Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Don’t Save Those Old Bananas for Banana Bread. Make Scones Instead.

I always keep a backup supply of butter in my freezer — for baking emergencies, and in case the craving for freshly made scones hits. And this morning, it did. So, I whipped up a recipe from the delightful Dawn Perry that I’ve had my eye on, with a few personal tweaks.

The biggest change was that instead of using frozen fruit as she suggests, I used a black-streaked banana on the counter. There was only one, not enough for banana bread, but just right for eight scones.

To make them, heat your oven to 400 degrees. Ms. Perry calls for putting 2 cups/255 grams all-purpose flour in a big bowl. But to give the scones some depth and earthiness, I substituted ¼ cup/30 grams buckwheat flour for an equal amount of all-purpose. Whole-wheat flour would also work, and if you’re going that route, you could swap in even more (though I wouldn’t want any more buckwheat flour, it’s pretty intense).

Then add 1 tablespoon baking powder, ¾ teaspoon fine sea salt, ¼ cup/50 grams granulated sugar, and 2 tablespoons dark brown sugar. Or use all brown sugar or all granulated. This amount of sugar gives you a nicely sweet scone with a crisp crust, but you can also use less sugar.

Whisk it all up. Then, using the large holes on a grater, shred in 1 stick (1/2 cup/115 grams) frozen or very cold butter. Using frozen butter gives you slightly lighter scones, especially if your kitchen is warm, but there’s not a huge difference if you don’t keep butter stockpiles in the freezer.

Toss it with your hands so the butter distributes evenly, squeezing and pinching if it blobs together. Then add a diced ripe banana — or about a cup of any other fruit you like, fresh or frozen. Finally, mix in a teaspoon or so of vanilla extract and ¾ cup/180 milliliters dairy product — the richer, the better. Ms. Perry uses ½ cup/120 milliliters sour cream thinned down with ¼ cup/160 milliliters whole milk. I used Greek yogurt thinned down with heavy cream. Use what you’ve got, nondairy also works fine here.

The dough will be very sticky and clumpy, but don’t add flour if you can avoid it. The wetter the dough, the more tender the scones. Dump this almost unmanageable mess out on a floured countertop and squish it together with your very sticky hands, patting it into a 1-inch-thick round if you want wedge-shaped scones, or a rectangle if you want square scones. Then cut out eight pieces. If you have a metal bench knife, this is a good place to use it because you can measure the thickness (there’s usually a ruler on the edge). Cut with it, and use it like a spatula to move the scones to a parchment paper-lined or greased baking sheet.

Brush the scones with a beaten egg to make them glossy brown. (I threw the rest of the egg in my daughter’s smoothie.) Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, until golden-topped and just firm to the touch.

Then eat warm. I slathered mine with salted butter. But even I have to admit it might have been overkill … or then again, maybe it was just right.

This is part of a series in which Melissa Clark teaches you how to cook with pantry staples. See more.

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With Most Weddings Still on Hold, Italian Designers Struggle

At 7 a.m. on April 30, Pietro Demita and Silvana Persano, the owners of Diamond Couture, which specializes in wedding gowns, were already busy in their atelier in Veglie, Italy.

The business partners had chosen nine gowns from their latest collection, hung them on a rack and dragged them in front of their warehouse. Scissors in hand, Mr. Demita and Ms. Persano, each wearing face masks, cut through corsages of white lace and skirts of tulle, thrusting the shreds into a large yellow and blue bin. Mr. Demita set the pile on fire with a lighter.

The burning was filmed by a friend and used to address “people in power,” he said, about the plight of the country’s wedding industry.

According to the Italian National Institute of Statistics, 190,000 to 195,000 weddings are registered every year in Italy. When these are celebrated with a party, they sustain an industry worth an estimated 40 billion euros ($44 billion) employing 83,000 companies. Additionally, 540 million euros ($593 million) are generated by about 10,000 wedding celebrations organized by foreigners in Italy, who often purchase their wedding dresses in the country.

“If my dreams have to be turned into ashes, I prefer doing it myself,” Mr. Demita said.

Diamond Couture presented its latest collection in April 2019 at Sì Sposaitalia Collezioni, an international trade show in Milan for bridal and formal wear. The event showed 220 bridal collections in 2019. Orders for gowns were taken during the buying appointments at the fair and delivered between September and October. The company always agreed to start crafting the ordered dresses without a deposit. The payments would be sent in March of the following year.

Mr. Demita’s and Ms. Persano’s annual production grew from 49 gowns to more than 1,000 within 13 years.

But on March 9, the Italian government announced stringent quarantine measures. Eighty percent of the weddings for which Diamond Couture had orders for gowns were postponed with the rest being canceled. Mr. Demita and Ms. Persano faced empty cash registers.

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Italy was the first Western country to impose a national lockdown, on March 4, which suspended all businesses. With 33,072 Covid-19-related deaths as of May 27, Italy has the third-highest figure, only ranking behind the United Kingdom (37,460) and the United States (101,392).

Restrictions in Italy were lifted May 18, but social-distance measures are still being enforced throughout the summer, pushing most weddings planned during the sought-after period from April through September to the fall or next year.

“It is a climate that certainly does not invite to celebrate,” Michela Gombacci, a business consultant, said about her postponed May wedding on the Italian island of Capri with her American fiancé, Stefano Minoli. “We thought it would have been almost out of place.”

The practice of delayed payments is common among small businesses in Italy, and it is especially widespread in the wedding industry as it allows retailers to collect the payments for the gown in installments.

Larger companies and small outfits operating in the higher-end segment try to steer clear of it. Nicole Spose by Nicole Cavallo has asked brides to pay off dresses by the date on which the wedding was originally planned, not the newly scheduled date in the future. “The majority understands the situation and has agreed,” Ms. Cavallo said in a phone interview. But, she noted, “some aren’t that happy about it.”

The payments are necessary, Ms. Cavallo said, to cover the cost of keeping gowns in her atelier for longer than originally planned.

Still, shops are without their usual orders and deposit money. To make up for the canceled fashion show in April, Ms. Cavallo offered future brides online consultations to jump-start new orders and deposits.

A similar service will be rolled out by Antonio Riva in Milan at the beginning of June. Mr. Riva, who starts producing only upon receipt of a deposit and delivers only when gowns are paid in full, hopes to be able to deliver his gowns by October, as usual. “We are in a lucky position because everything is made in Italy and our business partners understand our needs,” he said.

Larger losses were suffered by companies like Carlo Pignatelli in Turin, Italy, which specializes in formal attire for men. “While brides start looking for a gown nine to six months before the event, men start only three to two months before,” said Francesco Pignatelli, the creative director of the house. His company received all payments for its 2019 bridal dress collection in the fall of the same year. However, since 80 percent of the company’s total sales is generated by men’s suits, which typically sell between February and April, Mr. Pignatelli expects a 50 percent drop in the companies’ annual revenue.

To date, no company in Italy has received the government’s monetary aid to provide for furloughs. Businesses have had, instead, to advance salaries for about two months, putting their finances under further strain.

Wedding gown makers remain hopeful that they will recover in 2021; they expect to set a record in the production of gowns after social restrictions are lifted.

Yet, it seems inevitable that smaller businesses will suffer.

“The year 2020 is compromised,” said Serena Ranieri, the president of Feder Matrimoni ed Eventi Privati, a group that represents businesses involved in weddings and private events. “It is a collapse that the sector is unable to absorb and which will cause closures and bankruptcies, with consequent job losses and a devastating impact also for the companies in the supply chain which miss most of the customers.”

Mr. Demita said he and Ms. Persano are using their savings to get by, “but sooner or later, the water in the well runs out.”

In the meantime, in Milan, Emanuele Guido, the director of Sì Sposaitalia Collezioni, is working on the next edition of the fair, which has been postponed from April until September. “It is an experiment,” Mr. Guido said of how many exhibitors will actually show up in the month when they usually deliver gowns.

Will Diamond Couture attend? Mr. Demita sighed. “Frankly, I do not know.”

Continue following our fashion and lifestyle coverage on Facebook (Styles and Modern Love), Twitter (Styles, Fashion and Weddings) and Instagram.



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Kering Stresses Inclusive Bent Ahead of June Pride Month

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PARIS  — Signaling intentions to continue seeking to cultivate an inclusive working environment, Kering issued a statement Friday expressing support for the LGBTQ community, relaying the message at the outset of Pride month.

Pride month kicks off in June amid rising concern that respect for diversity could fall by the wayside in an environment of deep economic and social upheaval due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

The luxury goods group’s comments indicate the topic will remain a priority for the company.

“At Kering, we believe that diversity and equality are key pillars of a sustainable and creative company. We have a continued commitment to foster and maintain a supportive and inclusive work environment for all our employees around the world, including our LGBTQIA+ community,” said Béatrice Lazat, the group’s chief people officer. 

Kering listed a number of measures it has taken to promote inclusivity, including its group-wide family leave policy for new parents, signing a Friends of the Court brief in the U.S. calling for civil rights for LGBTQ communities, and setting up an internal group dubbed “All” that focuses on raising awareness on LGBTQ issues both inside the company and externally, in the U.S., Brazil, Qatar, Italy, France, the U.K. and Australia. 

The luxury company also cited Balenciaga’s “Love Is for Everyone” campaign and Gucci’s Chime for Change initiative.



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Minnesota governor urges end to protest destruction that has shut down libraries, businesses and light rail

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz urged an end to the violence over George Floyd’s death that has shut down libraries, businesses and the light rail system, as it was taking attention away from the institutional racism that led to another loss of life.

“We have to restore order to our society before we can start addressing the issues,” Walz said at a Friday press conference. “Before we turn back to where we spend our energy, making sure justice is served swiftly and making sure we learn something from what George Floyd gave on Monday.”

Days-long unrest in response to Floyd’s death turned violent as protesters and law enforcement clashed and looters entered hundreds of businesses in the area. On Thursday night, rioters set the Minneapolis Police Departments’ 3rd Precinct building on fire.

Walz activated the National Guard, and more than 500 soldiers were brought in to “provide safety and protection” to people in the Minneapolis area. Minnesota National Guard Adjutant General, Major General Jon Jensen, said troops were trained to “protect life, preserve liberty and ensure people’s right to peacefully demonstrate.”

The governor acknowledged during Friday’s press conference that it’s difficult for people to differentiate between the Minneapolis Police Department–where the four officers were employed–and the National Guard. As a white man, he said he wouldn’t patronize people of color by claiming to understand their experiences, but asked that everyone help them to “use a humane way” to restore the streets to a place where people who are demanding justice can be heard.

“It’s time for us to clean our streets. It’s time for us to execute today in a way that shows respect and dignity to communities. I’m going to ask a lot of help today of the folks that want to see it,” Walz said. “It is my expectation that justice for the officers involved in this will be swift, that it will come in a timely manner and that it will be fair.”


Protesters throw objects into a fire outside a Target store near the Third Police Precinct on Thursday in Minneapolis, Minnesota, during a demonstration over the death of George Floyd. On Friday, Governor Tim Walz urged an end to the violence so that officials could address the institutional racism that caused Floyd’s death.
KEREM YUCEL/AFP/Getty

Pursuing justice for Floyd’s death and addressing the institutional racism that allowed him to be killed in broad daylight cannot be done as the situation on the ground stands now, Walz said. He acknowledged that there is immense amounts of pain and change is needed. But Waltz also said the looting and burning of the city was taking attention away from building a future for Minnesota and answering the tough questions.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison also urged people to not take the anger they have at the Minneapolis Police Department out on the National Guard. He reminded them that a week ago, members of the National Guard were helping with COVID-19 testing. “Please remember this is not the group that you associate with unfair conduct,” he said.

Newsweek reached out to the Minneapolis Police Department for comment but did not receive a response in time for publication.

On Monday, officers were called to the scene after receiving a call that Floyd, a 46-year-old man, allegedly tried to use a fake $20 bill at a store. They arrived around 8 p.m. local time and handcuffed Floyd after asking him to get out of a car he was sitting in.

In a video posted on social media, Floyd is seen on the ground with his face pressed to the pavement as an officer, later identified as Derek Chauvin, presses his knee into the back of Floyd’s neck. Floyd repeatedly told officers he couldn’t breathe and when told by one of the officers to “get up,” the 46-year-old said, “I will, I can’t move.”

Officers called EMTS around 8:30 p.m., after Floyd stopped moving, and the 46-year-old was pronounced dead at the hospital an hour later.

All four officers–Chauvin, Thomas Lane, Tou Thao and J. Alexander Kueng–were fired from the Minneapolis Police Department on Tuesday. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called it “the right call,” but their termination did little to squelch calls for justice.

Demands are mounting for the officers to be charged, and while officials have promised to deliver justice, they’re also urging people to be patient. Ellison told CNN on Friday that without an “airtight case” it could fall apart. And while Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman was appalled by the video, he said police brutality cases can be complex and he needs to be able to prove an officer violated a criminal statute.

Walz thanked God during the briefing that someone was on the scene with a camera to videotape the encounter.

“There isn’t a person here or listening today that wonders how many times that camera’s not there,” he said. “These are tough questions, these are things that have been brewing in this country for 400 years.”

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Renault is Macron’s problem champion

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PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron is hoping to use national and EU financial firepower to rescue crucial companies and bolster their roles as champions — that makes Renault a problem.

The French carmaker is bleeding red ink and on Friday announced a three-year restructuring plan, with 4,600 jobs set to go in France alone as part of a global effort to cut costs by €2 billion.

The pandemic, which saw Renault’s car sales in France fall by 83.8 percent in April, has only accelerated the carmaker’s decline to a struggling brand buckling under the weight of a costly transition to clean mobility while locked in a troubled alliance with Japanese automaker Nissan.

“The kind of [health] crisis we have just come through has forced us to act,” said Renault’s Chairman Jean-Dominique Senard at a press conference announcing the restructuring plan. He said the coronavirus had simply made the need to reform “more urgent.”

Jobs cuts, closing factories and angry workers are a problem for Macron.

“Today the company can longer take the weight of the expenses given the collapse of the market” — Jean-Dominique Senard, chairman of Renault

The French government has announced an €8 billion rescue package for the car industry, as well as a promised state guarantee for a €5 billion loan for Renault — as long as the carmaker strikes a deal with its unions over factory closures and joins fellow French carmaker PSA in the Commission-led project to build a European battery industry for electric cars.

On Friday, Senard said the company didn’t need the cash yet. He was also lukewarm on the need to invest in battery cell technology. “In batteries we are very well supplied for the years to come,” he said.

However, interim CEO Clotilde Delbos did say that electric motor production would be repatriated to France from China.

Saving companies like Renault — in which the French state has a 15 percent stake — is part of Macron’s post-pandemic vision of building up national and European champions able to do battle on global markets. The government gave Air France a €7 billion bailout, part of which involved assurances that the airline would continue to buy aircraft from Airbus — another industrial champion.

In comparison to PSA, which turned a profit and is gearing up to merge with Fiat Chrysler, Renault is in a much more difficult spot. It posted a €141 million loss last year, its alliance with Nissan is in tatters, and it needs to slash production.

The restructuring plan will see Renault cut 15,000 jobs worldwide, and start talks with its unions over what to do about excess production at some of its 14 French plants. “Today the company can longer take the weight of the expenses given the collapse of the market,” said Senard.

Renault is leaving the big decisions until after July 1 when Luca de Meo, the former boss of Volkswagen unit Seat, takes over as CEO.

“Why make a rather sad announcement like that of job losses without announcing a development plan,” asked Senator Olivier Jacquin, a French Socialist senator working on transport. “It’s a bit surprising from that point of view.”

Getting the job cuts out of the way now might clear the decks for new corporate leadership to set out long-term goals, but it does nothing help Macron steer his government through a major economic crisis. The prospect of mass redundancies also exposes him to political pressure.

“When the government is putting €8 billion on the table, this cannot be done without putting conditions for the development of an industrial strategy,” said Sébastien Jamuel, a Communist MP for Dieppe in the north of France where Renault has a plant. “Industrial sovereignty must be regained, but not only in the world of words, but also actions and demands that the shareholder state must make.”



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Some Japanese Whiskies Aren’t From Japan. Some Aren’t Even Whisky.

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Mamoru Tsuchiya is worried about the future of Japanese whisky. Sales are booming, but there’s a problem: A large amount of the liquor isn’t actually made in Japan, said Mr. Tsuchiya, one of that country’s leading whiskey experts.

Some of it isn’t whiskey at all.

“There are a lot of situations where you call it Japanese whisky, but they’re using imported Scotch or Canadian whisky,” he said.

Global demand for Japanese whisky has exploded over the last decade — bottles like the Yamazaki 18 Year Old, which once collected dust at $100, sell for five times the price and are now almost impossible to find. The dollar value of exports to America grew by nearly 50 percent in 2019 over the previous year, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States.

But unlike most whiskey-producing countries, Japan has few rules about what constitutes whiskey, let alone what makes it Japanese. Companies can buy spirits in bulk from abroad, bottle and label it “Japanese whisky,” and ship it back out. They can export aged shochu made from grains, like rice or barley, for sale in America as whiskey. Some so-called distilleries don’t even do any distilling; they import the whiskey in bulk and contract another company to bottle it.

It’s a regulatory Wild West that both established distilleries and start-ups are taking advantage of to feed growing global demand. It’s also a potential public-relations disaster: The internet is already rife with articles claiming to pull back the curtain on the myth of Japanese whisky.

While many of the premier brands, like Yamazaki and its 18 Year Old, point out that they are made exclusively in Japan, others refuse to say. “It puts Japanese whisky’s reputation at risk,” said Makiyo Masa, the founder of Dekanta, an online retailer.

In September Mr. Tsuchiya, who runs an advocacy organization called the Japan Whisky Research Centre, proposed a set of rules for Japanese whisky, including a requirement that it be distilled in Japan. The rules would be voluntary, but he planned to use the 2020 Tokyo Whisky and Spirits Competition, which he runs, as a carrot: Only products that met his criteria could enter as “Japanese whisky.”

Mr. Tsuchiya said he had received support from most of the distilling industry, as well as the Japan Spirits and Liqueurs Makers Association, an industry-funded, government-chartered agency that helps set nationwide regulations.

But because of the coronavirus pandemic, the competition and Mr. Tsuchiya’s proposed rules are on hold. While the industry and consumers wait to see what happens next, a new debate is underway: What is Japanese whisky, anyway?

Japan’s laissez-faire regulatory approach is rooted, at least in part, in its complicated history with the West.

Its first recorded encounter with whiskey came in 1853, when Commodore Matthew Perry, during his inaugural visit to Japan, gave his hosts 70 gallons of Scotch and American whiskey. It was a hit among the imperial court, and the gift became a defining memory of a landmark cross-cultural encounter.

As part of its subsequent push to emulate the West, Meiji-era Japan encouraged the production of domestic versions of that same whiskey. Japanese distillers often used sweet potatoes, which were abundant, but they produced a much different spirit than the barley, corn and rye used in Scotland and America.

“From the get-go, Japanese whisky was not whiskey as the rest of the world understands it,” said Liam McNulty, a Tokyo-based whiskey writer. No one gave much thought to defining it, he said, since it was entirely for domestic consumption. The bragging rights that came with having a homegrown whiskey industry, and whatever tax revenue it generated, were more important than the precision of the end product.

The first modern Japanese whisky distilleries, including Yamazaki, didn’t open until the 1920s. While they were modeled on Scottish operations and often produced high-quality spirits, they did little to change the overall character of Japanese whisky, which, especially following World War II, was aimed at everyday salarymen looking for a quick drink after work.

The Japanese government introduced formal definitions for domestic whisky in 1989, but by then the industry was dominated by a few big distilling companies that wanted to keep the rules loose. After 1989, for example, whisky sold domestically had to contain at least 10 percent aged malt whisky; the rest could be unaged alcohol, typically made from imported molasses.

Both domestically and internationally, interest in Japanese whisky began to pick up in the early 2000s, snowballing through the next 15 years as the industry’s premium brands, like Hibiki and Yamazaki, racked up global critical acclaim. But distillers didn’t have enough fully aged product to meet demand, leading many established and start-up brands to start buying in bulk from overseas.

The Japanese whisky industry can be opaque, so it is hard to know which distilleries rely on foreign sources. Still, analysts point to fast-growing exports of Scotch and Canadian whisky to Japan in recent years, even as the retail sales of those whiskeys remain flat — implying that most of the imported spirit is being bought by distilleries and relabeled as Japanese.

One company that has been open about its sources is Nikka, which makes whisky in Japan and owns the Ben Nevis distillery in Scotland. Emiko Kaji, Nikka’s manager of international business development, said that domestic supply shortages force the company to use “a small amount of whiskey from overseas” to meet demand.

She also said that imported Scotch is a critical ingredient in creating Nikka’s flavor profile, in the same way that an American baker might swear by French butter in making an apple pie.

“Unlike in Scotland, we do not have the custom of exchanging casks with other producers within the country,” Ms. Kaji said. “In order to create a complex blended whisky to meet this demand, blenders in Japan needed to look outside our country for whisky to realize their visions.”

Nevertheless, as more American whiskey fans learn that Japanese whisky isn’t 100 percent Japanese, they’re increasingly unhappy. Much of the critical praise over the past decade leaned on generalizations about Japanese craftsmanship and ingredients, and drinkers are understandably angry to learn that the whisky in their glass might not even be made in Japan.

Some distilleries are coming clean by labeling their whiskies “world blends,” meaning a combination of imported and domestic products, said Flavien Desoblin, who carries several of these bottles at his two Manhattan whiskey bars, the Brandy Library and Copper and Oak. (These include Ao, from Suntory, one of the largest distilling companies in Japan, and Ichiro’s Malt & Grain World Whisky, from Chichibu, a highly regarded craft producer.)

“I believe it’s a great first step,” Mr. Desoblin said. “Since we have to pay a premium for just about any whisky that comes from Japan, we need to be told the truth.”

Mr. Tsuchiya wrote his proposed rules to move even further. They would require distilleries to use only barley in their mash, ferment it with yeast (shochu uses a different process), distill it entirely in Japan, and then age it for at least two years in a wood cask.

“We require two years, instead of three like in Scotland, because in Japan we have a more temperate climate and whisky may age faster,” he said.

So far, Japan’s largest whisky companies have said they are receptive to Mr. Tsuchiya’s proposal. But some experts question whether the industry will end up supporting it. Japanese whisky may have earned a global following, but its largest market is among everyday, value-conscious domestic drinkers who don’t pay attention to technical details.

Mr. Van Eycken wonders if producers want to create a polarized landscape by explaining that Japanese whisky, their bread and butter, isn’t what people thought it was. “Call me a skeptic, but from a business point of view, that’s very unlikely.”

He may be right. But if distillers end up rejecting Mr. Tsuchiya’s proposals, it’s possible that Japanese whisky’s newfound fans will reject them in turn.

“They need to decide if their interests are good for the industry, or for consumers,” said Yoshitsugu Komasa, who founded the Kanosuke distillery in southern Japan in 2017 and has pushed other craft producers to be more transparent. “If these rules are not adopted, I think things are going to get worse.”

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Russia to negotiate with Syria on more military bases: Interfax

May 29, 2020

To further cement Russia’s long-term military presence in Syria, President Vladimir Putin reportedly tasked his defense and foreign ministries with obtaining additional land and naval rights from Damascus.  

“Putin has signed a directive tasking the Defense Ministry, in cooperation with the Foreign Ministry, with holding negotiations with Syria on transferring more real estate and water territory to the Russian military’s possession,” the Russian Interfax news agency reported today. 

As Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s most important ally, Russia currently has two permanent military facilities in the war-torn country — the Hmeimim air base in the coastal Latakia province and a naval facility at the port of Tartus on the Mediterranean Sea.

Since Russia intervened militarily with air support in 2015, Assad has managed to retake much of the country from the opposition that seeks to oust him. Most recently, Russian warplanes played a key role in the regime’s assault on Idlib province, the last stretch of territory still held by the rebels after nine years of war. 

The deadly campaign to retake the northwest enclave left more than one million displaced and hundreds of civilians dead since December. Russia and Turkey, which each back opposing sides in the conflict, announced a cease-fire in early March that largely put a halt to the Kremlin-backed offensive. 

The proposed talks over additional military facilities come days after Putin appointed Moscow’s ambassador in Damascus, Alexander Efimov, as his special envoy for developing relations with Syria in what’s seen as an attempt to balance military and diplomatic involvement in Russia’s Syria policy. 



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Testing Is Key to Beating Coronavirus, Right? Japan Has Other Ideas

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TOKYO — As the world tries to get a handle on the coronavirus and emerge from paralyzing lockdowns, public health officials have repeated a mantra: “test, test, test.”

But Japan went its own way, limiting tests to only the most severe cases as other countries raced to screen as many people as possible. Medical experts worried that the approach would blind the country to the spread of infection, allowing cases to explode and swamping hospitals.

It hasn’t happened. Japan — the grayest country in the world and a popular tourist destination with large, crowded cities — has one of the lowest mortality rates from Covid-19 among major nations. The medical system has not been overwhelmed. And the government never forced businesses to close, although many chose to.

This week, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe declared Japan’s battle against the outbreak a resounding success, taking the country off an emergency footing — a sort of “lockdown lite” that lasted only a month and a half.

“By doing things in a uniquely Japanese way, we were able to almost completely end this wave of infection,” Mr. Abe said, adding that what he called the “Japan model” offered a path out of the global pandemic.

It’s still unclear, though, exactly what accounts for Japan’s achievement and whether other countries can take lessons from its approach. Critics say Japan undercounted coronavirus deaths. And some warn that further waves of infection could undermine the government’s self-congratulatory pronouncements.

Instead of testing widely to understand and limit the virus’s spread through the general population, Japan has focused on quickly containing small outbreaks through contact tracing. Instead of dictating strict constraints on daily life, it has focused on educating people about measures like social distancing and gently prodding them to follow along.

Theories for the country’s relatively low mortality rate run the gamut from cultural attributes — widespread mask wearing, a practice of regular hand washing, a near absence of physical greetings like hugs and handshakes — to just plain luck.

A combination of many other factors, including government measures and changes in behavior among a public that feels strong pressure to follow the rules, could also be at work.

Individual actions “may seem small or mundane,” said Keiji Fukuda, an epidemiologist who directs the School of Public Health at the University of Hong Kong. But, he added, “the cumulative impact of all of those efforts across the entire country to really implement some kind of distancing” may have been substantial.

Whatever the formula, Japan has so far succeeded in keeping deaths low. The country has recorded fewer than 900 deaths even as the United States and European countries have reported tens of thousands.

Epidemiologists say widespread testing for the virus is important because it allows officials to isolate those who test positive, and to track trends in infection rates to help determine when it is safe to reopen schools, businesses and other places where people congregate.

Researchers at Harvard have said the goal should be to test nearly everyone who has at least mild flulike symptoms, as well as an average of 10 contacts for each person who tests positive.

Countries like South Korea and China that faced fast-growing outbreaks early in the pandemic quickly ramped up testing. China performed more than three times as many tests in Wuhan in a single day than those Japan has conducted nationwide since Feb. 18 — about 455,000 tests on around 278,000 people.

Japan initially told people who suspected they were infected with the virus not to seek help unless they had experienced a fever for four days, or two days if they were over 65. Even some people with seemingly severe symptoms were refused, provoking theories that the government was trying to hide the true extent of the problem.

Medical experts said the guideline was intended to conserve hospital resources. A national law on infectious diseases mandated that anyone who tested positive, even those who were asymptomatic, had to be placed in one of the country’s few isolation wards, creating a strong disincentive for doctors to test patients with milder symptoms.

The Japanese government also said early on that test kits must be rationed because they were in short supply. That argument has since faded, however, as Japan has never used even half of its testing capacity on any given day, and it has increased its testing capacity to just over 24,000 a day.

Japan has since eased its rules to allow those who test positive but are asymptomatic to stay in hotels. It is preparing to begin limited testing for antibodies, hoping to get a better grasp of the number of people who have been infected. It also plans to introduce a smartphone app to help with contact tracing.

Despite the constrained testing for the virus, the rate of positive results has dropped below 1 percent, a fact that the government’s expert panel on the virus says demonstrates that current testing levels are sufficient.

But a group of prominent Japanese academics, businesspeople and other figures has called on the government to take a much bolder step: build a capacity of 10 million tests a day and offer testing to anyone who wants it. Consecutive negative results, the group argues, could allow people to fully resume social and economic activities.

As the country has seemingly defied the odds, many public health experts, including some in the government, have warned against drawing any definite conclusions from Japan’s experience.

They caution that Japan is not in the clear yet, and that a second or third wave of infections could strike at any time. As more data on deaths from this year becomes available — there are indications that Tokyo has undercounted dozens of coronavirus deaths — the picture may not look quite as good.

Some say Japan may have a large hidden population of asymptomatic cases. Shigeru Omi, the deputy head of the government’s expert panel on the coronavirus, told lawmakers that the real number of infections could be as much as 10 or 20 times as high as currently believed. Japan has reported fewer than 17,000 cases, versus more than 1.7 million in the United States.

Norio Sugaya, an infectious diseases expert at Keiyu Hospital in Yokohama, noted that Japan’s mortality rate, while vastly lower than those in hard-hit countries like Spain or Britain, is one of the worst in Asia.

In February, an outbreak of the virus aboard the cruise ship Diamond Princess left officials scrambling. The response was widely seen as a disaster, but health experts turned it into a learning opportunity.

Epidemiologists and public health experts used the data from the ship to help develop a framework for stopping the virus’s spread in Japan.

The approach emphasized reducing people’s exposure to the conditions that led the pathogen to spread on the ship. A public education campaign urged people to avoid the “Three C’s” — closed spaces with poor ventilation, crowded places and close contact.

On TV talk shows, hosts took a “no question is too stupid” approach to talking about the virus, assuaging viewers’ anxiety and stressing the basic science of prevention: wash your hands, wear a mask, keep your distance from others.

At the same time, community health centers raced to investigate clusters using a monitoring system that had been developed to trace cases of influenza and tuberculosis.

Another key factor may have been Mr. Abe’s decision to close schools in late February, well before almost any other country. The decision was hugely unpopular, but it appears to have provoked an almost instantaneous change in behavior, according to polling conducted by researchers at Hiroshima University.

The day after the announcement, the percentage of people who were avoiding crowded places nearly doubled, rising to almost 60 percent. By mid-March, it was over 75, the study found.

In April, as cases began to spike, Mr. Abe declared a state of emergency. Businesses were requested to close or reduce their hours. People were asked to make only necessary trips. There were no penalties, but many complied anyway.

Makoto Sasho, 50, decided to close his grilled eel restaurant in the Meguro neighborhood of Tokyo and focus on delivery and carryout, despite assurances from the government that businesses like his could continue table service.

“We conformed to society’s expectations of us,” he said, adding that “when I thought about the future, I knew we absolutely could not be responsible for a cluster.”

As Japan now begins to reopen, some experts fear that people will begin to let down their guard.

In a speech on Monday night, Mr. Abe emphasized that the end of the state of emergency did not mean a return to normal life.

“What we need to aim for,” he said, “is establishing a new normal.”

Mr. Sasho said that his customers were clamoring for him to reopen, but that he was not sure he was ready.

“It’s a new way of life,” he said. “Maybe I’ll just stick with delivery and takeout.”

Motoko Rich contributed reporting.

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Taylor Swift Slams Trump For ‘Stoking’ Fires Of ‘White Supremacy And Racism’

Taylor Swift called out President Donald Trump on Twitter Friday, slamming him for “stoking the fires of white supremacy and racism” during his presidency and insisting that he will be voted out in the upcoming November election.

The singer tweeted her impassioned message at Trump in response to his missives on Thursday night.

The city of Minneapolis has seen days of demonstrations after the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died after a police officer knelt on his neck. Thursday night’s actions saw a local police station set aflame and mass looting across the city. 

In response, Trump tweeted that the protestors were “thugs” and threatened violent intervention.

“Either the very weak Radical Left Mayor, Jacob Frey, get his act together and bring the City under control, or I will send in the National Guard & get the job done right,” Trump wrote. “These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd, and I won’t let that happen. Just spoke to Governor Tim Walz and told him that the Military is with him all the way.”

He also added: “Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

The controversial message prompted Twitter to issue a content warning over the tweet, warning users that it violated the platform’s rules about glorifying violence but was still available out of public interest. The warning marked the second time this week that one of Trump’s tweets had been labeled as such by the platform.

Though Swift had remained quiet on the political front for quite some time throughout her career, the “Lover” singer told The Guardian last year that she feels Trump and his administration are “gaslighting the American public into being like, ’If you hate the president, you hate America.’” As such, she’s pledged to “do everything I can for 2020.”

Of her silence prior to the last two years, Swift has said that she was “just trying to protect my mental health ― not read the news very much, go cast my vote, tell people to vote.”

“I just knew what I could handle and I knew what I couldn’t. I was literally about to break,” she said, adding that she has since felt “really remorseful” for not officially endorsing Hillary Clinton when she ran for president in 2016.



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Is Hamas becoming second power in ruling Palestinians?

May 29, 2020

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Bulldozers from the Palestinian Land Authority (PLA) affiliated with Hamas in the Gaza Strip demolished May 21 housing units in al-Qaraya al-Badawiya area in northern Gaza. The authority explained in a statement issued on the same day that the housing units “encroach on agricultural lands.” 

PLA Director of Public Relations Amal Shamali told Al-Monitor, “These lands are the government’s property. They were rented out to citizens between 2010 and 2012 at a low price of $100 per year for every two dunams of land in order to establish agricultural projects and create new job opportunities for unemployed youths.”

Shamali noted that the demolition aimed at halting the ongoing housing violations, among other violations against government lands in the Gaza Strip.

Rami Mansour, owner of a housing unit that was demolished on these lands, told Al-Monitor, “After I lost my house in Shajaiya neighborhood in the east of Gaza City during the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip in 2014, I built a small house consisting of one room, a bathroom and a kitchen on a piece of land that I rented from the Hamas government for agricultural purposes. I was surprised when the PLA brought its bulldozers to destroy my house.”

Mansour noted that his now-demolished house is the only housing unit for his family of eight, including six children. He added, “Just like others whose houses were destroyed, I admit these lands are the government’s, but because of the bad living circumstances and our inability to rebuild our houses that were damaged during the war, we had to live here. I ask the government to provide us with houses that can shelter us and our children from the cold of winter and the heat of summer.”

On May 14, bulldozers demolished a house under construction for the Chaath family in the Chaouth area in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza.

Ahmad Chaath, owner of the destroyed house, told Al-Monitor, “We were surprised when dozens of police officers attacked the construction site in the early morning. When we tried to hold on to the columns of the house to prevent them from being destroyed, they beat us — men and women — and removed us from the site to destroy it.”

He said his family received the land on which the now-demolished house was built in 1942, based on an order from the British High Commissioner who ruled Palestine between 1920 and 1948, to live on it and cultivate it.

Chaath added, “We have lived here, generation after the other, for dozens of years. None of the parties that ruled the Gaza Strip since then — like Israel [1967-1994] and the Palestinian Authority [1994-2007] — forced us out. Now, Hamas, which is ruling Gaza, wants to kick us out.”

Hamas’ recent demolition of houses was faced with opposition from rights groups.

Saleh Abdel Aty, chairman of the International Committee for the Support of Palestinians’ Rights, told Al-Monitor, “According to the law, citizens cannot be evacuated from lands registered in the name of the [British] High Commissioner. They require a compromise between the citizens and government rather than excessive use of force.”

Aty added, “Families that have been evacuated have the right to alternative housing from the Hamas government.”

On the political level, Hamas’ moves on the ground reflect its insistence on governing the Gaza Strip separately from the PA. Hamas is working according to Egyptian-brokered truce understandings reached with Israel at the end of March 2019. Meanwhile, President Mahmoud Abbas announced May 19 the end of all agreements, including security ones, signed with Israel and the United States, in response to Israeli plans to annex Palestinian territories.

Under the truce understandings, Israel would offer the Gaza Strip economic incentives to alleviate the siege imposed since 2007, in return for calm in Gaza and Hamas refraining from launching rockets at Israel.

Hamas leader Yahya Moussa told Al-Monitor, “The political agreements between Israel and the PA are in no way similar to Gaza’s understandings with Israel.”

He added, “Hamas and Israel have no agreements to renege on. They are just oral understandings under Eygptian brokerage that constitute an achievement for us. Our aim is to protect our citizens from any Israeli aggression and ease the blockade on the Gaza Strip.”

Moussa clarified that the virtual span of these understandings is set by the field situation. He said, “If Israel reneges on its understandings by closing borders or launching a new military aggression on Gaza, the understandings will be null and void.”

Secretary-General of the Palestinian People’s Party Bassam al-Salhi called on Hamas to stand behind the PA’s stance and end all understandings and agreements reached with Israel.

He told Al-Monitor, “Hamas’ justifications about the need for understandings with Israel to break the siege on the Gaza Strip are useless. The Palestinian struggle against breaking the siege should be based on unity rather than division. I believe Hamas’ understandings with Israel at a time when Abbas ended all agreements with it further deepen the rift between the two sides of the nation [the West Bank and Gaza].”

Wassel Abu Youssef, member of the PLO Executive Committee and secretary-general of the Palestinian Liberation Front, a leftist party, told Al-Monitor, “Hamas’ agreements with Israel were not coordinated with the PLO, which is the sole representatives of Palestinians. It is incomprehensible why Hamas has chosen to proceed while Abbas ended all agreements with Israel.”

He underlined the importance of uniting the Palestinian stance to confront the US peace plan and Israel’s decision to annex wide parts of the West Bank. He added, “Confronting these risks cannot succeed without a united Palestinian strategy. We lack united work.”



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