent of the population — did not have access to adequate food last year.

China extended massive bilateral food aid during 1994-98, a period North Korea calls the “Arduous March,” when the country lost as much as 10 percent of its population of 22 million to mass starvation, amid an economic meltdown brought on by mismanagement and the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Reported by Jieun Kim for RFA’s Korean Service. Translated by Leejin Jun. Written in English by Eugene Whong.



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Man in custody after ‘distraught’ kids see mother fatally stabbed

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The 45-year-old was found on a nearby street almost two hours later, with what were believed to be self-inflicted wounds, and was transported to Rockhampton hospital in a serious condition.

Police will allege he and the woman were known to each other.

Detective Senior Sergeant Luke Peachey told reporters at the scene the incident was “very tragic” and said police would throw “every resource we’ve got at this”.

“The actual incident appears to have been witnessed by two young children,” he told reporters at the scene. “Obviously they’re distraught … they’ve watched their mother obviously, tragically become deceased.”

Senior Sergeant Peachey declined to comment further on whether the incident was domestic violence related.

“I won’t go into any details in this stage,” he said. “The circumstances and obviously what occurred here tonight will be under investigation long into the night and I’d say the upcoming days.”

Police are expected to address the media on Wednesday morning.

Anyone with information is urged to contact Policelink on 13 14 44 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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200 Covid-19 cases at Welsh meat plant outbreak

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The 2 Sisters plant in Anglesey has been closed due to the outbreak

There are now 200 confirmed Covid-19 cases linked to the coronavirus outbreak at a Welsh meat factory.

Public Health Wales (PHW) has confirmed 25 more cases at the 2 Sisters chicken processing plant, which employs about 500 people in Llangefni on Anglesey.

Now three Welsh meat plants have Covid-19 among it workers – with 34 cases linked to Kepak in Merthyr Tydfil and 70 at Rowan Foods in Wrexham.

Wales’ health minister said government will see if the sector should improve.

PHW have carried out more than 450 Covid-19 tests as a result of the Anglesey outbreak, which is the reason why schools will not open in the county on Monday.

The chicken processing plant in Llangefni, the smallest of food giant 2 Sisters’ 12 plants across the UK, has temporarily closed as a result of the outbreak.

“Incidents like this are a reminder that coronavirus is still circulating, sometimes invisibly, and that we all need to be vigilant,” said Dr Graham Brown of PHW.

Birmingham-based 2 Sisters is one of the UK’s biggest food manufacturing companies, employing about 18,000 people across the country and with an estimated £3bn annual turnover.

2 Sisters supply major outlets like Marks & Spencer, KFC, Asda and Aldi – although the company say none of their major customers are supplied from the Anglesey plant.

‘No evidence of wider community transmission’

Health Minister Vaughan Gething said there was no evidence of wider community transmission following the outbreaks at 2 Sisters and Rowan Foods – and did not see a need for local lockdowns in response.

Mr Gething said outbreaks in meat and food processing plants had been a feature of the pandemic around the world and food producers had been “generally good” at complying with Covid-19 workplace regulations.

However, he said: “We also know in the meat processing sector, operating margins can be very tight, many people are employed on fairly low pay and levels of statutory sick pay mean many people feel they have no choice but to carry on working when they are ill.”

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionVaughan Gething says he is being “deliberately cautious” to “keep Wales safe”

The minister said the government would look at the sector “within a very quick period of time” to understand if officials needed to do more.

Cases of coronavirus have generally fallen across Wales, Mr Gething said, with fewer than 100 cases each day in the first few weeks of June.

But he revealed on Tuesday that there had been 34 cases associated with Kepak in Merthyr Tydfil since April, with eight new cases since the start of June – on top of the 200 cases at 2 Sisters and 70 at the Rowan Foods outbreak in Wrexham.

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There has been a “small cluster” of cases at Kepak in Merthyr Tydfil

A union official has written to Rowan Foods to express “extremely worrying and developing issues” at the plant, which the company has denied.

In a letter seen by BBC Wales, Unite regional officer David Griffiths says one of the workers who tested positive for Covid-19 returned to work after isolating for six days.

People who have tested positive must self-isolate for at least seven days from when their symptoms began.

‘Astonished’

He writes: “The reason for my letter/email is to raise specific and extremely worrying and developing issues at the Wrexham site.

“We have had many members contacting us in relation to the ongoing situation of colleagues being tested as Covid-19 positive that were in work immediately before their positive tests.”

He added he had been told a manager “returned within six days of a positive Covid-19 test”.

“This being a food manufacturer I am astonished at this happening,” he wrote.

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The Rowan Foods outbreak has seen 70 cases

He said after two managers tested positive “no care or consideration” was made to workers who came into contact with those infected.

A statement from the Oscar Mayer Group, which runs Rowan Foods, said it had worked hard since March to implement measures to protect staff.

“We have reviewed potential risks of Covid-19 and have proactively made significant operational changes at the site to maintain social distancing, including various mitigations such as screens and visors,” it said.

“In addition, we have implemented a behavioural safety system and social distancing champions throughout the factory to ensure colleagues are socially distancing.”

What is happening at Kepak?

Jason Stevens, Usdaw union area organiser, said the priority at Kepak was to “put in place necessary safety measures and ensure that they are adhered to”.

He added: “Risk assessments continue and along with our Usdaw reps on site we are holding regular meetings with the company seeking to improve safety on site.”

Coronavirus regulations in Wales state workplaces must take “all reasonable measures to ensure that a distance of two metres is maintained between person on the premises and waiting to enter the premises”.

A fresh lockdown has been ordered in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia after a coronavirus outbreak linked to a meatpacking plant there.

The Food Standards Agency said it was “very unlikely you can catch coronavirus from food” as the virus is a respiratory illness.

Dr Brown, consultant in communicable disease control for PHW, said at Rowan Foods the “testing process is ongoing” and additional cases have been found.

“This does not mean that the company has been identified as the source of the infection, or that finding additional cases means the infection is increasing,” he added.

“However, we are identifying previously asymptomatic individuals that work for Rowan Foods Ltd with the infection.”

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Army suspects foul play in disappearance of Fort Hood soldier Vanessa Guillen

The Army is now convinced there was “foul play” involved in the two-month-old disappearance of Fort Hood Soldier Vanessa Guillen, Rep. Sylvia García, D-Texas, said Tuesday.

“They have now used the words foul play. They are convinced now that there is foul play involved and they are following all the leads they can,” the congresswoman said at a Fort Hood press conference that was live streamed on social media.

After weeks of protests, Guillen’s father, sisters, García and their attorney Natalie Khawam met with military investigators and officials at Fort Hood, Texas, where Guillen was serving and last seen. Her mother, Gloria Guillen, was also invited, but she said at the press conference that after she saw images of soldiers searching for her daughter in a river, she felt too ill to attend.

Rep. Garcia said the military provided a timeline and some answers to their questions, but not the detailed “tick-tock” of Guillen’s activities that they had hoped to get. García said she thought military officials were as forthcoming as they could be in the midst of a criminal investigation.

Military officials did not participate in Tuesday’s news conference. NBC News reached out to Fort Hood for response.

Vanessa Guillen

Guillen, a 20-year-old private first class in the 3rd Cavalry Regiment, was last seen April 22, at a Fort Hood parking lot. Her car and barracks room keys, identification card and wallet were found in the armory room where she was working the day she disappeared, Fort Hood officials have said.

Her disappearance has drawn local protests, while celebrities such as Salma Hayek have joined in the effort to draw attention to her disappearance.

Guillen’s family has said they have been frustrated with how the military responded to their concerns when they could not reach her that night and with the investigation since then.

“I pleaded with them from the beginning that they search for my hija (daughter), that they close the base and that they use the more than 30,000 soldiers to look for her and they never did it,” said Gloria Guillen at the press conference. “I begged them to close the base and investigate room by room, barrack by barrack, building by building and they didn’t do it. Why now are they doing a show to look for my daughter?”

She said tearfully that her daughter told her since she was 10 that she was going to join the military. “I thought it was kid’s play, then she entered her teens and entered high school. She enrolled and I was scared. In my hearty as a mom, I feared I would suffer,” said Guillen.

García said the military has pulled phone records and reviewed credit card and security records. Information on when she was last seen is based on interviews with people, however no camera video exists, which the family and their attorney said they found odd.

“So many gaps and holes”

The military confirmed Guillen was last heard from at 11:30 a.m. based on phone records. The family’s attorney Natalie Khawam said that a text was sent from Guillen’s phone on the day she was last heard from, notifying a supervisor of a serial number of one of the weapons she had to review.

Khawam questioned why such important military information would be texted and whether the text actually came from Guillen or someone using her phone. Guillen’s phone has not been found, Rep. Garcia said.

García said there continue to be discrepancies between the family’s timeline and what the investigators have detailed.

One has emerged regarding whether Guillen was in her barracks when routine head counts took place.

“In at least one, it was admitted the supervisor or sergeant who actually is supposed to account for everyone in the barrack submitted a report that everyone was accounted for when, in fact, now he’s admitted that he did not see Vanessa,” said Garcia.

She said there should have been three or four different checks at the barracks by the end of the day.

Khawam said the family shared with military officials that Guillen had told them as well as friends that a sergeant had followed her into a shower while she was naked.

“We suspect that person was her supervisor the same day after she was missing,” the attorney said.

The family also said she was not supposed to work on the day of her disappearance, but was called in to work and they want to know who called her in.

The family said the military would not provide names of who her supervisor was nor provide names of witnesses.

“There’s so many gaps and holes in what we learned today that I am going to demand a congressional investigation. For this family, we want to know what happened and who is covering up to who and why are they covering up,” Khawam said.

“I feel like we we’re not going to resolve this down here,” she said. “We need the higher ups now.”

In a separate case of a missing soldier, the Army announced Sunday that it had identified skeletal remains of Private Gregory Morales, 24, of Sapulpa, Oklahoma in the town of Killeen, where Fort Hood is located.

The military said they suspect foul play. Morales, who also used the last name Wedel, had been missing since Aug. 20, 2019. He was scheduled to be discharged from the Army in a couple of days.

Military officials say they have no information to connect Morales’ case to Guillen’s. The Army is offering $25,000 rewards for information in each of the cases.

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Major quake hits southern Mexico, triggers local Pacific tsunami – Firstpost

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By Julia Love

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – A powerful earthquake of magnitude 7.4 struck the coast of southern Mexico on Tuesday, killing at least one person, buckling paved roads, and setting off a tsunami in nearby Pacific coastal areas.

One person died in the state of Oaxaca, Governor Alejandro Murat said, after the quake hit the Pacific coastal state mid-morning.

The country’s seismological service said a tsunami on the Oaxaca coast was ongoing, with the sea level having risen 60 centimeters (2 feet) at Huatulco beach, a popular destination for U.S. and Canadian tourists.

Mexico’s civil protection agency recommended that residents move away from the coastline. Videos on social media showed the ocean’s water receding in Oaxaca, a mountainous state that is also home to coffee plantations and Spanish colonial architecture.

Miguel Candelaria, 30, was working at his computer in his family home in the Oaxaca town of Juchitan when the ground began to tremble. He ran outside with relatives, but they had to stop in the middle of the street as the pavement buckled and rocked.

“We couldn’t walk… the street was like chewing gum,” said Candelaria, 30.

Neighbors screamed in terror and some shouted out warnings to run from the electricity poles that looked poised to fall, said Candelaria, who works in telecommunications marketing.

Quakes of magnitudes over 7 are major earthquakes capable of widespread, heavy damage. A 7.1 magnitude earthquake that struck central Mexico in 2017 killed 355 people in the capital and the surrounding states.

Tuesday’s quake set off a tsunami warning for the Pacific coasts of Mexico and Central and South America. Waves of up to one meter (3.28 ft) were possible on the Mexican coast, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration warned.

Buildings shook in Mexico City, hundreds of miles away.

Helicopters flew low over the Roma and Condesa districts of the capital, apparently looking for damage in streets where many buildings still show the scars of the 2017 quake. The city’s public security ministry said a flyover showed “there are no fallen buildings.”

The U.S. Geological Survey said the epicenter of Tuesday’s quake was located 69 km (43 miles) northeast of the town of Pochutla.

It was very shallow, only 26 km (16 miles) below the earth’s surface, which would have amplified the shaking.

(Reporting by Frank Jack Daniel, Julia Love, Adriana Barrera, Stefanie Eschenbacher and Anthony Esposito in Mexico City and Sandra Maler in Washington; Writing by Alistair Bell; Editing by Rosalba O’Brien)

This story has not been edited by Firstpost staff and is generated by auto-feed.



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Another Tweet From Trump Gets a Label From Twitter

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OAKLAND, Calif. — Twitter added a label to another post by President Trump on Tuesday, the fifth time it has said he violated its policies and further escalating the company’s battle with the president over his often incendiary tweets.

In an early-morning tweet, Mr. Trump threatened “serious force” against any protesters who tried to establish an autonomous zone in Washington, D.C., as they have in Seattle. Twitter hid his message behind a warning label saying the president violated the company’s policies forbidding abusive behavior.

After years of taking a hands-off approach, Twitter began to moderate Mr. Trump’s posts more aggressively last month. It added fact-checking messages to some of his tweets about mail-in ballots and appended a warning label to a tweet in which he suggested that protesters would be shot. Last week, the company put an explanatory label on a tweet from Mr. Trump that included a doctored video about a “racist baby.”

In response, Mr. Trump accused Twitter of working to stifle conservative voices and harm his re-election campaign. Last month, he signed an executive order intended to roll back legal protections for Twitter and other internet companies. A lawsuit has been filed to block the order.

Despite pushback from the president, Twitter has continued its efforts to moderate his tweets, setting it apart from social media companies that have avoided taking action on the president’s posts. While Mr. Trump often posts identical content on his Twitter and Facebook accounts, Facebook has left most of them untouched. Facebook did remove the “racist baby” video after receiving a complaint from the copyright holder.

Twitter said Mr. Trump’s tweet about the autonomous zone included “the presence of a threat of harm against an identifiable group.” Such a tweet would be removed if a regular user posted it, but Twitter provides an exception to this policy for Mr. Trump and other government officials, allowing their messages to remain online behind a warning label.

“This Tweet will remain on the service given its relevance to ongoing public conversation,” Twitter said.



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For Portland, Ore., Woman, Home These Days Is Where She Parks Her Minivan

Naida Lavon, 67, lives in her minivan after losing her housing and being furloughed from her job.

Naida Lavon


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Naida Lavon

Naida Lavon, 67, lives in her minivan after losing her housing and being furloughed from her job.

Naida Lavon

The coronavirus pandemic has left tens of millions of people without a safety net. Naida Lavon is one of them.

Lavon is 67 years old, a retired school bus driver, and she was recently furloughed from her part-time job at Avis Rent-a-Car. In March, she also found herself without a home so she started living in her minivan on the streets of Portland, Ore. For the past few months, Lavon has been keeping an audio diary of her experience being newly homeless.

Her first night living in her car, Lavon didn’t know where to park and feel safe. She drove around and found a road in an industrial area on the west side of Portland’s airport. The road is lined on both sides with people living in their cars, RVs and trailers. Many look as if they have been parked there a long time: They have awnings and furniture set up. Lavon parks alongside them each night, and although she doesn’t interact with her neighbors much, she says she feels there’s safety in numbers.

For privacy, Lavon has blacked out most of the minivan’s windows with insulating material. Her bed takes up half the back of her car. Her mattress is made out of seat cushions, camping pads and a duvet cover. She has an old sleeping bag for warmth. She stores her belongings in plastic drawers and a rooftop carrier.

Lavon (here before the pandemic) considers herself fortunate compared with other people without housing.

Laura Jones


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Laura Jones

Lavon (here before the pandemic) considers herself fortunate compared with other people without housing.

Laura Jones

One of the biggest hurdles for Lavon is staying clean. Because of the pandemic, many public restrooms are closed. She often goes to the grocery store during the day to use the bathroom and wash up. Occasionally, she stops by a friend’s apartment to take a shower. Lavon says she tries not to panic about the possibility of getting the virus but takes as many precautions as she can.

Lavon considers herself fortunate compared with others living on the streets. She has a nice car, which runs well. She’s usually clean and well-dressed. She has Social Security and a small pension, even if it’s not enough to afford housing in Portland.

Hunker Down Diaries is a new series from Radio Diaries, sharing short diaries and conversations between people thrown together by the pandemic. Stories about ordinary life in extraordinary times. To hear more stories from the Hunker Down Diaries series, subscribe to the Radio Diaries Podcast.

In her audio diary, Lavon records a conversation with her daughter, Laura Jones, 43, as they sit in a Starbucks parking lot. Jones lives about two hours away in Tacoma, Wash., with her husband and two kids.

Jones wants to know how long her mother thinks she can live out of her minivan — until September, Lavon replies.

“I would like for you to stay with us,” her daughter says.

But there’s no spare room, and Lavon would be sleeping in the kitchen nook.

“I’m not comfortable with that,” Lavon tells her daughter. “I hate to feel like a burden.”

Lavon also worries that her presence would add tension to Jones’ relationship with her husband.

For Jones, the hardest part has been seeing her mom’s bed in the car.

“That’s when it hit me,” she tells her mother. “What kind of daughter am I if I’m letting you live in your car?”

Lavon has struggled with housing instability since she was a kid. She grew up with a single mom who worked multiple jobs, and they moved around a lot.

“I’m just one of those people that’s always on the move, not always willingly,” Lavon says. “That’s just how my life has gone.”

This story was produced by Nellie Gilles of Radio Diaries, with help from Sarah Kate Kramer and Joe Richman. It was edited by Deborah George and Ben Shapiro. We also had help from Jessica Deahl.

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