Thursday, April 30, 2026

Florida Police Use Krispy Kreme To Lure Black Bear Off City Streets

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — Glazed or jelly? A black bear roaming around a Florida city proved no match for the doughnuts that lured the animal into a humane trap.

The Fort Myers News-Press reports that the juvenile 250-pound (113- kilogram) bear spent a good chunk of Tuesday morning meandering around the Gulf coast city. Wildlife officials say bears tend to move more in the spring in search of mates and, as always, food.

In such a congested area, tranquilizing the bear wasn’t an option, said Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Officer Adam Brown. He said the drugs don’t always work immediately on large animals such as bears.

“When we use a tranquilizer the bear sometimes will run away, and we didn’t want to take any chance of it running into traffic or the residential area,” he said.

So instead, officers turned to doughnuts from Krispy Kreme and some blueberry pie-scented spray in a trap. That did the trick.

Brown said the bear was relocated to a state-managed wildlife area. Authorities estimate there are about 4,000 black bears in Florida.

Wildlife officials say people should be sure to secure their garbage cans and should not put them out the night before pickup because it gives bears more opportunity to get into them.



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U.S. to end sanctions waivers allowing some work at Iran nuclear sites – Firstpost

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By Arshad Mohammed and Humeyra Pamuk

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States said on Wednesday it will terminate sanctions waivers that had allowed Russian, Chinese and European companies to continue work aimed at making at Iranian nuclear sites less prone to be used to develop weapons.

The waivers, which will expire after 60 days, had covered the conversion of Iran’s Arak heavy water research reactor, the provision of enriched uranium for its Tehran Research Reactor and the transfer of spent and scrap reactor fuel abroad.

In a statement, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo did not justify his decision, which will halt some work designed to make it more difficult for Iran to potentially develop fissile material for nuclear bombs.

The decision seemed aimed at tightening the U.S. “maximum pressure” policy applied since Washington abandoned the 2015 Iran nuclear deal two years ago. That deal gave Tehran economic sanctions relief in return for curbs on its nuclear program.

After the withdrawal and the revival of U.S. sanctions to cut Iran’s oil exports, Tehran has boosted its nuclear work in what analysts see as an effort to change U.S. policy or to build up Tehran’s leverage should they get into negotiations.

“The Iranian regime has continued its nuclear brinkmanship by expanding proliferation sensitive activities,” Pompeo said, saying this “will lead to increased pressure on Iran.”

However, Pompeo said the United States would extend for 90 days a waiver allowing foreign work at a nuclear power plant built by Russia at Bushehr “to ensure safety of operations.”

Alex Vatanka, an analyst at the Washington-based Middle East Institute think tank, said the United States may want to look tough to force Tehran to accept tighter nuclear restrictions or to make it harder for a new U.S. president to revive the 2015 deal. President Donald Trump is up for re-election on Nov. 3.

(Reporting By Arshad Mohammed and Humeyra Pamuk, Editing by Franklin Paul, Marguerita Choy and Sonya Hepinstall)

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



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Trump on campaign defense with core elements of his base

WASHINGTON — Heading into the crucial summer stretch of his re-election campaign, President Donald Trump is grappling with declining support among key groups that helped deliver his 2016 victory, putting rising pressure on his campaign and the White House to shore up his base.

With just over five months to Election Day, a string of polls this month show an erosion of support among voters Republican strategists had expected would be rock-solid behind the president at this point, including seniors, non-college educated white voters and evangelicals.

Trump has consistently trailed former Vice President Joe Biden in national polling this year, but his campaign advisers had long downplayed those numbers, pointing to the consistency of his message and arguing that his base was sticking with him. They spent time traveling to states Trump lost, and targeting groups he was weakest with, such as black voters, to try to erode support for apparent Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

And while it’s a long way until November, the sliding enthusiasm among the president’s base has been noted by Trump’s aides, with focus increasingly turning to efforts to directly reach those groups, such as last week’s White House event targeting seniors, and recent presidential swings to Rust Belt states where white working-class support is critical to his fall chances.

“The significance of these results are not that the numbers have fallen and he may lose them in November, but the fact that he will spend valuable time and effort in rebuilding his support with these people,” said Democratic pollster Peter Hart. “It will drive him that much harder in working on his base and rejuvenating his support with rallies.”

Key to Trump’s 2016 victory were white male voters, particularly those without a college degree, among whom Trump outperformed past Republican presidential candidates. The president has spent much of the past three years targeting that group with his policies and messaging, touting trade deals with China and Mexico, strict immigration measures and progress made on a southern border wall.

Still, Trump’s support from those voters has dropped significantly since 2016, when he received 71 percent of the white non-college male vote. Now, 64 percent of white men without a college degree said they plan to vote for Trump, according to a survey released last week by Quinnipiac University. A Fox News poll also last week found even less support, with Trump drawing support from 58 percent of that group.

There has been a similar trend among white voters with a college education. Trump’s support from white men with a college degree has dropped from 53 percent to 44 percent. Among white college-educated women it’s fallen from 44 percent to 29 percent in an NBC/WSJ survey in April.

Trump has also seen declining support among a group that had been one of the firmest pillars of the Republican Party — evangelical voters. While he still has a commanding lead among that group, it too has narrowed. In a national poll by Fox News this month, 70 percent of evangelical voters said they planned to vote for Trump. That compares to 81 percent in 2016, according to exit polling.

Between March and April, Trump’s approval among white evangelicals fell 11 points, the Public Religion Research Institute found. Trump also dropped 12 points among white Catholics and 18 points with mainstream Protestants, the survey found.

Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh dismissed the poll numbers, and said the campaign’s internal data shows the president “in solid shape in all of our key states.” The campaign told surrogates earlier this month that its internal polling in 17 states they are targeting showed Trump closing the gap against Biden from a 9-point deficit three weeks ago to tied at 48 percent, according to an email obtained by NBC News.

“Americans know his record on building a great economy and know he is the one to lead us to that position again,” Murtaugh said. “Evangelicals know that he is the best pro-life president in history.”

But public polling has the trends hurting Trump in the must-win battleground states where his support has dropped to 43 percent from 50 percent in 2016, according to April NBC/WSJ surveys.

Trump’s weakening appeal with seniors following his response to the coronavirus is hurting him particularly hard in Florida, where 21 percent of voters are 65 and older. In 2016, Trump won the senior vote in that state by 17 points over Hillary Clinton, but currently leads Biden among that group by just 4 points, according to a Florida Atlantic University poll this month.

In a separate survey, Biden held a 10-point lead over Trump among seniors, according to an April poll of Floridians by Quinnipiac University.

The president’s campaign advisers have also grown increasingly concerned about Arizona, once a solidly Republican state viewed as a must win for 2020, where Trump is being hurt by his falling support among suburban voters and low approval among Hispanic voters, said a White House official. Trump won Arizona by 3 points, but in 2018, four Democrats won statewide office. Trump ally Sen. Martha McSally is currently trailing former astronaut Mark Kelly, the Democrat, in the state’s 2020 Senate contest.

“More than ever, this is going to be a race won and lost in the margins,” the official said.

Trump traveled to Arizona earlier this month to tour a plant making protective masks, making the state his first visit outside D.C. since canceling campaign events in March amid the coronavirus. Since then, he’s made stops in Pennsylvania and Michigan and traveled to Florida this week for a rocket launch.

In Washington, the White House has already been targeting its messaging towards trying to win back some of those groups. Last week, Trump said he wanted all churches opened immediately and threatened to “override” governors who kept restrictions in place. On Tuesday, the White House held an event titled “Protecting Seniors with Diabetes” where the president announced a plan to lower the price of insulin and used the moment to attack Biden.

“I hope the seniors are going to remember it,” Trump said at the Rose Garden event.

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Weather forecast, alerts and UVB index for all South African provinces, 28 May 2020

Weather data provided by the South African Weather Service. For a detailed forecast of your province, click here.

Warnings: None.

Watches: Localised flooding is expected in places over the Cape Metropole.

Special weather advisories: None.

Gauteng: Fine and cool, becoming cold from the south in the afternoon

UVB sunburn index: Low.

Mpumalanga: Fine and cool, becoming cloudy with evening drizzle and fog along the escarpment

Limpopo: Fine and warm, becoming partly cloudy with evening fog along the escarpment

North-West Province: Partly cloudy, windy and cool to warm.

Free State: Partly cloudy, windy and cool.

Northern Cape: Cloudy, windy and cold to cool with isolated showers and rain in the west and south but scattered in the extreme south-west. It will be fine and cool in the east where it will become partly cloudy from afternoon. Light to moderate snow can be expected over the southern high ground from the evening where it will be very cold. The wind along the coast will be light to moderate north-westerly becoming fresh south-westerly in the afternoon.

Western Cape: Cloudy and cold to cool with scattered showers and rain in the west spreading to the east from late morning but widespread in the south-west. Light snow can be expected over the western high ground in the afternoon spreading to the eastern high ground in the evening. It will be very windy. The wind along the coast will be strong to gale north-westerly south of Cape Columbine becoming strong to gale westerly to south-westerly in the afternoon, otherwise light to moderate north-westerly becoming fresh to strong south westerly in the afternoon.

UVB sunburn index: Low.

Western half of the Eastern Cape: Fine, cool and windy, becoming cloudy from the south west with isolated showers and rain spreading eastwards but scattered along the coast. Snowfall is expected in the evening and overnight on the mountains. The wind along the coast will be strong to gale force westerly to south-westerly.

Eastern half of the Eastern Cape: Fine, warm and windy. It will become cloudy from the west in the evening, with isolated showers, spreading to the Lesotho border overnight. Light evening snowfall is expected over the northern mountains. The wind along the coast will be moderate north-westerly, becoming strong south-westerly, but gale force late in the day west of Kei River.

Kwazulu-Natal: Fine and warm but cool on the western high-ground. The wind along the coast will be moderate north-easterly, becoming moderate to fresh south-westerly in the evening from the south.

UVB sunburn index: High.




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Iran opens new parliament packed with Rouhani critics

May 27, 2020

Iran’s 11th parliament officially began its mandate May 27 following a ceremony attended by many of the country’s most powerful men, including moderate President Hassan Rouhani, Chief Justice Ebrahim Raisi and several high-ranking military commanders.

In a message read by his representative, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei envisioned the pathway ahead of the new lawmakers, urging them to refrain from “sideshows” and instead unite to uproot corruption and pursue the “resistance economy,” a strategy Khamenei has been promoting in recent years to fight off the US “maximum pressure” policy.

Khamenei’s message also stressed the parliament’s independence as the top decision-making body where lawmakers should enjoy “the right to impeach.” The supreme leader, however, has been accused of last-minute interference in matters of high sensitivity, nipping in the bud legislation taken up by lawmakers in various parliaments. In November, Iranian parliamentarians began a push to effectively cancel the government’s contentious fuel subsidy plan that triggered days of unprecedented, deadly unrest nationwide. Khamenei ordered the lawmakers to back down and let the government press ahead with the controversial scheme. Months later, when a group of the parliamentarians presented a plan to impeach the interior minister, whom they accused of orchestrating the same deadly crackdown, the supreme leader once again intervened. The impeachment project was aborted.

The inauguration ceremony was addressed by Rouhani, who will have to leave office in August 2021. Rouhani called on the new assembly to prioritize national interests over partisanship and urged cooperation in the war against “US sanctions and provocations.” Rouhani was talking to a body of ultraconservatives who in February swept the seats in a one-sided race facilitated by the candidate vetting body, the Guardian Council, which had barred almost all their Reformist rivals.

To pass bills in the previous parliament, the Rouhani administration faced near-zero resistance as moderate and Reformist members were in full control. The parliamentarians, as a result, were granted by critics the pejorative moniker of “government advocates” rather than people’s representatives. But “this parliament will not act as a government representative,” the oldest member of the new legislative body, Reza Taghavi, made clear to Rouhani and his team in the opening ceremony.

A significant number of the new parliamentarians have taken pride in their anti-engagement approach on a platform of hostile rhetoric against the Iran nuclear deal that had been negotiated by Rouhani’s government. Following an unofficial directive from the supreme leader, that accord was quickly passed in the ninth parliament, which was controlled by the camp known for its anti-West agenda, and which now again holds the absolute majority in the new assembly.

The new lawmakers fought a bitter, public battle over the speakership, but former Tehran Mayor Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf — who came in first in votes for Tehran’s parliament seats and has been an archenemy of Rouhani — appeared to have an easy path to the post. A conservative faction of 240 legislators gave 166 votes to Ghalibaf, 57 to Hamidreza Hajbabayee, five to Mostafa Mirsalim and two to Hassan Norouzi, according to the Tehran Times. It appears that Ghalibaf’s election as speaker by the full, 290-seat parliament will be a mere formality.

Mirsalim had vowed not to give up in the race until the end, once again drawing attention to old corruption allegations involving Ghalibaf, which remain unaddressed by the judiciary but have been haunting him for years. Although Mirsalim did poorly in the faction’s vote for speaker, his tweet may herald fierce infighting and raucous debates ahead for a politically like-minded yet deeply divided legislature.



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US news anchors in explosive on-air exchange

CNBC Squawk Box anchors Andrew Ross Sorkin and Joe Kernen have clashed on air in an extraordinary exchange, trading a series of ugly jabs over each of their responses to the seriousness of the coronavirus pandemic.

The heated debate started when Mr Kernen suggested Mr Sorkin had displayed a track record of overreacting to the virus that has now claimed the lives of nearly 100,000 Americans and infected more than 1.6 million in the United States.

Mr Kernen suggested that Mr Sorkin was being too pessimistic about the markets during a segment about the S&P 500 and Nasdaq’s recent spikes. Mr Sorkin, however, noted “a lot of smart people” have questioned how the stock market could be booming in the current state of the economy.

“Why is that the smart people?” Mr Kernen asked. “They’ve been wrong for 35 per cent! Why are they smart? Just because they can see what’s right in front of their nose? That doesn’t make them smart!”

CNBC “Squawk Box” co-hosts Andrew Sorkin and Joe Kernen had a heated moment on TV about their divided coverage of the Covid-19 pandemic. (Supplied)

Mr Sorkin fired back, “Joe, you missed it 100 per cent on the way down too! You missed it 100 per cent on the way down! And you missed 100,000 deaths!”

As Mr Kernen started to interject, Mr Sorkin raised his voice.

“Hold on! Hold on! Hold on!” Mr Sorkin said. “I’m not going to do this with you Joe! Every morning you try to question the questions I am asking! These are questions that investors are asking every single morning. I am just trying to get through some of this clutter.”

The dust up appeared to settle for a brief moment, but reignited when Mr Kernen again accused Mr Sorkin of being too negative.

“You panicked about the market, panicked about Covid, panicked about the ventilators, panicked about the PPE, panicked about ever going out again, panicked if we’d ever get back to normal,” Kernan said.

Mr Sorkin, who grew visibly frustrated, fired back at Kernen, saying, “You didn’t panic about anything!”

“100,000 people died, Joe. And all you did was try to help your friend the President! That’s what you did.”

“Every single morning on this show you have used and abused your position, Joe,” Mr Sorkin added. “You have used and abused your position.”

Mr Kernen defended himself, calling Sorkin’s characterisation of his positions “totally unfair.”

Mr Kernen said that he had simply been trying to advise investors to “keep their cool.”

The clash eventually came to an end with Mr Kernen moving on and reading the headlines.

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Cambodia’s Supreme Court Rejects Return of Former RFA Reporters’ Passports

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Cambodia’s Supreme Court on Wednesday refused to hand back the passports of two former RFA reporters being investigated on charges of espionage, but returned the ID card of one of the two men.

Yeang Sothearin and Uon Chhin—who had worked as an editor, reporter and news anchor, and a photographer and videographer for RFA’s Khmer Service, respectively—were taken into custody in November 2017.

They were charged with “illegally collecting information for a foreign source” after RFA closed its bureau in the capital in September that year and have been in limbo, unable to travel outside of Cambodia.

Uon Chhin’s personal identification card will now be returned to him, but authorities will still retain both men’s passports, the Supreme Court said in its ruling on Wednesday.

He can now use his ID to apply for certain documents he needs, but his passport is needed for him to travel abroad for health checkups and professional training, Uon Chhin told RFA’s Khmer Service on Wednesday.

“We are being deprived of opportunities to improve our knowledge and experience,” he said.

“Our period of court supervision ended a while ago, so why do they still want to retain our passports, which have nothing to do with the truth of our case?” said Yeang Sothearin, also speaking to RFA.

Because his passport had been taken away, he was unable to visit dying relatives and other family members in South Vietnam, he said.

“When my aunt and my cousin died, I could not go to visit them. My parents have also been sick for a long time, and I can’t visit them either, because [the authorities] won’t return my passport,” Yeang Sothearin said.

“The court has already lifted its supervision of my clients, so there is no need to still keep their passports,” said defense lawyer Sam Chamreurn, also speaking to RFA.

“They are useless to the case anyway,” he said.

‘Illegally collecting information’

Uon Chhin and Yeang Sothearin now face charges of “illegally collecting information for a foreign source” under Article 445 of the Criminal Code—an offense punishable by a prison term of from seven to 15 years.

Additional charges were added in March 2018, alleging that the two men had illegally produced pornography.

On Dec. 30, the court rejected an appeal by the two reporters to halt a reinvestigation into the pornography case, allowing a new investigation into those charges to proceed.

RFA closed its nearly 20-year-old bureau in Phnom Penh on Sept. 12, 2017 amid a crackdown by the government that also saw the Supreme Court dissolve the main opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) a month later.

The move paved the way for Prime Minister Hun Sen’s ruling Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) to sweep the ballot in national elections in 2018, effectively turning Cambodia into a one-party state.

Cambodian journalists working for RFA had reported over the years on corruption, illegal logging, and forced evictions, among other stories largely ignored by pro-government media, and authorities had already closed independent radio stations carrying RFA reports, using a pretext of tax and administrative violations.

The arrest of Uon Chhin and Yeang Sothearin came after a warning from Cambodia’s Ministries of Information and Interior that any journalists still working for RFA after its office in the capital closed would be treated as spies.

They were released on bail in August 2018, but were placed under a period of court supervision, which barred them from changing their addresses or traveling abroad, and required them to check in with their local police station once a month.

Local and international rights groups and legal observers have long condemned the treatment of the pair in the courts as part of a wider attack on the media and civil society in Cambodia and called for the country’s trade and aid partners to press for their release.

Paris-based Reporters Without Borders ranked Cambodia 143rd out of 180 countries in its 2019 World Press Freedom Index.

Reported by RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Sok Ry Sum. Written in English by Richard Finney.



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US Congress Passes Uyghur Rights Act Authorizing Sanctions For Abuses in Xinjiang

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The U.S. Congress passed the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act of 2020 on Wednesday, marking the first legislation by any government to target China for its persecution of Uyghurs in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR), despite threats of retaliation from Beijing.

The passage comes as the U.S. House of Representatives voted 413-1 via proxy to approve the bill that would sanction Chinese government officials—including regional Communist Party secretary Chen Quanguo—responsible for arbitrary incarceration, forced labor and other abuses in the XUAR, home to internment camps holding as many as 1.8 million Uyghurs and other Muslims.

The bill, which was also passed unanimously by the Senate in mid-May, condemns the Chinese Communist Party for the three-year-old internment camp program and requires regular monitoring of the situation in the region by U.S. government bodies for the application of sanctions once signed into law by President Donald Trump.

It also addresses Chinese government harassment of Uyghurs living inside the United States—an increasing threat from Chinese diplomatic missions and Communist Party-controlled United Front organizations in Western countries.

In a statement following its passage in the Senate, Republican Senator Marco Rubio—who along with Democratic Senator Bob Menendez introduced the legislation—said China’s “systematic, ongoing efforts to wipe out the ethnic and cultural identities of Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in Xinjiang is horrific and will be a stain on humanity should we refuse to act.”

While Beijing initially denied the existence of the camps, China last year changed tack and began describing the facilities as “boarding schools” that provide vocational training for Uyghurs, discourage radicalization, and help protect the country from terrorism.

But reporting by RFA’s Uyghur Service and other media outlets indicate that those in the camps are detained against their will and subjected to political indoctrination, routinely face rough treatment at the hands of their overseers and endure poor diets and unhygienic conditions in the often-overcrowded facilities.

China has slammed moves to pass legislation in support of the Uyghurs as interference and warned of retaliation “in proportion” if Chen were targeted.

Among those who have called for Beijing to shut down its camp system and end other rights violations in the region are U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, U.S. Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback, and several high-ranking lawmakers.

While President Trump has largely remained silent on the situation in the XUAR, his administration has taken an increasingly tough stance against China amid tense relations over Beijing’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and, more recently, its likely rubber stamp passage of a new security law in Hong Kong that observers have warned severely threatens freedom of speech there.

In the unlikely event that Trump vetoes the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act, Congress could override him because of the near unanimous support the bill has received in both the House and the Senate.

‘A matter of priority’

On Wednesday, the Munich-based World Uyghur Congress (WUC) exile group, welcomed the House approval of the bill following the Senate vote earlier this month and called on Trump to “urgently” sign it into law.

“These recent developments have shown a renewed resolve from the U.S. government to take urgent, meaningful and sustained action to address the crisis in East Turkistan, that the act provides for,” the statement said, using the name preferred by Uyghurs for their homeland.

“Once this bill is signed into law, it will constitute the first legislative initiative by a national government to address the Uyghur crisis. The bipartisan support for the act evidences by these recent votes gives hope to the Uyghur people and a mandate for the U.S. to implement the provisions of the act as a matter of priority.”

The WUC noted that for three years, Uyghurs around the world have been calling on the international community to take concrete measures against the Chinese government for its abuses in the XUAR, while friends and family members of those in the diaspora increasingly disappear into the camp system.

“We urge President Trump to sign the Uyghur Human Rights Policy into law as a matter of priority and take immediate steps to implement it,” WUC president Dolkun Isa said.

“Our community needs the U.S. government and governments around the world to take real, meaningful action, as is provided for in this act. After years of suffering and frustration, the Uyghur people need hope.”

The WUC also called on other government to emulate the U.S. in passing legislation that will hold China to account for the situation in the XUAR.

The bill’s passage was also welcomed by the Washington-based Uyghur Human Rights Project (UHRP), which said it would “help ensure that the issue is on the global policy agenda.”

“The House and Senate have shown true global leadership,” UHRP director Omer Kanat said in a statement.

“This is a signal to the entire world that now is the time to take action to end the Chinese government’s atrocities in East Turkistan.”

Other actions

Congress may also soon deliberate new legislation would prohibit imports from the XUAR to the U.S. amid growing evidence that internment camps in the region have increasingly transitioned from political indoctrination to forced labor, with detainees being sent to work in cotton and textile factories, many of which are located on the same grounds as the detention facilities.

The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, introduced in March, would block imports from the region unless proof can be shown that they are not linked to forced labor.

Meanwhile, the executive branch has been taking steps to hold entities responsible for enabling the persecution of Uyghurs to account by subjecting them to additional scrutiny.

Last week, the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security announced that nine additional parties would be added to its Entity List for their involvement in human rights abuses in the XUAR, including eight companies and the Ministry of Public Security’s Institute of Forensic Science. The new additions mark an expansion from 28 entities placed on the list in October last year.

Earlier this month, U.S. Customs and Border Protection placed a withhold release order on hair products made by Hetian Haolin Hair Accessories in order to ensure that products made with forced labor do not reach U.S. shelves. The company was registered in an industrial park in Hotan (in Chinese, Hetian) prefecture’s Lop (Luopu) county, in the same location as a detention camp.

In a statement Wednesday, the UHRP welcomed U.S. government efforts to prevent the importation of goods made with Uyghur forced labor and encouraged other nations to take similar steps to address the issue.

The organization also applauded House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi for her recent appointment of Washington-based Uyghur attorney Nury Turkel to the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), an independent body that reviews violations of religious freedom internationally and makes policy recommendations to the White House, State Department, and Congress.

In a statement welcoming the passage of the bill on Wednesday, Turkel said that Congress had sent “a powerful bipartisan message to the world that the Chinese government’s persecution of the Uyghurs is not forgotten.”

“The passage of this bill shows the best of this country and the American people to speak out in defense of those oppressed peoples’ rights and dignity,” he told RFA.

“USCIRF thanks the Members of Congress who tirelessly worked on this bill for more than a year. We urge President Trump to sign the bill into law soon for it to be enforced to address the ghastly human rights abuses that the Chinese government has committed against the Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in China.”

Reported by Alim Seytoff for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.



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Guy Who Suggested Injecting Lysol Is Trying To Make Opponent’s Gaffes A Big Deal

WASHINGTON – Less than six months from Election Day, the Trump campaign is deeply concerned that the president of the United States next year could be suffering from dementia.

No, not the 73-year-old who confuses his father and his grandfather, claims his actions during the pandemic have saved “billions” of Americans and even suggested people should inject themselves with disinfectants to cure the coronavirus.

It’s the other guy, 77-year-old presumed Democratic nominee Joe Biden, whose gaffes and verbal miscues are apparently proof that he is not mentally fit to occupy the nation’s highest office.

“I don’t think he remembers what he did yesterday,” Trump said of Biden in a recent interview with Sinclair Broadcasting. “He’s not mentally sharp enough to be president.”

The strategy is obvious, said David Axelrod, who led former President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign. “He can’t win a referendum on his own performance and so he has to try and disqualify Biden,” he said. “And his fundamental argument appears to be that Biden lacks the mental acuity and physical stamina to lead the country and restore the economy.”

Biden, for his part, has laughed off the suggestion that he has “lost a step.” In a CNN interview Tuesday, Biden turned the question back toward Trump: “Talk about a guy who’s missing a step. He’s missing something.”

Trump campaign officials would not respond to queries about their efforts to question Biden’s mental fitness, which has been a major component of their overall attack against the former vice president ever since Trump himself recycled the “Sleepy Joe” insult he had originally used against former Indiana Sen. Joe Donnelly.

He can’t win a referendum on his own performance and so he has to try and disqualify Biden.
David Axelrod, leader of Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign

On May 15, Trump campaign staffer Abigail Marone ridiculed Biden’s interview on Snapchat in a press release. “He can barely get through an appearance without getting lost or telling people not to vote for him,” she wrote.

On April 28, the Trump campaign’s rapid response director Matt Wolking posted a video clip of Biden’s interview with a Miami television station in which he states: “My son’s business dealings [in China] were not anything what everybody that he’s talking about, not even remotely.” Wolking added the comment: “I’ve watched this approximately 15 times now and it cracks me up every. single. time.”

In an April 23 interview on Fox News, Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale called Biden a “gaffe machine” and claimed he couldn’t remember when the Sept. 11 attacks had taken place. “We almost can’t decide what gaffes to put up every day, there are so many of them,” Parscale said.

As it happens, April 23 was also the day of Trump’s infamous soliloquy from the White House briefing room in which he suggested that injecting disinfectants and inserting lights into a COVID-19 patient might cure the disease.

“So, supposing we hit the body with a tremendous — whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light — and I think you said that that hasn’t been checked, but you’re going to test it. And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way,” Trump said. “And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs.”

Trump initially received a bump in his approval rating as the pandemic struck the country, but his remarks that day were followed by a quick decline. His approval ratings are now back to the low 40s, where they have been much of his presidency.

The Lysol and lights comments, though, were just the most well-known in a large and growing collection of nonsensical and erroneous statements he has made about COVID-19.

On April 1, Trump said, “Other countries tried to use the herd mentality,” when he likely meant “herd immunity.”

The next day, he stated: “I think also in looking at the way that the contagion is so contagious, nobody’s ever seen anything like this where large groups of people all of a sudden have it just by being in the presence of somebody who has it. The flu has never been like that.”

On April 15, he said his favored drug, hydroxychloroquine, “prevents the immune system from overreaching to the virus.”

On May 8, he expressed surprise at how a medical test might show different results at different times. “Katie, she tested very good for a long period of time and then all of the sudden today she tested positive,” Trump said of press aide Katie Miller. “This is why the whole concept of tests aren’t necessarily great.”

And through the whole period, he has continually referred to the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic as having taken place in 1917.



President Donald Trump speaks with members of the coronavirus task force in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on Friday, April 10, 2020.

Trump’s misstatements, of course, began long before the coronavirus outbreak. He has repeatedly claimed his father was born in Germany, when in fact it was his paternal grandfather. He called the CEO of Apple “Tim Apple” during a White House meeting, rather than Tim Cook, and then spent days claiming he had not made a mistake but was just using shorthand. Another time, he appeared unable to say the word “origins” correctly, continually pronouncing it “oranges.” He has claimed that wind turbines cause cancer and that the F-35 fighter plane is literally invisible, when in fact it is merely difficult to see on radar.

Related reports of Trump’s inability to focus or understand details about topics even led him to take an Alzheimer’s screening test during his 2018 physical exam, which he then claimed he had aced with a perfect score. The White House did not mention Trump retaking that screening at his 2019 physical in February or during his sudden, unexplained visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in November.

Rick Tyler, a Republican political consultant who worked on Texas Sen. Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign in 2016, said medical tests are not necessary to see what’s plainly visible each time Trump speaks. “Trump is not only in physical decline, which is obvious, he is in mental decline. He’s not sharp. He gets details wrong,” Tyler said.

He lies and projects because that’s what narcissistic psychopaths do. Fish swim, dogs bark, and Trump lies and projects.
George Conway

George Conway, the husband of a top White House aide to Trump and himself a prominent Trump critic, said the president’s attacks on Biden’s mental acuity should not be considered a strategy because Trump is not capable of one. “I wouldn’t call it a tactic. He lies and projects because that’s what narcissistic psychopaths do,” Conway said. “Fish swim, dogs bark, and Trump lies and projects.”

Indeed, that Trump “projects” his own failings on his rivals and critics has been a widespread observation for years. Despite keeping the lightest campaign schedule of any of the Republican candidates running in 2016, Trump called former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush — known for his 16-hour workdays — “low energy.” Despite running a charity that enriched himself and facing numerous lawsuits for fraud, Trump called Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton “crooked.” And despite near-daily dishonesties on matters large and small, Trump called Cruz “Lying Ted.”

Cruz addressed that himself the day he ended his presidential candidacy in 2016. “Whatever he does, he accuses everyone else of doing,” he said in an extended critique. “This man is a pathological liar, he doesn’t know the difference between truth and lies. … In a pattern that is straight out of a psychology textbook, his response is to accuse everyone else of lying.”

Trump’s attacks against his opponents appeared to work for him in the 2016 primary and general election, but it is unclear whether attacking Biden for his verbal slips is helping Trump or having the opposite effect.

Recent polling shows Trump losing support from voters over 65, particularly among women in that cohort. Trump comfortably carried that age group against Clinton in 2016, 53% to 44%.

“If the Trump campaign thinks the answer to their precipitously falling support is to bank on a smear that’s failed for over a year and double down on the subject of mental acuity after all of this, then frankly, maybe it’s not just Donald Trump who’s ‘missing something,’ as the vice president said yesterday,” said Biden campaign spokesperson Andrew Bates.

And former Obama aide Axelrod said all of the time and energy Trump has invested in questioning Biden’s mental sharpness could be quickly undone.

“Biden can pull the rug out from under him with active appearances, sharp media and strong debate performances,” Axelrod said. “It also may be hard for a president who touts disinfectant as a COVID-19 treatment and regularly says bizarre things to hold himself up as the portrait of coherence.”



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Report: Kayleigh McEnany Voted By Mail 11 Times In Last 10 Years

Like her boss, President Donald Trump, Kayleigh McEnany has been speaking out against letting Americans vote by mail in the next election.

And like her boss, the White House press secretary has protested against mail-in votes despite doing it numerous times in the past.

Florida voting records show that McEnany, a native of Tampa, has voted by mail in 11 elections in the last 10 years, The Tampa Bay Times reported.

This revelation came on Tuesday, the same day that McEnany took to Twitter to list what she claimed were problems with mail-in ballots.

It was also the same day that the president got in a tizzy after Twitter added fact checks to his tweets, flagging his incorrect information about mail-in voting.

McEnany did not respond to HuffPost’s inquiry about her extensive experience with voting by mail.

Last week, McEnany attempted to justify the president’s own mail-in voting history by saying he “had to” because he was unable to cast his ballot in Florida, which he lists as his official residence and frequently visits. 

Trump has threatened to withhold federal funds from Nevada and Michigan if they send citizens applications to vote by mail, citing without evidence a risk of voter fraud. “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace said on the show that “there really is no record of massive fraud or even serious fraud from mail-in voting.”



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