Wednesday, April 22, 2026

U.S. Unemployment Declines To 13.3%, Diverging From Expert Predictions

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. unemployment rate fell to 13.3% in May from 14.7%, and 2.5 million jobs were added — a surprisingly positive reading in the midst of a recession that has paralyzed the economy in the wake of the viral pandemic.

The May job gain suggests that businesses have quickly been recalling workers as states have reopened their economies.

Other evidence has also shown that the job market meltdown triggered by the coronavirus has bottomed out. The number of people applying for unemployment benefits has declined for nine straight weeks. And the total number of people receiving such aid has essentially leveled off.

The overall job cuts have widened economic disparities that have disproportionately hurt minorities and lower-educated workers. Though the unemployment rate for white Americans was 12.4% May, it was 17.6% for Hispanics and 16.8% for African-Americans.

Even with the surprising gain in May, it may take months for all those who lost work in April and March to find jobs. Some economists forecast the rate could remain in double-digits through the November elections and into next year.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story is below:

America’s workers likely suffered another devastating blow in May, with millions more jobs lost to the viral pandemic and an unemployment rate near or even above 20% for the first time since the Great Depression.

Economists have forecast that the government will report Friday that employers shed 8.5 million more jobs last month on top of 21.4 million lost in March and April. A figure that large would raise the total losses since the coronavirus intensified nearly three months ago to almost 30 million — more than triple the number of jobs lost during the 2008-2009 Great Recession.

The economy has sunk into what looks like a deep recession, and most economists foresee unemployment remaining above 10% — its peak during the Great Recession — through the November elections and into next year.

A report Thursday on applications for unemployment benefits reinforced the picture of a bleak job market: The number of people seeking jobless aid last week was double the previous record high that prevailed before the viral outbreak occurred.

Still, that report did offer a few glimmers of hope. As restaurants, movie theaters, gyms, hair salons and other retail establishments gradually reopen, job cuts are slowing and employers are recalling some of their laid-off workers. The total number of people receiving unemployment aid rose slightly, the government said, but stayed below a peak of 25 million reached two weeks earlier. And the number of laid-off workers applying for aid, while historically high, has declined for nine straight weeks.

The economic shock, like the pandemic itself, has widened economic disparities that have disproportionately hurt minorities and lower-educated workers. More than 55% of African-Americans say they or someone in their household has lost income since mid-March, compared with 43% of whites, according to a weekly survey by the Census Bureau. For Hispanics, the figure is 60%. The pandemic has especially eliminated jobs, at least temporarily, at restaurants, hotels, retail chains and other lower-wage industries.

The street protests over George Floyd’s killing that led to some vandalism and looting in dozens of cities won’t affect Friday’s jobs figures, which were compiled in the middle of May. But business closures related to the unrest could cause job losses that would be reflected in the June jobs report to be issued next month.

A few businesses are reporting signs of progress even in hard-hit industries. American Airlines, for example, said this week that it would fly 55% of its U.S. routes in July, up from just 20% in May.

And the Cheesecake Factory said one-quarter of its nearly 300 restaurants have reopened, though with limited capacity. Sales at those restaurants are at nearly 75% of the levels reached a year ago, the company said. Both companies’ share prices rose.

Those limited gains may lead to more rehiring as companies slowly restart shuttered businesses. But economists say the pace of hiring will then likely lag as a severe recession and high unemployment hold back consumer spending, the main driver of the economy.

Erica Groshen, a labor economist at Cornell University and a former commissioner of the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, said hiring could ramp up relatively quickly in coming months and reduce unemployment to low double-digits by year’s end.

“Then my inclination is that it will be a long, slow slog,” she said.

Overhanging the jobs picture is widespread uncertainty about how long the unemployed will remain out of work. Most of the layoffs in recent months were a direct result of the sudden shutdowns of businesses in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Though many of the unemployed have said they expect their layoffs to be temporary, many large businesses won’t rehire everyone they laid off. And some small employers might not reopen at all if the recession drags on. Until most Americans are confident they can shop, travel, eat out and fully return to their other spending habits without fear of contracting the virus, the economy will likely remain sluggish.

Even if just one-third of the U.S. job losses turn out to be permanent, that would leave roughly 10 million people out of work. That is still more than all the jobs lost in the Great Recession. A hole that size would take years to fill. Oxford Economics estimates that the economy will regain 17 million jobs by year’s end, a huge increase by historical standards. But that would make up for barely more than half the losses.

Gwyneth Duesbery, 22, returned this week to her job as a hostess at a steakhouse where she lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan, as the restaurant prepares to reopen. Duesbery said she is grateful for the opportunity, given that she hasn’t received unemployment benefits since the restaurant closed in March and has run through her savings.

She will spend this week helping to clean the restaurant and setting tables 6 feet apart. The restaurant will be able to seat only about one-quarter of its usual capacity.

The restaurant, Bowdie’s Chop House, has reservations for about 20 people for its opening night Monday and said it has drawn plenty of interest from longtime customers. Still, Duesbery worries about her health.

“I am concerned that it will expose me to potential diseases, and expose others, no matter the precautions that we take,” she said. “It’s kind of uncharted waters.”

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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National Rail to offer ‘busy station’ alerts

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PA Media

National Rail says it will warn people if stations or trains are busy, to help them follow social distancing rules.

A warning triangle will appear on its app and website to warn customers buying tickets that a train service is expected to be busy.

It will also warn people who have signed up for travel alerts if a railway station is busy.

National Rail said it would use journey planning trends and live updates from railway staff to run the system.

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NAtional rail

Overcrowding has been an issue on some trains during the coronavirus pandemic.

The RMT transport union has threatened to halve services to protect staff and passengers.

National Rail’s new system was developed by tech start-up Zipabout.

Passengers will be able to sign up for alerts on Facebook Messenger, and National Rail hopes to offer text-message and WhatsApp alerts in the future.

The system will also suggest alternative travel options to help people stagger their journeys.

National Rail has also revealed the busiest times for some of the UK’s biggest stations:

  • Birmingham New Street – 06:00 to 06:30
  • Bristol Temple Meads – 08.30 to 09:00
  • Cardiff Central – 8:30 to 9:00
  • Edinburgh Waverly – 07:00 to 08:00
  • Glasgow Queen Street – 07:00 to 08:30
  • Leeds – 08:00 to 08:30
  • Liverpool Lime Street – 08:00 to 08:30
  • London Victoria – 07:00 to 07:30
  • London Waterloo – 06:30 to 07:30
  • Manchester Piccadilly – 07:00 to 7:30

The government said it welcomed National Rail’s updates, but advised that anybody who could avoid rail travel should continue to do so.

“With capacity reduced to around one-fifth of that previously seen on our railways, it is important that people work from home if they can, stagger their travel times to avoid crowds, and use other forms of transport wherever possible,” said Transport Secretary Grant Schapps.

He added: “Harnessing data and new technology will be crucial both to enable social distancing now, and to modernise the network for the future.”

According to the Office of Rail and Road (ORR), 51 million fewer journeys were made on the UK’s railways in the first three months of the year compared with the same period in 2019.

Services were reduced substantially when the lockdown began in March, though have started to increase again after Prime Minister Boris Johnson said people who could not work from home could go to their place of work.

On Thursday, the government announced that passengers on public transport in England would be required to wear a face covering from 15 June.

Face coverings must be worn on buses, trams, trains, coaches, aircraft and ferries.

However, very young children, people with disabilities and those with breathing difficulties would be exempt, said Mr Schapps.

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Leftovers: Jack Daniel’s cans its popular cocktails; top peanut butter brands put the squeeze on packaging

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Leftovers is our look at a few of the product ideas popping up everywhere. Some are intriguing, some sound amazing and some are the kinds of ideas we would never dream of. We can’t write about everything that we get pitched, so here are some leftovers pulled from our inboxes.

Jack Daniel’s cans its signature summer refreshment

The Jack Daniel Distillery is launching a line of Jack Daniel’s Canned Cocktails in time for the start of summer, according to a release. The drinks will be available in select states in three flavors: Jack & Seltzer, Jack & Cola and Jack, Honey & Lemonade.

Each can is made with Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey. The Jack & Cola and Jack, Honey & Lemonade flavors are 7% ABV, while the Jack & Seltzer flavor is 5% ABV with 97 calories.

From spiked seltzer to hard kombucha, canned alcoholic drinks have grown increasingly popular. Nielsen research last year showed consumers want more ready-to-drink alcoholic beverages out of a desire for convenience. 

Jack Daniel’s has started to innovate more in the past year. The brand launched its first new flavor in years in October: The Tennessee Apple. The flavor was created with the fall season in mind, similar to how these new canned cocktails are releasing for summer. 

Brown-Forman Corp., which produces Jack Daniel’s, Old Forester and Woodford Reserve, has turned to whiskey innovation for new launches as sales in the category have grown in recent years. 

The company used data analytics to launch its Old Forester Kentucky Straight Rye Whisky last year. Last month, Brown-Forman partnered on a limited launch of a co-branded Lynchburg Lemonade pod made with Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey for the Drinkworks Home Bar system.

If whiskey sales continue to rise and these seasonal launches pay off, then more new whiskey-themed launches are likely to be on the way from Brown-Forman. 

— Lillianna Byington

Optional Caption

Courtesy of Hormel

 

Peanut butter’s squeeze is on

The two top-selling peanut butter brands have both decided it’s time to put the squeeze on traditional jars.

Smucker’s Jif and Hormel’s Skippy are both making the move to squeezable pouches this summer. The pouches are multi-serve with resealable caps. 

Courtesy of J.M. Smucker

 

“Jif lovers enjoy their Jif in a variety of ways—in smoothies and snacks, as a key ingredient in cooking and baking, or even eating it ‘straight up’ with a spoon,” Rebecca Scheidler, vice president of marketing for Jif, said in a press release. “With our new squeezable pouch, we’re making it even easier and quicker for Jif lovers everywhere to get their Jif fix.”

Jif’s squeezable creamy peanut butter will be in a 13-ounce tube, which is slightly smaller than its 16-ounce jar. It comes to retailers and will be available online next month, and consumers who can’t wait to get their hands on a pouch can sign up for email updates.

Skippy’s new squeeze pouches will be hitting shelves later on this month, according to a company press release. The Hormel brand will put its creamy peanut butter and its creamy Natural Peanut Butter Spread in 6-ounce resealable packages.

“We know consumers are looking for new ways to enjoy the peanut butter they love while still delivering on taste and product benefits,” Skippy Brand Manager Jennesa Kinscher said in the press release. 

Considering peanut butter’s staple role in most American children’s diets, it makes sense to put it in easy-to-serve pouches. A pouch makes it easier for a kid or parent to make a snack or sandwich. It’s more convenient and less clunky to take peanut butter as an on-the-go treat. And for baking and smoothies, a squeezable pouch simplifies the process of measuring and adding to a mixing bowl or blender. 

Once only used for baby food, squeezable packages have become more popular in recent years. Aside from the convenience factor, squeezable packages are more economical, requiring less raw materials, being cheaper to manufacture and easier to ship and store. Other brands have seen success by adding a squeezable package. These include Chobani, which uses a squeezable pouch to market its plain Greek yogurt as a condiment, and Daisy, which introduced a squeezable pouch of sour cream in 2015.

Competition in the segment is stiff, and these brands are known for taking being competitive to the extreme. Last month, Smucker sued Hormel in federal court. The Ohio-based spreads, coffee and pet food company said the Skippy maker was trying to block its rollout of a no added sugar Jif variety because the new Jif jar would have a light blue lid, and Skippy uses teal for the lids of its creamy variety. 

Given the fact that both companies announced the launch of the same new packaging innovation just days apart, squeezable peanut butter is something consumers do want. If these products are successful, it may be the beginning of the end for the peanut butter jar — at least for creamy varieties.

— Megan Poinski

Courtesy of Clown Shoes

 

Catch the rainbow in your beer stein

If you’ve ever wondered what a rainbow tastes like, a new craft beer will soon be available to give the popular Skittles candy some competition.

Clown Shoes, a Massachusetts brewer, is introducing its first-ever beer made with terpene additions called Rainbows Are Real. Terpenes are aromatic oils produced by a variety of plants, including cannabis and hops, and they are said by some to have therapeutic benefits.

“The idea of enhancing aroma and boosting flavors is exciting,” Dan Lipke, head brewer at Clown Shoes, said in a statement. “When you add in the potential health benefits, it really made me want to take on a project like this.”

Rainbows Are Real, an IPA, is brewed with the terpenes linalool, found in flowers and spice plants, and beta-pinene, which has a wood-green pine smell. The aromatic compounds enhance floral and pine notes and supplement sweet, citrusy hops, according to Clown Shoes. 

The New England brewer is not the first to try terpenes in its beers. In 2017, Lagunitas Brewing developed a new IPA made with marijuana terpenes from the cannabis plant. That beer, called SuperCritical, was a limited release.

The new offering is the latest in the craft beer space to try and push the limits with a brew that is different and has a clever name to grab the consumer’s attention. Rainbows Are Real takes it a step further through the addition of terpenes to tap into natural, organic compounds that could potentially help consumers relax.

Craft makes up more than 25% of the $116 billion U.S. beer market, according to the Brewers Association. The segment was poised for another strong year in 2020. But the coronavirus pandemic forced many craft breweries to shutter their brewpubs and taprooms, a major source of revenue and a key way for consumers to sample new beers. The longer the pandemic’s impact lingers, the higher the risk of closing for thousands of craft brewers. 

As beer establishments slowly reopen and customers come back, brews like Rainbows Are Real could be just what people need to relax in an otherwise trying time for both the industry and the country.

— Christopher Doering

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EU eyes return to free travel by early July

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European Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson | Olivier Hoslet/EPA

Bloc starts to open up again after coronavirus border closures.

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Updated

The European Commission hopes that travel restrictions within the Schengen European free travel area will be lifted by the end of June and to end a ban on entry into the EU by early July, Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson said today.

“I believe … we will return to the full functioning Schengen no later than end of the month of June,” said Johansson. The free travel area, composed of 22 EU countries plus Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Lichtenstein, has not been functioning since countries rushed to reintroduce border controls to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

Johansson, who spoke at a virtual press conference following a virtual meeting of EU home affairs ministers, said that many EU countries supported the plan, but acknowledged that “there were also a few member states who said they were not ready to take that decision now and would like to follow that development a bit further.”

Reluctance was voiced by representatives of Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria, a Council official said. Spain, after unilaterally announcing it will open borders from June 22, said it would reconsider after receiving backlash from Portugal.

Fully rebooting the system has proven hard, with many countries wary of opening borders to all their neighbors for fear of importing new cases. “At the end of the day it is the decision for each member state,” said Johansson.

For travel from outside the bloc, the Commission will next week propose a two-week extension to the ban on non-essential travel into the EU — meaning the restrictions would end in early July.

“That was supported by many member states … We will continue having a dialogue before we make a final decision,” said the Swedish commissioner.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Thursday wrote to Commission President Ursula von der Leyen urging caution in opening up the EU’s external borders, and said any decisions must be coordinated.

“Covid incidence thresholds in third countries, for instance, should be agreed among us, before regaining full mobility with them,” they wrote in a letter seen by POLITICO.

Cristina Gallardo contributed reporting. 



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The fourth industrial revolution: It works for UJ – The Mail & Guardian

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For people such as Robert Westwood, or a rural nurse in Limpopo, or Banele Hlengethwa from Daveyton, the fourth industrial revolution (4IR) as it is being embraced at the University of Johannesburg (UJ), has a meaning far beyond anything they could have imagined. It’s not just that it’s making their own lives and work better and more productive; it’s providing tangible improvements in the lives of others.

Virtual training, real expertise

When Robert Westwood was called out as an emergency care practitioner in the wind and the rain to rescue a German tourist who had fallen 15m on the Kingfisher hiking trail near Wilderness, despite the inaccessibility of the location and the extremely adverse weather conditions, he knew exactly what to do. When he was lowered into the crevice where the injured man was lying with his pelvis shattered, his body temperature plummeting and his level of consciousness slipping, Westwood drew on the thorough and extensive simulation training that he had received while studying for his Bachelor of Health Sciences degree in Emergency Medical Care at UJ.

Among all the other exercises and technology that Westwood was exposed to, he had also been amongst the first cohort of students to spend a full weekend at Gariep Dam, where rescue missions were simulated with combinations of aviation, small-boat rescue and the use of a fully-equipped temporary hospital set up specifically for the training. And it was there that he learnt how to build the high-angle system he used in Wilderness to lower himself and his partner down to the injured hiker.

Simulations include the use of drones, GoPro cameras and high-tech command posts. There are mannequins so sophisticated that they can breathe, bleed, cry and vomit. They even vibrate if they are “experiencing” a seizure, and respond immediately to any real medication administered intravenously. With this kind of state-of-the-art 4IR technology at UJ, the use of simulations is proving not just effective, but life-saving in real emergencies.

Artificial intelligence, real diagnosis

Meanwhile, for a nurse in rural Limpopo, who for the first time is confronted with a young woman presenting with a painful lump in her breast, what would have been a complex and dangerous situation fraught with inexperience, delays and frustrations, is capable of resolution within minutes. Despite a lack of specialist training, and the distances and time-lags involved if the young woman were to have to seek a diagnosis from a radiologist and oncologist, all the Limpopo nurse needs to do is to upload the information to the data-base being built by Professor Qing-Guo Wang at UJ’s Institute for Intelligent Systems. This system makes use of artificial intelligence (AI) to produce accurate, immediate diagnoses from an analysis of 20 000 cases from the archives of the Charlotte Maxeke Academic Hospital that have been placed into the data-base.

Wang has a PhD in industrial automation and is an internationally renowned researcher in multiple engineering-related fields. He is passionate about exploring ways in which AI can advance technology and improve services so that people can access a better quality of life.

For the many millions of South Africans like the young Limpopo woman, who don’t have medical aid or easy access to medical expertise and specialists, remote diagnostic systems such as the one being developed at the Institute for Intelligent Systems can literally save lives. They can dramatically circumvent the need to wait weeks or months to see a doctor in the public health system, and completely eliminate the often lengthy, expensive and uncomfortable journeys required to get essential and authoritative initial help. Even for a nurse with only rudimentary training, a full, accurate and timely diagnosis will be possible. It’s nothing short of revolutionary.

Digital work, real employment

And a revolution is what has happened in the life of Banele Hlengethwa, a 25-year old diesel mechanic graduate who was working part-time in retail and promotions during his student years, when he was recruited as a fieldworker in a Quality of Life Survey being conducted by UJ’s Process, Energy and Environment Technology Station (PEETS).   

One of the university’s most advanced such surveys, it used an app that had been developed at PEETS so that it could geolocate the fieldworkers, time the questionnaire process, and identify any misleading or fraudulent responses or activities. With automated quality control processes eliminating errors and discrepancies, the result was an authentic, reliable and dynamic set of data on which the Gauteng City-Region Observatory (GCRO) could rely.

Hlengethwa’s leadership qualities quickly landed him a role as a facilitator — then, in succession, positions as a quality distribution agent, assistant in logistics planning and map population — and finally, as a supervisor.

Learning about the quality of other people’s lives through state-of-the-art 4IR technology has dramatically changed the quality of his own, and others. In 2018 Hlengethwa started the Yenzokuhle Social Enterprise and Skills Village, with the aim of addressing issues such as crime, gangsterism, alcohol and drug abuse and teenage pregnancies in his community. And at the core of it all is the 4IR technology he learnt to work with through his association with UJ through PEETS.

Reimagining tomorrow

As a leader in academic thought and research in Africa, UJ has embraced the technology that is shaping our future, not just on our continent, but globally. And it’s doing this in myriad ways — applying it in both teaching and learning — using it to advance not just ideas, but also skills, expertise and capacity. People everywhere will be able to experience real benefits and meaningful, positive change in their lives, both as developers and recipients, of the advantages that 4IR has to offer.

For more information, visit:
https://www.uj.ac.za/



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George Floyd live updates: Minneapolis seeks to ‘dismantle’ police department; Kanye West disrupts Chicago rally

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Reverend Al Sharpton’s passionate speech at George Floyd’s memorial brought those in attendance to their feet.

USA TODAY

Protests are expected to continue Friday demanding justice for George Floyd, with multiple demonstrations planned in Washington, D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham said an event planned for Saturday “may be one of the largest that we’ve had in the city.” 

Minneapolis local officials plan to vote Friday on the first changes to the police department. City Council President Lisa Bender said that they will “dismantle” the agency and “replace it with a transformative new model of public safety.”

Thousands across the nation commemorated Floyd’s life on Thursday as his first memorial took place in Minneapolis. There was a moment of silence that lasted 8 minutes and 46 seconds, the length of time a police officer pressed his knee against Floyd’s neck as he lay handcuffed.

A second memorial service is scheduled for Saturday in Raeford, North Carolina, before a viewing Monday and private funeral Tuesday in Houston.

Some recent developments:

‘Get ready.’ The next generation of black journalists has something to say.

Our live blog will be updated throughout the day. For first-in-the-morning updates, sign up for the Daily Briefing. Here’s the latest news:

‘Black lives matter’ being painted on DC street outside White House

The words “Black lives matter” were being painted onto the streets of Washington near the White House early Friday, local TV stations reported.

Images showed artists with yellow paint forming massive letters on 16th Street NW, near where protests have been held for several days and federal law enforcement authorities cleared groups of peaceful demonstrators with force and chemical irritants earlier this week ahead of President Donald Trump’s controversial visit to St. John’s Church.

NBC Washington reporter Mark Segraves tweeted Friday that the painting came at the direction of Mayor Muriel Bowser, who has been at odds with Trump and federal authorities over the presence of national guard troops in Washington and threats of a federal takeover of D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department.

Twitter blocks Trump campaign video featuring George Floyd

Twitter blocked a video shared by President Donald Trump’s campaign that shows images of George Floyd and recent protests over a copyright claim, the company says.

The company put a label on the video posted by the @TeamTrump account that said, “This media has been disabled in response to a claim by the copyright owner.”

The video, still on Trump’s YouTube page, shows Floyd and images of peaceful protests with Trump’s voice dubbed over commending the demonstrations. The video then shows images of destruction some protests saw as Trump condemns those actions, before turning to images of police officers and demonstrators embracing.

“Per our copyright policy, we respond to valid copyright complaints sent to us by a copyright owner or their authorized representatives,” Twitter said in a statement. It’s the latest action that Twitter has taken against Trump, who has threatened to retaliate against social media companies.

Minneapolis city council seeks to ‘dismantle’ police department

Minneapolis officials plan to vote Friday on the some of the first changes to the police department in the wake of George Floyd’s death, The Star Tribune reported.

City officials are working with the state’s Department of Human Rights on a stipulated restraining order that would require immediate changes to the agency. The order would also set up an investigation into whether the department participated in racial discrimination in the last 10 years.

On Thursday, City Council President Lisa Bender tweeted that they will “dismantle the Minneapolis Police Department and replace it with a transformative new model of public safety.”

2 New York police officers suspended after injuring 75-year-old man

Two New York police officers have been suspended after a viral video showed them shoving a 75-year-old man to the ground on Thursday night.

The graphic video shared on Twitter shows a man walking up to Buffalo Police Department officers. It is unclear if he exchanged words with the officers before he is shoved to the sidewalk. The man stumbles back and falls and the video shows him motionless and bleeding from his head. 

After the man falls, a person shouts, “He’s bleeding from his ears!” Someone else shouts, “Get a medic!” The reporter recording the video is then told to back up. Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown issued a statement late Thursday, saying the man in the video is 75 years old and at the hospital in “serious but stable” condition. 

– Jordan Culver

California mayor resigns after controversial email about police killings

The mayor of a Southern California city has resigned after apologizing for an email that stated he didn’t “believe there’s ever been a good person of color killed by a police officer” locally, saying he never meant to use the word “good.”

Temecula Mayor James Stewart said he is dyslexic and used voice text to send his late-night message on Tuesday but failed to notice the added word.

“Unfortunately I did not take the time to proofread what was recorded. I absolutely did not say that,” Stewart told the Riverside Press-Enterprise on Thursday. “What I said is and I don’t believe there has ever been a person of color murdered by police, on context to Temecula or Riverside County. I absolutely did not say ‘good.’ I have no idea how that popped up.”

Stewart said he was replying to someone “concerned about our police officers and their sensitivity training.” Stewart said the message started a firestorm of criticism and asked people to forgive “for this egregious error.”

George Floyd remembered at Minneapolis memorial service 

Hundreds streamed into a Minneapolis memorial service Thursday for George Floyd, who was recalled as a gentle soul and commanding presence. 

Family members, activists and other mourners paid tribute to Floyd, whose death in  police custody was captured on a video that horrified much of the country and precipitated widespread protests.

Benjamin Crump, a lawyer representing the family, focused his remarks on the need for justice, not just for Floyd but others who encountered a similar fate.

“What we saw in that video was evil. So, America, we proclaim as we memorialize George Floyd, do not cooperate with evil. Protest against evil,” Crump said, his voice rising along with those in attendance, who applauded. “Join the young people in the streets protesting against the evil, the inhumane, the torture that they witnessed on that video.” 

– Jorge L. Ortiz, Nora G. Hertel, Mark Emmert

Kanye West appearance at Chicago protest results in disorder

Kanye West joined public protests Thursday night in response to the death of George Floyd. The rapper appeared in Chicago at a “Justice for George Floyd/CPD out of CPS” rally on city’s South Side.

Organizers with Good Kids Mad City told USA TODAY that West called them yesterday and said he wanted to join a protest. But the orderly rally devolved as West got out of a black SUV wearing a face mask and a hoodie.

Organizers became frustrated with the disorder. Taylore Norwood, 20, grabbed a megaphone and told the crowd that this Chicago march was a youth-led protest and that she didn’t want a “celebrity” hijacking it.

– Grace Hauck

North Carolina mayor condemns police destruction of medics’ tent

The Asheville Police Department’s aggressive dismantling of a volunteer medical station 15 minutes after curfew has set off calls for accountability across the city and beyond. 

Video by the Citizen Times of the Tuesday incident shows Asheville police officers in riot gear and holding shields, forming a protective circle around officers stomping and stabbing water bottles. Other officers destroyed medical supplies such as bandages and saline solution.

North Carolina Mayor Esther Manheimer called it “senseless,” in a Thursday speech. She said police destruction of the medics’ tent was “wrong, it was senseless, and it only serves to reinforce those feelings of mistrust, hurt and anger.”

– Mackensy Lunsford, Asheville Citizen Times

Protesters surround MLK Memorial 

The Martin Luther King, Jr. memorial was the scene of protest Thursday in response to the death of George Floyd. The group knelt at the memorial for 8 minutes and 46 seconds, to remember how long Floyd was being pinned down by a Minneapolis police officer while saying he couldn’t breathe. 

While kneeling, the demonstrators listened as the names of people who died in police custody were read through a speaker system. 

Maya Taybron, a 15-year-old high school student from Washington, D.C., said she had joined the group rallying because so many African Americans had been treated “badly for no reason, just for the color of our skin.”

Her brother, Keyon Taybron, a 19-year-old college student, said there “couldn’t have been a better place” to rally because of King’s legacy.

Robert E. Lee statue in Richmond to come down ‘as soon as possible’

The statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee that has towered over  this Virginia city for more than 100 years will be removed “as soon as possible,” Gov. Ralph Northam announced Thursday.

The news came after days of protest surrounding the Lee statue and other Confederate monuments on the city’s Monument Avenue, sparked by the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis and protests against racial inequality around the country.

Is this the end for other Confederate memorials? Richmond is taking down Confederate statues

Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney said he would propose to the city council that the four other Confederate memorials be removed, too. 

“Ladies and gentleman, it’s time. It’s time. It’s time to put an end to the lost cause and fully embraced the righteous cause. It’s time to replace the racist symbols of oppression and inequality,” Stoney said at a news conference.

– Ryan W. Miller, Ledyard King and Sarah Elbeshbishi

More news about the George Floyd protests

Florida protester arrested for spray-painting security cameras at governor’s mansion

A man who was involved in several large gatherings in Tallahassee last weekend was arrested after police say he spray-painted the lenses of security cameras at the Florida Governor’s Mansion.

Nicholas Denney, 24, faces one count of damage to property criminal mischief. He was taken into custody Thursday on a warrant and will appear before a judge Friday.

Police watched Denney pull a can of paint from his backpack as protesters gathered in front of the executive mansion on Saturday and spray over two security cameras and a push to talk box.

– Karl Etters, Tallahassee Democrat

Contributing: The Associated Press

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#OLAF plays major role in seizure of over a thousand tonnes of dangerous #CounterfeitPesticides

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#OLAF plays major role in seizure of over a thousand tonnes of dangerous #CounterfeitPesticides

#OLAF plays major role in seizure of over a thousand tonnes of dangerous #CounterfeitPesticidesThe European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) shared operational intelligence with the customs authorities of the member states, of China, Ukraine, Russia and Colombia. This happened in the context of Operation Silver Axe V, which has led to the seizure of 1,346 tons of illicit and counterfeit pesticides. These products pose a major risk to public health and the environment if they ever reach the open market. The Operation Silver Axe V was coordinated by Europol, involving police, customs and plant protection authorities from 32 countries.

OLAF’s role in the operation was to alert EU member states’ customs authorities about suspicious shipments of pesticides, with a specific emphasis on active ingredients that have recently been de-authorised for use in the EU, such as carbendazim, chlorpyrifos, thiacloprid or thiametoxam. These last two substances are acutely toxic for bees. OLAF also exchanged information with the Chinese Anti Smuggling Bureau and the Security Service of Ukraine via its liaison officers in Beijing and in Kyiv, as well as with the Colombian Policía Fiscal y Aduanera, and the Federal Customs Service of Russia. The suspicious shipments of pesticides came mainly from China and India. Although the shipments were declared as being in transit through the EU and destined for re-export from the EU to another country, the chemicals were in fact intended for illegal sale in the EU.

OLAF Director-General Ville Itälä said: “The traffic of illicit and/or counterfeit pesticides is one of the most profitable businesses for international fraudsters, and is estimated to represent up to 13.8% of all pesticides sold in the EU. It harms the European economy, damaging legitimate businesses and stifling innovation, putting many jobs at risk in Europe.

“But it also comes with serious risks: pesticides must undergo rigorous testing before being placed on the EU market, and the illegal pesticides, which are mostly untested and composed of active substances banned in the EU but still in use in other parts of the world, can pose significant health risks for farmers and consumers.

“They are also considered harmful to the environment by causing damage to flora, fauna and soils. Europol and OLAF provided vital support and expertise to the member states involved in the operation. With our help, police, customs and plant protection authorities succeeded in foiling the organized crime groups trafficking illicit and counterfeit pesticides.”

Operation Silver Axe is now in its fifth year, and has so far led to seizures of 2,568 tons of illegal pesticides. OLAF’s role in these operations focuses on the smuggling of potentially dangerous products in complex cross-border fraud schemes that are impossible to detect and decrypt for the national authorities of a single state.

OLAF is very active in supporting the customs authorities of the Member States in the prevention and detection of dangerous goods, including pesticides. In this respect, OLAF has put in place a rapid alert system allowing to share intelligence in real time with non-EU countries, like Hong-Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia, for the monitoring of such goods during the transhipment of the containers in the ports of transit.

The trade of counterfeit products results in vast illicit profits and huge losses of tax revenues for the EU and its member states. The smuggling of counterfeit products harms the European economy, damages legitimate business and stifles innovation, putting many jobs at risk in Europe. Counterfeiting also poses serious risks to the environment and health and safety.

For more information, please see OLAF’s previous press releases on this subject .

OLAF mission, mandate and competences

OLAF’s mission is to detect, investigate and stop fraud with EU funds.

OLAF fulfils its mission by:

  • Carrying out independent investigations into fraud and corruption involving EU funds, so as to ensure that all EU taxpayers’ money reaches projects that can create jobs and growth in Europe;
  • contributing to strengthening citizens’ trust in the EU Institutions by investigating serious misconduct by EU staff and members of the EU Institutions, and;
  • developing a sound EU anti-fraud policy.

In its independent investigative function, OLAF can investigate matters relating to fraud, corruption and other offences affecting the EU financial interests concerning:

  • All EU expenditure: the main spending categories are Structural Funds, agricultural policy and rural;
  • development funds, direct expenditure and external aid;
  • some areas of EU revenue, mainly customs duties, and;
  • suspicions of serious misconduct by EU staff and members of the EU institutions.

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Strawberry Moon lunar eclipse of 2020 occurs today. Here’s what to expect.

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A digital rendering of how the moon will appear during the June 5 penumbral eclipse. (Image credit: Starry Night)
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This sky map shows the penumbral lunar eclipse of June 5, 2020, over Sao Paolo, Brazil, at 6:30 p.m. local time. The moon will be in the constellation Ophiuchus, to the left of the Scorpius constellation. At this time, the Earth's penumbral shadow will be moving off of the moon's upper limb.

The June 5 penumbral lunar eclipse as seen from Sao Paolo. (Image credit: SkySafari app)
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At the moment of greatest eclipse, on June 5, 2020 at 3:25:02 p.m. EDT (19:25:02 GMT), about half of the moon's surface will be in Earth's penumbral shadow, causing that half of the moon to appear slightly darker than usual. This map also shows the moon's path through Earth's shadow; the larger circle represents the penumbra, while the smaller circle represents the darker, inner shadow called the umbra.

A diagram showing Earth’s inner shadow, or umbra, and outer shadow, or penumbra, as they will align with the moon on June 5. (Image credit: SkySafari app)
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A map showing where the June 5 penumbral eclipse will and will not be visible from Earth.

A map showing where the June 5 penumbral eclipse will and will not be visible from Earth. (Image credit: F. Espenak/NASA GSFC)

Sharp-eyed skywatchers in parts of the world may be able to catch a slight lunar eclipse today (June 5) as Earth embarks on a new “eclipse season,” although North American viewers will be out of luck

Today’s eclipse will be what astronomers dub a “penumbral eclipse,” which occurs when the outer ring of Earth’s shadow just grazes the moon. (During a partial eclipse, the moon falls somewhat into Earth’s inner shadow; during a total lunar eclipse it falls entirely into that inner shadow.)



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OTT vs Theatres: Anurag Kashyap says the fight is only for films with big stars  : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

Owing to the lockdown, the release of several films has been stalled. Some of the producers have decided to skip the theatrical release and opt for direct to OTT release. However, this has not gone down well with theatre owners especially multiplex chains like PVR and INOX. Ayushmann Khurrana and Amitabh Bachchan starrer Gulabo Sitabo was the first film that decided to go straight to digital followed by Vidya Balan’s Shakuntala Devi. 

Both Gulabo Sitabo and Shakuntala Devi have big faces leading the film. In an interview with a news portal, filmmaker Anurag Kashyap pointed out that this OTT vs Theatre fight is a very self-serving fight. He said that films like Bamfaad and Eeb Allay Ooo have also been released on OTT but the multiplex owners expressed their displeasure only after films featuring big stars took the digital route. 

He said that when cinemas will open there will be such a bottleneck of movies that there will be a struggle. He said he personally suffered when Gangs of Wasseypur had completed nine days in cinemas and was taken over by Ek Tha Tiger. He said that his film was doing well but was thrown out of the cinemas. 

He said that the discussions happening are for big films with big stars in them. Anurag said that he has not heard the same discussion for lower budget films with lesser-known actors. The filmmaker feels that if the theatres are having a self-serving fight then everybody else also has the right to do the same. 

Anurag’s new film Choked: Paisa Bolta Hai started streaming on Netflix from today (June 5). The film, which stars Saiyami Kher and Roshan Mathew in lead roles, revolves around demonetisation.

ALSO READ: Anurag Kashyap announces his new production company Good Bad Films  

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Libyan government forces seize Haftar stronghold Tarhuna

Forces loyal to Libya’s internationally recognised government said on Friday they entered Tarhuna, the last major stronghold of commander Khalifa Haftar in the west, capping the sudden collapse of his 14-month offensive.

Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA) was pushed from its last positions in the capital, Tripoli, a day earlier in the latest of in a series of battlefield defeats.

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Al Jazeera’s Mahmoud Abdelwahed – reporting from Tarhuna, 75km (47 miles) east of Tripoli – said the city’s loss was a major blow to the LNA.

“From here Haftar’s forces had a central command for the past year, and from here Russian military experts – with UAE and Egyptian military experts – have been running the battles from this city,” he said as militiamen fired assault weapons in celebration.

Government forces now may target the Haftar-controlled city of Bani Walid to the south, said Abdelwahed.

Turkey’s backing has helped the internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) win a string of victories in recent weeks, ending an assault on Tripoli that led to battles in its southern suburbs and the bombardment of the city centre.

Tarhuna was the main launchpad for the offensive against the capital that Haftar’s forces finally abandoned this week.

The GNA operations room said its forces had reached the centre of Tarhuna after entering from four sides.

“Our heroic forces entered the city of Tarhuna from four axes and reached the city centre … and they gave the Haftar terrorist militia a lesson they will not forget,” said Mohammed Gnounou, a GNA military spokesman, in a statement.

No reprisal acts’ 

Libya’s conflict is far from over, however, with the LNA still controlling the country’s east, where there is a parallel administration, and large parts of the south, where the country’s main oilfields are located.

The LNA is backed by Russia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Egypt. The United Nations has warned a recent flood of weapons and fighters to both sides in Libya risks a major new escalation.

Mostafa al-Majai, another GNA military spokesman, said government forces entered Tarhuna without a fight after the LNA pulled out of the city into the desert.

“No reprisal acts have taken place inside the city. A large number of residents left it days ago. This has made it easy to establish security there,” he said.

GNA Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj vowed his government would take control over all of Libya.

“Our fight continues and we are determined to defeat the enemy, impose state control on the whole of the homeland and destroy all those who jeopardise the construction of a civil, democratic and modern state,” al-Sarraj said after talks with Turkish officials in Ankara.

‘Humanitarian gesture’

Sami Hamdi, The International Interest’s editor-in-chief, told Al Jazeera the Tarhuna’s fall may have been “a negotiated exchange between the Russians and the Turks”.

“In terms of its significance, it means the complete end of Haftar’s Tripoli offensive. The military solution that Haftar offered … is no longer on the table, and we are back to the status quo as it was before the beginning of the Tripoli offensive, east and west,” Hamdi said. 

Meanwhile, Haftar’s forces confirmed their “redeployment” away from the Libyan capital following the UN-recognised government’s announcement it is back in full control.

On Thursday, the Government of National Accord said it had retaken the whole of Greater Tripoli, finally beating off an offensive Haftar’s forces launched in April last year.






Libya’s GNA says it regained full control of the capital, Tripoli

Haftar’s spokesman, Ahmad al-Mesmari, said the redeployment was a “humanitarian gesture intended to spare the Libyan people further bloodshed”.

Hundreds of people have been killed and 200,000 more driven from their homes since Haftar launched his assault, vowing to “cleanse” the capital of the “terrorist militias” he said dominated the GNA.

Al-Mesmari said the redeployment was also intended to bolster the work of a UN-backed military commission tasked with shoring up a nationwide ceasefire.

“We announce that we are redeploying our forces outside Tripoli on condition that the other side respect the ceasefire,” he said in a statement released late on Thursday.

“If they do not respect it, we will resume military operations and suspend our participation in the negotiations of the military committee.”

The United Nations’ Libya mission said on Tuesday that after a three-month suspension, the warring parties had agreed to resume ceasefire talks.

A military commission made up of five GNA loyalists and five Haftar delegates held talks in February, but the dialogue was suspended.

Haftar is supported by neighbouring Egypt and the United Arab Emirates, as well as Russia.

UN experts in April said hundreds of mercenaries from Russian paramilitary organisation the Wagner Group were fighting for Haftar.

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