Karan Johar’s throwback photo with Shah Rukh Khan, Gauri, Akshay Kumar and others take internet by storm

Image Source : INSTAGRAM/KARANJOHAR

Karan Johar’s throwback photo with Shah Rukh Khan, Gauri, Akshay Kumar, and others take internet by storm

Bollywood filmmaker Karan Johar is one of the most active celebrities on social media. Every now and then he keeps on treating his fans with his Instagram posts and amid the lockdown, this activity increased even more and the producer treated us with adorable videos of his kids Yash and Roohi.  Sailing in the same boat, the producer shared a series of ‘major throwback’ pictures with some of his B’town friends namely superstar Shah Rukh Khan and his wife Gauri, actors Akshay Kumar, Uday Chopra and also his parents– father Yash Johar and mother Hiroo Johar. The three pictures must have been taken in the 90s. The first one had KJo posing with his parents along with SRK and Gauri. The second showed him having a laugh with Akshay while the third and last one was a candid one wherein ‘Dhoom’ fame Uday can be seen giving a neck massage to Karan.

The photo was shared on Instagram and was captioned by the Ae Dil Hai Mushkil director as, “Major throwback! @iamsrk @gaurikhan @udayc @akshaykumar.”

Have a look at the same here:

 

 

 

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Scott Dixon wins IndyCar season opener at Texas Motor Speedway – Sportsnet.ca

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FORT WORTH, Texas — IndyCar packed every bit of its delayed season-opening event into one long, hot day in Texas without any fans in the stands. Scott Dixon was the fastest for most of the day at a place he knows well.

Dixon, a five-time IndyCar champion, took the checkered flag at dusk Saturday for his fourth win at the 1 1/2-mile, high-banked oval, where drivers had also practiced and qualified earlier in the day. The 39-year-old New Zealander raced to his 47th career victory and matched A.J. Foyt’s record of 18 seasons with a win.

After a restart with three laps left following a caution when his young teammate Felix Rosenqvist crashed, Dixon sped away in the No. 9 Chip Ganassi Honda for a 4.4-second victory over Simon Pagenaud. Defending IndyCar champion and polesitter Josef Newgarden finished third behind Pagenaud, his teammate at Team Penske.

Nearly three months after the start of the season was put on hold because of the coronavirus pandemic, IndyCar finally got on the track for what would usually be the midpoint race of its season.

The massive grandstands that can seat well more than 100,000 people were empty, and not because of extreme heat — temperatures in the mid-90s with a heat index around 100 degrees Fahrenheit throughout practice, qualifying and even much of the race. No spectators were allowed, as will also be the case for the next race on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 4.

Gov. Greg Abbott rode in the pace car for the first professional sporting event in Texas since sports shut down nationwide because of the coronavirus. The only at-track spectators were the people watching from their condos in the building overlooking Turn 2.

Dixon had the top speed during the two-hour practice session earlier in the day, and qualified second to start on the front row alongside Newgarden. He went on to win the IndyCar title each of the three previous times he won the race at Texas.

Rosenqvist had been running behind Dixon for several laps when he crashed trying to move through traffic. He got high going onto the backstretch with nine laps remaining, bringing out the final caution. He finished 20th out of the 23 cars that started the race.

Dixon led 157 of the 200 laps, and had an earlier six-second lead over Newgarden wiped out by a caution for debris. Newgarden led twice for 41 laps and fourth-place finisher Zach Veach led the remaining two laps. Ed Carpenter, the series’ only driver-owner, rounded out the top five.

Because of the extended day at the track, the length of the race was shortened to 200 laps from its usual 248 at Texas, and was finished under two hours.

When Newgarden won the pole after being the last to take a qualifying run earlier in the day, there was no reaction from a crowd. There was, however, a quick warning over the radio to his Team Penske crew to avoid any celebratory high-fives.

“This feels awkward. There’s no fans,” Newgarden said then, adding that he was still excited to be back with his team and racing again — more than eight months after the end of his second championship season.

All of the teams were already in St. Petersburg, Florida, for what was supposed to be the season opener March 15. But there were never any practice laps on the streets of St. Pete, making the fast track at Texas the debut for the protective windscreens now over the open cockpits of the cars.

Texas became the season opener while keeping its originally scheduled date, which was supposed to be the ninth of 17 races. That would have been two weeks after the Indianapolis 500, which has been rescheduled for Aug. 23.

Drivers and team members went through health screenings when they got to Texas Motor Speedway. Many of them had already gone through similar screenings to get on chartered planes they boarded at dawn Saturday in Indianapolis — they were returning home after the race.

Crew members were required to wear face masks, and there was plenty of room for social distancing in the garage areas. Texas used both of its 64-bay garages so the 24 teams could spread out, and there were bigger-than-usual stalls on pit road.

Rinus VeeKay, the 19-year-old rookie driver for Ed Carpenter Racing who won six Indy Lights races last year, crashed during practice and then had his debut IndyCar race end with another crash after completing only 36 laps. His No. 21 car got high going onto the backstretch, then ricocheted off the wall to collect Alex Palou, another rookie.

Takuma Sato missed the race after the Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing crew was unable to get the No. 30 car repaired in time for the green flag after a crash in qualifying about 2 1/2 hours before the race started. The 2017 Indianapolis 500 winner was the polesitter at Texas last year before finishing 15th.



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‘I lived a nightmare’: One woman’s story of hope after seven years of abuse

Living a nightmare for seven years, Melissa’s* story is something we’ve all heard before.

She meets a man and is charmed at first sight. For the first few weeks she’s living a dream. She believes she’s met her soul mate.

Then the cracks start to show. Little comments that whittle down her confidence: “Oh, you don’t know how to wash the dishes properly,” and “You don’t know how to drive”.

She had no voice. She was told she had to be quiet, that he would do the talking.

Melissa moved to Australia from South America in 2011 and met Paul* three months into settling into her new life.

She had no family and her friends were people she met through Paul. Isolated, she decided to move back to South America two years into their tumultuous relationship.

To make her stay, Paul popped the question. Melissa thought she was special – Paul had never wanted to get married, he was against it. But she thought for her, he had changed.

Melissa says she talked herself into staying. This was her thought process: “yeah, sometimes he’s not very nice, but look at what’s he’s doing? He wants to marry me. He has a good side.”

Melissa’s relationship with Paul began smoothly but soon turned sinister. (Gabriele Charotte)

Paul’s not-very-nice side involved physical aggression, including slapping and grabbing her roughly. The emotional abuse was nasty and at times sinister, and it intensified when she fell pregnant in 2017.

“He took me straight to the abortion clinic. He never wanted the baby. He threatened me if I keep the baby he would ‘murder’ me. I was afraid, until I sat in that abortion clinic,” she said.

“I didn’t want the abortion and for the first time in our relationship, I said no to him.”

Paul replied, “If I knew you were going to be a b*tch about having an abortion, I would have had a vasectomy.”

While the baby grew inside her, Paul called their unborn child a c*nt. He forced Melissa to eat raw meat and drink a lot of coffee in the hope she would miscarry. This was the dark side she never saw until she was pregnant.

Feeling ashamed and embarrassed, Melissa didn’t speak to anyone about Paul’s behaviour.

It wasn’t until the baby was born that the midwife in hospital noticed Melissa was feeling flat. The midwife also wondered why her partner, the father of the baby, was never there in hospital.

Melissa was told she should go see a psychologist. In her first sessions, she realised she was in a domestic violence situation.

She was blinded by the manipulation, the shame and the lack of confidence to see what was happening around her and to her. She had also been holding onto hope: hope that Paul would change, espeically after their baby was born.

When she came home with the baby, Paul told her their son was her responsibility. He didn’t want any connection with him.

She had no help or if she did ask for it, it was transactional. If she asked Paul to go to the pharmacy to get some medication, he would ask her for sexual favours.

The behaviour got worse. While Melissa breastfed her son, Paul would wave his penis in front of them, and at times, start masturbating. He even asked Melissa if he could be breastfed.

“I lived a nightmare,” she says.

Melissa revealed that Paul had previously admitted to having a pornography addiction and his childhood contributed to that. She was told he was shown pornography at just seven years of age and family members were abusive.

Melissa recounts these admissions to see if she can still, to this day, try to work out or understand why Paul behaved in the way he did, particularly after their son was born.

Finally, after a seven year relationship and when her son was just six weeks old, Melissa left Paul. That was February of last year, 2019.

All she had were some nappies and their clothes. She found comfort at a women’s refuge. She was working in hospitality at the time and wanted to keep working, but was worried for their safety – that Paul would find her if she was in a public working environment.

Mettle is exactly what Melissa needed: a safe working environment with like-minded women, who have also gone through similar traumatic experiences. Mettle gives hope and a future for women and their children who have escaped domestic violence situations.

Today presenter Tracy Vo with Mettle Women co-founder Bronwyn Bate. When Melissa left Paul*, Mettle Women was able to help by providing employment and secure housing. (Supplied)

Many who have come through the program have never worked in their lives. They were stay-at-home mums, while their partners worked.

CEO and co-founder Bronwyn Bate says it’s not that the women don’t have the skills, they just don’t have the confidence.

“We interviewed dozens of survivors about their experiences and the barriers they felt about entering the workforce. Number one was they were scared that their perpetrator would find their workplace. We have strict security policies in place. You can’t really prepare yourself until you’ve experienced what that threat looks like.”

Mettle is a gift delivery social enterprise which provides a secure facility for these women, at least six months of paid work, free childcare, free psychology sessions and assistance in educational classes, such as financial literacy.

“We’ve partnered with educational institutions, the likes of TAFE, for these courses. Some of the women, for example, have never had a superannuation account.”

Mettle gives women a start to a new life but there is no end date to its involvement with them and their children. They make sure they have secure housing. Mettle connects them to partnered recruitment agencies for future employment, or they can stay at Mettle if they choose to.

“Melissa* for example worked in the finance industry back home and hasn’t had the chance to utilise her skills in Australia.” says Brownyn. Through Mettle, she’s found work that suits her skillset.

This kind of independence has given these survivors hope. But when they feel they’re making progress to a brighter future, another battle starts to brew. For Melissa, it’s a battle in the courts.

One of the gift packs produced by Mettle Women. (Supplied)

In May, her former partner Paul applied for visitation rights with their son.

Melissa says she recalls some parting words from Paul as she left him over a year ago: “He said to me, ‘I’m actually glad you left because I had bad thoughts in my mind.’ I didn’t know what he was talking about. I fear for my son’s safety.”

Melissa detailed this information and every part of their treatment by Paul in an affidavit, but most of it was withheld in court because she was told it was not relevant.

Paul has been granted supervised visits of their 17-month-old son for two nights a week. If all seems to be well after an eight-week period, Paul will have their son, unsupervised, for those two nights.

Melissa says she’s disappointed by the court system. She felt she started having a voice but she wasn’t heard when she presented her case as to why she fears for her son’s safety. Bronwyn Bate shares the frustration.

“Often I’m baffled when our women come back to me and tell me that their lawyer said she was being over the top and the magistrate said she was being unreasonable. I’d like to think that I’m a reasonable person, but none of it seems fair.”

“I’m not advocating for incarceration, what I’m advocating is for the victim’s safety.”

It is a fair call for a system which seems to be letting down domestic violence victims, both women and men.

Melissa’s story isn’t unique. She’s found her voice now, so others can also find their voices and speak up. Both she and Bronwyn hold onto hope: hope there will be reform; hope there will be support; hope that they’ll be safe.

* Names have been changed.

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Protest Records Show Scant Evidence Of Trump’s Bogus Antifa Claims

WASHINGTON (AP) — Scott Nichols, a balloon artist, was riding home on his scooter from the protests engulfing Minneapolis last weekend when he was struck by a rubber bullet fired from a cluster of police officers in riot gear.

“I just pulled over and put my hands up, because I didn’t want to get killed,” said Nichols, 40. “Anybody that knows me knows I wasn’t out there to cause problems.”

Nichols, who before the coronavirus pandemic made his living performing at children’s birthday parties under the stage name “Amazing Scott,” spent two days in jail before being released, facing criminal charges of riot and curfew violation.

President Donald Trump has characterized those clashing with law enforcement after George Floyd’s death under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer as organized, radical-left thugs engaging in domestic terrorism, an assertion repeated by Attorney General William Barr. Some Democrats, including Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, initially tried to blame out-of-state far-right infiltrators for the unrest before walking back those statements.

There is scant evidence either is true.

The Associated Press analyzed court records, employment histories, social media posts and other sources of information for 217 people arrested last weekend in Minneapolis and the District of Columbia, two cities at the epicenter of the protests across the United States.

Rather than outside agitators, more than 85% of those arrested by police were local residents. Of those charged with such offenses as curfew violations, rioting and failure to obey law enforcement, only a handful appeared to have any affiliation with organized groups.

Those charged with more serious offenses related to looting and property destruction – such as arson, burglary and theft – often had past criminal records. But they, too, were overwhelmingly local residents taking advantage of the chaos.

Social media posts indicate only a few of those arrested are left-leaning activists, including a self-described anarchist. But others had indications of being on the political right, including some Trump supporters.

The president has tried to portray the protesters and looters with a broad brush as “radical-left, bad people,” ominously invoking the name “antifa,” an umbrella term for leftist militants bound more by belief than organizational structure. Trump tweeted last Sunday that he planned to designate antifa as a terrorist organization.

“These are acts of domestic terror,” Trump said in a Rose Garden speech Monday, moments after heavily armed troops and riot police advanced without warning on the largely peaceful protesters across the street from the White House.

Barr, put in charge of organizing the police and military response, activated the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force last weekend to target protest organizers.

“The violence instigated and carried out by Antifa and other similar groups in connection with the rioting is domestic terrorism and will be treated accordingly,” Barr said in a statement issued Sunday.

There have been violent acts, including property destruction and theft. Police officers and protesters have been seriously injured and killed. But federal law enforcement officials have offered little evidence that antifa-aligned protesters could be behind a movement that has appeared nearly simultaneously in hundreds of cities and towns in all 50 states since Floyd’s death.

The AP obtained copies of daily confidential “Intelligence Notes” distributed this past week to local enforcement by the Department of Homeland Security that repeat, without citing evidence, that “organized violent opportunists — including suspected anarchist extremists — could increasingly perpetrate nationwide targeting of law enforcement and critical infrastructure.”

“We lack detailed reporting indicating the level of organization and planning by some violent opportunists and assess that most of the violence to date has been loosely organized on a level seen with previous widespread outbreaks of violence at lawful protests,” the assessment for Monday says.

The following day, the assessment noted “several uncorroborated reports of bricks being pre-staged at planned protest venues nationwide.”

“Although we have been unable to verify the reporting through official channels, the staging of improvised weapons at planned events is a common tactic used by violent opportunists,” the Tuesday assessment says.

But social media posts warning that stacks of bricks have been left at protest sites in Atlanta, Boston and Los Angeles have been debunked by local officials who have explained that the masonry was out in the open before the protests or was for use in construction projects.

Nichols, the balloon artist, hardly fits the portrait of a radical.

He recently gained local notice for a giant balloon rabbit and other sculptures displayed in his front yard for Easter. He laughed when asked if he had any ties to antifa or other militant groups. A white man who lives less than a half mile from where Floyd was killed on May 25, Nichols said he protested to support of his neighbors, many of whom are black.

“It was the most insane thing I’ve seen in my life,” he said. “The city was going crazy.”

Nichols said he and a friend helped douse a dumpster fire near a laundromat. He remembers getting a text from his mother saying that Minneapolis had set an 8 p.m. curfew, but he thought it would be enforced loosely.

“Had I known that being out after curfew would be such a severe penalty, I would have never done it,” Nichols said, adding that he missed his son’s high school graduation while he was in jail.

Lars Ortiz, a 35-year-old classical musician, said he was driving just blocks from his Minneapolis home on May 29 after visiting a friend recovering from COVID-19 when officers pulled him out of his car at gunpoint. He said he had been unaware of the 8 p.m. curfew enacted that night.

Ortiz and another friend in the car with him were put in zip-tie restraints and forced to wait on a bus for hours before police took them to jail, where he would spend the weekend.

“It was scary. It was confusing. I felt violated,” said Ortiz, a cellist who identifies as a biracial Mexican American.

Ortiz was held on a riot charge and curfew violation. He said he was told when he was released from jail on Monday the more serious rioting charge was dropped.

Lt. Andy Knotz of the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office, whose deputies were deployed from the suburban county north of Minneapolis into the city to help with the unrest, said it was a “chaotic scene” and that Ortiz was coming from the direction of the protests. Knotz said Ortiz was removed from his car by the Minnesota State Patrol, and an Anoka deputy took him to the police station.

“In chaos like that you can’t determine who is legit and who isn’t,” Knotz said.

Natalie Cook, 43, who’s white, said she had never before participated in a protest, but wanted to be there to support and protect her 24-year-old son, who’s black.

“Not only did I want to go to be an ally to black people, but I wanted to go to support my son,” Cook said. “Also, I was afraid to send him out by himself.”

Cook said they were marching peacefully with about 100 protesters for hours when police started using tear gas and shooting rubber bullets. As they tried to get away, they were pepper sprayed and her son was hit at close range by a rubber bullet, she said. They were both jailed and released on Monday, charged with riot and violating curfew.

Cook said her son was deeply affected by Floyd’s death and she doesn’t have any regrets about going out to make their voices heard.

“My son was really struggling with it,” she said. “We couldn’t just sit by and watch.”

AP filed public records requests seeking arrest reports and other documents that might show what evidence law enforcement officers have against Nichols, Ortiz the Cooks and others arrested in Minneapolis. Those records have not yet been provided.

In Washington, the D.C. Metropolitan Police arrested at least 81 people last weekend, including some as young as 13. Most were charged with curfew violations and felony rioting, which could result in up to 180 days in jail and $5,000 in fines.

Among the highest profile arrests made by federal authorities in the last week was Matthew Lee Rupert. Prosecutors allege the 28-year-old Illinois man traveled to Minneapolis to participate in riots and then posted videos on a Facebook page showing him looting stores and handing out explosives.

In one video, Rupert, a convicted felon, says: “We come to riot, boy! This is what we came for!”

Though Rupert is alleged to have targeted police officers, there is no evidence cited in his indictment he is affiliated with any organized group. Among the few indicators of his political beliefs was a series of Facebook posts celebrating Trump’s 2017 inauguration. “Trump is my president but I’m not racist,” he wrote, adding that he loves Mexican food.

Rupert, who made an initial court appearance Friday, remains in federal custody. A federal public defender assigned to represent him did not respond to a voicemail message seeking comment.

Michael German, a former FBI agent and fellow with the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, said people often travel and cross state lines to participate in protests and that not all of them have peaceful intent. He said politicians and law enforcement often cite the presence of out-of-towners to justify greater police force against protesters.

“It’s an old tactic for law enforcement policing protests to suggest that the problems are being caused by outside agitators,” German said. “It opens up the opportunity for greater police violence in response.”

Among those who traveled to Minneapolis to protest Floyd’s killing was Tara Houska, a 36-year-old attorney and member of the Couchiching First Nation from northern Minnesota. An activist for indigenous rights, she was arrested in Minneapolis last Saturday night and charged with not complying with a peace officer.

Houska, who attended college and law school in the city, said she was with a group a couple blocks from where Floyd died when police told them they were breaking curfew. They replied they were going home, she said, and then the officers hit them with pepper spray and zip-tied their hands.

“Almost everyone that was in our holding tank with us was from Minnesota,” Houska said.

Sierra West, 29, of Kansas City, Missouri, said she drove to Minneapolis with a friend because she is “so angry about what is happening” with police brutality and wanted to peacefully protest.

After marching for hours, West broke away from the crowds and was walking back to her car through an alley alone when police arrested her early Saturday on riot and curfew violation charges. She said she did nothing to provoke the four officers who confronted her.

“They were hiding, and they literally jumped out of the shadows with guns drawn on me,” she said. “The street was completely empty.”

West, who is white and describes herself as a strong supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement, was freed from jail on Monday afternoon.

University of Minnesota Law School student Santana Boulton, 23, said a police officer pepper-sprayed her in the face on May 28 before she was tear-gassed two days later and then arrested on Sunday, charged with unlawful assembly and violating a curfew.

About 15 minutes before the 8 p.m. curfew, Boulton said she and her boyfriend joined a large crowd of marchers on Interstate 35. People linked arms and kneeled before two lines of police officers formed near the protesters. She said she never heard any orders to disperse.

“It was nothing like a riot. It was a sit-in,” she said.

Boulton, a white woman who moved from Michigan to Minneapolis to attend law school, was arrested and spent 16 hours in custody. She described herself as “philosophically an anarchist,” but “not a revolutionary.”

“Antifa isn’t even real,” Boulton said. “As an actual person who identifies with the political label of anarchist, the only thing anarchists do is have meetings where they argue for five hours and get nothing done.”

Kunzelman reported from Silver Spring, Maryland, Bleiberg from Dallas and Durkin Richer from West Harwich, Massachusetts. Associated Press writers Brian Slodysko and Ashraf Khalil in Washington, Amanda Seitz and Don Babwin in Chicago, and Lori Hinnant in Paris contributed to this report.

Follow Associated Press Investigative Reporter Michael Biesecker at http//:twitter.com/mbieseck

Have a tip? Contact AP’s global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org

This story has been corrected to reflect that Trump’s remarks in the Rose Garden came after, not before, authorities advanced on protesters across the street from the White House.



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Militants Shoot Civilian Dead in Jammu and Kashmir’s Baramulla

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Representative image.

The police said an investigation is in progress and officers are working to establish the full circumstances of this terror crime.

  • IANS Srinagar
  • Last Updated: June 7, 2020, 7:44 AM IST

Suspected terrorists shot dead a civilian at the Bomai area in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district on Saturday evening, officials said.

The victim has been identified as Ishfaq Ahmad Najar, the police said. Najar received grievous gunshot injuries and was shifted to the hospital for treatment where he succumbed to his injuries.

The police said an investigation is in progress and officers are working to establish the full circumstances of this terror crime.

The area has been cordoned off, and search operations are in progress.




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Tropical Storm Cristobal takes aims at Gulf Coast, Louisiana: Landfall expected Sunday

Cara Richardson, Greg Hilburn and Khrysgiana Pineda, USA TODAY NETWORK
Published 7:15 a.m. ET June 6, 2020 | Updated 9:58 p.m. ET June 6, 2020

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As Cristobal starts to move in, folks in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, prepared for the worst on the weekend of June 6.

Accuweather

MONROE, La. –  Tropical Storm Cristobal is expected to slowly strengthen Saturday night, moving toward a likely landfall on the Gulf Coast Sunday.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency Saturday.

Cristobal was upgraded from a tropical depression to a tropical storm over Mexico on Tuesday, becoming the third named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season. The National Hurricane Center said Cristobal’s maximum sustained winds had strengthened to 50 mph Saturday evening. The storm was centered about 235 miles south of the mouth of the Mississippi River.

Cristobal is not expected to become a hurricane, which typically have wind speeds of 75 mph.

“The tropical storm-force winds extend outward at least 24 miles from the center,” meteorologist Dennis Feltgen said. “That’s a big storm.” Landfall and tropical cyclones also trigger the possibility of tornadoes, Dennis cautioned.

Heavy rainfall is expected this weekend and early next week in areas of the Mid-South and Gulf Coast from East Texas to Florida, the National Hurricane Center said. Flooding is predicted to reach as high as five feet above ground level along the mouth of the Mississippi River and Ocean Springs, up to four feet along the Morgan City shoreline and between one and three feet along the rest of the gulf. 

“We put our disaster teams and 70 mobile feeding units on standby,” Salvation Army Southern Territory Disaster Coordinator Jeff Jellets said. “We’re staying in close coordination with local officials, monitoring the storm path and, once the storm makes landfall, getting damage assessments.” 

In response to COVID-19, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the CDC and public health officials have worked together to increase sanitary requirements at disaster facilities. Temperature screenings, reduced personnel, masks, increased cleaning, and transparent barriers are to be set up to encourage social distancing, according to FEMA’s manual on COVID-19 during the hurricane season. 

Hurricane season officially began Monday. 

“This could be a very active season,” AccuWeather meteorologist Dan Kottlowski said. “The more active the season, the more likely we’ll have at least one, two or three major events.”

Federal forecasters at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration last month predicted as many as 19 named storms would form, of which as many as 10 will be hurricanes. It’s just one of many forecasts that predict an unusually busy season in 2020. 

GRAPHIC:USA TODAY’s storm tracker

With Cristobal, a tropical storm watch was posted for the northern Gulf of Mexico coast from Intracoastal City, Louisiana, to the Alabama-Florida border.

“Now is the time to make your plans, which should include the traditional emergency items along with masks and hand sanitizer as we continue to battle the coronavirus pandemic,” Edwards said in a statement released Thursday.

What’s changed: How to prepare for hurricane season in the COVID-19 pandemic

Early Saturday, dangerous flooding was already occurring in portions of Mexico and Central America, according to the hurricane center.

A storm surge warning is in effect from the mouth of the Mississippi River to Ocean Springs, Mississippi. Tropical storm-force winds are possible Saturday night along the northern Gulf Coast, from southeastern Louisiana to the western Florida Panhandle. 

Contributing: Associated Press; Doyle Rice and Joel Shannon, USA TODAY

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Thousands protest Indigenous Australians’ death in police custody

Tens of thousands of people protested across Australia in support of the Black Lives Matter movement while also addressing the deaths of Indigenous Australians in custody or at the hands of the police. 

In Melbourne, thousands gathered peacefully on Saturday to listen to speeches from Indigenous Australians who had family members killed.

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Gathering in front of the state’s Parliament House, protesters sang in Indigenous language, with thousands tapping their chest in accompaniment. Protesters held placards, with chants of “Black lives matter” and “always was, always will be Aboriginal land”.

Lawrence Austin and Murray Calgaret hold a placard of their relative Veronica Nelson who died in custody on January 2, 2020 [Ali MC/ Al Jazeera]

Like protesters in the United States and around the world, people chanted “I can’t breathe”.

These are the words uttered by African American George Floyd as a Minnesota police officer kneeled on his neck, leading to his death.

They are also the words spoken 12 times to prison officers by Indigenous Australian man David Dungay Jr in 2016 as he was restrained and forcibly sedated in his cell. 

Dungay subsequently died, yet none of the five prison officers has been convicted so far.

A total of 432 Indigenous Australians have died in custody or at the hands of the police every month since a landmark Royal Commission was conducted on the issue in 1991 and not a single conviction has been made. 

‘A lot of fear and anger’

Justin Grant, a speaker at the rally, told Al Jazeera about his relative, 19-year-old Kumanjayi Walker, who was shot dead by police last year in the small community of Yuendemu.

“There was a lot of fear and anger [in the community] about what happened,” he said. 

The police officer involved has been charged with murder, but is yet to stand trial.

Grant said an ongoing issue was the poor historical relationship between Indigenous Australians and the police. 

“[The police] are breaking our trust and scaring our people … they [don’t] respect our culture, our laws or our practices.”

Australia Black Lives matter 4

Flowers and photographs of the deceased lay at the steps of Victoria’s Parliament House [Ali MC/Al Jazeera]

Belinda Day’s mother, Tanya Day, died after sustaining head injuries while locked in a cell on the charge of public drunkenness.

Belinda told Al Jazeera on Friday that prison officers should have taken better care of her mother. She added that racism was a factor in the arrest and subsequent treatment of her mother.

Her uncle also died in custody, and she said that to have two family members lose their lives in the same way was “very distressing”.

“Mum now has grandchildren that have a fear of the police. And that level of fear gets passed on through the generations,” she said, adding that while it was good the issue of Indigenous deaths in custody was getting attention, it was a shame that it was occurring due to the Black Lives Matter movement in the US.

“It’s just really frustrating that we need to wait for something to happen internationally so that we can get Australians on board and understand what’s happening here.

“It’s time for change. And that time is now. We need the support of all Australians to stand with us and say ‘enough is enough’. How many more Aboriginal people need to lose their lives in this manner before we make change?”

Larry Walsh, an elder in the Melbourne Indigenous community, told Al Jazeera he began advocating for the implementation of the 1991 Royal Commission after his uncle died in custody.

Since then, he said, the situation “hasn’t changed, it’s just gotten worse”.

australia black lives matter

On average, one Indigenous Australian has died in custody or at the hands of the police every month since a landmark Royal Commission was launched on the issue in 1991 [Ali MC/Al Jazeera]

Walsh said it was important for people to come together to support the families of Indigenous Australians who lost family members due to deaths in custody, and also to show support for the Black Lives Matter movement in the US.

“It’s important that we support our brothers and sisters in America who are needlessly killed like our people are,” he said. “And the only way we are going to get change is if we work together in solidarity.”

Protests were also held in large cities across Australia, including in Sydney, where, despite an attempt by the state government to have it declared illegal, the Supreme Court ruled it could still go ahead.

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A Chinese soccer legend has called for the downfall of the Communist Party

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Hao Haidong, 50, was a household name among millions of soccer fans in China in the 1990s and 2000s, and briefly played for English club Sheffield United, but in recent years had been relatively low profile. On Thursday, however, he made a surprise appearance in two videos on the YouTube channel of Guo Wengui, an exiled Chinese tycoon and fierce critic of the Chinese government.

In the first video, Hao read out in Chinese a manifesto of the “Federal State of New China,” a government proposed by Guo as an alternative to the Chinese Communist regime.

“The Communist Party’s totalitarian rule in China has caused horrific atrocities against humanity,” he said, denouncing the party as a “terrorist organization” that has “trampled over democracy, violated the rule of law and dishonored lawful agreements.”

He also accused Beijing of violating its promise to Hong Kong to keep the “one country, two systems” principle unchanged for 50 years, and “brutally cracking down on Hong Kongers defending democracy and freedoms.”

It is extremely rare, if not unprecedented, for a successful Chinese sports star to unleash such a blistering public denunciation of the Communist Party and openly call for its downfall. Dissidents who publicly criticize the party or demand democratic reforms often face lengthy prison sentences.

Hao has been outspoken on social and sports issues, but had not directly challenged the Communist Party until Thursday.

On Friday, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang said: “For such absurd remarks I am not interested in commenting at all.”

YouTube is banned in China, but news of Hao’s extraordinary public comments were fast spreading on Chinese social media by Thursday afternoon, catching many by surprise. His account on Weibo, China’s version of Twitter, appears to have since been deleted.

Sensitive anniversary

It was unclear from the videos where Hao was speaking from, but they were released on a politically sensitive date on the Chinese calendar. June 4 was the 31st anniversary of China’s bloody military crackdown on pro-democracy protesters around Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989.
Hao’s second video featured a 53-minute interview with him and his wife Ye Zhaoying, a former badminton champion.

“The most fundamental reason that I spoke out today against the (Chinese Communist) system is that I think the Chinese people and China’s future should no longer be trampled upon by it,” he said in the interview.

“I think the Chinese Communist Party should be kicked out of humanity. The ghost of Communism should no longer be allowed to drift in this world. This is what I’ve concluded after 50 years of living.”

When asked if he was worried about retaliations for speaking out, Hao said he and his wife were prepared for the attacks and pressure to come. “Today, we’ve made the biggest and most correct decision in our lives,” he said.

Hao was a star on the Chinese national soccer team when it made its only World Cup appearance in 2002. Having retired for more than a decade, the former striker still holds the record as China’s all-time top scorer for the national team and in the Chinese league.

In the videos, Hao did not reveal how he had got in touch with Guo, a Chinese property tycoon-turned-dissident who lives in exile in New York. Since fleeing China in 2014 amid a graft probe by Chinese authorities, Guo has frequently leveled accusations of corruption against Chinese leaders on social media and in livestreams on YouTube.

Guo is known to have close ties with former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon. In another video released on Guo’s YouTube channel Thursday, Bannon read out an English version of the “Federal State of New China” from a boat, with Guo by his side.

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Marines order Confederate flags removed in ban that includes bumper stickers and clothing

The order directs Marine Corps commanders to find and remove displays of the Confederate flag in public areas, including bumper stickers and clothing.

       

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No taller than 500M, no plagiarism: China signals ‘new era’ for architecture

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Written by Oscar Holland, CNN

An end to “copycat” buildings and a ban on skyscrapers taller than 500 meters (1,640 feet) are among the Chinese government’s new guidelines for architects, property developers and urban planners.
Outlining what it calls a “new era” for China’s cities, a circular issued by the country’s housing ministry and the National Development and Reform Commission earlier this year also proposes other sweeping measures to ensure buildings “embody the spirit” of their surroundings and “highlight Chinese characteristics.”
With height restrictions already being implemented in places like Beijing, and a 2016 government directive calling for the end to “oversized, xenocentric, weird” buildings, the guidelines appear to formalize changes that were already underway.

Shenzhen’s Ping An Finance Center is currently the world’s fourth-tallest building. Credit: ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP/Getty Images

But according to Chinese architecture experts, some of the less eye-catching suggestions — such as an appeal for heritage protection, a credit system for designers and the appointment of chief architects — may signal a subtler evolution in the way China’s cities are planned.

“The document is really not just about height,” said Li Shiqiao, a professor of Asian architecture at the University of Virginia, in a phone interview. “It’s about Chinese culture, the urban context, the spirit of the city and the appearance of modernity.”

“This has been in the academic discussion a lot, but somehow not in a government document until now.”

Cut down to size

Of the 10 completed buildings measuring above 500 meters around the world, half are found in mainland China.

Among them are the planet’s second-tallest skyscraper, the twisting Shanghai Tower at 632 meters (2,073 feet) tall, and Shenzhen’s Ping An Finance Center, which is 599 meters (1,965 feet) from base to tip.

In the last two years, they’ve been joined by Beijing’s Citic Tower and the Tianjin CTF Finance Center, the world’s seventh and ninth tallest buildings respectively. But the tide against soaring skyscrapers has been turning for some time.
The number of new buildings measuring 200 meters (656 feet) or above in China fell by almost 40% last year, according to construction data from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH). In Beijing’s downtown Central Business District, a height restriction was already being applied to new proposals — a cap of just 180 meters (591 feet) according to a 2018 report by property firm Jones Lang LaSalle.
Elsewhere in the country, the Wuhan Greenland Center had its projected height cut from 636 meters (2,087 feet) to under 500 — a decision made in 2018, after construction began, necessitating a significant redesign — with local media citing airspace regulations. The Suzhou Hungnam Center has since had its planned height cut from 729 meters (2,392 feet) to 499 meters (1,637 feet), with upcoming skyscrapers in the cities of Chengdu and Shenyang also “suffering the same fate,” according to state-run tabloid Global Times.

Vessel-shaped ‘supertall’ skyscraper transforms Beijing’s skyline

Fei Chen, a senior architecture professor at the UK’s Liverpool University, described the 500-meter limit as “quite arbitrary,” adding that skyscrapers measuring 499 meters are “still very, very tall buildings.” But the new document confirms growing intolerance for buildings that are “out of scale or out of context,” she said.

Chen also pointed to official concern around the “reckless” use of tall buildings, whereby expensive and unprofitable towers are used by real estate firms to brand their developments — or by local governments to put their cities on the map.

“(The guidelines) respond to the identity crisis that we’ve all noticed since the 1980s, when cities started to borrow standards and building types from international contexts,” she said in a phone interview. “And since the 1990s, cities have been promoted as being competitive in the market through the construction of landmarks and large public buildings.”

As such, the new restrictions are as much about economics as design. Above a certain height, the cost of constructing skyscrapers increases exponentially with each additional floor. China’s skylines are now littered with unfinished towers as economic growth slows and developers face a squeeze on credit.

Workers atop the Wuhan Greenland Center, which remains unfinished eight years after construction commenced.

Workers atop the Wuhan Greenland Center, which remains unfinished eight years after construction commenced. Credit: STR/AFP/Getty Images

According to CTBUH data, around 70 Chinese buildings that were meant to stand above 200 meters are currently “on hold,” having already started construction. Three of them were expected to measure over 500 meters, including Tianjin’s soaring Goldin Finance 117, which broke ground over a decade ago. Wuhan’s aforementioned Greenland Center has stood unfinished and largely untouched since 2017, despite having its planned height reduced.
In Li’s view, the government’s new measures epitomize a “new paradigm” for Chinese cities — one less reliant on marketable skyscrapers and speculative financing. To illustrate the shift, he compares Shanghai’s Pudong district, the soaring financial quarter that rose from almost nothing in the last two decades, to Xiongan, a brand new city being built 100 kilometers southwest of Beijing. Unlike Pudong, the new 2.5-million person satellite city will be relatively low-rise, with its property market subjected to tight state controls.

“If you take Pudong as the paradigm for Chinese urbanization from 2000 to today, then you look at Xiongan — which is not dominated by real estate speculation or iconic buildings — as the new paradigm … then that’s quite an amazing change we’re witnessing.”

A new framework

Yet Li maintains that the 500-meter height restriction is, from an academic standpoint, “probably the least interesting” part of the new government guidelines.

Elsewhere, the circular contains a range of other measures, including the prohibition of “plagiarism, imitation and copycat behavior.” China’s very own Eiffel Tower and a London-inspired Thames Town outside Shanghai are two of the more extreme — and ridiculed — examples of how imitation architecture thrived in the 2000s.

A replica of the Eiffel Tower in Tianducheng, a luxury real estate development in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province.

A replica of the Eiffel Tower in Tianducheng, a luxury real estate development in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. Credit: JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/Getty Images

This official shift, again, may simply reflect the changing design culture in China. But an explicit ban on plagiarism could nonetheless prove useful in a country where the “degree of quality is so diverse,” Chen said.

“There’s already an acknowledgment in the architecture industry that (copying) is not welcome,” she said. “But China is huge, and some cities are doing better than others.

“In east-coast cities, or more developed areas, architects have better design skills, so they produce better buildings. But in inland cities you still see buildings that copy others’ styles or architectural languages, and that doesn’t result in very good design.”

The government document also proposes a credit system — and, conversely, a blacklist — for architects, to encourage compliance with planning laws and regulations. It warns against demolishing historical buildings, traditional architecture or even old trees to make way for new developments, a move in keeping with the growing emphasis placed on heritage preservation in China. (Two Shanghai art museums, created from disused industrial oil tanks and an old power station, are among the recent high-profile renovation projects in a country once known for indiscriminately razing old structures).

But one of the government’s new suggestions proposes something entirely new in China: chief architects for each city.

Moscow and Barcelona are among cities that already appoint an individual to approve or veto new proposals. Li welcomed the idea as a way to ensure designs fit the overall urban context.

“The hesitation is whether ensuring uniformity means that a city becomes predictable and uninteresting, or whether you actually sustain some degree of creativity,” he added. “But we have a new generation (of Chinese designers) that is great at both maintaining the urban fabric and creating very interesting architecture. The key is instituting a system that guarantees that process.”

The skyline of Chongqing, in southwest China.

The skyline of Chongqing, in southwest China. Credit: Wang Zhao/AFP/Getty Images

How — or even whether — the government’s more exploratory suggestions come to fruition remains to be seen. The new guidelines provide a broad framework for cities, but finer details must be resolved at a local level, said Chen, whose research focuses on urban governance in China.

Characterizing the circular as a series of red lines not to be crossed (more “don’ts” than “dos”), she also suggested that work is still required to positively articulate what constitutes good design.

“There are policies and documents talking about what you shouldn’t do… which is a good thing, but they’ve never said what you should do,” she explained. “Architects and urban designers may benefit from quite specific guidance on what good design is.

“But this needs to be related to the local context, so I wouldn’t expect the national government to produce guidance like this. What works in one context may not work in another.”

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