SpaceX launches advanced GPS satellite for US Space Force, sticks rocket landing

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — SpaceX successfully launched its 11th mission of the year, lofting a next-generation global positioning satellite into space for the U.S. Space Force. 

A shiny, white Falcon 9 rocket took to the skies today (June 30) at 4:10 p.m. EDT (2010 GMT), taking off from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. 

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‘Real Housewives of New Jersey’ alum Dina Manzo’s ex-husband hired mobster to attack current husband: Feds

Thomas “Tommy” Manzo, the ex-husband of former Real Housewives of New Jersey star Dina Manzo, has been indicted for assault and other crimes in a wild story that certainly isn’t scripted for Bravo cameras. 

Tommy was arrested in New Jersey on Tuesday along with an alleged member of the Lucchese crime family for supposedly having Dina’s current husband, Dave Cantin, attacked in 2015. Prosecutors claim Tommy hired John Perna, “an organized crime soldier,” to assault Dina’s then-boyfriend in exchange for a lavish wedding reception. 

According to the indictment viewed by Yahoo Entertainment, Tommy was “upset that [Cantin] had an ongoing relationship with his former wife” and “planned to have a violent assault committed on [Cantin] that would leave a permanent facial scar.” Prosecutors say Perna accepted the job in order to “maintain and enhance his position with” the Lucchese family.

Tommy, 55, and Perna, 43, are each charged with committing a violent crime in aid of racketeering activity and conspiracy to commit a violent crime in aid of racketeering activity. Perna is also charged with conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud related to the submission of a false car insurance claim, and Tommy with falsifying and concealing records related to the federal investigation of the violent crime. 

Tommy, one of the owners of the Brownstone Restaurant in Paterson, N.J., allegedly hired Perna to attack Cantin in the spring of 2015. In return, Perna received “a deeply discounted wedding reception” at the venue, the U.S. Attorney’s Office claims. The attack allegedly happened in July 2015.

According to the indictment, Perna followed Cantin to a strip mall in New Jersey and attacked him in the parking lot. Perna allegedly “used a dangerous weapon, namely a slap jack, with the intent to inflict serious permanent injury” on Cantin. 

“In return for the commission of the violent assault on [Cantin], defendant Thomas Manzo fulfilled his agreement to hold the reception at a free or discounted price,” the indictment reads. 

Perna’s wedding celebration took place at the Brownstone Restaurant in August 2015. The government states that the wedding and reception “were attended by approximately 330 people and included many members of the Lucchese Crime Family.”

Tommy and Dina Manzo separated in 2012 after five years of marriage. The divorce wasn’t finalized until 2016, after she began dating Cantin.

“Divorce is never easy,” Dina, 48, told Radar Online in 2016. “It was a very emotional divorce for me.

“Of course it’s heartbreaking, but things happen the way they’re supposed to,” she added. “It was a long time coming. I think we just both had different ideas of what a marriage should be.”

As for Cantin, she told the outlet, “We’re both heavily involved in pediatric cancer — [we met] through a project for that. … He’s just the most loving man. He’s really an awesome person and very caring. He treats my family so good, and he’s a great dad to his kids and I see that, how important that is.”

Dina has a 24-year-old daughter from her first marriage to George Hadjiapostoli.

Dina starred on the first two seasons of the Real Housewives of New Jersey, which premiered in 2009. She returned in 2014 for Season 6, but exited the show in 2015 to move to California. She frequently returned to New Jersey where, in 2017, she and Cantin were attacked in a brutal home invasion. They secretly wed months later, but didn’t publicly confirm the news until 2019. Sunday marked their third anniversary.

Dina has yet to comment on the news of Tommy’s arrest. He faces a possibility of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Read more from Yahoo Entertainment:

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Iran’s Zarif says ending arms ban ‘inseparable’ from nuclear deal

Iran has said the preservation of its nuclear accord with world powers depends on the scheduled end in October of a UN arms embargo as the United States seeks to extend it.

“The timetable for the removal of arms restrictions embodied in Resolution 2231 is an inseparable part of the hard-won compromise,” Iranian Foreign Affairs Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif told a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) session, referring to the resolution that blessed the 2015 deal signed to curb the Islamic Republic’s nuclear activities in exchange for sanctions relief.

“Any attempt to change or amend the agreed timetable is thus tantamount to undermining Resolution 2231 in its entirety,” he said.

His comments were made after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged the UN body to extend the embargo on Iran.

Washington has circulated a draft resolution to the 15-member council that would indefinitely extend the embargo but Russia and China have already signalled their opposition to such a move.

“If Iran isn’t a threat to peace and security I do not know what it is,” Pompeo said, warning that the embargo’s expiration would risk the stability of the Middle East.

“Iran will hold a sword of Damocles over the economic stability of the Middle East, endangering nations like Russia and China that rely on stable energy prices,” he added, referencing two opponents of prolonging the embargo.

Pompeo described Iran as “the world’s most heinous terrorist regime,” and urged the UNSC to reject “extortion diplomacy.”

If the US is unsuccessful in extending the arms embargo, it has threatened to trigger a return of all UN sanctions on Iran under the nuclear deal, from which Washington unilaterally withdrew in 2018.

Zarif countered calling President Donald Trump’s administration “an outlaw bully” that is waging “economic terrorism” on his country to satisfy domestic constituencies and “personal aggrandizement.”

He called for the US to compensate the Iranian people for the damage and vehemently opposed any extension of the arms embargo, warning that Iran’s options “will be firm” if it is maintained and the US will bear full responsibility.

Pompeo’s threat to trigger a new set of sanctions was met with criticism during the meeting by other members who signalled their opposition to the move, while also stressing the importance of respecting the deal.

While Russian diplomat Vassily Nebenzia denounced the US’s attempt to extend the embargo as a “utopia”, China’s UN ambassador, Zhang Jun, stressed that the five-year arms embargo should end as scheduled under the 2015 resolution.

“Having quit the JCPOA, the US is no longer a participant and has no right to trigger snapback at the Security Council,” Zhang said, using the official name of the deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action.

European allies of the US have voiced support for extending the embargo but also oppose new sanctions, saying the bigger issue is Iran’s nuclear programme.


“Unilateral attempts to trigger UN sanctions snapback are incompatible with our current efforts to preserve the JCPOA,” said the British envoy, Jonathan Allen, referring to the nuclear agreement.

Olof Skoog, the European Union representative to the UN, noted that the US has not participated in any meetings on the nuclear deal since announcing its withdrawal in May 2018.

The UNSC was meeting to discuss a report by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres who said the cruise missiles used in several attacks on oil facilities and an international airport in Saudi Arabia last year were of “Iranian origin”.

Guterres said “these items may have been transferred in a manner inconsistent” with a 2015 Security Council resolution that enshrines Tehran’s deal with world powers to prevent it from developing nuclear weapons.

Iran rejected the report saying it had been drawn up under US and Saudi influence.


SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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AP Debrief: U.S. knew of Russian bounties in 2019

classified intelligence — a full year earlier than has been previously reported. (June 30)

       

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The economy is falling apart but Wall Street had its best quarter in decades

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The Dow (INDU) recorded its best quarter since the first three months of 1987 with a 17.8% jump, while the S&P 500 (SPX) logged its best quarterly gain since the final three months of 1998, climbing 19.9%.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (COMP) lagged only slightly behind, with its best performance since the fourth quarter of 1999, soaring 30.6%.

All three indexes also finished in the green on Tuesday, the final trading day of June and the second quarter.

It’s been an extremely turbulent quarter for the stock market.
The buoyant rally came on the coattails of a dramatic selloff in the market in March, when the pandemic lockdown began. The Dow recorded its worst start to a year in history, falling 23.2% in the first three months.
But investors were optimistic about the summer thanks to the gradual reopening of the economy — which began as early as April in some states — as well as unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus left investors optimistic about the summer.
More than 20 million American jobs vanished in April, but soon after, the jobs picture and other economic data began to improve as well.

That said, the country’s crisis is clearly not over. Thursday’s jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics is still expected to show an unemployment rate of more than 12%.

Nevertheless, investors are deciding to focus on the positives.

Over the past few weeks, infection rates in parts of the country have surged and have left some states to pause their reopening plans. Economists worry about what a second lockdown could do to the recovery. These worries weighed on the market on some days but were often outweighed by hopes for more stimulus money from Washington.

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Netflix is investing $100 million in Black-owned banks

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The streaming service announced plans to deposit 2% of its cash, or an estimated $100 million, into Black-owned financial institutions and community development organizations, which have a better track record of lending to minority borrowers than mainstream consumer banks.

Minority-owned banks and credit unions represent just 1% of America’s total commercial banking assets.

“We believe bringing more capital to these communities can make a meaningful difference for the people and businesses in them, helping more families buy their first home or save for college, and more small businesses get started or grow,” Netflix said in a statement.

As part of the initiative, the company is also investing $25 million into the New York-based Local Initiatives Support Corporation, a development finance company with 35 offices across the country that backs Black entrepreneurs across a variety of businesses.
LISC President & CEO Maurice Jones said most Black-owned businesses are sole proprietorships with up to 10 employees with annual revenues of less than $1 million, and typically aren’t prioritized by large commercial banks like Chase (CCF), Bank of America (BAC), or Wells Fargo (CBEAX).

He said Netflix first approached his organization about a potential deal after the May 25 killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, which set off a national reckoning over systemic racism.

“My recollection is they reached out to us after seeing the work we were doing around investing in small businesses, particularly businesses led by people of color,” Jones told CNN Business.

About 10% of Netflix’s $100 million investment will go to the Hope Credit Union, which finances underserved communities in the Deep South.

Jones said Netflix is one of several major companies that have invested in LISC over the last three weeks. He said he’s “never seen anything like” the outpouring of support that Black-owned financial institutions have received since Floyd’s killing, but noted that support needs to be sustained over a period of years if companies are sincere in wanting to close the nation’s racial wealth gap.

“Do we have the stamina, the faithfulness, to do this for years, the way we did in Europe with the Marshall Plan after WWII?” Jones asked. “If we build black wealth and minority communities in this country, it will be good for them and the entire economic health of the country.”

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Your Wednesday Briefing

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The new national security law for Hong Kong that was adopted in China on Tuesday gives the government in Beijing sweeping powers to crack down on dissent.

The new legislation, released to the public for the first time after its adoption, provides a blueprint for the authorities and courts to suppress the city’s protest movement and for China’s national security apparatus to pervade layers of Hong Kong society.

In ambiguous wording, it lays out new crimes and authorizes life imprisonment in the most serious cases. Here are some key points:

  • The law takes aim at antigovernment protesters. Activities like damaging government buildings and interrupting public transit are described as acts of subversion and terrorism.

  • It allows Beijing to seize broad control in security cases, especially during crises. A new Committee for Safeguarding National Security will operate in total secrecy and will be shielded from legal challenges.

  • The law focuses heavily on the perceived role of foreigners in Hong Kong’s unrest. It will impose harsh penalties on anyone who urges foreign countries to criticize or to impose sanctions on the government.

Big picture: Critics have called it a death knell to the “One Country, Two Systems” political framework that preserved Hong Kong’s distinctive status.

Response: The business world has largely fallen in line behind China’s campaign to tighten its grip on Hong Kong. Many leaders around the world condemned the law, The Financial Times reports.

The European Union will open its borders to visitors from 15 countries as of Wednesday, but not to travelers from the U.S., Brazil or Russia, where coronavirus cases continue to balloon.

The list of nations that the bloc has approved includes Australia, Canada and New Zealand; travelers from China will be permitted if China reciprocates. E.U. countries are hoping to restart travel and tourism while preventing new outbreaks.

The decision came as Anthony Fauci, the top infectious disease expert in the U.S., said the number of new infections in the nation could more than double to 100,000 a day if the country fails to contain the surge that is now underway in many states.

Employers like Facebook are becoming excited about the long-term prospect of remote working, but decades of setbacks suggest a bumpy road ahead.

In the past, IBM, Best Buy and other companies scrapped work-from-home experiments after finding that telecommuting diminished accountability and creativity. Technology has made big strides since then.

Swine flu: A study warns that a new strain of the H1N1, common on pig farms in China since 2016, has “the essential hallmarks of a candidate pandemic virus” and should be “urgently” controlled.

Huawei and ZTE: The U.S. Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday designated the Chinese telecommunications firms as national security threats, cutting them off from billions of dollars in federal broadband subsidies.

Australia-China relations: Australia will be spending nearly $1 billion on cyberdefense, including recruiting cyberspies, over the next decade as tensions with China increase.

Belgium: King Philippe has expressed his “deepest regrets” for his country’s brutal past in a letter to the president of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the first public acknowledgment from a member of the Belgian royal family of the devastating toll during eight decades of colonization.

In memoriam: Carl Reiner, the multifaceted master of comedy, has died at age 98.

Snapshot: Above, Sunset Beach in Treasure Island, Fla. Beaches in the southern part of the state will be closed for the Fourth of July, the biggest summer travel holiday in the U.S., as Florida reverses course on its reopening because of a rise in coronavirus cases.

What we’re listening to: This retro radio station, where it is always the summer of 1997. “The desktop themes and tunes alone will make your day,” says Remy Tumin on the Briefings team.

Cook: This Sichuan chile crisp with peanut streusel is a combination that doesn’t sound like it should work, but it does — especially when paired with a sundae. You can also omit the peanut streusel or replace it with crushed peanuts.

Watch: Cinéma vérité raises fascinating questions about the genre’s capacity to accurately mirror the world. Our reviewer recommends “Crisis” and “Salesman” if you want to become acquainted with a style that tests the boundaries of nonfiction filmmaking.

Do: Bridal boutiques are offering virtual shopping experiences where brides, grooms and members of their wedding parties can try on and purchase their attire online. Here are a few options for shopping without having to leave your house.

Staying safe at home is easier when you have plenty of things to read, cook, watch and do. At Home has our full collection of ideas.

The Times announced on Tuesday that it would start using uppercase “Black” to describe people and cultures of African origin, both in the U.S. and elsewhere. Here is what our National editor, Marc Lacey, wrote about the change.

My father was born a Negro. Then he was black. Late in life, much to his discomfort, he became an African-American.

Everyone in this country who traces their ancestors back to Africa has experienced a panoply of racial identifiers over their lives, with some terms imposed and others embraced. In the course of a single day in 2020, I might be called black, African-American or a person of color. I’m also labeled, in a way that makes my brown skin crawl, as diverse, ethnic or a minority.

Amid the nation’s reckoning with racism following the death of George Floyd, another name is being widely adopted: Black with a capital B.

John Eligon, a New York Times national correspondent who writes about race, captures the discussion in an article. As he notes, each name change brings spirited discussion. Isn’t black a color, not a race? If one capitalizes Black, should one also capitalize White? And Brown?

As one who works in words, I would never suggest that word choice does not matter. Words can affect the thinking of both those who write them and those who read them. So I am in favor of pushing the shift key — but I doubt it will be the last time we edit what people like me are called.

[You can sign up for the Race/Related newsletter here.]


That’s it for this briefing. See you next time.

— Melina


Thank you
To Theodore Kim and Jahaan Singh for the rest of the break from the news. You can reach the team at briefing@nytimes.com.

P.S.
• We’re listening to “The Daily.” Our latest episode is about the Supreme Court’s ruling on abortion this week.
• Here’s our Mini Crossword, and a clue: Bird with light blue eggs (five letters). You can find all our puzzles here.
• A trove of internal ISIS documents obtained by the Times journalist Rukmini Callimachi and her colleagues in 2018 have been released to the public as part of a project with George Washington University.

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The Real Lessons of Telfar, Kanye and the Gap

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Late last week, when the embattled Gap brand announced, with great fanfare, that it was embarking on a 10-year partnership with Kanye West to create a new brand, Yeezy Gap, in an all-in bid for relevance and revitalization, a corner of the panting internet noticed one thing was amiss.

“What about Telfar?” people asked.

They were talking, of course, about Telfar Clemens, 35, a Black designer upending old ideas about gender, identity and community, who had been announced, to almost as much fanfare, as a Gap collaborator in January.

That same month there had even been a lavish party thrown by the Gap during Paris men’s fashion week in its store on rue Tronchet, attended by Kate Moss, Violet Chachki and Dev Hynes and covered in Vogue, W, Essence and Complex (among other publications) to herald the Gap x Telfar collection.

Now it looked as though the Gap, deep in financial trouble after the pandemic caused the closing of its stores and the furloughing of most of the North American retail staff; already suffering reputational damage after canceling many of its orders from factories in Bangladesh and elsewhere; being attacked on Instagram by disgruntled customers; and being sued for $66 million in nonpayment of rent by its landlord, Simon Property Group, had dropped one Black creative for a more famous one.

Given the current uproar about racial justice, the timing could not have been worse.

For Mr. Clemens, speaking for the first time since the brouhaha began, to think that this is about Kanye vs. Telfar is to draw the wrong conclusion.

This is about how collaborations between emerging designers, especially emerging designers of color, and giant establishment corporations, traditionally framed by fashion as key to a new designer’s success, may actually be about something else entirely.

To be specific, he said by phone from Maryland, it is about “a vast power imbalance, perpetuated by the narrative of ‘inclusivity,’” or “being allowed to appear in territory owned by white people

His creative director, Babak Radboy, 37, also on the phone, characterized the experience as “a wake-up call.”

It is also the story of a large company in disarray and what seems like an almost complete failure in basic systems and communication. When asked about what happened, a spokeswoman for the Gap emailed, “The Yeezy Gap partnership and the Telfar collab were handled by wholly separate teams and the workstreams didn’t intersect, given organizational and leadership shifts between the timing of both.”

Which is business speak for: Telfar fell through the cracks during a time of corporate upheaval. That is a mistake that is telling in itself.

(Mr. West was not available for comment.)

Mr. Clemens and Mr. Radboy had initially avoided talking about the debacle because, Mr. Clemens said, he was happy for Mr. West, who had been involved in conversations with the Gap for more than a decade and Mowalola Ogunlesi, the Nigerian-British designer, who has been named design director for Yeezy Gap project. Mr. Clemens said he loved both their work.

But he and Mr. Radboy had become increasingly uncomfortable with the story line, popular on social media, that painted the Telfar group as victims — or that “played fame and skin color against each other,” as Mr. Clemens said.

They were more concerned about that misperception than the mechanics of what exactly happened, though the mechanics themselves are important.

It began about a year ago, when the Gap reached out to Mr. Clemens to talk about working together. The buzz around him and his unisex designs — which ignore old orthodoxies about “female” and “male” and crop and chop and twist mythologies of sexuality, uniforms and utility into clothes — was building. He had won the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund award, held a rave/show during New York Fashion Week complete with a mosh pit, attended the Met Gala and created an It bag for a new generation so ubiquitous it was christened “the Bushwick Birkin.” His creative fan club included the playwright Jeremy O. Harris, the rapper Butch Dawson, Solange and Kelela.

Mr. Clemens had that alchemy that transforms fashion into community. Little wonder the Gap, which was in the midst of a long-term identity crisis, saw potential. Over time, they hashed out an agreement, which was for two seasons, with unlimited options to renew, and involved a design fee and royalties.

“I’m a big fan of the Gap — it’s so much in our DNA,” Mr. Clemens said. “The potential of what this could be seemed so big — walking into a Gap store and being able to get a unisex piece of clothing in every size and color. It would have been groundbreaking, a cultural shift in what was expected from the Gap.”

A logo was created. A contract for the introductory party was signed. The windows of the Gap store in Paris were papered with photographs from the most recent Telfar show.

At the event, John Caruso, then the head of Gap Adult Design, told Vogue the collaboration “represents all the momentum and the future vision of the brand.”

“It’s a completely new chapter, so it’s important that we do things like this to stand proud, be bold and cut through all the noise,” he said.

That is why, when the news about the Yeezy deal broke, the Telfar crew, Mr. Radboy said, felt “déjà vu.”

Mr. Clemens said: “It seemed so similar to the story we had to tell” — albeit at an even bigger scale. To outsiders, even the logo looked awfully similar, though to be fair, there’s only so much any designer can do with three letters and a blue square.

By then, however, the Gap leadership had changed. Art Peck, the chief executive, had been abruptly fired in November, 2019. Alegra O’Hare, the chief marketing officer, stepped down at the end of January. Then Mr. Caruso left.

The Telfar Gap collection contract was still in draft form, unsigned by either party, though a Telfar spokeswoman said a deal memo had been agreed upon and the contract promised by March 25. (Deal memos, while they outline the terms of an agreement, are not legally binding).

Then the pandemic happened. And then Mr. Clemens, who had already delivered 30 designs, which would form the basis of a collection despite not having a finalized contract, was told that production had been postponed indefinitely.

In late March, his company sent the Gap an invoice asking to be paid for its work. The Gap offered to pay 25 percent of the design fee as a postponement fee (they have done this). Mr. Clemens asked to be paid in full.

And that, Mr. Radboy said, is when all communication ceased. He sent email after email. He heard nothing. The Gap spokeswoman attributed this to “an organizational shift in the brand during an unprecedented period.”

It was not until the weekend after the Kanye deal was announced and social media began to raise the Telfar issue that the Gap said it would pay the full invoice.

“We took immediate steps to resolve this matter after we were made aware of a delay in payment,” the spokeswoman emailed. “While we’d chosen not to move forward with the Gap x Telfar partnership at this time, we’re making whole on the full payment regardless and have only respect and appreciation for Telfar’s time and vision.”

“Simply put this is not at all how we would expect a partnership to be handled and apologize for how this panned out,” the statement continued.

At this point, Mr. Clemens said, “I am really glad to be free of it.” Especially so given the way the Gap has let down its supplier factories, he said.

“We grew up looking at the edifice of the mall and wanting to be part of it, to have power there,” Mr. Radboy said. “Now we have realized we shouldn’t. It has been part of our survival to become content for a bigger brand so they can make a statement about their racial solidarity. But the real problem is the initial situation that blocks a designer’s progress so they need to say ‘yes’ to such a thing.”

Besides, both he and Mr. Clemens said, their digital business, which they own and control entirely themselves, is going very well.

“If anything, we’ve learned a lot more about ourselves and how we want to position ourselves in the new industry,” Mr. Clemens said. He noted that since his factory reopened and he was able to restock his bags, they have been selling out on his own platforms within an hour.

“Transformation,” he said, is not working with an establishment brand. Transformation “is what we are doing independently and directly.”



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No Spitting: MLB Unveils Some New Rules Due To The Coronavirus

Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles stands empty in an aerial view from late May. Games will resume in late July.

Bing Guan/Bloomberg via Getty Images


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Bing Guan/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles stands empty in an aerial view from late May. Games will resume in late July.

Bing Guan/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Major League Baseball is officially coming back this summer after a delay caused by the coronavirus pandemic, but aspects of the game will look a little different.

MLB announced Monday that it would shift some of its in-game rules, making significant and historic changes.

Many of those rule changes were made with concerns over the spread of the coronavirus in mind, including a threat of immediate ejection if a player or coach comes within 6 feet of an umpire or opponent in the course of an argument.

There’s also a ban on spitting, which many baseball players do conspicuously. Spitting, “including but not limited to saliva, sunflower seeds or peanut shells, or tobacco,” is prohibited.

Other measures to limit the spread of the virus include asking pitchers to carry a small wet rag instead of licking their fingers for moisture, ordering teams to provide expanded dugout and bullpen space, and instructing all participants to practice general social distancing.

Fielders are also “encouraged to retreat several steps away” from the base runner when the ball is out of play.

The league has also tweaked game play rules in other ways, including some that are intended to speed up the game.

The National League, which represents half of the MLB’s teams, will allow teams to use designated hitters for the first time ever. That means another player can bat in place of the pitcher. The American League has had this rule in place for decades.

If a game goes into extra innings, teams will start each half-inning with a runner on second base — a move that will likely lead to more scoring when teams are tied after nine innings. Also, any player may appear as a pitcher at any point in the game.

While players will report to their respective training camps Wednesday, the shortened, 60-game regular season is not set to begin until July 23 or 24. Some details still need to be worked out between the Major League Baseball Players Association and MLB.



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‘Kashmir becoming another Palestine’ as residents fear demographic shift

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ISLAMABAD          -       Up to 25,000 people had been granted domicile certificates in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJ&K) since May 18, raising fears of the beginning of demographic changes in the Muslim-majority Himalayan region.

“The decision to provide non-Kashmiri residents with a domicile certificate is certainly the beginning of the end. This is the beginning of Kashmir becoming another Palestine,” Badar-Ul-Islam Sheikh, a 29-year-old resident of the main city of Srinagar, told the media. The certificate, a sort of citizenship right, entitles a person to residency and government jobs in the region, which till last year was reserved only for the local population.

“It is sad. It is horrible. I fear that time will come that we will not even feel safe in our homes,” Sheikh said. “We have been silenced.” According to a census conducted by India in 2011, out of 12.5 million total population, Muslims comprise 68.31 percent and Hindus 28.43 percent in Kashmir.

Article 35 (A) had barred outsiders, including Indian nationals from other states, from settling and claiming government jobs to maintain the demographic balance in the region, which had seen decades of armed rebellion against the Indian rule.

On Friday, a picture of the domicile certificate issued to Navin Kumar Choudhary, a bureaucrat originally from the Indian state of Bihar, went viral on social media.

In April this year, amid the coronavirus lockdown, the government notified domicile laws making an unspecified number of outsiders eligible for residency and jobs. According to the new law, any person who had lived in the region for 15 years, or had studied in the region for seven years and passed his class 10 or class 12 examination was eligible for domicile certificate.

Also, children of Indian government employees who had served in the state for 10 years were eligible to settle and claim local residency rights. The law applies even if the children had never lived in Kashmir. Out of 66, top bureaucrats serving in the region, 38 were outsiders belonging to other Indian states. Many other outsiders served in various central government institutions like banks, post offices telecommunication facilities, security institutions, and universities.

Khurram Parvez, a human rights activist based in Srinagar, said the move was “disastrous’ for the whole region.

“It appears government was in some kind of hurry. Within weeks so many people applied,” he told the media.

Kashmiri politicians across the divide had said the revocation of special citizenship rights was aimed at reversing the Muslim majority character of the region, which was now directly ruled from New Delhi.

The local legislature, which was directly elected by the people, was suspended in the wake of the scrapping of Article 370 last year.

“All our misgivings about the new domicile rules in J&K are coming to the fore,” tweeted Omar Abdullah, the former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, which was earlier a state and now a federally administered region.

Omar was jailed following the removal of the region’s autonomy in August last year along with most prominent Kashmiri leaders who opposed the stripping of the region’s special status by the Hindu nationalist government of Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi. He was released almost eight months later, in March.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, a government official said, since May 18, when the rules were notified, 33,000 people had applied for the domicile certificates. Out of them, 25,000 people had been granted residency rights, he said.

As many as 32,000 applications were filed in 10 districts of the Hindu majority Jammu region in the south. The highest number of 8,500 certificates had been issued in the Doda district, which had a delicate demographic balance, with Muslims comprising 53.81 percent and Hindus 45.76 percent.

Up to 6,213 domicile certificates had been issued in Rajouri district, which had 62.71 percent Muslim population. Authorities had distributed 6,123 residency certificates in Poonch, a border district comprising 90.44 percent Muslim population.

In the Kashmir region, which was about 96.4 percent Muslim population, 435 certificates had been issued so far, out of the total 720 applications.

According to several human rights organisations, thousands of people had been killed since 1989, when India sent tens of thousands of troops to the region to quell the armed rebellion.

 



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