Saturday, April 25, 2026

Uber Eats features black-owned restaurants on U.S., Canadian delivery platform

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FILE PHOTO: An Uber Eats bicyclist makes a delivery during the coronavirus outbreak, in the U.S. Capitol Hill neighborhood in Washington, U.S. April 1, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

(Reuters) – Uber Technologies Inc on Thursday launched a feature on its food delivery app Uber Eats that allows customers in the United States and Canada to order from restaurants owned by black people.

The feature comes in response to U.S.-wide protests over the death of a black man, George Floyd, while in police custody, which has become the latest flashpoint for rage over police brutality against African-Americans and prompted calls to support black communities and businesses in solidarity.

Customers who open the Uber Eats app in major U.S. and Canadian cities will see a banner reading, “Support Black-owned restaurants,” and are provided with a list of nearby restaurants. Delivery fees for those orders are being temporarily waived, a statement on the app says.

Uber said the new feature is a response to requests from customers and that various Uber employees had compiled the restaurants based on publicly available sources and with input from local organizations and business associations.

Uber said it does not ask restaurants for information on race when including them on its platform. Restaurants were informed about the initiative ahead of time and can opt out of the program, as well as refer other black-owned restaurants not yet included.

Reporting by Tina Bellon in New York; additional reporting by Ayanti Bera in Bangalore; Editing by Leslie Adler

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Medical journals retract two influential coronavirus studies

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A pharmacy tech holds pills of Hydroxychloroquine at Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah, on May 20, 2020 | George Frey/AFP via Getty Images

A pair of influential studies were retracted because of alleged irregularities in the underlying data, which came from a little-known data company.

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Two top medical journals on Thursday retracted a pair of influential coronavirus studies because of alleged irregularities in the underlying data, which came from a little-known data company called Surgisphere. Both journals said the firm had rebuffed requests to review its dataset.

One study, published on May 22 in The Lancet, found that the drug hydroxychloroquine increased the risk of death for coronavirus patients — prompting several countries to ban its use as a Covid-19 treatment, and the World Health Organization to temporarily pause a clinical trial of the medicine.

The second paper, published on May 1 in the New England Journal of Medicine, examined the use of blood pressure drugs called ACE inhibitors in coronavirus patients.

The quick retractions of two prominent studies could undermine the public’s — and politicians’ — trust of scientific research during a pandemic when knowledge is rapidly evolving and accumulating, said Jennifer Kates, director of global health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation.

“Some will question scientific findings, in an environment where misinformation and distrust of information is already a problem,” she said.

The Surgisphere retractions underline why it’s important not to overstate the findings of any single study, tweeted Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute. But they are also “a reminder that [the] scientific publication largely worked,” he added.

Hydroxychloroquine, which has long been used to treat malaria, lupus and arthritis, has been a political chewing toy for weeks now. President Donald Trump continues to tout the drug despite several studies that have suggested it does not benefit coronavirus patients. The Lancet study, which analyzed records of 96,000 patients from hospitals on six continents, was the largest study published to date examining the experimental treatment.

The journal retracted the paper at the request of three of its four authors. The trio said that the fourth co-author, Surgisphere CEO Sapan Desai, would not transfer data needed for a third-party peer review. The company had said it would cooperate with such a review after outside researchers identified discrepancies in the data and raised questions about Surgisphere’s ethics and privacy practices.

The second retraction, announced just hours later by the New England Journal of Medicine, came after the Journal had issued an “expression of concern” about the blood pressure drug analysis — often a first step to formal retraction — on Tuesday.

Desai, through a company spokesperson, declined to comment Thursday about The Lancet retraction. He has not responded to a subsequent request for comment on the New England Journal of Medicine retraction.

The coronavirus pandemic has increased the tempo of scientific research and publishing. Many authors are opting to post their studies as online preprints ahead of peer review or publication in a journal, and in some cases journals are prioritizing coronavirus papers for review.

The Surgisphere retractions could prompt questions about the potential dangers of that emphasis on speed, Kates said. “Hopefully, moving forward, the right balance can be struck between speed and accurate review of the data,” she added.

Arthur Caplan, a research ethicist at New York University, agreed that the retraction may reveal a problem with the drive to accelerate scientific publishing. “Journal editors are telling me left and right they can’t get peer reviewers,” he said, adding that a dearth of reviewers might lead to more faulty science being waved through.

The Surgisphere controversy “reconfirms my doubt about speeding up the scientific process is the right way to deal with the pandemic — whether it’s drugs or, soon to come, vaccines,” he said.

Surgisphere had also provided information behind a study on ivermectin, an anti-parasitic drug, as a potential coronavirus treatment. That analysis, which was published in the middle of May as a preprint, has also raised eyebrows among the scientific community and prompted nations to alter policy — in this case, to stock up on ivermectin.

Carlos Chaccour, a medical researcher at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, said the study likely violated European data privacy standards and had implausible results.

“We emailed the authors more than three weeks ago concerned with some of these issues and our doubts were not dispelled by Dr. Desai,” he said last week, referring to Surgisphere’s CEO.



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Israel suspends parliament after lawmaker tests positive for coronavirus

Jun 4, 2020

Parliament sessions in Israel are on hold after a legislator repeatedly photographed without a mask tested positive for the coronavirus. 

“All Knesset workers have been instructed to not arrive at parliament if their work is not essential,” a statement from parliament said. Committee meetings were also postponed Thursday “until all the ramifications are examined.” 

Sami Abu Shehadeh, a member of the Joint List coalition in parliament, received a positive test result Wednesday evening. The other members of the Balad party, his faction of the Joint List, are currently in quarantine. 

“I appeal to all of those who have been in my immediate vicinity to self-isolate and get tested,” Shehadeh tweeted. He continued, “The virus still exists between us and the return to normal is helping the virus spread in a large and fast way.” 

He told an Israeli radio station that he has recently “met with thousands of people” during various protests, family events and Knesset activities. Local television outlets showed Shehadeh without a mask during several of these meetings. 

On Thursday, a lawmaker in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party referred to Shehadeh’s diagnosis as a “terror attack” carried out by his prominently Arab political party. Fateen Mulla later walked back those comments, insisting he meant “political attack.”  

Last month, Israel’s parliament swore in a new government led by Netanyahu with his former rival Benny Gantz as his deputy. As part of the unity government deal, Netanyahu can advance plans to annex parts of the Palestinian territories, including the strategic Jordan Valley, as soon as July 1.  

This story contains reporting from Agence France-Presse.
 



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Israel suspends parliament after lawmaker tests positive for coronavirus

Jun 4, 2020

Parliament sessions in Israel are on hold after a legislator repeatedly photographed without a mask tested positive for the coronavirus. 

“All Knesset workers have been instructed to not arrive at parliament if their work is not essential,” a statement from parliament said. Committee meetings were also postponed Thursday “until all the ramifications are examined.” 

Sami Abu Shehadeh, a member of the Joint List coalition in parliament, received a positive test result Wednesday evening. The other members of the Balad party, his faction of the Joint List, are currently in quarantine. 

“I appeal to all of those who have been in my immediate vicinity to self-isolate and get tested,” Shehadeh tweeted. He continued, “The virus still exists between us and the return to normal is helping the virus spread in a large and fast way.” 

He told an Israeli radio station that he has recently “met with thousands of people” during various protests, family events and Knesset activities. Local television outlets showed Shehadeh without a mask during several of these meetings. 

On Thursday, a lawmaker in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party referred to Shehadeh’s diagnosis as a “terror attack” carried out by his prominently Arab political party. Fateen Mulla later walked back those comments, insisting he meant “political attack.”  

Last month, Israel’s parliament swore in a new government led by Netanyahu with his former rival Benny Gantz as his deputy. As part of the unity government deal, Netanyahu can advance plans to annex parts of the Palestinian territories, including the strategic Jordan Valley, as soon as July 1.  

This story contains reporting from Agence France-Presse.
 



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Transfer Centre (Sky Sports)

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Who has the best/worst PL run-in?

Ahead of the Premier League’s planned return, what kind of run-in does your team face? Here’s our guide to every side’s prospects, on paper at least…

28/05/20 6:00pm



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Intel: US warns Middle Eastern partners against Chinese investment

Jun 4, 2020

The State Department’s top official overseeing US policy in the Middle East warned countries in the region against accepting Chinese investment, contracts and coronavirus aid during a virtual interview with the Middle East Institute today.

Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker said the United States has told its partners in the region to take “a careful look at investment, major contracts and infrastructure projects,” warning that they could “come at the expense of the region’s prosperity, stability, fiscal viability and longstanding relationship with the United States.”

“We’re not forcing countries to choose between the United States and the PRC,” said Schenker, referring to the People’s Republic of China. “Countries can and should maintain healthy relationships with both, but we want to highlight the costs” that come with certain engagements with China.

Why it matters: American-Chinese relations have deteriorated considerably amid the coronavirus pandemic as both sides take swipes at each other over their COVID-19 response. Amid the escalating feud, the United States has become increasingly assertive in trying to push its Middle Eastern partners away from China’s orbit.  

Israel awarded a $1.5 billion contract to construct a water desalination plant last month to an Israeli company rather than a Chinese one after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo publicly pressured Israeli officials against the Chinese bid during a visit to Jerusalem. Washington also rejected an offer from the United Arab Emirates to provide COVID-19 test kits to the US Embassy because China was involved in manufacturing them. The UAE has significantly deepened its ties with China in recent years, including contracts with the Chinese telecommunications company Huawei.

“Make a deal with Huawei, basically all the information and your data is going to Huawei, property of the Chinese Communist Party,” said Schenker. “When you take a COVID kit from a Chinese genomics company, your DNA is property of the Chinese Communist Party, and all the implications that go with that.”

China also has supplied the UAE with drones, which in turn have made their way to Libya to support Khalifa Hifter’s assault on the UN-backed government in Tripoli.

Schenker also noted that China “got free press” for shipping thermometers to a Lebanese airport, even though the airport had been closed for several months.

“China is engaging in this face mask diplomacy in an effort to repair its tarnished reputation that flowed from the lack of transparency, how they dealt with COVID. So, they delivered a face mask here, PPE there.” PPE stands for personal protective equipment.

What’s next: Middle Eastern oil exporters have increased their petroleum shipments to China in recent months as the country recovers from its initial COVID-19 wave while US and European markets remain stagnant amid the pandemic. The increase in Gulf oil output coupled with the decreased demand has hammered US shale oil markets, creating a source of friction between the United States and its close partner Saudi Arabia.

Know more: Rina Bassist has the details on how the United States may have thwarted China’s bid to construct the water desalination plant in Israel.



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Authorities to Destroy Uyghur Cemetery in Xinjiang Capital

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Authorities in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR) have announced plans to destroy a Uyghur cemetery in the capital Urumqi, marking the latest of dozens razed in recent years as part of a campaign experts have said is aimed at controlling members of the ethnic group.

On May 22, a document bearing stamps from the bureaus of public affairs, building affairs, and land management was posted informing residents that the cemetery in Urumqi’s Bulaqtagh (in Chinese, Shuimogou) district would be dug up and moved on June 10.

According to the document, which was circulated widely on Chinese social media platforms, those with family members buried in the cemetery must register for the removal of the remains of their loved ones.

RFA’s Uyghur Service recently spoke with a Han Chinese woman at the Urumqi Ethnic Affairs Office who confirmed that the registration period for the cemetery was “already underway,” although the exhumation of remains had yet to begin.

“We have not started relocating [remains],” she said, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

“The announcement was published by the Urumqi Municipal Government. We are registering the families with tombs.”

The woman said her office had made provisions for family members of the deceased who are based outside of the capital to designate a representative to register for the relocation on their behalf.

However, when asked what the reason for the relocation was, she hung up the phone.

RFA also spoke with a Uyghur official from the Bulaqtagh Muslim Burial Affairs Office who said that people had until the end of May to register for the move by using a photo of the grave’s headstone and the number assigned to the plot.

“We’re registering people—it’s been about a week already,” said the official, who also declined to be named.

“You’ll take a photo of the number and bring it in, and we’ll get you registered. We’ll let you know about everything else after you come in.”

According to the official, workers will be assigned to move the remains, but she was unable to provide details about how the process would take place or where they would be relocated.

She also claimed that it was “a government decision” to move the cemetery, but did not know whether there were any plans to build something in its current location.

“We’re only taking care of registration, so there are a lot of things we don’t know” she said.

Recent razing

Plans to relocate the cemetery come one month after reports that a graveyard considered sacred by Uyghurs that was razed by authorities last year in the XUAR’s Hotan (Hetian) city has been paved over and turned into a car park.

Rian Thum, a professor of history at the University of Nottingham in Britain, had posted a time lapse view of the Sultanim Cemetery to Twitter based on satellite imagery from Google Earth, which shows grave plots being gradually being plowed over with dirt beginning in 2019 and a parking lot being erected in the western portion of the site.

At the time, he said destroying graveyards is part of a bid by authorities to control the wider Uyghur population, which views the sites as “a part of the historical landscape of the Uyghur region,” regardless of their religious significance.

It also follows an investigation by Agence France-Presse which in October revealed that at least 45 cemeteries in the XUAR had been destroyed since 2014—30 of which were razed since 2017.

Many of the sites were transformed into parks or parking lots, while others had remained empty lots, AFP said. Reporters said they had seen human remains left at several sites.

Speaking to RFA, a Uyghur in exile who grew up in Urumqi’s Bulaqtagh district and lived there with their family until 2015 called the cemetery marked for a June 10 relocation “particularly important” for Uyghurs from the area.

“This is a sacred Muslim cemetery for Uyghurs from Bulaqtagh, [and neighboring] Tikquduq and Ayotkel to bury their dead,” the source said.

The local government had closed the cemetery to new burials in 2014, they said, based on the claim that it had grown so large it was encroaching on land marked for official use.

Reported by Mihray Abdilim for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by Elise Anderson and Alim Seytoff. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.



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Coronavirus live updates: Melbourne primary school closed after student tests positive

A vaccine summit hosted by the British government has raised billions of dollars to immunise children in developing countries as experts wrestled with the difficult question of how any potential vaccine against the coronavirus might be distributed globally – and fairly.

The United Nations and the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement have urged that “a people’s vaccine” be developed for COVID-19 that would be freely available to everyone, calling it a “moral imperative”.

Thursday’s event, which raised $US8.8 billion ($A12.7 billion), exceeding its target, was a pledging conference for the vaccines alliance GAVI, which says the funds will be used to vaccinate about 300 million children in dozens of countries against diseases like malaria, pneumonia and HPV.

GAVI also announced a new “advance market commitment” mechanism to enable developing countries to get any effective COVID-19 vaccine when available.

It hopes to raise an additional $US2 billion for that effort, to immunise health care workers as well as high-risk individuals and create a buffer of doses to be used where needed most.

But experts pointed out that the unprecedented pandemic – where arguably every country will be clamouring for a vaccine – may make efforts at fair distribution extremely messy.

The worldwide scramble for masks and ventilators that erupted in the early stages of the outbreak are not encouraging signs that there will be much global co-operation if and when a coronavirus vaccine is available.

“Rich countries will most likely try to push their way to the front of the queue, leaving poorer countries at the back, and that’s a problem,” said Jimmy Whitworth, a professor of international public health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

“I can’t imagine any country saying, ‘Africa’s need is greater than ours, so they can get the vaccine first and we’ll remain vulnerable.”‘

The urgency of finding a way to stem outbreaks was evident as Brazil reported yet another record number of deaths over the previous 24 hours – 1349.

Brazil’s confirmed death toll of more than 32,500 is the world’s fourth-highest and is considered a significant under count due to insufficient testing.

India, meanwhile, reported a record number of infections – 9304, with 260 deaths – on Thursday as its tally of fatalities surpassed 6000 and its number of infections rose to nearly 217,000, the world’s seventh highest.

Neighbouring Pakistan reported more than 4000 new cases and 82 deaths as its confirmed cases surpassed neighbouring China, jumping to 85,264.

The spike came weeks after Prime Minister Imran Khan overrode warnings from experts and eased a lockdown.

Ahead of the vaccine gathering, philanthropist Bill Gates said there were potential solutions to the growing tide of vaccine nationalism.

“The key to that challenge is having scale and having factories all over the world that are making the vaccines,” Gates said.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he hoped Thursday’s gathering would mark “the moment when the world comes together to unite humanity in the fight against disease”.

About a dozen vaccine candidates are in early stages of testing in thousands of people around the world.

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Intel: US warns Middle Eastern partners against Chinese investment

Jun 4, 2020

The State Department’s top official overseeing US policy in the Middle East warned countries in the region against accepting Chinese investment, contracts and coronavirus aid during a virtual interview with the Middle East Institute today.

Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker said the United States has told its partners in the region to take “a careful look at investment, major contracts and infrastructure projects,” warning that they could “come at the expense of the region’s prosperity, stability, fiscal viability and longstanding relationship with the United States.”

“We’re not forcing countries to choose between the United States and the PRC,” said Schenker, referring to the People’s Republic of China. “Countries can and should maintain healthy relationships with both, but we want to highlight the costs” that come with certain engagements with China.

Why it matters: American-Chinese relations have deteriorated considerably amid the coronavirus pandemic as both sides take swipes at each other over their COVID-19 response. Amid the escalating feud, the United States has become increasingly assertive in trying to push its Middle Eastern partners away from China’s orbit.  

Israel awarded a $1.5 billion contract to construct a water desalination plant last month to an Israeli company rather than a Chinese one after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo publicly pressured Israeli officials against the Chinese bid during a visit to Jerusalem. Washington also rejected an offer from the United Arab Emirates to provide COVID-19 test kits to the US Embassy because China was involved in manufacturing them. The UAE has significantly deepened its ties with China in recent years, including contracts with the Chinese telecommunications company Huawei.

“Make a deal with Huawei, basically all the information and your data is going to Huawei, property of the Chinese Communist Party,” said Schenker. “When you take a COVID kit from a Chinese genomics company, your DNA is property of the Chinese Communist Party, and all the implications that go with that.”

China also has supplied the UAE with drones, which in turn have made their way to Libya to support Khalifa Hifter’s assault on the UN-backed government in Tripoli.

Schenker also noted that China “got free press” for shipping thermometers to a Lebanese airport, even though the airport had been closed for several months.

“China is engaging in this face mask diplomacy in an effort to repair its tarnished reputation that flowed from the lack of transparency, how they dealt with COVID. So, they delivered a face mask here, PPE there.” PPE stands for personal protective equipment.

What’s next: Middle Eastern oil exporters have increased their petroleum shipments to China in recent months as the country recovers from its initial COVID-19 wave while US and European markets remain stagnant amid the pandemic. The increase in Gulf oil output coupled with the decreased demand has hammered US shale oil markets, creating a source of friction between the United States and its close partner Saudi Arabia.

Know more: Rina Bassist has the details on how the United States may have thwarted China’s bid to construct the water desalination plant in Israel.



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After protests, iconic Lee statue in Richmond to be removed

Northam made the decision, which has been widely praised by black leaders and activists, after days of angry protests in Richmond and across the country over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white police officer pressed a knee into his neck while he pleaded for air.

The decision also came a day after Richmond’s mayor, Levar Stoney, announced he will seek to remove the four other Confederate statues along Monument Avenue, a prestigious residential street and National Historic Landmark district in the former capital of the Confederacy.

Together, the decisions mark a striking departure from recent years when even after a violent rally of white supremacists descended on Charlottesville in 2017 and other Confederate monuments started falling across the country, Virginia did not make the same changes.

In part, local governments were hamstrung by a state law that protects memorials to war veterans. That law was amended earlier this year by the new Democratic majority at the statehouse and signed by Northam. When the changes go into effect July 1, localities will be able to decide the monuments’ fate.

As for the Lee statue, Northam and his predecessor, fellow Democrat Terry McAuliffe, have not previously pressed the issue.

McAuliffe said in the aftermath of the Charlottesville rally, where a woman was killed after an avowed white supremacist drove a car into a crowd, that he lacked the authority to remove the statue without General Assembly approval. Some activists and attorneys, including staff of the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia, disagreed.

Northam, who can’t seek reelection because Virginia governors cannot serve consecutive terms, said earlier this year that he was still studying the issue.

The statues on Monument Avenue are among the most prominent collection of tributes to the Confederacy in the nation.

Today, Lee’s 21-foot sculpture rises atop a pedestal nearly twice that tall on a grassy circle 200 feet in diameter.

Northam noted the enormous size of the monument in his remarks Thursday.

“We put things on pedestals when we want people to look up,” he said. “Think about the message that this sends to people coming from around the world to visit the capital city of one of the largest states in our country. Or to young children.”

Elsewhere on the broad avenue lined with mansions and tony apartments are statues to Confederate President Jefferson Davis, Gens. J.E.B. Stuart and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson and Confederate naval officer Matthew Maury.

A statue of black tennis hero Arthur Ashe, a Richmond native, was erected on Monument Avenue in 1996.

The decision to remove the Lee monument has drawn condemnation from Confederate heritage groups and the leader of a Richmond group dedicated to preserving Monument Avenue. But it has been hailed by black lawmakers and activists, many of whom have long called for its removal.

Robert Johns, the brother of the late civil rights icon Barbara Johns, who as a teenager helped lead the push against public school segregation, said his family was pleased to learn of the statue’s removal, calling it a symbol of “hate, bigotry and division.”

“We are now walking into a new era of acceptance, respect and inclusion,” he said.

A descendant of Lee’s brother, the Rev. Robert W. Lee IV, also endorsed the monument’s removal, saying at the press conference that his line of the Lee family “wholeheartedly” commends the governor’s decision.

“Friends, the world may be burning and the world is about to turn because we are going to let justice roll down, and this is the start of something incredible,” he said.

Leaders of the House and Senate GOP caucuses criticized Northam, whose decision on the statue marks his most visible action so far to make good on his pledge to devote his term to promoting racial equity after a scandal over a racist photo that appeared on his medical school yearbook page nearly forced him from office last year.

“The Governor’s decision to remove the Lee statue from Monument Avenue is not in the best interests of Virginia. Attempts to eradicate instead of contextualizing history invariably fail,” Senate GOP leaders said in a statement.

For years, when Republicans controlled the General Assembly, they blocked efforts to change the law protecting war memorials.

A spokeswoman for the state Department of General Services, which Northam said would handle the removal, said Thursday planning is underway to ensure it is completed “safely and effectively.”

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