ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A man was shot Monday night as protesters in New Mexico’s largest city tried to tear down a bronze statue of a Spanish conquistador outside the Albuquerque Museum, prompting the city to announce that the statue would be removed until officials determine the next steps.
The man was taken to a hospital and was listed in critical but stable condition late Monday, said Albuquerque police spokesman Gilbert Gallegos.
A confrontation erupted between protesters and a group of armed men who were trying to protect the statue of Juan de Oñate before protesters wrapped a chain around it and began tugging on it while chanting: “Tear it down.†One protester repeatedly swung a pickax at the base of the statue.
Moments later, a few gunshots could be heard down the street and people started yelling that someone had been shot.
Gallegos said police used tear gas and flash bangs to protect the officers who intervened and detained those involved in the shooting. He said they were disarmed and taken into custody for questioning as police worked to secure the scene. He said detectives were investigating with the help of the FBI but he did not immediately release any other information.
“The shooting tonight was a tragic, outrageous and unacceptable act of violence and it has no place in our city,†Mayor Tim Keller said in a statement. “Our diverse community will not be deterred by acts meant to divide or silence us. Our hearts go out the victim, his family and witnesses whose lives were needlessly threatened tonight. This sculpture has now become an urgent matter of public safety.â€
Democrat Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham issued a statement in which she took aim at the armed individuals, saying they were there to menace protesters. She said no matter who strikes first, there would be no room in New Mexico for any sort of escalation of what she called “reckless, violent rhetoric.â€
“The instigators this evening will be rooted out, they will be investigated, and they will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law,†she said.
The violence came just hours after activists in northern New Mexico celebrated the removal of another likeness of Oñate that was on public display at a cultural center in the community of Alcalde. Rio Arriba County officials removed it to safeguard it from possible damage and to avoid civil unrest ahead of a scheduled protest.
A forklift pried the massive bronze statue of Oñate on horseback from a concrete pedestal. Cheers erupted among bystanders who saw the memorial as an affront to indigenous people and an obstacle to greater racial harmony, though several people also arrived to defend the tribute to Oñate.
County Manager Tomas Campos said the statue was placed in storage for its own protection. He expects the three-member county commission to solicit public comment on what to do next with the public works project commissioned by the state in the early 1990s.
“This is public property and I’m not going to allow it to be damaged,†Campos said. “Plus, I don’t feel like risking my sheriff’s deputies or state police to defend it.â€
The Oñate statues have been a source of criticism for decades.
Oñate, who arrived in present-day New Mexico in 1598, is celebrated as a cultural father figure in communities along the Upper Rio Grande that trace their ancestry to Spanish settlers. But he’s also reviled for his brutality.
To Native Americans, Oñate is known for having ordered the right feet cut off of 24 captive tribal warriors that was precipitated by the killing of Oñate’s nephew. In 1998, someone sawed the right foot off the statue — an incident that weighed in the decision to stash away the statue.
Luis Peña of Espanola, an artist and computer network engineer, started a public petition last week to remove the statue in Alcalde. He said he was heartened to see it taken off display.
Removal of the statue was followed by a few heated roadside discussions about local colonial history, under the gaze of a half-dozen sheriff’s deputies.
Tony Valerio, 65, rushed to the site after a neighbor alerted him that the statue was being taken down.
“He’s my hero. He brought a lot of good things to New Mexico,†Valerio said of Oñate. “What’s next? The Statue of Liberty?â€
Lujan Grisham, who has campaigned on her heritage as a 12th-generation New Mexican, called the statue’s removal a “step in the right direction†in an earlier Twitter post.
By Monday evening, dozens had joined a celebratory gathering with Native American dancing and drumming outside the cultural center where demonstrators left hand prints in red paint on the empty statue pedestal.
Meanwhile, the scene in Albuquerque turned into chaos as people ran for cover. Police in riot gear could be seen taking at least two people into custody following the shooting as some protesters heckled the officers. It was more than two hours before the area was cleared.
Monuments to European conquerors and colonists around the world are being pulled down amid an intense re-examination of racial injustices in the wake of George Floyd’s death at the hands of police.
Albuquerque city officials have promised to convene a council of community leaders and artists to consider the concerns about the public art piece.
Titled “La Jornada,†the sculpture depicts Oñate leading a group of Spanish settlers to what was then the northern-most province of New Spain in 1598. The collection of statues includes an indigenous guide, a priest, women settlers and soldiers. The names of the families who accompanied Oñate are listed on plaques below as part of the “Wall of Spanish Ancestral Heritage.â€
“Recent calls for altering ‘La Jornada’ remind us that works of art often challenge communities to debate ideas, pursue empathy, grapple with multiple perspectives, reconcile conflict and interrogate history,†said Shelle Sanchez, head of the city’s Cultural Services Department.
Lee reported from Santa Fe. Attanasio reported from Alcalde.
Attanasio is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
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New Zealand reported two cases of COVID-19 Tuesday, ending a three-and-a-half week spell without any fresh infections, health authorities said.
Both the new patients were recent arrivals from the United Kingdom, the health ministry said.
“The ministry can confirm today two new cases of COVID-19 in New Zealand related to the border as a result of recent travel from the UK. Both cases are connected,†it said in a brief statement.
New Zealand’s borders are open only to returning Kiwis and their families, besides some exceptions for business and compassionate grounds, with everyone undergoing two weeks mandatory quarantine.
The South Pacific nation, which has recorded only 22 deaths among a population of five million, declared last week that it had eliminated community transmission of the virus.
As a result, domestic restrictions including social distancing requirements and limits on public gatherings were lifted, although strict border controls remain.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on Monday that she had not declared the country virus-free because “New Zealand will have cases again in the futureâ€.
“Of course, our hope and expectation is that should be at the border… if they’ve quarantined, of course, that’s a very different story than in the community,†she told reporters, adding “it’s an ongoing campaignâ€.
By Agence France-Presse (AFP)
‘MasterChef Australia: Back To Win’ contestant Khanh Ong has opened up about his family’s refugee journey, saying “it’s an awkward conversation but it’s a conversation that needs to be hadâ€.Â
Khanh spent the first two years of his life in an immigration camp in Indonesia, before moving to Australia with his family in the 1990s.
“I feel as though when you grow up as a refugee, you pretend that everything is great,†the 27-year-old told HuffPost Australia.
“You pretend that everything is fine but there is a little part of you that just wants to be like every single other person, and I don’t want anyone to feel that.â€Â
Channel 10
Growing up in a Vietnamese household, food was always a big part of his life and he learned how to make traditional Vietnamese food from his mum Dzung. Little did he know that years later he would be an inspiration to others on a national cooking show. Â
“It’s really humbling,†he said. “I would’ve loved growing up to see a refugee that looked like me on my screen. It’s a hope kind of thing.â€
Khanh said he didn’t speak much about his refugee journey when he first competed on ‘MasterChef’ in 2019.Â
“Even in the first season I never really spoke about it, just because it’s an awkward conversation. It’s always been an awkward conversation but it’s a conversation that needs to be had.
“At the end of the day, I see myself as Australian still and I feel a lot of refugees see themselves that way and need to see that representation, that Australians are very different, that we have all different cultures.
“We are all different but that should be celebrated.â€Â
Khanh’s father Tam lost his battle to cancer when Khanh was in his late teens, and as he’s detailed in his new book, A Gay Guy’s Guide to Life, Love, Food, he took over running his family’s butcher business. He’s also worked in fashion design and been a DJ, though food has been his main passion.Â
“Dad would’ve been so proud. He would’ve been so happy,†Khanh told HuffPost Australia.
“My family have always been a massive support for me. When it comes to cooking, I feel like cooking is all about your memories and your emotions and that’s why half of us do what we do. It’s because it takes us to a place that is comforting, so that’s what the book is about.â€Â
Khanh was eliminated from ‘MasterChef: Back To Win’ on Sunday night, but surely this won’t be the last we see of him.Â
AsianScientist (Jun. 16, 2020) – Singapore’s Health Science Authority has granted regulatory approval of remdesivir as a treatment for SARS-CoV-2 infection, the virus that causes COVID-19, on a conditional basis.
Remdesivir is a nucleotide analog with broad-spectrum antiviral activity both in vitro and in animal models against multiple emerging viral pathogens.
Gilead filed for registration of remdesivir—which has been given the trade name Veklury—in Singapore on May 22 and obtained conditional approval on June 10.
Infectious diseases specialists are now permitted to administer remdesivir for the treatment of adult patients who meet the following criteria for severe COVID-19: they must have an oxygen saturation of less than or equal to 94 percent; require supplemental oxygen; or require more intensive breathing support such as extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or invasive mechanical ventilation.
The conditional approval is based on clinical data from the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases’ global Phase III trial and Gilead’s Phase III SIMPLE trial in patients with severe manifestations of COVID-19. Singapore participated in both clinical trials and has enrolled around 100 patients. As part of the condition of the approval, data from ongoing clinical studies will be submitted to HSA to ensure continued safety and efficacy of the product.
According to a press statement, Gilead is scaling up manufacturing of remdesivir given the limited global supply of the drug. The company anticipates new supplies of the drug to start to become available in July, with supply continuing to increase through the end of 2020 and into next year.
“Gilead will work closely with the health authorities in Singapore to provide guidance on anticipated drug supply based on local incidence and severity of disease,†Mr. Daniel Li, senior director of clinical operations at Gilead Sciences, told Asian Scientist Magazine.
Singapore is among the earliest countries in Asia, besides Japan and Taiwan, to approve remdsivir as a treatment for patients with severe COVID-19. Outside of these regions, remdesivir is an investigational, unapproved drug.
———
Source: Gilead; Photo: Dimitri Karastelev/Unsplash.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.
A Dungannon man has been remanded in custody following a high-speed pursuit which ended with the fleeing car bursting into flames.
n the course of the 90-minute episode Leon Lemoshe, also known as McGlinchey (27), of Killymaddy Hill was said to have performed numerous dangerous manoeuvres with a passenger on board while trying to evade police.
He is charged with driving a BMW dangerously without a licence or insurance, failing to stop for police, assaulting an officer and resisting arrest.
While occurring on numerous roads, the chase ended at Ballinderry Bridge Road, Coagh, on June 12.
A police officer told Dungannon Magistrates Court all charges could be connected.
He said in the pursuit Lemoshe reached speeds in excess of 100mph on public roads, took a roundabout anticlockwise, drove on the wrong side of the road and performed a handbrake turn on a dual carriageway, narrowly avoiding colliding with other traffic.
A stinger device was deployed, puncturing one tyre.
A member of the public observed a small white package being thrown from the driver’s side, which was seized and sent for examination.
The police helicopter was tracking the scene, with armed response officers in attendance.
As the pursuit continued police observed flames inside the BMW, which was then ditched by Lemoshe, who along with a passenger, exited and fled. Seconds later the car was engulfed in flames.
Opposing bail, the officer said: “Police are concerned there is a high risk of reoffending.
“This was a major incident which lasted one-and-a-half hours of pursuit involving the police helicopter, armed response officers and multiple patrols.
“The defendant has previous convictions for this kind of driving.
“He showed total disrespect for other road users.”
A defence lawyer said his client was threatened and his home attacked a few months ago, and the person allegedly responsible is currently remanded in custody in Maghaberry Prison.
Lemoshe is “quite literally terrified of encountering this person if refused bail”, the defence stated, although it conceded it would be up to prison authorities to manage risk.
It was suggested he could be released to reside with his mother in Dungannon.
District Judge John Meehan said: “There seems to be a compulsion to go out on the roads illegally, going by the record. The defendant is accused of very serious offences while on bail for similar matters, and the extent to which police were required to go to apprehend him was extraordinary.
“It must also be noted – and I continue to refer to this – he was out driving at will with a passenger, ignoring the Covid-19 lockdown restrictions the rest of us are following.”
Refusing bail, Judge Meehan described the incident as “outrageous offending”.
Belfast Telegraph
Labor’s national executive is preparing to take action against the party’s beleaguered Victorian branch.
Three frontbenchers have been forced out of the state cabinet over a branch-stacking and infighting scandal.
Party stalwarts are swooping in to clean up the sordid mess.
“There’s a discussion about getting senior elders in to make sure we clean up the show,” federal Labor Leader Anthony Albanese told 2GB radio on Tuesday.
Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews expects the national executive to deliver a plan to restructure the state ALP.
“Then it will be for us here in Victoria to get on and make the reform that is very, very important,” he told reporters in Melbourne.
“No one should underestimate my resolve to deal with these issues properly to make sure that we make really significant reform.”
Party powerbroker Adem Somyurek has been banished from Labor after being caught handing over cash and using parliamentary staff to create fake branch members and amass political influence.
Two of his allies – Robin Scott and Marlene Kairouz – have also resigned from the ministry.
The scandal exposed by 60 Minutes threatens to seep through federal Labor ranks.
Even so, there was no mention of Mr Somyurek or the Victorian crisis during a long federal Labor caucus meeting in Canberra on Tuesday.
The factional heavy claimed to be protecting Anthony Byrne and some of the footage was filmed in the federal MP’s office.
A state Labor MP has called for the Australian Federal Police and ASIO to investigate the covert recordings.
Tim Richardson is concerned, given Mr Byrne is the deputy chair of the powerful parliamentary joint committee on intelligence and security.
“We don’t know who put those recordings in, we don’t know what’s been compromised,” he told reporters.
“That’s a great concern for our commonwealth and our national security.”
Former senator Stephen Conroy alleged Mr Somyurek intimidated federal Labor MPs including Tim Watts, Julian Hill, Joanne Ryan and Rob Mitchell.
“The intimidation of federal MPs is to be absolutely deplored,” he told Sky News.
Mr Somyurek was also recorded claiming Labor MP Josh Burns relied on his support.
“It’s not true and I am my own person in the Labor Party,” Mr Burns told the ABC.
“I think that there are clearly issues, though, that we need to deal with as a party.”
He said an arm’s length inquiry was needed to restore trust.
Former Labor leader Bill Shorten says the party thought it had stamped out branch-stacking until the “shocking and reprehensible” Victorian scandal erupted.
“The party has been trying to clean up branch stacking across Australia and … well, we thought it had, but clearly it hadn’t in Victoria,” he told Nine.
“Every person’s credentials need to be checked again. Did they pay for it, their own membership?”
WA Labor MP Patrick Gorman, a former state secretary, said banning cash payments for membership would go some way to stamping out branch stacking.
Early estimates suggest 163,000 people lost their jobs in May, on top of 449,000 the previous month, as the coronavirus crisis lockdown took its toll on the UK economy.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) data covering the number of paid employees showed a fall of 2% since the country entered effective hibernation in March.
It released the experimental data as its own figures showed a leap in the so-called claimant count – jobless claims applications through Universal Credit.
The ONS recorded a rise of 528,000 – or 23% – last month to 2.8 million.
It meant the total had risen by 1.6 million since March.
The figures will make grim reading for the government which has, to date, spent £55bn propping up businesses through various support schemes and paying wages to millions of furloughed workers.
The ONS said its data demonstrated the impact the Job Retention Scheme had inflicted on workforce output.
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Jonathan Athow, deputy national statistician for economic statistics, said: “The slowdown in the economy is now visibly hitting the labour market, especially in terms of hours worked.
“Early indicators for May show that the number of employees on payrolls were down over 600,000 compared with March.
“The claimant count was up again, though not all of these people are necessarily unemployed,” he said.
Wider ONS figures, covering the three months to April, suggested the jobless rate remained at 3.9% as the furlough scheme got in to gear.
Economists had expected to see a surge to 4.7%.
The ONS reported the steepest quarterly decrease in vacancies on record of 342,000 to 476,000 in the period.
The statistics body suggested that it remained to be seen whether surging Universal Credit claims and evidence of plunging payrolls would translate into actual jobs lost when official data, covering May, is released next month.
In response to the figures, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps told Sky News: “We had feared, some people had feared, economists said the figures would be worse still.
“A lot of people of course, nearly 9 million people, are being protected by the furlough scheme and another more than 2.5 million self-employed in addition to that with enormous sums of money.”
Neil Carberry, chief executive of the Recruitment and Employment Confederation, said: “The headline figures may not show it, but a lot has changed since April – with the claimant count rising to 2.8 million, the unemployment rate is likely to be much higher than 3.9% now.
“But with the lockdown being eased and the economy opening up, hiring should grow.”
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea’s military on Tuesday threatened to send back troops that it had withdrawn from areas near the South Korean border, in the North’s latest warning that it was prepared to abandon the détente that has prevailed on the Korean Peninsula for two years.
In recent weeks, North Korea has declared its intent to reverse steps that both sides have taken over the years to ease tensions along the heavily armed border. Last week, the North referred to the South as an “enemy,†accusing it of reneging on a 2018 agreement to stop sending propaganda across the border.
The North Korean People’s Army said on Tuesday that it had been asked to develop “an action plan†to “turn the front line into a fortress and further heighten the military vigilance against the South,†according to a statement published by state media. It said the plan would involve returning soldiers to areas that had been demilitarized under past agreements with the South.
Sending more troops to the border — already the most heavily fortified in the world — is guaranteed to raise tensions with the South. But in saying that the move was in the planning stages, the North seemed to be leaving room for compromise.
The North reacted with anger this month to propaganda campaigns carried out by activists in South Korea, who have used balloons to send leaflets over the border denouncing Kim Jong-un, the North’s leader, and his repressive government. South Korea, hoping to keep the peace, has vowed to stop the balloon launches and is planning legislation that would outlaw them.
In its statement on Tuesday, the North Korean military said ​the North was prepared to start sending its own propaganda leaflets into the South.
The threatened North Korean troop deployment would involve areas near the border that have been demilitarized since 2000, when the two Koreas’ leaders met for the first time. Monday was the 20th anniversary of that summit meeting.
Under those agreements, the North ​withdrew some of its frontier military units to make way for roads linking South Korea to Diamond Mountain — a resort destination in the North, which became the site of an experiment in inter-Korean tourism — and to Kaesong, a North Korean town near the border where the two Koreas jointly operated an industrial park.
Both projects were part of the South’s “Sunshine Policy†of improving ties through economic cooperation, which led to the 2000 meeting between Mr. Kim’s father, Kim Jong-il, and then-President Kim Dae-jung of the South. But that good will soured over the years as North Korea continued to develop a nuclear arsenal, and the two projects were eventually shut down.
The Koreas’ relations warmed again in 2018, when Kim Jong-un and the South’s current president, Moon Jae-in, met twice​. They agreed to stop cross-border propaganda, and they set a goal of resuming the Kaesong and Diamond Mountain projects. ​They also removed more troops from the border area, shutting down some of the guard posts that both Koreas maintain within the so-called Demilitarized Zone that separates them.
But acrimony has returned in recent months. Mr. Kim’s diplomacy with President Trump collapsed last year, frustrating his hopes of winning relief from tough international sanctions imposed on the North over its nuclear weapons. He has since stepped up pressure on the South to move ahead with the Kaesong and Diamond Mountain ventures, both of which had brought the North much-needed hard currency.
Under the 2018 agreements, however, those joint projects were to be resumed only as part of a broader deal to denuclearize the North. The South’s refusal to proceed with them regardless has led to increasingly harsh rhetoric from the North, whose economy, already suffering under the sanctions, has been damaged further by the coronavirus pandemic.
Last week, North Korea cut off all communication lines with South Korea, including military hotlines, and said it would expand its nuclear weapons capabilities.
On Saturday, Kim Yo-jong, Mr. Kim’s sister and a prominent adviser, said the North should no longer “trust the trite language​†coming from Mr. Moon’s government.
“I feel it is high time to surely break with the South Korean authorities​,†she said, adding that the ​â€â€‹next step​â€â€‹ would be taken by the North Korean military.
On Monday, Mr. Moon marked the 20th anniversary of the Koreas’ first summit meeting by saying that the road to peace was​ “slow†and “tortuous.†He urged Mr. Kim “not to reverse the promise of peace he and I made before 80 million Koreans.â€
NYPD officers took a knee alongside protesters in Times Square for a brief respite from the violent protests following the death of George Floyd.
Storyful
The New York Police Department is investigating whether three of its officers were poisoned after drinking milkshakes on Monday night at a Shake Shack restaurant in Manhattan.
The officers complained of “not feeling well” before being hospitalized and later released, the NYPD said in a statement to USA TODAY, and Shake Shack said via Twitter that it was “horrified” and working with police.
“At this time, the incident is part of an active and ongoing investigation to determine if this was accidental or intentional in nature,” the NYPD statement said.
The Detectives’ Endowment Association, the labor union that represents 20,000 active and retired New York City Detectives, condemned the incident as an attack on police, claiming on Twitter that the officers were “intentionally poisoned by one or more workers.”
‘The major stumbling block’: Powerful police unions stand in the way of structural reform, experts say
“Police in New York City and across the country are under attack by vicious criminals who dislike us simply because of the uniform we wear,” DEA President Paul DiGiacomo said in a statement. “Emboldened by pandering elected officials, these cowards will go to great lengths to harm any member of law enforcement.”
The Police Benevolent Association of the City of New York said on Twitter, “When NYC police officers cannot even take meal without coming under attack, it is clear that environment in which we work has deteriorated to a critical level. We cannot afford to let our guard down for even a moment.”
In a statement, the PBA added, “All PBA members are advised to carefully inspect any prepared food items they purchase while on duty for possible contamination.”
The incident comes amid ongoing national protests against policy brutality, spurred by the death of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis on May 25, and rising calls for police reform or defunding.
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