Face coverings to be mandatory on trains and buses

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Media captionMark Drakeford said face masks would become compulsory on public transport

Three-layer face coverings will be mandatory on public transport in Wales from 27 July, the first minister has said.

At the daily Welsh Government coronavirus briefing, Mark Drakeford said this would also be the case for taxis and other situations where 2m social distancing was not possible.

Last week, Health Minister Vaughan Gething recommended their use.

But he stopped short of making them mandatory.

Mr Drakeford said: “For the sake of simplicity and consistency, as well as being part of our plan to help reduce the risk of transmission while on public transport where it is not always possible to maintain a two metre physical distance, it will become mandatory for people to wear a three-layer face covering while travelling – this includes taxis.”

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Media captionThe masks should be made of cotton, and even an old pair of socks can be used to cover your face

Face coverings are currently required on public transport in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Having a different rule for wearing masks on public transport in Wales and England was “not sustainable in the long term”, Mr Drakeford said.

“Our decision to make face coverings mandatory on public transport is a combination of the fact that we know as the economy gets back into operation more people will need to use public transport to go to work and for other purposes, and when more people need to use confined spaces then additional protections need to be introduced in order to overcome the fact that two-metre social distancing will not always be possible,” he added.

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Taxi driver Stephen Clifford is not sure if the plan will work for taxis

Taxi driver Stephen Clifford, from Newport, does not believe it will work for customers

He said: “Most of people the customers wouldn’t wear them.

“We’d lose an awful lot of money. If you’ve got to have it, you have got to have it. And what if we had to provide them? It’s hard to say.”

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Masks will not be compulsory in shops

Asked why coverings were not mandatory in other public spaces, Mr Drakwford said: “The advice of the Welsh Government is that if places are crowded then face coverings are advisory. Where places are not crowded it is a matter for the individual citizen to make that decision.”

Coronavirus is now “at its lowest ebb” since the pandemic began, he added, saying the Welsh Government’s response had to be “proportionate”.

While Mr Drakeford said masks would not be mandatory for shoppers, businesses may ask people to wear them.

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The Welsh government has recommended face coverings should be three layers thick

He said the retail sector had made “huge efforts” to introduce measures to maintain physical distancing, including putting up one-way systems, limiting the number people who can enter a shop and putting up screens at checkouts. 

But, he added: “At this point in time, when the prevalence of coronavirus is low, we are not mandating the use of face coverings in other public places, but many people may choose to wear them – and there is nothing to stop that happening in Wales.

“Our advice may change if cases of coronavirus begin to increase.”

The first minister said the Welsh Government had made changes to regulations which recognise there are some occasions when it is not always possible to maintain a distance of 2m.

“These include maintaining hygiene standards and limiting close face-to-face interaction, wherever reasonable,” he added.

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London Underground staff have been handing out face coverings

Mr Drakeford also said 300,000 coronavirus tests have been carried out in Wales, with 17,000 of them positive.

He urged people to carry on following the “golden rules” such as washing hands frequently.

He said there had been a “real change in working patterns, with more people working from home”, adding: “We need to see flexible working become a permanent feature of working life in Wales and the Welsh government will lead the way in this.”

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GOP Senators Could Pay Political Price For Opposing Coronavirus Relief, Poll Finds

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Republican senators could pay a political price for opposing a $3 trillion Democratic coronavirus relief proposal, with three-quarters of voters in Senate battleground states supporting the legislation, according to a new poll from two progressive organizations.

The survey, from Data for Progress and The Justice Collaborative Institute, found widespread support for the HEROES Act, which the Democratic-led House passed in mid-May. The legislation included a second round of $1,200 stimulus checks for most Americans, $200 billion in housing assistance and $1 trillion in aid to state and local governments.

Senate Republicans have resisted the legislation, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has indicated the chamber will pass its own, less costly GOP-led proposal later this month. Both McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) have suggested compromise is likely, with possible sticking points including an extension of expanded unemployment benefits and McConnell’s desire for a liability shield to protect companies from coronavirus-related lawsuits. 

“I can’t comfortably predict we’re going to come together and pass it unanimously like we did a few months ago — the atmosphere is becoming a bit more political than it was in March,” McConnell told reporters in Louisville earlier this month. “But I think we will do something again. I think the country needs one last boost.”

The poll, however, found the senators McConnell is counting on to win reelection and keep the GOP’s control of the Senate could lose support if that boost doesn’t go far enough in battling the economic pain wrought by the pandemic. The national unemployment rate is above 11%, and a previously passed $2 trillion relief law has played a key role in preventing further economic collapse. 



Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell plans to pass a GOP-only coronavirus relief proposal in late July. 

The poll found 57% of voters said they would be more likely to vote for a candidate who supports the Democratic proposal, while just 11% said they would be less likely to vote for such a candidate. Even 52% of Republicans said they would be more likely to back a candidate who supports the stimulus proposal. About one-third of voters said it wouldn’t impact their vote. 

And the poll indicates voters might reject a plan that does not go far enough – 79% of voters, including 65% of Republicans and 83% of independents, said the HEROES Act is either the right size for a relief proposal or should be even larger. Just 21% of voters said the proposal “goes too far.” 

Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate, and Democrats are targeting at least seven GOP-held seats in November. Republican pickup opportunities are largely limited to bright-red Alabama. McConnell, facing a deteriorating political environment caused by Trump’s mishandling of the pandemic, is trying to steer vulnerable Republicans like Colorado Sen. Cory Gardner, North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis and Montana Sen. Steve Daines to political safety. 

Sean McElwee, a progressive strategist who helped conduct the survey, said any McConnell-led opposition to a robust stimulus proposal will only hurt his party’s incumbents, including those in states like Kansas and South Carolina, where the GOP is unexpectedly playing defense. 

“It turns out that driving the American public into a never-ending pit of economic despair would have negative consequences for the Republican Party,” McElwee said. “For all the talk of Mitch McConnell being a mastermind, he’s putting states on that map that we’re unimaginable in the wildest dreams of Democratic strategists just three months ago.”

The poll surveyed 819 likely voters across 18 states with competitive Senate races: Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Texas, Maine, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Arizona, Iowa, Montana, New Mexico, Colorado, Kansas, Alabama and Kentucky. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.3 percentage points. 

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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Goya faces boycott backlash after CEO praises Trump

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Dive Brief:

  • Comments from Goya CEO Robert Unanue praising President Trump last week have turned into a backlash and calls for a boycott on social media, including from prominent figures like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Hamilton creator Lin-Manuel Miranda. “If Goya wants our business, they must respect and fight for our humanity!,” immigrant advocacy group United We Dream said in a petition calling for the boycott.
  • Unanue said at the White House last Thursday that “we’re all truly blessed… to have a leader like President Trump who is a builder, and that’s what my grandfather did.” Unanue was at the event because Trump signed an executive order launching a Hispanic Prosperity Initiative and Goya was donating two million pounds of food to U.S. food banks as a part of it. 
  • Unanue doubled down on his comments Friday in an interview with Fox News, saying he would not apologize and called the boycott a “suppression of speech.” He said there was a double standard since Goya previously worked with President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. “So you’re allowed to talk good or to praise one president, but you’re not allowed” to praise another, Unanue said. 

Dive Insight:

While a lot of people believe politics and religion don’t mix, Goya is finding that business and politics sometimes don’t either. Now, following Unanue​’s comments praising Trump, the food maker could see an impact, at least in near term, on its sales.

Unanue’s comparison of his grandfather and Trump as builders was referring to the family-owned company’s origins. Goya was started in 1936 by the current CEO’s Spanish grandparents as a storefront business selling authentic Spanish products, like olives and olive oil, to local Hispanic families in Manhattan. It has since grown into one of the largest Hispanic-owned food businesses in the country, boasting 4,000 employees and a wide portfolio of 2,500 products, including beans, seasonings, cooking oils and frozen products.

Since 2004, the company has been run by the founders’ grandson, Robert Unanue, who previously told Fox Business he has been with the company since he was 10. But now Unanue is the latest to be in the hot seat for supporting Trump. 

Thousands of people on social media are calling for shoppers to stop buying from the company. The phrase #BoycottGoya quickly started to trend as consumers criticized the CEO for supporting a president who they believe hurt Latin Americans and immigrants with his controversial immigration policies. The opposition to Unanue’s comments could help Goya’s competitors, as people on social media started to promote similar companies like La Preferida and Badia, as well as share their own recipes for products like adobo. 

Other food companies have been judged for their interaction with the Trump administration. In 2018, Nathan’s Famous faced an uproar after its Executive Chairman Howard Lorber held a fundraiser for Trump; many people threatened to boycott the hot dog maker. In 2017, companies including Hershey, Mars and Jelly Belly were reportedly targeted in an anti-Trump boycott because the National Confectioners Association hosted its annual conference at the Trump National Doral resort. Although these backlashes cause a stir on social media, they don’t always end up causing any significant movement in sales.

As news of the boycott spread, a counter movement began with conservatives and Trump supporters using the #BuyGoya hastag. Senator Ted Cruz tweeted that “Goya is a staple of Cuban food. My grandparents ate Goya black beans twice a day for nearly 90 years. And now the Left is trying to cancel Hispanic culture and silence free speech. #BuyGoya.” Amid the backlash, Trump also expressed his support for the brand tweeting, “I LOVE @GoyaFoods!”

The company has widely promoted its philanthropy efforts during the pandemic as it has donated hundreds of thousands of pounds of food. The New York Times reported on Friday that the company put out a release about Goya’s donation for the White House initiative, but didn’t mention the backlash. The longtime CEO doesn’t seem too concerned with the retribution since he has since stated he isn’t apologizing. Unanue also said he would not turn down future invites. “I didn’t say that to the Obamas and I didn’t say that to President Trump,” he told Fox. 

As international flavors have become more popular in the U.S., consumers have increasingly sought out ethnic food. And as the market for Hispanic foods specifically has continued to grow, Goya has reportedly attracted and rejected a $3 billion offer to buy the company. 

During the pandemic, Goya has seen a major boost in sales as consumers turn back to center-of-the-store products. The question now remains whether or not this boycott will actually come to fruition enough to hurt its bottom line and reverse its positive sales boost.

Adriana Waterston, senior vice president of Horowitz Research, told the Associated Press that Goya regularly is one of the most trusted brands in studies she conducts. This could mean consumers feel especially betrayed but the brand’s popularity will make a boycott hard.

“This Goya thing is going to go down as one of the biggest marketing faux pas of the year,” Waterston said.



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A bacterial toxin enables the first mitochondrial gene editor

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Bacterial weaponry has an unexpected use in human cells.

A protein secreted by bacteria to kill other microbes has been re-engineered to tweak DNA inaccessible to other gene editors, scientists report online July 8 in Nature. The advance paves the way for one day fixing mutations in mitochondria. Those energy-producing organelles are inherited from a mother and have their own DNA, distinct from the genetic information — from both parents — that’s stored in a cell’s nucleus.

“I’ve been a mitochondrial biologist for 25 years, and I view this as an extremely important advance for the field,” says Vamsi Mootha, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

Mutations in mitochondrial DNA cause over 150 distinct syndromes and affect 1,000 to 4,000 children born in the United States each year. There are no cures for these diseases and currently, the only way to prevent a child from inheriting dysfunctional mitochondria is a controversial “three-parent baby” method (SN: 12/14/16). This in vitro fertilization technique requires mitochondria from a donor egg, in addition to genetic information from a mother and father.

An approach for developing cures for genetic diseases is gene editing, a technique that makes changes directly to DNA. Perhaps the most famous gene editor, CRISPR/Cas9 is a molecular scissors that cuts DNA. Researchers have also previously used molecules called TALENs to cut up mitochondrial DNA in mice and eliminate defective organelles (SN: 4/23/15). A newer technology, called base editors, bolts proteins that can change DNA bases — represented by the letters A, C, G and T —  to a modified version of the CRISPR-associated protein Cas9 (SN: 10/25/17). These editors chemically transform one DNA base into another, essentially fixing typos that can lead to disease. This technology, however, works only on DNA in nuclei, not mitochondria.

The toxin secreted by the bacteria Burkholderia cenocepacia unexpectedly proved to be the solution needed to create a mitochondria-friendly base editor. Marcos de Moraes, a microbiologist at the University of Washington in Seattle, deduced that the toxin killed bacteria by causing disruptive DNA mutations. But for months, he couldn’t untangle how the process worked at a molecular level. He was on the verge of moving on from the project when a single late-night experiment made everything fall into place.

It was like a soap opera, de Moraes says. He’d suspected early on that the toxin protein attached to DNA and modified one DNA letter, cytosine (C), so it resembled a different one, thymine (T). These intentional DNA typos were what brought down the toxin’s victims. But what de Moraes learned from that fateful late-night experiment was that, unlike all other cytosine-converting proteins, the toxin made changes to double-stranded DNA rather than single-stranded DNA.

This seems like a minor difference, but it has major implications. Thus far, base editors have used proteins like Cas9 to pry apart target DNA into single strands before making a change. But pieces of RNA required for the function of these proteins can’t get into mitochondria. A base editor based on the B. cenocepacia toxin, which works on double-stranded DNA, would no longer need to depend on Cas9.

The prospect of developing a mitochondria-friendly tool spurred conversations with David Liu, a chemical biologist and HHMI investigator at Harvard University and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard.

The new cytosine-converting enzyme, however, was as lethal to mammalian cells as it was to bacterial prey. The first step in “taming the beast” was modifying the toxin so it didn’t just indiscriminately mess up double-stranded DNA, Liu says. The researchers split the protein into nontoxic halves; the two pieces changed cytosine to thymine only when they were brought together to the same spot of DNA.

“It’s quite brilliant,” says Carlos Moraes, a mitochondrial biologist at the University of Miami in Florida who was not involved in the work.

To direct the enzyme halves’ activity, the researchers attached TALE proteins, short pieces of protein that could be chosen to target specific stretches of DNA. In cell culture experiments, the mitochondrial editor successfully converted cytosine to thymine at intended mitochondrial DNA locations, with efficiencies ranging from 5 to 49 percent.

Future work will aim to improve efficiency, develop new types of mitochondrial editors that can produce other DNA base changes, and see if mitochondrial gene editing works in animals.

“This is just the first step,” says Shoukhrat Mitalipov, a mitochondrial biologist at the Oregon Health & Science University in Portland who was not involved in the work. “But in the right direction.”

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Antitrust accusations escalate in the food industry as DOJ cracks down

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In June, former Bumble Bee Foods CEO Chris Lischewski was sentenced to more than three years in prison for conspiring to fix prices for canned tuna. 

The U.S. Department of Justice is trying to send a message with the lengthy jail time, which is more than double the average range of 14 to 18 months, Scott Wagner, a partner at Bilzin Sumberg, told Food Dive. 

“Nobody likes to go to jail. Business executives going to jail for 10 minutes would be a deterrent,” Wagner said. “You have to think that people in other industries, particularly if the government is already investigating, are looking at a three-year sentence and really reevaluating their positions and people who had not cut deals with the government may be reconsidering that now.”

The hefty sentence comes amid a flurry of antitrust action from the DOJ aimed at the food industry. In the last month, several executives were indicted for conspiracy to fix chicken prices and four major meatpackers were subpoenaed after anti-competitive accusations. Soon after, Tyson Foods announced it was fully cooperating with the DOJ’s investigation into the chicken industry.

Legal analysts told Food Dive that the DOJ’s antitrust division has focused more on prosecuting executives because it is a more effective disincentive in these cases and that allegations in the food industry are piling up now as more seek leniency and deals to avoid charges. 

Leniency program can have a chain effect

In antitrust cases, Wagner said there are often collections of cases in particular sectors. In the last decade, for example, he said there were a lot of price fixing conspiracies on electronics. Wagner said one case can lead to another because if someone is caught in one case and they likely won’t obtain amnesty since they aren’t the first to expose it, they may say, “Well let me tell you about this other case.”

“Cases sort of build that way, and I think that’s why you’re starting to see this increased focus in the food industry [as] one case just sort of leads to another,” he said. 

The Antitrust Criminal Penalty Enhancement and Reform Act (ACPERA) statute, passed in 2004 and recently renewed, built on the DOJ’s Corporate Leniency Policy. The leniency program allows for a company who comes forward to avoid criminal convictions, criminal fines and prison time if they admit to a criminal violation of antitrust laws and cooperate fully. That company can also get limits on monetary damages it may need to pay in civil court.

Wagner said that statute has helped lead to longer prison sentences because they are able to build stronger cases with a cooperating witness. This policy brings documentation and “someone to tell you where the bodies are buried,” which are valuable in understanding how the conspiracy worked, he said. 

 

Philip Giordano, an antitrust partner at Hughes Hubbard who previously served as a prosecutor in the antitrust division of the DOJ, told Food Dive that the leniency program essentially offers a free pass for the first one in the door to not be criminally prosecuted in exchange for cooperation.

“It’s a bit of game theory. The idea is that if you’re second in, you might get some discount, but you’re not going to get a free pass for prosecution,” he said. “So it creates a race to the DOJ.”

The policy shifted slightly last year to also allow those who are not first to be eligible for deferred prosecution agreements (DPA) if they self-report and take remedial action. Giordano said the availability of DPA for second-in cooperators is significant but the division still has discretion over whether to offer DPA to a defendant. 

Current and former top executives at Pilgrim’s Pride and Claxton Poultry Farms were indicted last month for conspiring to fix prices for chickens sold to grocers and restaurants from 2012 to 2017. If convicted, those four executives face a statutory maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $1 million fine. They pleaded not guilty on the charges and the jury trial is predicted to start in August.

After the indictment of Pilgrim’s Pride and Claxton Poultry Farm on price-fixing allegations, Tyson Foods publicly announced its cooperation with the DOJ’s price-fixing investigation into the chicken industry under the antitrust division’s Corporate Leniency Program. 

The investigation was publicly disclosed last year when the DOJ intervened in a lawsuit filed in 2016, which accused companies, including Pilgrim’s Pride, Perdue Farms, Tyson Foods and Sanderson Farms, of colluding to inflate broiler chicken prices.

The idea is that if the company can’t trust the co-conspirators, then they may not engage in the conduct in the first place, Giordano said. 

“It’s supposed to destabilize cartels,” he said. “It’s been a very successful program.”

Giordano said he doesn’t see any reason to think that there’s some initiative to go specifically after price fixing in the food industry; instead, he said it’s more happenstance — meaning it’s “just what came in the door.” However, some cases can be linked together in “leniency plus,” he said. 

He explains that in leniency or amnesty plus, if a conglomerate is tagged for price fixing in one product area, typically corporations cooperate because they know the evidence is usually pretty strong, and it’s unlikely for a company to beat DOJ in court. Then if they get onto the plea track, many look around their company to see if there’s anything else going on in another product line because if they report a separate conspiracy, they can apply for leniency, Giordano said. 

Plea agreements for an antitrust investigation into the auto parts industry in 2013 showed the success of DOJ’s “amnesty plus” policy because it started with an investigation into just one product — wire harnesses — and then expanded into more than 30 different products, according to Mondaq.  

“If you are successful in bringing in this new conspiracy that needs to be investigated, you get leniency. You’ll also get a greater discount for the cooperation in the first conspiracy,” he said. “Sometimes you get sort of a daisy chain effect where an investigation in one industry will lead to an investigation in a related industry or related line of products, and that could very well happen.”

One year of antitrust action in the food industry

See the full timeline â–¼

A stronger deterrent

When the 40-month sentence for Bumble Bee’s CEO came down, the DOJ praised the verdict. 

Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim of the Justice Department’s antitrust division said in a statement that the sentence reflects the serious harm that resulted from the multi-year conspiracy. Federal prosecutors originally recommended Lischewski serve eight to 10 years in prison, while his lawyers requested 12 months of home confinement. DOJ didn’t return Food Dive’s request to comment for this story. 

“Executives who cheat American consumers out of the benefits of competition will be brought to justice, particularly when their antitrust crimes affect the most basic necessity, food,” Delrahim said. 

The DOJ said the court found that the conspiracy impacted hundreds of millions of dollars in canned tuna sales during that time period. Bumble Bee pleaded guilty and was ordered to pay a $25 million fine, while StarKist Co. was fined $100 million. Chicken of the Sea was given amnesty for blowing the whistle on the other companies. 

John F. Bennett, special agent in charge of the San Francisco division of the FBI, said in a statement that the case brings them closer to its goal of “allowing our citizens to be able to purchase food in an unbiased market within an efficient and fair economy, free of corporate greed.”

Giordano said there has been a shift toward the DOJ going after individuals and not just companies. He said originally the program focused on corporations and substantial fines, and sometimes individuals just wouldn’t be fully investigated by the time the five-year statute of limitations expired. 


“It wasn’t until executives started getting jail sentences for people to start taking these laws much more seriously.”

Philip Giordano

Antitrust partner, Hughes Hubbard


“But more and more, the program seems to be emphasizing going after individuals and seeking jail time. I think the idea, basically, is that it’s a more effective deterrent when you put executives in jail for white-collar crimes,” Giordano said. “It wasn’t until executives started getting jail sentences for people to start taking these laws much more seriously.”

With subpoenas out in the beef industry and indictments against executives filed in the chicken industry, DOJ action will continue. 

In the indictment of chicken executives, the Justice Department said the leaders and employees discussed details about their pricing over the phone and with text messages for years while they were simultaneously negotiating deals with retailers and restaurants, The Wall Street Journal reported. Wagner said he suspects there will be more to see out of this case going forward, such as people agreeing to plead guilty.

“These indictments are the beginning, not the end, of what we’re going to see in the chicken industry,” Wagner said.

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England can unlock Joe Root’s full batting potential after Ben Stokes shows the way in Southampton – Sport360 News

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Not even a near entire opening day lost to rain could dampen the spirits in Southampton, as England and the West Indies served up a classic on Test cricket’s much anticipated return.

Resuming after a near four-month hiatus and without the presence of spectators, cricket in a ‘bubble’ delivered more than what was promised in a stirring win for the Windies.

It was a clash which had been touted as a battle between Ben Stokes and Jason Holder – two elite all-rounders who led out their respective teams at the Ageas Bowl. The face-off between the No1 and 2 ranked Test all-rounders lived up to expectations, with both the captains chipping in with heroic individual displays in Southampton.

Holder was exquisite with the ball in England’s first innings as his six-wicket haul made a mockery of the home team’s decision to bat first on a moving pitch. Fittingly, the 28-year-old was on hand to finish the job with the bat for the visitors in what was a tricky run chase in the final innings.

Stokes, meanwhile, had an even greater contribution towards England’s cause and was unfortunate to end up on the losing side. The 2019 ICC Cricketer of the Year was at his all-round best in a Test where he aggregated 89 runs and six wickets across the two innings. His individual brilliance over the five days dug England out of the holes of their creation, but it just wasn’t enough to overpower a resolute Windies effort which was fully deserving of their victory.

That Stokes is England’s heartbeat was shown last year by his magnificence in the World Cup and the Headingley Test against Australia. Having been bestowed with the temporary captaincy for the Southampton clash owing to Joe Root’s absence, Stokes rose to the occasion in a talisman’s display with both bat and ball.

Questions will be asked of his decision to bat first in damp conditions in Southampton, as well as the move to omit Stuart Broad from the playing XI. While hindsight is a wonderful thing, the result could have been all so different for England had their familiar batting failures not come back to haunt them in both innings.

Though the loss against his name on captaincy debut will stick for a while, Stokes’ own performance in the Test is only worth of praise. It was a performance befitting of a talisman and leader from the champion cricketer who never stopped huffing and puffing in pursuit of victory. Not deterred by the responsibilities that England captaincy brings with it, Stokes instead raised his levels to even greater heights.

Like a man on a mission with a single-minded pursuit of pushing England to victory, Stokes gave a timely reminder of his genius as an all-rounder of enviable talent. As a performance, it was highly reminiscent of Imran Khan and Ian Botham at their peaks. If there were any doubts about his 2019 heroics being a flash in the pan, the Durham man dispelled them in emphatic fashion.

Stokes has hit his prime, and such performances are only going to become a regular occurrence going forward. Root will return to take his place as captain in the second Test at Old Trafford, but Stokes’ Southampton showing has definitely given the England team management some food for thought.

Although stripping someone from captaincy is never ideal, could England possibly unlock Root’s full potential as a Test batsman by giving Stokes the full-time job? To be fair to Root his record as England Test skipper isn’t too shabby, with the Yorkshireman managing a 51 per cent win-rate in his 39 matches at the helm.

However, it is his personal displays which have taken a heavy beating ever since he took over the captaincy from Alastair Cook in 2017. While his ‘Fab Four’ contemporaries in Virat Kohli, Kane Williamson and Steve Smith (before his leadership ban) have hit greater heights with the bat as skippers of their team, Root has gone the opposite way.

Root (15)

Among the four star batsmen of this era, it was Root who hit his peak the earliest with a brilliant few years between 2014 and 2017. There was a time he was considered as the best Test batsman in the world, and the right-hander even attained the No1 Test ranking in August, 2015.

Unfortunately, the Englishman’s rivals have left him in their wake in recent years and by some distance. While Smith and Kohli have constantly exchanged the No1 rankings between them, Root even suffered the ignominy of dropping out of the top 10 towards the end of 2019.

For a man who was averaging as high as 53 before donning the captaincy hat, his current average of 42.92 is quite the comedown. Another issue that has plagued Root’s batting as skipper is the drastic reduction in his century conversion rate.

Before captaincy, Root was converting his fifties into centuries at a rate of more than 40 per cent. Since being put in charge of affairs for England, that rate for Root has dropped alarmingly to 28.5 per cent.

His double ton in New Zealand last year was a fine innings, but such mammoth displays have been too few and far between for Root the captain. In contrast, he has been going from strength to strength in the ODI format without the pressure of leading the team. With Eoin Morgan taking the reins in the 50-over format, Root has flourished as a batsman who can hold anchor for England’s array of big hitters.

He has registered eight ODI centuries in the last three years alone, while managing just six Test tons in his entire captaincy tenure. His Test credentials cannot be questioned, given the heights he touched in previous years. He is a generational talent after all and is poised to be become the most prolific run-scorer to represent England.

It is whether he can produce those performances while burdened by the captaincy which is the burning question for England and the team management.

England will understandably be reluctant to rock the boat and remove Root from his position, but the manner in which Stokes took to captaincy in Southampton has given them an option should they choose to be bold. It is one which could finally see the return of a batsman who was on par with Smith and Kohli instead of one who has crumbled under the weight of the crown.

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The racist double standards of international development

Year after year, the luminaries of international development, from Bill Gates to Jim Kim, Nick Kristof to Steven Pinker, line up to tell us about the wonderful progress that has been made against global poverty. According to the most recent estimates, published by the World Bank, there were “only” 734 million people living on less than $1.90 per day in 2015, down from 1.9 billion people in 1990.

It sounds like wonderful news. But there is a problem with this narrative. Oddly enough, there is no empirical basis for the $1.90 line. It is an arbitrary threshold that has no grounding in actual human needs. Empirical evidence shows that $1.90 per day is not even enough for people to secure decent nutrition, to say nothing of other basic requirements. In fact, at least 3.5 billion people live on more than this, and yet remain trapped in poverty.

It is important to recognise that the international poverty line is adjusted for purchasing power. When we hear $1.90 per day, we commonly assume that this means the equivalent of what an American might be able to buy with that amount of money in, say, Sudan or India. But exactly the opposite is true. It is the equivalent of what $1.90 can buy in the United States. Just think for a moment about what this means. It is virtually nothing.

To get a sense for how low this standard is, the economist David Woodward once calculated that to live on the international poverty line in Britain, in an earlier base year, would be like 35 people trying to survive “on a single minimum wage, with no benefits of any kind, no gifts, borrowing, scavenging, begging or savings to draw on (since these are all included as “income” in poverty calculations).” This goes beyond any definition of “extreme”.  

This brings us to an important question. Why is it that the barons of international development judge the lives of people in the global South by $1.90 per day, when everyone agrees – including the World Bank itself – that this standard is far too low for a human being in the global North? For comparison, the poverty line in the US is $15 per day.

There is a clear double standard here, and it does not take much to recognise that it is racist. There is one standard for the (majority white) people of the North, and another standard for the (majority Black and brown) people of the South. It is a colonial logic that remains with us today, and goes unchallenged year after year.

Some try to justify this disparity by saying these are totally separate economies, and so they require separate standards. But this premise – the idea of separation – is simply not true. The economies of the North and South have been integrated into a single global system for at least 500 years, ever since the onset of colonialism.

We know that the rise of the North depended on cheap labour and raw materials extracted from the South during the colonial period. It depended on silver stolen from the Andes, rubber from the Congo, grain extracted from India, as well as sugar and cotton grown by enslaved Africans on land stolen from Indigenous Peoples.  

This might seem like ancient history, but the very same arrangement remains in place today. People in the global South sew the clothes that Steven Pinker wears each day. They assemble Bill Gates’ laptops, including the one that Nick Kristof uses to write his columns. They grow and pick the bananas and berries that Jim Kim has for breakfast. And then there is our coffee and tea, the coltan in our gadgets, the oil that fuels our industries, the lithium we need for electric cars … everywhere we look, it is overwhelmingly clear that we live in a single global economy. 

In fact, trade data shows that high-income nations are totally reliant on resources and labour from the South. In 2015, high-income nations appropriated a net total of 10.1 billion tonnes of materials, and 379 billion hours of human labour from the rest of the world. There is an enormous net flow of resources and embodied labour from poor countries to rich countries. 

One cannot have it both ways. You cannot have a single global economy when it suits you to use the labour and resources of the poor, but then insist on separation in order to measure their lives by different standards. That is the logic of apartheid.

Global capitalism depends on resources and labour extracted from the South, and yet the people who render it – including those who work in the factories, mines and plantations of multinational companies – receive but pennies in return. Pinker and Gates tell us to celebrate when workers in the South go from one to two dollars a day. But would we celebrate if we learned that workers in the North were earning two dollars a day, while employed by the biggest brands in the world? No. We would be outraged. Because for workers in the North we apply the standards of morality and justice, yet for workers in the South we apply the standards of bare existence.

The analogy to apartheid is appropriate. South African law required one wage for white people and a much lower wage for Black people. Those who benefitted from this system insisted that it was natural: just how the market works. Economists devised elaborate arguments to explain why Black people’s labour was worth less – ignoring, of course, that the economy depended on it.

Similar arguments persist today. Economists say that workers in the South have lower wages because of lower productivity. But it is not true. Keep in mind that in many cases they are working for the same companies with the same technology (say, a GM factory in Mexico, or a Nike sweatshop in Bangladesh). In fact, Southern workers are often more productive than their Northern counterparts, as they work under much more extractive conditions. And yet they are paid as little as 1/30th the amount – for the same work, in the same industries.  

For 500 years, capital has relied on the devaluation of lives in the global South, whether it be through colonisation, dispossession, genocide and slavery, or, more recently, through structural adjustment programmes, free trade agreements and corporate land grabs that depress the costs of Southern labour and resources. The $1.90 line is the legacy of this long history. It is part of a colonial ideology that sees people of colour as cheap.

In the 21st century, in the era of Black Lives Matter, we can no longer accept the racist double standards of international development. We must reject the logic of apartheid. If we are going to live in a single global economy, then we must demand a single standard for all human lives: that all people receive fair wages for their labour and fair prices for their resources. This is the principle that international development must demand, if it is to have any moral standing. This is what real progress looks like. 

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

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Will COVID-19 Spell the End of Outdoor and Environmental Education?

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For 49 years, students at Rancho El Chorro Outdoor School, tucked in the San Luis Obispo hills above the California coast, learned about science and ecology by investigating tidepools and dissecting squids.

“Everything was experiential,” says Celeste Royer, Rancho El Chorro’s Director of Environmental Education. “Getting these kids out into the natural environment, giving them a chance to explore, inspiring them to want to know more—it’s so unique from their traditional classroom experience. It’s a learning environment that can’t be replicated inside.”

But after a two-month closure due to COVID-19, Rancho El Chorro permanently shut down as of May 2020.

The COVID-19 closure in March came during the school’s most profitable season, its residential programming, where students stay for a week of outdoor learning at the Rancho El Chorro campus.

“My bread and butter comes through the residential programs,” Royer says. “We lost hundreds of thousands of dollars by not being able to run those.”

With a resulting half million dollar deficit, the superintendent of the San Luis Obispo County Education Office, which oversees all supporting educational programs for the district, made the decision in early May to shutter the outdoor school that serves about 7,000 students annually from five different counties.

Though Royer expressed disappointment and surprise at the decision, Rancho El Chorro is not alone. According to a recent policy brief by University of California, Berkeley’s Lawrence Hall of Science, which surveyed nearly 1,000 environmental education and outdoor science schools that serve primarily K-12 learners, 63 percent of such organizations are uncertain whether they will ever open their doors again, if pandemic restrictions last until year’s end.

These organizations are nature centers and preschools, parks, zoos, aquariums, museums and residential outdoor science schools like Rancho El Chorro. This spring, if not for COVID-19, they would have collectively served four million students across the United States. By December of 2020, an estimated 11 million students will have missed out on these experiences.

Craig Strang, the Associate Director at the Lawrence Hall of Science and an author of the brief, says that the survey was born out of an impromptu webinar with program leaders in March to discuss the unforeseen impacts of COVID-19. As a public science and research center, the Lawrence Hall of Science designs curriculum and supports professional development for different educational organizations around the country.

“We started to hear these devastating stories, one after the other, about programs shutting down, sending revenue and tuition back to schools that were not going to be able to participate, laying off their entire staff on one week notice, and people telling us, ‘If this goes on for more than a few weeks, I don’t think we’re going to be able to survive,’” Strang says. It suddenly felt like the field was on the verge of extinction.

The survey results, which were released in early June, confirmed the stories. As of May 2020, participating organizations lost an estimated $225 million and furloughed or eliminated 12,000 staff members. Those numbers are anticipated to increase to $600 million and 30,000 staff by the end of the year, and this data only represents a small subset of the field, as Strang estimates there are thousands more of these organizations throughout the U.S.

The Benefits of Outdoor Science Education

Environmental and outdoor learning boasts an array of scientifically-proven benefits for students, from increased environmental stewardship and awareness, to improved social, academic, physical and psychological health. Nature deficit disorder, as coined by author Richard Louv in his 2005 book Last Child in the Woods, is the idea that many behavioral problems and challenges facing our students, such as reduced attention spans and obesity, are actually caused by lack of time outdoors. Nature-based learning has shown to be more effective than traditional teaching, to increase attention spans and to reduce stress. It’s no surprise then that pediatricians have started prescribing time outdoors to children.

Students from communities of color have less access to natural spaces, which means that the loss of environmental and outdoor programming is also an issue of equity. An estimated 58 percent of the students impacted by cancellations of the programs in the Lawrence Hall of Science’s survey are from marginalized communities, including English language-learners and those eligible for free and reduced lunch. These are students whose access to outdoor spaces is likely already limited and possibly further exacerbated by the pandemic, and whose communities are disproportionately impacted by COVID-19.

“There’s the perception that these programs are designed by and for white people,” Strang says. While this perception certainly has its merits, the field has made significant strides in the past decade to offer more accessible and equitable educational experiences through community partnerships, scholarships, fee waivers and the like, gains which Strang fears will be undone as organizations seek to prioritize their bottom lines.

Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center combines outdoor recreation and skillbuilding with field science instruction on a 204-acre island in Boston Harbor. It serves primarily students from the Boston Public School District through a mix of offerings, such as residential programs for middle schoolers, summer backpacking and kayaking expeditions, and employment and STEM skills training for high schoolers through its Green Ambassadors program. Participants cultivate their scientific thinking often over multiple trips and years of going to Thompson Island.

Nikkida Tabron, Chief Education Officer at Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center, became involved with the organization to build students’ academic and social-emotional growth in the outdoors. “It was really important to me as a person of color to provide more access to kids who look like me, who don’t necessarily have access,” she adds.

Thompson Island’s programming is generally free to schools and students, funded by the weddings, conferences and special events hosted on the island—events which, unfortunately, are difficult to run with COVID-19. Currently, all in-person educational programming is on pause at Thompson Island, with their summer Green Ambassadors training happening digitally.

Residential Outdoor Science Schools Are the Hardest Hit

Residential outdoor science schools, which comprise a quarter of the survey respondents, will likely be hardest to reopen, because they present conditions that make social distancing difficult—such as transportation to remote campuses via bus (or boat, in the case of Thompson Island), close sleeping quarters in bunk rooms or tents, and eating in communal spaces like dining halls.

While most of these programs are currently completely shut down, the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS), the nonprofit global wilderness school that operates worldwide, is piloting programs this summer with new social distancing precautions.

NOLS suspended all its programming in March, evacuating 158 students in five countries from the field. In early April, they laid off 60 percent of all their employees. Because of the large size of the organization, they did not qualify for PPP loans.

“NOLS is a very conservative and frugal organization,” says Rachael Price, the organization’s Director of Operations. “We had saved cash reserves for a rainy day. This was a huge hurricane.”

Eighty to 95 percent of NOLS’ income comes from student tuition. Donor contributions and downsizing to only essential functioning—which “becomes pretty brutal when you don’t have 90 percent of your income,” Price says—is what is keeping them afloat during this time.

This summer, NOLS is running 20 percent of their normal capacity out of a single location in Lander, Wyoming, with an array of new practices based on the assumption that every person is an asymptomatic carrier of COVID-19. These protocols include smaller class sizes, socially distant transportation options and participants always standing six feet apart. Masks will be worn in moments where closer contact is necessary, such as a river crossing where students must hold onto each other. In addition to impeccable hand-washing and hygiene practices, students will undergo daily health screenings and have individual sleeping arrangements in the field.

“We didn’t have to operate in order to survive,” she says. Being in that position allowed NOLS to think critically about why they should resume, and ultimately, led them to conclude that their programming was as essential as ever.

“The value of a NOLS education in terms of leadership and independence, all the things that kids learn from outdoor education, is so crucial to dealing with challenges and uncertainty in a dynamic environment,” Price says.

Silver Linings

Amidst the chaos, there are opportunities. As organizations recover and re-staff vacancies, they could hire educators of color who better reflect the communities they serve. In 2019, The Lawrence Hall of Science released a study examining equitable workspaces in the field of environmental education, with specific recommendations to advance equity and inclusion, particularly around hiring and supporting staff of color.

Programs could also strengthen their partnerships with local schools by deploying educators into school systems. “This is happening at a time when public health leaders are promoting the value of outdoor learning as safe, engaging, effective and essential,” Rena Dorph, director of the Lawrence Hall of Science, said in a press release. Both Thompson Island and Teton Science Schools in Jackson, Wyoming, are considering how they can bring their teaching to students, rather than having the students come to them.

“We have experienced educators, we have some funding we can bring to the relationship, and we’re really interested in supporting the potential pathways schools have for opening next year,” says Joe Petrick, the Head of Field Education at Teton Science Schools, which teaches students of all ages through nature-based, day and overnight programs.

While the Teton Science Schools’ residential programming has been cancelled through 2020, Petrick says that their AmeriCorps members could support local schools digitally, or their outdoor educators could go to schools and take kids outside into play yards or nearby parks.

As schools across the U.S. look to reopen in the fall, they face some serious constraints. They need to lower class sizes to allow for social distancing, but most don’t have enough classroom space. Many are considering staggered schedules and hybrid learning models where students spend part of the week in school and part at home in unfacilitated independent learning.

Of course, that presents challenges for parents or guardians who work or otherwise can’t supervise their children’s learning, just as digital learning this spring exposed fundamental inequities for students who didn’t have access to reliable technology or the internet. Meanwhile, Strang says, “We’ve got this whole field that’s shut down with 30,000 employees who are trained, skilled, enthusiastic, dying to work with kids in the outdoors, and who could extend the amount of space available by taking kids outside.”

Yet these solutions and much of the future of outdoor science education depends on traditional schools, donors, philanthropists, policy makers, and the broader academic world seeing outdoor learning as a legitimate and necessary component of our educational systems, deserving funding and support.

Many still see these programs as a luxury—educational experiences that are nice, but ultimately unnecessary.

According to Celeste Royer, that’s a short-sighted mindset.

“In addition to a pandemic and social injustice, we have climate change. We have a host of environmental issues to deal with. We need to have an educated student body growing up into adults that are going to help us with solutions to these problems,” Royer says.

Royer is retiring after 40 years in the field of environmental education. Twenty-two of those years were spent at Rancho El Chorro. It was a planned retirement, but she’s leaving knowing there are still many challenges ahead for this work.

“What we do can’t be extra anymore,” she says. “It needs to be right along there with everything else that gets taught.”



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Rekha to undergo COVID-19 test, BMC not allowed to enter bungalow

Image Source : INSTAGRAM/@REKHA_THE_LEGENDARY_LOVER

Rekha to get tested for coronavirus

Veteran actress Rekha will be tested for the novel coronavirus. One of the actress’s security guards had tested positive for the novel coronavirus recently, after which her bungalow in Bandra ‘Sea Springs’ had been sealed by the BMC. Today, Rekha and her manager Farzana along with three servants of the house and a security guard were supposed to undergo coronavirus tests. The BMC team reached Rekha’s residence for the same. However, no one opened the door. After a while, the manager spoke from behind the door and enquired as to what the matter was. When BMC team told her that they had come to take their tests, Farzana said, “Take the number, call me, and then we shall talk.”  Ultimately, the BMC team had to return.

Meanwhile, Chief Medical Officer of BMC H West ward Sanjay Phude said that they called up the manager Farzana once again. To which, she replied that Rekha is fit and fine and, also said she is doing completely fine as well. Furthermore, she informed the BMC team that they haven’t come in contact with anyone.

Furthermore, the BMC officials said that Rekha does not come out often nor meet anyone and, its perfectly fine to take precautions. However, it is absolutely necessary for them to get tested for Covid-19 because it comes under the law and, it is mandatory for anyone who has come in close contact with the infected person, to get themselves tested for the virus.

After this,  the BMC sent a sanitization team to Rekha’s house. They also tried their best to get inside her home as they wanted to sanitize Rekha’s home from the inside as well. However, this time around too, no one answered the door. As a result of which, the team sanitized the house from outside and also its surrounding areas including the security guard’s cabin.

 

 

 

 

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‘I Felt Defenseless’: Seoul Mayor’s Secretary Speaks Out About Alleged Abuse

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SEOUL, South Korea — The secretary to one of the most powerful political figures in South Korea, Mayor Park Won-soon of Seoul, described suffering years of abuse and sexual harassment at his hands, calling in her first public statement on Monday for a world where women can be treated “like humans.”

The statement was released hours after the funeral of Mr. Park, who committed suicide last week after his secretary went to the police with her accusations.

“I felt defenseless and weak before the immense power,” the woman said in a statement released through her lawyer at a news conference on Monday. “I wanted to shout at him in a safe court of law, telling him to stop it. I wanted to cry out how much he has hurt me.”

“I wanted to forgive him,” the statement continued. “I wanted him to be judged in a court of law and to apologize to me as a fellow human.”

While his mindset is unknown, Mr. Park, a lifelong champion of women and the second most powerful official in Seoul after the president, killed himself on Thursday, a day after his secretary, whose name and other personal information were not released, went to the police with her allegations. In his suicide note, Mr. Park did not mention the accusations, saying only that he was “sorry to everyone.”

On Monday, the woman’s lawyer, as well as activists, called for an investigation, saying she had been widely vilified on social media, where online trolls tried to reveal her identity and blamed her for driving the popular mayor to kill himself. Under the legal procedures of South Korea, Mr. Park’s criminal case is closed, and there will be no indictment, because the suspect is dead.

“What has happened doesn’t go away just because the accused is dead,” said Go Mi-kyeong, head of the Korea Women’s Hotline, one of the women’s rights groups where Mr. Park’s secretary sought help after going to the police. “The first step toward restoring the victim’s human rights is to unveil the full truth.”

Ms. Go called on the police to disclose what they have learned so far about the case. The police interviewed the victim and her lawyer for almost 10 hours until early Thursday. Ms. Go also demanded that Seoul City Hall launch an investigation on why it had dismissed the secretary’s earlier complaints of sexual harassment.

“When she appealed for help with City Hall, officials there just tried to protect the mayor, saying that he would never have done such a thing or that she should dismiss it like a minor mistake,” said Lee Mi-kyeong, head of the Korea Sexual Violence Relief Center, another women’s right group. “This is a typical case of sexual violence where the victim faces a tremendous power and is blocked from raising an issue.”

Seoul City Hall did not immediately respond to the demand for an investigation.

In South Korea, men dominate society’s upper echelons, enforcing a strictly hierarchical code. The culture can make women vulnerable to​ sexual​ abuse and make it difficult to speak out.

As in other countries, the #MeToo movement has rippled across South Korea in recent years. Women have come forward with accusations of sexual abuse against an array of prominent men, including theater directors, politicians, professors, religious leaders and a former coach for the national speedskating team.

Many of the accused have apologized and resigned from their positions. Several have faced criminal charges.

Mr. Park was by far the most prominent South Korean facing #MeToo accusations.

In 2018, he won a record third-term as mayor of Seoul, a city of 10 million where he pushed policies to make it safer for women. As a well-known human rights lawyer, he won the country’s first sexual harassment case.

Kim Jae-ryeon, the​ secretary’s lawyer, said the ​victim first came to her on May 12, accusing Mr. Park of sexually harassing her in his office and ​in a​ bedroom attached to it. Mr. Park pressed his body on ​her while taking selfies​, the lawyer said during the news conference​.

He ​also ​called her into his bedroom and asked her to hug him. Usually late at night, he sent obscene messages and photos of him in underwear through ​Telegram, an encrypted messaging app, the lawyer said.

“Once, when he saw a bruise on the victim’s knee, he touched his lips ​there, saying that it will heal the wound,” the lawyer said.

The lawyer said the victim had told the police that she showed some of Mr. Park’s obscene messages to her friends, as well as a journalist and fellow ​City Hall workers. The secretary also presented the police with incriminating evidence from her smartphone, she said.

Mr. Park, now dead, cannot defend himself over these accusations. His family has urged the news media not to carry unconfirmed, one-sided accusations.

Amid rain on Monday, hundreds of supporters gathered in front of City Hall, as Mr. Park’s funeral was held inside. ​When the hearse carried Mr. Park’s body out to be cremated, many supporters wailed ​and some tried to block the​ vehicle.

His ashes were later moved to Changnyeong​, his hometown​ in southern South Korea, which he left 50 years ​ago ​to pursue one of the most storied political careers in South Korea.

Mr. Park’s death divided South Korean society. Many lamented online the premature departure of one of the country’s most talented human rights lawyers, who laid the foundation for the country’s now vibrant civil-society movement. But his detractors called him a “hypocrite.” As political, religious and other leaders​ have​ paid tribute to him​ in the past few days​, some lawmakers and women’s rights leaders have refused to follow suit.

In her statement on Monday, ​his secretary expressed condolences over Mr. Park’s death.

But she said she felt “stifled” by the way society gave him such a rousing funeral, while she has been subjected to “distortions and speculations” over her motive.

“I ask myself how I am going to continue to live,” she said.

If you are having thoughts of suicide, call the U.S. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255 (TALK) or go to SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for a list of additional resources.

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