Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Own a Piece of the Ritz

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Would you like to own a set of six crystal Bar Hemingway martini glasses from the Ritz in Paris? At an auction from Sunday through Tuesday of tableware and other artifacts from the hotel, there are four lots of these, estimated at 400 to 600 euros (around $450 to $680). Or if your dining area lacks a silver-trimmed tableside gueridon from which to serve the pepperoni pie just delivered from the local pizzeria, there are those, too. The auction is live and online; the digital catalog of nearly 1,500 lots provides the window-shopping, along with a history of the hotel.

Artcurial “Art de la Table et Arts de Vivre” auction, June 21 to 23, artcurial.com.

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A Platform for Your Wine Bottle

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An unusual brass wine coaster just landed in the gift shop at the Glass House, the Philip Johnson residence in New Canaan, Conn., that’s now a museum. It has a bulge in the middle to fit the punt, or depression, at the bottom of most wine bottles, making it look, ever so slightly, like the sculpture of a fried egg. Eventual scratches are said to be part of its charm. It was created by Claesson Koivisto Rune, a Swedish design group, for Skultuna 1607.

Basso Bottle Trivet, $135, designstore.theglasshouse.org.

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Ways to Support Black Farmers, Restaurants and Nonprofits

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BLM Community Resources, on the website for the Museum of Food and Drink, lists scores of black-owned farms, restaurants, food resources in black communities and charities. Among them a flower farm that Walker Marsh developed on what was an empty lot in Baltimore, and a fund-raiser for the family of David McAtee, the barbecue chef who was shot and killed this month in Louisville, Ky. The museum is asking for public opinion as the webpage evolves. The website also has a preview of “African/American: Making the Nation’s Table,” an exhibition that has been postponed.

BLM Community Resources, mofad.org/community-resources.

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Disabled Tibetans Must Denounce Dalai Lama to Get Jobs

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Disabled Tibetans seeking low-paying jobs in Chinese government departments must now pass political tests to qualify for employment, with applicants required to reject “ethnic separatism” and denounce Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, a state directive says.

Issued in the Tibet Autonomous Region on June 11, the recruitment notice restricts employment to would-be government workers who “have a firm stand on the political principles of anti-secession, criticizing the Dalai [Lama], safeguarding the reunification of the motherland, and national unity.”

The notice, a copy of which has been obtained by RFA, also requires applicants for jobs including drivers, office cleaners, kitchen helpers, and other kinds of support staff to “support the [ruling Chinese Communist] Party’s leadership and socialist system.”

“Job seekers with disabilities must abide by the Constitution and laws of the People’s Republic of China,” the recruitment notice goes on to say.

Chinese demands that even disabled Tibetans now meet political qualifications to find work “shows the CCP’s sense of deep insecurity,” U.S.-based China analyst Ganze Lama Kyab told RFA’s Tibetan Service in a recent interview.

“It underscores that in Tibet, the Chinese government’s top priority is political correctness as a number-one requirement for hiring. Anyone who doesn’t toe the official Chinese policy line has no chance for a livelihood now in Tibet,” he said.

Tibetans seeking work as auxiliary police officers in Tibetan areas of China have also been barred from employment over a wide range of concerns, with recruiters told to disqualify anyone engaging in “separatist activities” or having family members who have left Tibet to go into exile abroad, sources told RFA in earlier reports.

“My younger brother tried to enroll in the Chinese police force,” a former resident of Tibet’s Chamdo prefecture now living in India told RFA’s Tibetan Service, adding, “But because I’m now in India, they have denied my brother the job.”

Tibetans wanting to join the Chinese army must also have no record of engaging in Tibetan political activities, Shide Dawa—a researcher at the Tibetan exile government-connected Tibet Policy Institute in Dharamsala, India—said.

“The Chinese crackdown on Tibetans for their loyalty and devotion to the Dalai Lama is in violation of international laws as well as a breach of freedom of speech and worship,” Dawa said, adding, “It even goes against China’s own laws, including its regional ethnic autonomy laws.”

Regarded by Chinese leaders as a dangerous separatist, the Dalai Lama fled Tibet into exile in India in the midst of a failed 1959 Tibetan national uprising against rule by China, which marched into the formerly independent Himalayan region in 1950.

Displays by Tibetans of the Dalai Lama’s photo, public celebrations of his birthday, and the sharing of his teachings on mobile phones or other social medial are often harshly punished.

Chinese authorities meanwhile maintain a tight grip on Tibet and on Tibetan-populated regions of western China, restricting Tibetans’ political activities and peaceful expression of cultural and religious identities, and subjecting Tibetans to imprisonment, torture, and extrajudicial killings.

Reported by RFA’s Tibetan Service. Translated by Dorjee Damdul. Written in English by Richard Finney.



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Coronavirus Australia update: NSW treasurer to issue stark warning as Queensland border war returns to court – politics live

The Australian government is set to reveal potential changes in the way it engages with the United Nations and other global bodies – after a review sparked by Scott Morrison’s concerns last year about “negative globalism”.

The foreign affairs minister, Marise Payne, is expected to address the issue when she makes a major foreign policy speech “on the Covid-19 period and beyond” at the Australian National University tonight.

Payne “will outline Australia’s agenda, including the central focus of our national interests and the importance of global institutions delivering on their mandates”, according to an event alert issued by the ANU’s national security college.

In an apparent reference to the forthright role Australia recently played in pushing for an international coronavirus inquiry – a move that triggered China’s ire – Payne is expected to “discuss international cooperation throughout the Covid-19 crisis and Australia’s role in promoting our values to support the rules-based global order”.

The speech, which begins at 6pm, is set to outline any changes to Australia’s engagement with global bodies, stemming from the review Morrison announced in his speech to the Lowy Institute last October when he warned against “a new variant of globalism that seeks to elevate global institutions above the authority of nation states to direct national policies”.

The prime minister argued at the time that Australia should avoid “any reflex towards a negative globalism that coercively seeks to impose a mandate from an often ill-defined borderless global community, and worse still, an unaccountable internationalist bureaucracy” – rhetoric that drew immediate comparisons with Donald Trump.

Contrary to that early positioning, however, there is speculation the “audit” may actually have recommended a more active role for Australia in the multilateral system.

The Australian newspaper reported last week that the review conducted by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade called on the government to seek more Australian representation in key committees, push more strongly for democratic-­nation candidates to take leadership positions, and press for reform when necessary.

Incidentally, a government bill to replenish funding for a number of global bodies sailed through the Senate last week.






Foreign affairs minister Marise Payne. Photograph: Joel Carrett/EPA

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A Hot Honey to Elevate Your Meal

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Red Clay, a company in Charleston, S.C., specializes in hot sauces, and just a trace of their new honey will elevate chicken — preferably fried, though grilled or roasted will do — with a touch of mellowness that has subtle bite. There’s more upfront heat, along with a vegetal note, in the company’s Barrel Aged Hot-Hot Honey. Geoff Rhyne, a chef who is also the company’s hot sauce alchemist, uses the leftover habanero pepper mash from making his hot sauces (like the Carolina-style bolstered with vinegar, and a rich verde variety) to season the honeys.

Red Clay Hot Honey with honeycomb, $18; Hot Honey, five ounces, $10; Hot-Hot Honey, five ounces, $10; redclayhotsauce.com.

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Picnic With Jon Bon Jovi

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Picnicking is an easy socially distant gathering for lunch or dinner. Versa, a rooftop bar and restaurant atop the Renaissance New York Midtown hotel, has assembled picnic baskets that can be ordered for delivery on Saturdays or Sundays to eight Manhattan parks, including Bryant Park, the Sheep Meadow and the Mall in Central Park and Hudson River Park. The basic $35 menu consists of a lobster roll from the Lobster Place in Chelsea Market, a bottle of Evian, a face mask and a bottle of Hampton Water, a pale, floral French rosé developed by Jesse Bongiovi and his father, Jon Bon Jovi, in partnership with the winemaker Gérard Bertrand. For $85, you also get an antipasto platter of charcuterie, cheeses, fruit, flatbread and smoked salmon, and some hand sanitizer. At $135, there are two lobster rolls and two bottles of wine and water, a tote bag and a picnic blanket, along with the other items. Versa and Hampton Water are donating to Black Lives Matter and other charities. Delivery is included. Orders must be placed by 5 p.m. Fridays.

Versa Hampton Picnic, hampton-picnic.com.

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House of Lords backs NI abortion regulations

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Northern Ireland’s abortion laws were changed by MPs last year at a time when the assembly had collapsed.

The House of Lords has overwhelmingly backed abortion regulations for Northern Ireland despite opposition by the Stormont Assembly.

Peers supported the provisions by 355 votes to 77.

An earlier bid led by independent crossbencher Baroness O’Loan for the regulations to be rejected was defeated by 388 votes to 112.

Northern Ireland’s abortion laws were changed by MPs last year at a time when the assembly had collapsed.

However, earlier this month the now-sitting assembly registered its opposition to the “imposition” of regulations by Westminster, which permit abortions up to birth in cases of severe non-fatal disability.

Outlining the measures, Tory frontbencher Viscount Younger of Leckie said: “The regulations provide the new legal framework for access to abortion services in Northern Ireland and ensure ongoing legal certainty.”

Prior to the changes, women and girls were forced to travel to England to access services or look to alternatives outside the healthcare system, potentially putting themselves at risk, he said.

Lord Younger added: “I recognise that this is an emotive issue and views on all sides of the debate are strongly held.

“These are extremely difficult and often distressing decisions for women and girls.

“However, the essence of these regulations is to provide women and girls with the opportunity to be able to make individual informed decisions based on their own health and wider circumstances.”

But opposing the regulations, Baroness O’Loan said: “We now have a functioning Northern Ireland Assembly. Abortion is a devolved matter. The assembly voted to reject these regulations on June 2.

“I ask you to listen to the people of Northern Ireland. Listen to our assembly. Do not approve these regulations.”

She was supported by disabled Tory peer Lord Shinkwin, who asked how “denying a human being diagnosed before birth with a non-fatal disability like mine the equal right to be born is somehow not less favourable treatment”.

Former Ulster Unionist Party leader Lord Empey said: “Legislation should never have been allowed onto the statute book in the first place.”

Democratic Unionist Party peer Lord McCrea of Magherafelt and Cookstown said: “It was introduced wrongly in the first place and now to add insult to injury we have it in conflict with the democratic decision of the Northern Ireland Assembly.”

But Labour former Northern Ireland secretary Lord Hain said: “I am sorry but it’s no good some local assembly members complaining.

“While they squabbled, refusing to do their jobs and instead maintaining Stormont in ignominious suspension for three years, the world moved on without them.”

For the Liberal Democrats, Lord Bruce of Bennachie backed the regulations, saying the regulations were necessary to deliver a change in the law which the UK Parliament had voted for and the Northern Ireland Assembly had “abdicated responsibility” for in the three years it did not meet.

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Trump confirms he wants to pull thousands of US troops from Germany

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U.S. President Donald Trump | Pool photo by Doug Mills/Getty Images

U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday said he wanted to lower the number of U.S. troops in Germany to 25,000 in response to what he characterized as German delinquency on military spending.

The reduction in troop numbers, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, is deeply unpopular among Republican lawmakers and some national security experts.

“We’re at 52,000 soldiers in Germany, that’s a tremendous amount of soldiers, that’s a tremendous cost to the United States,” Trump said. “Germany, as you know, is very delinquent in their payments to NATO.”

Roughly 35,000 U.S. troops are stationed in Germany, where force levels are allowed to go as high as 52,000. Trump noted that Germany was not devoting 2 percent of its gross domestic product to defense and criticized its trade relationship with the U.S. through the European Union.

“They are delinquent of billions of dollars, this is for years delinquent,” Trump said. “So we are putting the number down to 25,000 soldiers.”

Contrary to Trump’s comments, Germany does not owe that money to NATO. In 2014, European countries set a goal of spending 2 percent of their GDP on defense by 2024. In 2019, Germany hit 1.3 percent in defense spending, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

Last week, 22 House Republicans led by Republican Representative Mac Thornberry argued against Trump’s plan to withdraw troops from Germany and claimed the move would undermine the NATO alliance. At the time, Republican Senator Jim Inhofe, Senate Armed Services chair, said reducing U.S. forces in Germany was such a bad idea that he could not believe Trump would order it.



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Egypt to gradually resume international flights on July 1

Jun 15, 2020

Egypt will reopen all of its airports to international traffic beginning July 1, the aviation minister said Sunday, as the country gears up to welcome foreign tourists to a number of beach destinations. 

Flights will resume “between Egypt and countries which have reopened their airspace,” Mohamed Manar Anba said during a news conference. Egypt paused all international air travel on March 19, and has only allowed its airports to operate domestic flights. 

Just three coastal provinces — the Red Sea, South Sinai and Marsa Matruh — will reopen for foreign tourism in July. Online newspaper Egypt Independent reports the first foreign flight will take place on July 4, bringing tourists from Belarus to the Red Sea town of Hurghada.  

After implementing sanitation and social distancing measures, more than 200 hotels are allowed to reopen to guests. Most major tourist sites in Egypt, including Giza, the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo and Luxor’s Karnak temple, will reopen gradually. 

“We are not in a hurry. We want to ensure everyone’s health and our reputation as a tourist destination,” Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Khaled el-Anani said during the conference. 

After 14 years of restoration work, Egypt reopened its oldest pyramid in Saqqara, south of Cairo, in mid-March. With in-person visits to Egypt’s ancient monuments and sites suspended, the tourism ministry began to offer virtual tours in April. 

Egypt suspended foreign tourism in March as parts of its crackdown on the spread of the coronavirus. Al-Anani has previously estimated that losses to the country’s tourism sector, which accounts for 5% of Egypt’s gross domestic product, could reach $1 billion. 

The government recently postponed parts of its planned reopening following a spike in infections. Health officials registered 1,677 new cases on Saturday, the highest single day total since the country’s first reported case in mid-February. 

The Arab world’s most populated country has now confirmed 44,598 cases and 1575 deaths. 

This story contains reporting from Agence France-Presse. 



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