Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse 2 production begins : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

The highly anticipated sequel of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse has begun the production of the animated film. The film, that released in 2018, was highly applauded and won numerous awards including Best Animated Feature at the 91st Academy Awards, 46th Annie Awards, and 76th Golden Globe Awards.

Now, the production of the sequel has begun. Animator Nick Kondo took to Twitter to share his excitement and shared a gif and wrote, “first day on the job!”

While everything is kept under wraps, it is being reported that the sequel will focus more on the story Miles and Gwen Stacy. The after-credits scene also featured Miguel O’Hara, Spider-Man 2099. So, he will also play an important part in the sequel.

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse was directed by Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, and Rodney Rothman from a screenplay by Phil Lord and Rothman, and a story by Lord. It stars Shameik Moore as Miles Morales / Spider-Man, alongside the voices of Jake Johnson, Hailee Steinfeld, Mahershala Ali, Brian Tyree Henry, Lily Tomlin, Luna Lauren Velez, John Mulaney, Kimiko Glenn, Nicolas Cage, and Liev Schreiber.

The story is set in the shared multiverse called the “Spider-Verse” as Miles Morales becomes the new Spider-Man and joins other Spider-People from various dimensions to team up to save New York City from Kingpin.

More Pages: Spiderman : Into the Spider-Verse (English) Box Office Collection

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You could get £6,000 for swapping to an electric car

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An Electric Nissan Leaf car parked on the roadside charging from a a public charging point (Credits: Shutterstock / James W Copeland)

The government may be planning to offer UK drivers a £6,000 incentive to swap their diesel or petrol motor for an electric car.

According to documents seen by the Daily Telegraph, Boris Johnson will announce a number of initiatives to try and kick-start the economy after Covid-19. This speech, believed to be happening on July 6 will include a scrappage scheme to help the UK’s automotive industry.

EVs are typically more expensive and the infrastructure isn’t there yet – but they’re going to become increasingly more important. The Nissan Leaf, an all-electric vehicle, is manufactured at the company’s factory in Sunderland.

Jaguar Land Rover and BMW also have factories in the UK and electric vehicles are key to their future strategy.

Given new car sales are down 90% in the UK because of the lockdown, the government will be trying anything it can to stimulate growth in the sector – including giving new buyers £6k towards scrapping an old diesel or petrol car.

Boris Johnson is expected to announce initiatives to stimulate the automotive industry as lockdown eases (Credits: PA)

Fiona Howarth, CEO of Octopus Electric Vehicles – one of the country’s largest EV consultancy firms – commented: ‘It’s essential for the government to implement this incentive as it is critical to drive change.

‘The upfront cost of electric vehicles can still be seen as a barrier, despite the low lifetime and running costs. With lockdown bringing huge improvements in the quality of the air we breathe, this would solidify the government’s commitment to our health and the future of the world we live in. 

‘Consumers who want to switch to greener driving can be put off by the more expensive initial outlay for an electric vehicle compared to petrol or diesel. But by reducing this cost, EVs will become more affordable and dramatically increase uptake. 

‘The government can really make a difference and save lives by encouraging the switch to clean, electric cars. If we wait until lockdown eases, drivers will return to their normal routines and perhaps forget the long term benefits of what we have seen during quarantine.’



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Trump Floats Conspiracy That 75-Year-Old Buffalo Protester Pushed By Police Was ‘A Set Up’

“Buffalo protester shoved by Police could be an ANTIFA provocateur. 75 year old Martin Gugino was pushed away after appearing to scan police communications in order to black out the equipment,” the president tweeted Tuesday morning. “I watched, he fell harder than was pushed. Was aiming scanner. Could be a set up?”

Trump’s tweet appears to reference a report that aired on OANN, a right-wing network that routinely disseminates conspiracy theories.

A widely circulated video on Thursday showed police shoving Gugino, who had been participating in a peaceful protest over the police killing of George Floyd. The video shows Gugino falling backward, hitting his head and bleeding from the ear. He was hospitalized in serious but stable condition.

Two officers were later suspended without pay and charged with second-degree assault.

The police department initially claimed Gugino “tripped and fell.” After the video surfaced showing what happened, the mayor and the governor criticized the police actions.  

Gugino’s attorney said his client “has been a longtime peaceful protester, human rights advocate and overall fan of the U.S. Constitution for many years,” and “requests that any further protests continue to be peaceful.”

As protests against racism spread across the country in the wake of Floyd’s death, numerous examples of police responding with violence have been captured on video. 

Trump repeatedly called for military action against the protesters. Last week, federal authorities tear-gassed peaceful protesters near the White House, clearing the way for Trump to stage a photo-op at a nearby church.



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North Korea says it has severed all communication with South Korea

North Korea announced Tuesday it was axing all communications with South Korea, a move analysts believe could be an attempt to manufacture a crisis and force concessions from its neighbor.

The decision carried further significance because it was attributed in part to Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who has risen in prominence in recent weeks.

North Korea said it was suspending contact in anger at activist defectors who have fled to the South and routinely fly balloons back over the border carrying propaganda leaflets.

Many experts suspect the underlying reason is an attempt to gain leverage in inter-Korean negotiations that have stalled since a series of high-profile summits in 2018.

During a meeting, Kim Yo Jong and another senior North Korean official, Kim Yong Chol, described South Korea as “the enemy.”

Kim Yo Jong attends a wreath-laying ceremony at Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum in Hanoi, Vietnam, in March 2019.Jorge Silva / Reuters file

They said their neighbor had angered the North Korean people with its “treacherous and cunning behavior” and “driven the inter-Korean relations into a catastrophe,” according to North Korea’s state-run media.

Cutting off communication lines between the countries’ leaders and militaries was the first step before it “completely shut down all contact means with South Korea,” it said.

South Korea confirmed that Tuesday morning North Korea did not answer its military hotline for the first time since it was restored in 2018, according to a defense ministry spokeswoman.

“The communications line between South and North Korea … must be maintained as agreed,” an official from South Korea’s Unification Ministry said in a briefing.

Although Kim Yo Jong has been in the public eye for a while, representing her brother at the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea, she gained new prominence following several statements this year: condemning South Korea’s live-fire exercise in March and praising a letter from President Donald Trump to her brother.

When there were rumors that Kim Jong Un was in ill health, his sister was one of those touted as a potential successor.

“She appears to have long been trusted by her brother,” said John Nilsson-Wright, a senior research fellow at the London think tank Chatham House. “Having been put in charge of propaganda and publicity for the regime, she necessarily is an important figure in the power structure.”

Last week, she called the North Korean defectors who have fled to South Korea “human scum” and “mongrel dogs” for flying propaganda leaflets back across the border.

Communications lines between the Koreas have been cut and restored again during previous periods of tension. And some believe that North Korea is deploying a similar tactic now.

The country’s last summit with Trump broke down without an agreement, and subsequent negotiations have seen no progress toward North Korea giving up its nuclear weapons, as Washington says it hopes it will.

But the stalemate has also left North Korea no closer to ending the crippling Western sanctions that continue to throttle its economy. It has tried to pressure South Korea to take a softer line than the White House, but to no avail.

“Can North Korea continue to raise tensions to get the concessions it wants any time soon?” tweeted Ramon Pacheco Pardo, an associate professor at King’s College London.

South Korea “isn’t going to break the sanctions regime. Short and mid-range missile tests barely register these days. An ICBM test risks ending any hope of a deal with Trump,” he added, referring to an intercontinental ballistic missile. He said North Korea “isn’t in a good place.”

Stella Kim contributed.



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#UWCMustFall: University responds to students without resources

The University of the Western Cape (UWC) has come under fire for allegedly not supplying its students with the necessary resources such as laptops and data. All this, ahead of mid-year exams. Due to the sheer panic, the #UWCMustFall hashtag was born and students, mainly from the UWC campus, have taken to social media to air their frustrations. 

#UWCMUSTFALL: STUDENTS CLAIM TO BE WITHOUT RESOURCES AHEAD OF EXAMS

The main grievance on social media seemed to be that UWC did not equip their students with laptops or data ahead of exams that are allegedly supposed to take place as early as next week. 

“Signed up for the 30GB data in late April, and still now nothing yet I’m accepted to write exams in 10 days with what data”

Twitter user

The Democratic Alliance Student Organisation at the University of the Western Cape (DASO-UWC) also joined in on the #UWCMustFall hashtag saying that the university claims to serve the poor and middle-class students but have failed those same students. 

It called for the university to start acting in the interest of students. 

The EFF Student Command Branch of UWC said that a mid-year exam timetable has been issued and some students have no resources.  

“The mid-year exam timetable has been issued without the basis of ensuring that all students have received data. The lectures have been continuing as if we all have received data and laptops. Assignments are given, lectures are delivered but no data, no laptop!” it said. 

UWC RESPONDS TO COMPLAINTS

In response to the #UWCMustFall hashtag and complaints of a lack of laptops and data UWC placed the following on record:

  • The university said that to date (Tuesday 9 June), 1 216 students have been supplied with laptops (for their own accounts). The university said deliveries of laptops are continuing; 
  • The University has given 10 853 students data (10GB daytime and 20GB nighttime per month) at no cost to the student. Unsuccessful data activations are being dealt with;
  • There have been logistical challenges delivering devices to students who, in some cases, have supplied incorrect delivery details to the service provider. This has been a challenge because each student has to take delivery of the laptop package personally;

“We need to reassure all students who did not receive any data, devices or correspondence from the institution that we will be in contact with them over the next two weeks. However, we have also urged these students to email their queries to zonelearning.uwc@gmail.com, and we will respond to all queries as soon as possible,” it said. 

The university said a special and dedicated task team has been set up to identify the most vulnerable students. 

“Typically, these are the students who have not been active on our flexible learning management system, Ikamva. The identified students will be contacted by the University within the next month. These students will be phased-in, according to the Level 3 government protocol, for the return to campus,” it said. 

The institution said there will be “a catch-up period” in December 2020 and January 2021, which will be held online, and there will be face-to-face sessions for vulnerable students.

UWC MAKES PROVISION FOR EXAMS

UWC has also revised its academic calendar to ensure that students who cannot engage in Term 2, and present mid-year examinations, do so in the December 2020/January 2021 catch-up period. 

“There is no obligation for such students to write examinations in this upcoming session. So if students are unable to participate in these exams due to problems related to data, devices or other circumstances, according to UWC assessment principles, they will be allowed to take this exam in January 2021,” the university said. 

The University started an appeal, earlier this year, called #NoStudentWillBeLeftBehind when it became clear that a third of its 24 000 student body needed data or devices or both. The fundraising attempt seeks to offset the cost of a device from the student’s account and also helps with the ongoing purchase of data for students at no cost to the students. 



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Shehnaaz Gill’s father Santokh Singh Gill posts pictures hinting that he is free of the rape charges : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

Around a couple of weeks ago, there were reports of Shehnaaz Gill’s father, Santokh Singh Gill was accused of raping a woman at gunpoint. However, after speaking to a Punjabi news channel, he cleared his stance but that did not stop it from being a big controversy. The Bigg Boss 13 finalist, Shehnaaz Gill remained unavailable for comment but however, her brother spoke about it and said that the woman was trying to defame his father.

Santokh Singh Gill took to his Instagram to share a selfie showing off a victory sign with the caption, “Thoda time Laga lekin sichai Ki Jeet Hui thank you guys”. Posting another picture with his wife, he captioned it as, “Jinko mere upar Vishwas tha Ke Main Nirdosh Hoon Unka thank you”. The man has apparently been cleared of all charges and has a reason to celebrate.

Take a look at both the pictures that he posted.

Also Read: Shehnaaz Gill’s father, Santokh Singh Gill, clears air around the allegations of rape against him

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Geopolitical and Geoeconomic Challenges to China’s Silk Road Strategy in the Middle East

This essay is part of the series “All About China”—a journey into the history and diverse culture of China through essays that shed light on the lasting imprint of China’s past encounters with the Islamic world as well as an exploration of the increasingly vibrant and complex dynamics of contemporary Sino-Middle Eastern relations. Read more …


Despite Beijing’s increasing engagement in the Middle East, it lacks a clear, consistent, and comprehensive strategy for the successful implementation of the new Silk Road. Although China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) framework for cooperation with the Middle Eastern states is marked by strategic flexibility and maximizing opportunities, that may prove insufficient. As China and the countries of the region become more integrated, they will also share risks and face near-term geopolitical and geoeconomic challenges.

Geopolitical Challenges

Since the turn of the century, the Middle East has been experiencing a profound transformation that has exposed the region to geopolitical threats and instability. As regional order and international relations are yet to reach a new equilibrium in the process of disintegration, such restructuring could easily trigger geo-political conflicts, even wars, and lead to increased uncertainty and risk in the new Silk Road construction. The BRI reveals China to be an ambitious power, seeking regional dominance in the short term and global dominance in the long term. Like the US Marshall Plan for Europe, the BRI is China’s attempt to make itself appear as a benevolent country with leadership potential. Thus, it created hostility among other regional and global powers, with some seeking to counter Beijing’s inroads.

First, “great power” competition between the United States and Russia is likely to have adverse implications for the successful implementation of the BRI. The Middle East serves as an arena for proxy conflicts between the US and Russia. Taking advantage of the US eastward strategic rebalancing, Russia has reemerged as a key powerbroker and military actor in the Middle East, notably in Syria. In most instances, Beijing seems to have supported Moscow’s position. However, China’s plans for a long-term presence in the region will most likely require it to be more active on the political stage and adopt an independent policy orientation. Indeed, without playing an active role in addressing the central issues facing the Middle East, there is very little chance of China influencing regional dynamics.

Second, the regionwide strategic rivalry between Saudi Arabia and Iran is roiling the Middle East. The proxy battles waged by the two countries in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, and elsewhere have exacerbated regional tensions and fueled Sunni-Shia sectarian animosity across the Muslim world.[1] The ongoing struggle between Iran and Saudi Arabia, coupled with the US withdrawal from the JCPOA and reimposition of sanctions against Iran have complicated Beijing’s efforts to advance the BRI. Uniquely situated at the intersection of the Silk Road Economic Belt (SREB) and the Maritime Silk Road (MSRI), Iran is one of the major countries along the China-Central Asia-West Asia (CCAWA) Economic Corridor — a potential strategic hub linking the Middle East, Central, and South Asia and situated at the intersection of the SREB and the MSR.[2] Given Iran’s strategic location and abundant oil and gas resources,[3] it is not surprising that Beijing considers the integration of the country into the BRI to be so important.

Paradoxically, Iran’s regional hegemonic potential and aspirations could themeslves potentially do more to harm than to advance the prospects for the BRI. A more capable Shia Iran with a revisionist orientation intent on expanding its power is sure to certain to meet strong resistance from the Sunni-led Gulf States, which are also indispensable to the BRI.[4]

Third, China’s efforts to advance the BRI also face potential terrorist threats from violent extremist groups that are active in the Middle East. Such groups could damage or destroy BRI infrastructure projects. There is also a possibility that extremist groups or criminal networks might kidnap Chinese workers for their own political or economic goals.[5] [6] In the counterterrorism sphere, Beijing will rely on its partnerships with the Middle East states to enhance security along the BRI’s routes.[7]

Fourth, the region is beset by numerous hotspots and flashpoints of conflict. A sudden crisis may erupt over unresolved territorial or maritime disputes. The impasse between Qatar and its GCC neighbors could continue or the sharp divisions between them grow even wider. The hostility between the United States and Iran, or between Sausi Arabia and Iran could burst into open conflict. The civil war and humanitarian catastrophe in Yemen might drag on, producing a failed state and incubator for violent extremist networks. These uncertain and problematic conditions place China’s BRI plans at risk. 

Geoeconomic Challenges

The prospects for the Silk Road strategy’s successful implementation in the Middle East must also be viewed in the context of a multitude of geoeconomic challenges with which the countries of the region are continuing to wrestle. These challenges range from the high barrier to market access, bureaucratic corruption, complex business environment, weak governance and the rule of law, low regional economic and trade integration, lack of economic diversification, and low productivity growth, to inequality in earnings, the bottleneck in project funding, obstacles to doing business, the stability of regimes, concerns about the terms of loans and investment, and lack of central coordination.

First, most Middle Eastern countries are at the primary stage of industrialization, and they are susceptible to US and Western influence. Therefore, the BRI faces both internal and external constraints. For the most part, Middle Eastern countries have welcomed Chinese investment. However, six years into the BRI, there are some signs that this warm welcome might be waning. Echoing concerns heard in Asia, critics are pointing out that the Belt and Road projects often seem to bring more significant benefits to China than to the host countries. In addition to calling on China to hire local workers instead of Chinese workers, Beijing’s partners and outside observers also raise questions about debt sustainability, environmental impact, corruption, and the China’s overall motives.[8]

Second, the depletion of foreign currency reserves and uncertainty about future oil prices have forced the Gulf states to adopt restraint in economic policy, including streamlining and cost-cutting measures. Government agencies across the region have been instructed to cut their spending on new projects and return unused budget allocations to the Ministry of Finance. The Gulf states seek increasingly to escape their profound dependence on oil revenues through streamlining, diversification of revenue sources, and adoption of the principles of a modern economy. However, the main difficulty in converting the oil-based Gulf economies to diversify is that political and social stability in these countries is directly related to the high standard of living of their citizens, which is supported by oil money.[9] Economic or social instability in the Gulf states could influence or threaten the implementation of the BRI.

Third, there is a high barrier to market access in the Gulf region. Business and foreign investments in the Gulf states have been struggling due to bureaucratic corruption and royal monopoly. On the one hand, red tape in the government’s approval process jeopardizes the progress and profitability of projects. On the other hand, governments have sought to curb imports. Chinese enterprises have no distinct price advantage in the ratings and evaluation of foreign enterprises and contracted projects. There is also fierce competition with other countries. The Gulf states, having dealt with the US and European countries for a long time, tend to recognize Western standards in planning and design, production and operation, and quality supervision. In the traditional civil engineering field, Beijing is facing competition from other developing countries such as India and Turkey. The comparative advantage of Chinese enterprises is relatively weak.[10]

Fourth, according to the Corruption Perceptions Index 2019, about 70% of Middle Eastern countries scored below 50, which is a failing grade. Only five countries — the UAE, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Qatar — have managed to remain above this average.[11] Most of the Middle Eastern states are experiencing political instability, internal conflicts, war, terrorism, and economic collapse. These phenomena feed corruption, which in turn, further fuels them. In these respects, the BRI may become a risky gamble for government investments and Chinese investors.[12]

Fifth, the Middle East is a highly complex business environment, marked by weak governance and the rule of law, low regional economic and trade integration, lack of economic diversification, and low productivity growth — all of which have curtailed the region’s ability to tap its significant potential for economic growth.[13] With the dramatic fall in oil prices and coronavirus disease outbreak fostering economic diversification and industrial restructuring has become paramount for many countries, including even oil-rich ones.[14] The region is also in dire need of high-quality infrastructure to accelerate investment, provide new jobs for its booming youth population, and create sustained and inclusive growth. According to the World Bank, the Middle East needs to invest over $100 billion annually to maintain existing infrastructure and to create new infrastructure to serve its burgeoning population.[15] Many regional economies lack adequate financing, a problem likely to be compounded by the fall in oil prices, escalating social and economic costs and slowdowns in global growth and trade induced by the covid-19 pandemic.[16]

Bottlenecks in project funding in the Middle East region are additional concern. Infrastructure projects generally feature low profitability, an extended period for return on investment, and strict government monitoring; accordingly, private investment and available financing channels are limited. As most Middle East states are under enormous fiscal pressure, meeting their investment financing targets may leave them little choice except to rely on the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the Silk Road Fund.[17]

Fifth, Middle East states, despite welcoming the BRI, have thus far failed to remove obstacles to doing business with China and translate their intentions into bankable projects.[18] For some Middle Eastern countries that have signed on, there is also a gap emerging between expectations and actual benefits from the BRI. Additionally, as China’s economic role in the Middle East increases, there are concerns about the terms of loans and investment, which other states have found challenging to navigate.[19] This will be a concern for the Middle East states that taking participate in the BRI (e.g., Jordan, Yemen, Syria, and Lebanon) and are all “significantly” at risk of falling into a debt trap.[20]

Moreover, China is the most important trade partner of Middle Eastern states, but commerce between the two sides is still at a low level and has not realized its full potential. Energy accounts for a high proportion of trade while the export of Beijing’s high value-added and technology-intensive products is small and landmark cooperation projects are few. Although Sino-Middle Eastern cooperation has extended beyond traditional industries and infrastructure construction to retail, finance, telecommunications, and tourism, there is still significant room for development in policy and the cultivation of key industries. China and its Middle Eastern partners could expand areas of industrial capacity cooperation and focus on major projects (e.g., ports, logistics, and industrial parks). Chinese companies could invest in industrial development projects across the region, rather than focus almost exclusively on the Gulf countries. Furthermore, China could reduce the burden of the mammoth undertaking of implementing the BRI by cooperating with international public and private sector partners to bid on and execute major projects.[21]

Conclusion

As long as there is no complete network of roads, railways, cargo hubs, and new harbors, the BRI will remain an aspiration and not a concrete reality. The new Silk Road strategy lacks central coordination, as many routes and local construction projects are to be carried out by local or regional governments, which may create delays and hurdles if the states do not cooperate. Currently, Beijing tends to rely on bilateral relations with each country to help secure its investments, but transnational infrastructure investment in the BRI might suggest a transition to more of a regional and multilateral engagement strategy.[22] After all, some of the planned routes, especially the Southern Corridor running through Iran, may never leave the drawing board. In fact. all of the proposed main routes are slated to course through potential conflict areas in Central Asia and the Middle East. The ultimate success of the new Silk Road strategy will depend to no small extent on Middle East countries’ participation and support, as well as on China’s ability to overcome or find ways to maneuver around at least some of the many geopolitical and geoeconomic challenges that are impeding its progress.

 


[1] Liu Haiquan, “The Security Challenges of the ‘One Belt, One Road’ Initiative and China’s Choices,” Croatian International Relation Review 23, 78 (2017): 129-147.

[2] Gabriel Domínguez, “China seeking to link Iran to its New Silk Road,” Deutsche Welle, December, 15, 2005, https://www.dw.com/en/china-seeking-to-link-iran-to-its-new-silk-road/a-18917586.

[3] Michael Singh, “China’s Middle East Tour,” Foreign Affairs, January 24, 2016, https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/china/2016-01-24/chinas-middle-east-tour.

[4] William F. Engdahl, “The Eurasian Century is Now Unstoppable,” Global Research, October 7, 2016, https://www.globalresearch.ca/the-eurasian-century-is-now-unstoppable/5549715.

[5] Mordechai Chaziza, “China’s Counter-Terrorism Policy in the Middle East,” in M. Clarke (ed.), Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism in China: Domestic and Foreign Policy Dimensions (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018): 141-156.

[6] Mathieu Duchatel, “China’s foreign fighter’s problem,” War on the Rocks, January 25, 2019, https://warontherocks.com/2019/01/chinas-foreign-fighters-problem/.

[7] Giorgio Cafiero and Daniel Wagner, “What the Gulf States Think of ‘One Belt, One Road,’” The Diplomat, May 24, 2017, https://thediplomat.com/2017/05/what-the-gulf-states-think-of-one-belt-one-road/.

[8] “China’s Xi pledges to ‘fight corruption’ at Belt and Road summit,” Al Jazeera, April 26,  2019, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/04/china-xi-pledges-fight-corruption-belt-road-summit-190426063632664.html.

[9] Yoel Guzansky and Shmuel Even, “The Challenge of the Oil Market to the Gulf States,” INSS Insight No. 926, May 10, 2017, https://www.inss.org.il/publication/challenge-oil-market-gulf-states/.

[10] Liu Li and Wang Zesheng, “Belt and Road Initiative in the Gulf Region: Progress and Challenges,” China Institute of International Studies, September 11, 2017, http://www.ciis.org.cn/english/2017-11/09/content_40063037.htm.

[11] “Corruption Perceptions Index 2018,” Transparency International, January 23, 2020, https://images.transparencycdn.org/images/2019_CPI_Report_EN.pdf.

[12] “China’s Xi pledges to ‘fight corruption’ at Belt and Road summit,” Al Jazeera, April 26,  2019, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/04/china-xi-pledges-fight-corruption-belt-road-summit-190426063632664.html. 

[13] Shahrokh Fardoust, “Economic Integration in the Middle East Prospects for Development and Stability,” Middle East Institute, June 2016, https://www.mei.edu/sites/default/files/publications/PP5_Fardoust_RCS_economic_web_1.pdf. 

[14] Wenlin Tian, “The belt and road initiative and china’s middle east strategy,” West Asia and Africa 2 (2016), 127-145.

[15] “Economic diversification in oil-exporting Arab countries,” International Monetary Fund, April 2016, https://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2016/042916.pdf.

[16] “COVID-19: Implications for business,” McKinsey & Company, May 13, 2020, https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/risk/our-insights/covid-19-implications-for-business.

[17] Liu and Wang, “Belt and Road Initiative in the Gulf Region.”

[18]  Farzin Nadimi, “Iran and China are Strengthening Their Military Ties,” The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, November 22, 2016, https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/iran-and-china-are-strengthening-their-military-ties.

[19] Hadeeka Taj, “China’s new Silk Road or debt-trap diplomacy?” Global Risk Insights, May 5, 2019, https://globalriskinsights.com/2019/05/china-debt-diplomacy/.

[20] Ty Joplin, “Chinese Debt Trap? Multi-Billion Dollar Loan Pledge to Middle East Raises Questions,” Albawaba, July 19, 2018, https://www.albawaba.com/news/chinese-debt-trap-multi-billion-dollar-loan-pledge-middle-east-raises-questions-1161264.

[21] Liu and Wang, “Belt and Road Initiative in the Gulf Region.”

[22] Sumedh Anil Lokhande, “China’s One Belt One Road Initiative and the Gulf Pearl chain,” China Daily, June 5, 2017, http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/opinion/2017beltandroad/2017-06/05/content_29618549.htm.

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George Floyd live updates: Burial is Tuesday; poll shows strong support for protests; Army to consider renaming forts

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Hundreds of mourners paid their respects to George Floyd at a public viewing in his childhood hometown of Houston.

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A private funeral for George Floyd will be held in Houston on Tuesday while his death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers continues to fuel urgent demands for racial justice and law enforcement accountability.

Floyd will be laid to rest alongside his mother at a cemetery in nearby Pearland. At least 6,000 people mourned Monday at Floyd’s memorial. 

A new Washington Post-Schar School poll shows overwhelming national support for the protests prompted by Floyd’s death last month. And that support is translating into change. New York’s Legislature has begun approving a series of measures aimed at police accountability. The U.S. Army is considering a plan to remove Confederate leaders’ names from forts and installations. Confederate monuments are coming down across the nation, and Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam vowed to press on with his effort to remove an iconic statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond.

A closer look at some recent developments:

  • In 2019, Javier Ambler, saying he couldn’t breathe, died on a Texas street after deputies held him down and used Tasers on him four times while a crew from A&E’s reality show “Live PD” filmed.
  • Portland, Oregon, Police Chief Jami Resch resigned Monday after six months on the job amid Floyd protests, hand-picking a black captain to take her place.
  • The ‘Black Lives Matter’ painting in Washington, D.C. inspired artists and activists across the country to do the same. Is it enough to bring effective change?

Our live blog will be updated throughout the day. For first-in-the-morning updates, sign up for the Daily Briefing. Here’s the latest news:

Americans overwhelmingly support protesters, reject Trump’s response

Police departments have failed to ensure blacks are treated equally to whites and President Donald Trump’s response to nationwide protests has been insufficient, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll. More than two-thirds of respondents  say the killing of Floyd represents a broad problem within law enforcement, and 61% of respondents said they disapproved of Trump’s handling of the protests. Overall, 74% of Americans say they support the protests since the May 25 killing of Floyd, who died after an officer pressed his knee to the Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as he repeatedly cried out “I can’t breathe.”

New York state poised to open officers’ records, increase police accountability

New York’s Legislature on Tuesday is expected to pass legislation eliminating a decades-old statute that keeps law enforcement disciplinary records secret. Lawmakers responding to the nationwide call for increased accountability have already begun passing measures that include a ban on chokeholds, a prohibition on race-based profiling, and a requirement that police departments and courts track arrests by race and ethnicity to help identify patterns of bias. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said he will sign the measures into law. Elsewhere:

  • Minneapolis banned chokeholds – and city council members have vowed to disband the city’s police department.
  • California, New Jersey and the city of Denver are among cities also banning chokeholds in recent days.
  • Seattle has banned police from using  tear gas for a month; permanent bans are pending in New Orleans and Washington, D.C.

Virginia judge blocks order to take down Robert E. Lee statue – for now

A Virginia judge has issued an 10-day injunction that prevents Gov. Ralph Northam’s administration from removing an iconic but controversial statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee in Richmond. The governor, however, won’t be deterred, a spokesman told The Progress-Index, a member of the USA TODAY Network.

“Governor Northam remains committed to removing this divisive symbol from Virginia’s capital city, and we’re confident in his authority to do so,” press secretary Alena Yarmosky said in an email late Monday night. On Monday, Richmond Circuit Court judge Bradley B. Cavedo granted a request by attorneys for William C. Gregory that would halt any of the preparation work involved in removing the statue from its 130-year-old residence on Monument Avenue.

– Bill Atkinson, The Progress-Index

Army to consider scrapping Confederate names on forts

Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy signaled their willingness to discuss scrapping Confederate names on forts across the country, Army Col. Sunset Belinsky said Monday evening. They are open to having a bi-partisan dialogue on the renaming bases, according to Belinsky. The Army has 10 posts named after Confederate generals across the south, including major installations at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, Fort Benning in Georgia and Fort Hood in Texas.

McCarthy, a former Army Ranger, indicated his willingness to discuss the change after weeks of protests that have spread across the country following the death of George Floyd.

– Tom Vanden Brook, USA TODAY

Portland police chief resigns after six months amid rising racial tensions

Portland Police Bureau Chief Jami Resch on Monday announced she was stepping down from her position amid protests against police brutality, marking the end of her tenure as the bureau’s chief after six months.  Chuck Lovell, acting captain of the bureau’s Community Services Division, was named chief. Lovell, 46, is the bureau’s fourth black police chief, the Oregonian reported. His appointment comes as protests against police brutality and racial discrimination have swept across the country after the death of George Floyd. 

Resch, who is white, said she asked Lovell to take her place as chief and called him “the exact right person at the exact right moment.” The Oregonian reported Lovell was hired by the Portland Police Bureau in 2002. 

– Jordan Culver, USA TODAY

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DC street art inspires more ‘Black Lives Matter’ paintings in cities across US

A massive ‘BLACK LIVES MATTER’ mural painted on the street leading to the White House captured the world’s attention last week — an eye-opening visual that, remarkably, is large enough to show up on satellite images.

It also captured the imagination of artists, community activists and local officials across the nation seeking ways to express themselves in the wake of the death of George Floyd. Similar works have been completed in the California cities of Sacramento and Oakland and in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Jesse Jackson: White Americans are finally ‘awakening’ to racial crisis

The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr. has been at the heart of the fight for civil rights for most of his 78 years, a journey that has taken him from aide to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to running for president in 1988. But while social justice gains have often been elusive, Jackson now finds himself optimistic. The multi-racial and multi-city protests sparked by the death of George Floyd suggest that many Americans have become painfully aware of the nation’s festering racial wound, Jackson told USA TODAY Monday.

“I’m hopeful because we have finally pulled the scab back,” Jackson said. “Many white people never had the chance to really express how they feel. These marches are marches of hope. White people are saying racism is a problem, that’s an awakening.”

– Marco della Cava, USA TODAY

Joe Biden comes out against movement to ‘defund the police’

Presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden issued a statement saying he does not support the growing push to defund police departments. Biden, through spokesman Andrew Bates, said he supports funding initiatives such as mental health programs and substance abuse treatment so officers can concentrate on policing. “He hears and shares the deep grief and frustration of those calling out for change, and is driven to ensure that justice is done and that we put a stop to this terrible pain,” Bates said in a statement.

Derek Chauvin bail: Up to $1.25 million

Derek Chauvin, the veteran Minneapolis police officer accused of second-degree murder in the death of George Floyd, appeared in court for a hearing Monday and had his conditional bail kept at $1 million. It was initially set at $500,000 but doubled Wednesday when a second-degree murder charge was added. Prosecutors were granted their request for $1.25 million unconditional bail.

Chauvin, 44, said almost nothing during an 11-minute hearing in which he appeared before Hennepin County Judge Jeannice M. Reding on closed-circuit television from the state’s maximum security prison in Oak Park Heights.  Chauvin was seen on video pressing his knee against Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as the unarmed, handcuffed black man gasped that he couldn’t breathe. Court papers show Chauvin kept his knee on Floyd for two minutes after another officer couldn’t detect a pulse on him.

The other three officers involved in the case – J. Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao – are charged with aiding and abetting a murder. They remain in the Hennepin County jail on $750,000 bail.

Democrats honor George Floyd with silence, unveil police reform bill

House Democrats knelt in silence for 8 minutes and 46 seconds at a ceremony on Capitol Hill on Monday to honor George Floyd, who died after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes as he lay handcuffed in the street.

“It’s a long time, 8 minutes and 46 seconds. It’s a long time to be on one knee,” South Carolina Representative James Clyburn said. “But for 244 years, there were plenty of knees on the necks of blacks who came to this country.”

Democrats also unveiled a sweeping package addressing police changes, the first major legislative response to Floyd’s killing and protests against police brutality across the nation. The Justice in Policing Act of 2020 calls for mandatory dashboard and body cameras, an end to police chokeholds and the creation of a national registry to track officers with a record of misconduct.

The legislation is not expected to get a warm reception from most Republicans, who control the Senate.

– William Cummings, Ledyard King and Christal Hayes, USA TODAY

More on protests, George Floyd:

Contributing: The Associated Press

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Is breakfast at home back to stay?

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Dive Brief:

  • Breakfasts have transformed from an on-the-go experience to a sit-down meal during the pandemic. The indexes for pancakes, waffles, French toast, crepes and pork dishes were up over 150 in April compared to this time last year, according to data from market research group The NPD Group cited by Food Business News.
  • Breakfast spices, seasonings, marinades and rubs were also up over 150 on NPD’s indexes this past April. Sales of breakfast appliances, such as waffle irons and coffee pods, have also increased.
  • Susan Schwallie, executive director of food and beverage consumption for The NPD Group, told Food Business News that consumers “may not be willing, or it may be a struggle, to give back some of this time we’ve given to ourselves in the morning.” 

Dive Insight:

As busy consumers have desired more convenience from their food, the popularity of on-the-go breakfast options, like bars, have skyrocketed in recent years. But coronavirus hit the pause button on that trend.

Growth in portable breakfast options has begun to shift as families decide to sit down and take the time to eat a prepared breakfast at home while in lockdown. This trend has not only resulted in the revival of dishes more typically reserved for the weekends, such as pancakes and sausage, but there has also been a resurgence in cereal, a segment that has had soggy sales for years. Cereal giants Kellogg and General Mills saw sales rise in the category during this time. 

Cereal has always remained on shopping lists, and now consumers are buying more. Shopkick’s 2019 cereal survey revealed 96% of consumers buy it almost every time they shop. And now that kids are home all day and parents are providing both breakfast and snacks daily, cereal sales have experienced a significant lift. Over the two months ending April 25, cereal sales increased 34%, according to Nielsen data reported by AdAge.

The efforts of breakfast manufacturers to reposition and innovate breakfast as an indulgent snack may also play into this increase in sales. In May, Kellogg further shifted its cereal innovation efforts to the growing and profitable category of snacks with bigger size bites in a new line of products called Jumbo Snax. And in March, the PepsiCo-owned Aunt Jemima brand launched Cap’n Crunch Berrytastic Pancake Mix and Ocean Blue Maple Flavored Syrup to bring the classic cereal to the breakfast table in a new way.

Recent launches of breakfast items including pancake mixes from the Aunt Jemima brand and breakfast sausage from Beyond Meat indicate manufacturers are investing more in breakfast at home as consumers shift their preferences. Prior to the pandemic, low unemployment and busy schedules outside of the home meant consumers had more disposable income than time for meal preparation, pushing many to grab something quick and portable or head to fast food chains for breakfast. Now, as consumers adjust to this new reality, breakfast could return to the daily routine for the foreseeable future.

Companies that make frozen and shelf-stable options could be some of the big winners from this trend of eating the “most important meal of the day” in the house. With consumers making fewer trips to the grocery store to avoid leaving the home, products that can stay good for extended periods are likely to become new family favorites.

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Tom Hogan pays tribute to Gordon Lord Byron

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Tom Hogan has paid tribute to Gordon Lord Byron after his stable star died suddenly during routine exercise on the gallops on Tuesday morning.

One of the real fairytale stories of the last few years, the globetrotting gelding won Group Ones in France, Britain and Australia.

His first top-level strike came in the Prix de la Foret at Longchamp under William Buick in 2012, before Johnny Murtagh guided him to victory in the Sprint Cup at Haydock the following year.

The golden run continued in 2014 in the George Ryder Stakes at Rosehill, where he triumphed with Craig Williams in the saddle.

In addition to those victories, Hogan’s 12-year-old won the 2014 British Champions Sprint at Ascot and was also twice second in the Sprint Cup and Foret.

His last run came at Dundalk in December and in total he won 16 of his 108 races – earning not far short of £2million in win and place prize-money.

Hogan said: “He was a great horse and we had great times with him, but all good things come to an end.

“He was in super form. He did a great piece of work at the Curragh last Thursday and he was in great form – real happy in himself.”

He added: “It happened this morning. He wasn’t a horse that would have liked retirement – he died with his boots on.

“We were upset immediately after it happening. Looking at it now though, we’re just delighted to have been part of the story.



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