Minneapolis police precinct on fire as protests rage on

MINNEAPOLIS — A police precinct was burning in Minneapolis late Thursday as protests over the death of George Floyd raged on for a third straight day.

Protesters had focused their attention on the Police Department’s 3rd Precinct, the base of four officers who were fired after Floyd’s death in their custody Monday.

A fire appeared to have spread to the interior of the stations, which police had evacuated. They cleared the building shortly after 10 p.m., when demonstrators forcibly entered and “ignited several fires,” department spokesman John Elder said.

Fires also burned on both sides of the police station as demonstrators pushed down temporary fencing and occupied property at the precinct. Officers fired tear gas from the ground and a rooftop.

The city of Minneapolis on Twitter urged people to “retreat” from the area as a precaution. “We’re hearing unconfirmed reports that gas lines to the Third Precinct have been cut and other explosive materials are in the building.”

Police said late Thursday no serious injuries had been reported.

Multiple blazes also burned on nearby blocks.

The Minnesota guard said on Twitter that 500 soldiers have been activated for duty in the Twin Cities. “Our mission is to protect life, preserve property and the right to peacefully demonstrate,” it said.

Gov. Tim Walz signed an executive order Thursday activating the Minnesota National Guard. A statement from the governor’s office said the order was needed after “extensive damage to private property occurred and peaceful protests evolved into a dangerous situation for protesters and first responders.”

Businesses across the Twin Cities were boarding up their windows and doors Thursday in an effort to prevent looting.

Looters on Thursday broke into a Target on University Avenue in St. Paul before police arrived, sending the raiders scrambling.

But as police circled the store and faced off with an angry crowd, looters broke into a T.J. Maxx close by and made off with whatever they could carry. That store was later reported to be on fire.

“Officers continue to be hit with rocks and bottles thrown by people who are also breaking into buildings, looting and destroying property,” St. Paul police said on Twitter.

Target, headquartered in Minneapolis, later said it was temporarily closing 24 stores in Minnesota.

An unoccupied St. Paul police cruiser in the area also appeared to have been vandalized.

“Please stay home. Please do not come here to protest,” St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said in a statement late Thursday afternoon.

“Please keep the focus on George Floyd, on advancing our movement, and on preventing this from ever happening again. We can all be in that fight together.”

President Donald Trump late Thursday weighed in, blaming local leadership for the unrest and threatening to deploy National Guard troops that were already in position in the Twin Cities.

“I can’t stand back & watch this happen to a great American City, Minneapolis,” the president said on Twitter.

He called unruly demonstrators “thugs” and threatened that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

St. Paul police said that about 170 businesses had been damaged by vandalism, looting or fires.

In South Minneapolis, protesters gathered near the Police Department’s 3rd Precinct. Rocks were thrown at officers, who deployed tear gas as they moved through a crowd to get to a stabbing victim, said witness and City Council candidate A.J. Awed.

Police were later seen using a cart to roll a few civilians out of the area.

Metro Transit, which operates light rail and buses in Minneapolis and St. Paul, shut down almost all services through Sunday. An airport shuttle and its Northstar commuter line were all that remained operational.

“Out of concern for the safety of riders and employees, Metro Transit bus and light rail service will be suspended,” the transit agency announced at about 2:30 p.m.

Rosedale Center, a mall in nearby Roseville, said in Twitter it was asked by authorities to shut down.

In announcing store closures Target said in a statement, “We are heartbroken by the death of George Floyd and the pain it is causing our community. At this time, we have made the decision to close a number of our stores until further notice.”

Demonstrations also took place across the nation.

In New York City, at least 40 people were arrested as protesters took to the streets near Union Square and in Lower Manhattan, police said.

One officer was hit by a garbage can hurled at him, and another was punched in the face, according to the New York Police Department. Suspects in those incidents were among those arrested, the department said.

In Louisville, Kentucky, where Breonna Taylor was killed by police during a raid at her home, officers with batons and riot gear patrolled as a crowd chanted in protests. One officer was seen firing what appeared to be a paintball gun, and people in the crowd behaved as though there was an irritant in the air, video showed.

Police special adviser Jessie Halladay said that a peaceful protest had escalated, property had been damaged and bottles were thrown at officers.

In Los Angeles, demonstrators gathered outside police headquarters downtown, a peaceful contrast to Wednesday’s event, during which protesters blocked traffic on the 101 freeway and damaged California Highway Patrol vehicles.

In Denver, shots were fired near the Capitol, where a protest was taking place. But police spokesman Kurt Barnes said it wasn’t immediately clear if the gunfire was related. No injuries were reported and no one was in custody, he said

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis later expressed sadness over the state of the demonstrations. “I was absolutely shocked by video evidence of a motorist attempting to run over a protestor,” he said in a statement.

“I share the immense anguish we all feel about the unjust murder of George Floyd,” he said. “But let me be clear, senseless violence will never be healed by more violence.”

In Oakland, California about 20 protesters briefly occupied an intersection, according to NBC Bay Area.

In, Minneapolis, leaders were calling for peace: Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, City Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins and Police Chief Medaria Arradondo all pleaded for calm.

“We must restore the peace so we can do this hard work together,” Frey said.

Jenkins said protesters should be angry about Floyd’s death in police custody, but they have no right to “perpetrate violence and harm on the very communities that you say you are standing up for.”

“We need peace and calm in our streets, and I am begging you for that calm,” she added.

National Fraternal Order of Police President Patrick Yoes said Thursday that authorities must ensure justice is served in Floyd’s death, “whatever the consequences.”

“The fact that he was a suspect in custody is immaterial — police officers should at all times render aid to those who need it,” Yoes said. “Police officers need to treat all of our citizens with respect and understanding and should be held to the very highest standards for their conduct.”

Local and federal authorities spoke at a joint press conference on Thursday, which was delayed for two hours after reports of charges possibly being announced, but no such announcement came.

Representatives from the U.S. Department of Justice, FBI, the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, along with Hennepin County Attorney Michael Freeman, offered no significant updates other that to promise a swift and thorough investigation of the officers involved in the Floyd case.

U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota Erica MacDonald said it was imperative the community understood how seriously the department was taking the investigation for Floyd’s death.

“It breaks my heart to see what is happening in our streets in Minneapolis and St. Paul and in some of our suburbs,” MacDonald said. “And I am pleading, I am pleading with individuals to stay calm and to let us conduct this investigation.”

This is a developing story, refresh here for updates.

Gabe Gutierrez reported from Minneapolis and St. Paul, David K. Li from New York and Dennis Romero reported from San Diego.



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Denver Driver Appears To Target Man With Car As George Floyd Protest Grows Violent

Protests in Denver over the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died in police custody in Minneapolis, grew violent on Thursday after a driver appeared to target a demonstrator with their car and an unknown person fired a gun several times near those gathered outside the Colorado Capitol.

No one was injured in the shooting, but Annabel Escobar, a Denver resident at the protest, uploaded a video on Thursday afternoon of demonstrators walking toward the Statehouse after reports of the gunshots subsided. During a tense moment, a man can be seen jumping on the hood of a moving car, which then speeds away with him on the vehicle. The driver then appears to swerve toward the man after he falls off the car, then speeds away.

A link to the video, which is disturbing, can be found on Twitter.

Escobar told The Washington Post she spoke with the man and said he was not seriously injured. She said the police had been notified, but it’s unclear if they had found the driver.

The Denver Police Department did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s request for comment.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) said later Thursday that it was a “very sad night for our state,” adding that he was disheartened the protests had “developed into vandalism and violence.”

“I was absolutely shocked by video evidence of a motorist attempting to run over a protestor,” Polis wrote on Twitter. “Coloradans are better than this. I share the immense anguish we all feel about the unjust murder of George Floyd. But let me be clear, senseless violence will never be healed by more violence.”

The protests on Thursday involved clashes with police as authorities fired tear gas and pepper spray into the crowd.

Denver Police Department officials said there were no reports of injuries or damage following the shooting, and police did not have anyone in custody. They said six or seven shots were fired shortly after 5:30 p.m. local time, although the Denver Post said it was unclear where they came from.

State Rep. Leslie Herod, who was outside the Statehouse during the shooting, said the scene was “tense” immediately after the event. Footage shared on social media shows demonstrators running from the area. 

The demonstrations in Denver add to growing national outrage over the death of Floyd, who died in police custody after a white officer knelt on his neck. Protests erupted in Minneapolis on Thursday night for the third day and a police station was set on fire as demonstrators clashed with authorities. The Minneapolis National Guard had been activated and said 500 troops were on their way to the region to help quell the growing unrest.

Four police officers were fired from the Minneapolis Police Department after Floyd’s death this week, but members of Floyd’s family and the city’s mayor have called for charges to be filed.



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Social Studies: Week of May 25

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WWD rounds up the best fashion Instagrams of the week. Keep posting!
Dannijo

Ready for a plunge

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Perfect isolation spot. We can dream 💕
A post shared by DANNIJO (@dannijo) on May 28, 2020 at 5:49am PDT

 
Parade

Kate Moss forever

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We see your tie dye sweatsuit and we raise you an airbrushed T-shirt…👀 Surprises coming soon 💨🖌
A post shared by Parade (@parade) on May 27, 2020 at 10:32am PDT

 
Vexclothing

Rain on me

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A closer look @ladygaga ‘s look for 'Rain on Me' 💞
A post shared by Vex Latex (@vexclothing) on May 23, 2020 at 6:00pm PDT

 
Katespadeny

Summer chilling

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who let the dog out? 🐶🕶 #memorialdayweekend
A post shared by kate spade new york (@katespadeny) on May 25, 2020 at 10:02am PDT

 
Asliceofbambi

What’s for dinner?

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A post shared by Francesco Risso (@asliceofbambi) on May 27, 2020 at 11:47pm PDT

 
Eckhaus_latta

Dancing on my own

View this post on Instagram

David by David
A post shared by ECKHAUS LATTA (@eckhaus_latta) on May 26, 2020 at 9:09am PDT

 
Pppiccioli

Birthday

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Protective Antibodies To COVID-19 Isolated & Characterized

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AsianScientist (May 29, 2020) – Two studies published this week in Nature have isolated and characterized protective antibodies from COVID-19 patients that could represent candidates for further clinical development.

In the search for interventions against COVID-19, one potential mode of intervention would be to block viral entry into target cells by blocking the interaction between the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 and the ACE2 receptor on human cells.

Antibodies that can block viral entry into cells, thus neutralizing any effect it has biologically, are called neutralizing antibodies. Only a small subset of antibodies that bind a virus are capable of neutralization.

In the first study, a team of researchers led by Wang Xinquan and Zhang Linqi at Tsinghua University, and Zhang Zheng at the Southern University of Science and Technology in China, reported the isolation and characterization of 206 RBD-specific monoclonal antibodies derived from single B-cells of eight SARS-CoV-2 infected individuals.

The antibodies competed with ACE2 for RBD binding, and crystal structure analysis of a RBD-bound antibody revealed steric hindrance that inhibits viral engagement with ACE2.

Surprisingly, neither the anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies nor the infected plasma cross-reacted with SARS-CoV or MERS-CoV RBDs, although substantial plasma cross-reactivity to their trimeric Spike proteins was found.

“To the best of our knowledge, P2B-2F6 is the first reported antibody from a SARS-CoV-2 infected patient with atomic-level characterization of its epitope and interference with the ACE2 receptor,” the authors wrote.

In the second study, led by Yan Jinghua and colleagues at the Institute of Microbiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, the researchers reported the isolation of two specific human monoclonal antibodies from a COVID-19 patient.

Both CA1 and CB6 demonstrated potent neutralization activity in vitro against SARS-CoV-2. In addition, CB6 inhibited SARS-CoV-2 infection in rhesus monkeys at both prophylactic and treatment settings.

Further structural studies revealed that CB6 recognizes an epitope that overlaps with ACE2-binding sites in the viral RBD, thereby interfering with the virus-receptor interactions by both steric hindrance and direct interface-residue competition.

“At the current situation when vaccines are not available, any preventative treatments are greatly needed. Our in vivo protection data at pre-exposure settings indicated that CB6 is a promising candidate as a prophylaxis for COVID-19,” the authors wrote.

The articles can be found at:
Ju et al. (2020) Human Neutralizing Antibodies Elicited by SARS-CoV-2 Infection
Shi et al. (2020) A Human Neutralizing Antibody Targets the Receptor Binding Site of SARS-CoV-2.

———

Copyright: Asian Scientist Magazine; Photo: Unsplash.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.



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The National Anthem’s Path to Fame Began With Little Fanfare

One of the most important articles ever published by a 19th-century newspaper called The Baltimore Patriot & Evening Advertiser didn’t even make the front page. It appeared on Page 2.

The article was about a new song, “The Defence of Fort M’Henry.” The title was anything but catchy or enduring, but the newspaper said the song itself was “destined long to outlast the occasion, and outlive the impulse, which produced it.”

For once, a prediction in a newspaper proved correct. The song caught on, and its author, Francis Scott Key, became famous for it after it was retitled “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Still, that issue of The Patriot took on historical significance, because it was the first printing of Key’s lyrics with a date — Sept. 20, 1814, three days after Key had completed the lines he had begun scribbling on the back of a letter he was carrying.

The issue was important enough to end up in the collection of the American Antiquarian Society, which concentrates on 18th- and 19th-century documents and memorabilia, especially newspapers. Its goal is to have one copy of every newspaper printed between 1640 and 1876 in the American colonies or, after the Declaration of Independence, the United States. It has two million newspapers on hand.

As it happened, it had two copies of that issue of The Patriot. Society officials decided to sell one, a copy acquired nearly 90 years ago from the York County Historical Society in York, Pa. Christie’s, which will sell that copy in an online auction that opens June 2 and runs to June 18, estimates that it will go for $300,000 to $500,000 — enough, the antiquarian society says, to buy something else that would make its collection more complete. Officials of the group would not say what they had their eyes on.

Ellen S. Dunlap, the president of the antiquarian society, said the editors who printed Key’s poem could not have known what it would become. “They were just putting something in there to fill up the column inches, in a way,” she said.

If they had not published it, would it have been forgotten or lost?

“No,” she said. “It touched an emotion. Somebody was going to publish it.” Newspapers often published poems and ballads in those days. “This one just became kind of a big deal,” she said. (But it took 117 years. It did not officially become the national anthem until 1931, by coincidence the year the society acquired the copy that Christie’s is selling)

For the patriots who ran The Patriot, Key’s song was not just stop-the-press news, it was start-the-press news. The paper had not come out in almost two weeks. With the British closing in on Baltimore, the staff had taken a hiatus from journalism and had “been engaged in the defence of the city, and thus in the service of our country,” the editors explained in an article adjacent to the one about Key’s song. As such, said Peter Klarnet, Christie’s senior specialist in Americana, the issue served as “a unique time capsule into the time in which it was printed.”

“And it was a great news day,” he said. The issue “really captures the mood after this absolutely miraculous victory.”

For the young nation, the War of 1812 had been going badly for the Americans. But, under the headline “Glorious News,” The Patriot reported on the American defeat of the British Navy in the Battle of Plattsburgh on Lake Champlain, between New York and Vermont. The Patriot also reported that Congress was meeting again, less than a month after the British had burned the United States Capitol and the President’s House, not yet famous as the White House. President James Madison had been forced to flee Washington.

And that was just Page 2.

Like most newspapers of the period, The Patriot filled the front page with advertisements — then as now, newspapers had to turn a profit to survive, and Page 1 was where The Patriot made its money. One ad offered 1,000 bushels of corn. Below that, someone was trying to sell “a fine young mare well calculated for our troops.”

“Because this was Baltimore at the beginning of the 19th century,” Mr. Klarnet said, “there are advertisements for runaway slaves, for slaves who had been found.” He said there were at least five such notices on Page 1.

But back to Page 2.

Key was a witness to the bombardment of Fort McHenry because he had sailed across the harbor there to negotiate the release of a prisoner held by the British, his friend William Beanes, a physician from what was then called Upper Marlborough, Md. Key had been sent by the president to accompany the American government’s prisoner-of-war exchange officer, John Stuart Skinner.

Beanes’s captors agreed to let him go but set one condition: The Americans could not sail back across the harbor and go ashore until after the attack.

That forced them to wait out 25 hours of shelling. They were on a sloop, which Key said later was “tossed as though in a tempest” as the night wore on.

Key wrote something during the night, and back in his hotel room, he did some rewriting and polishing of lyrics that could be sung to the English drinking tune “To Anacreon in Heaven.” Then Skinner stepped in, and proved to be an exceptional promoter. He said later that he had taken the song from Key and “passed it to the Baltimore Patriot, and through it to immortality.”

It is not clear who wrote the article, which did not carry a byline, although it was signed “Ed. Pat.” — which would suggest that one the owners, Isaac Munroe or Ebenezer French, had dashed off the paragraph about Key’s lyrics.

But there is a larger mystery than the story of the story: Did The Patriot land a scoop with the publication of Key’s song? Or had The Patriot already been scooped?

Historians say a handbill with the lyrics was probably printed on Sept. 17, three days before The Patriot hit the streets. According to some 19th-century accounts, the handbill was printed at a rival newspaper, The Baltimore American. But it was not dated, and The American itself did not get around to printing the song until Sept. 21.

Mr. Klarnet believes that The Patriot was first. He said that a survey of known newspaper printings of the song in the weeks and months after the Battle of Fort McHenry found that the majority followed the version printed in The Patriot rather than the one in The American, which had slight differences in a few phrases and in punctuation.

But there is no way to know. “As with the Declaration of Independence,” Mr. Klarnet said, “the details we obsess on now were so incidental to the people at the time that no one recorded it.”

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WHO: Tobacco industry using ‘deadly’ tactics to hook kids

Tobacco companies are deliberately using “deadly” tactics to target children and get them hooked on smoking, the World Health Organization said Friday.

The WHO said cigarette firms were still trying out all manner of ways to get youngsters lighting up — and it was no accident that the vast majority of smokers start before they turn 18.

Ahead of its World No Tobacco Day on Sunday, the WHO said 44 million children aged 13 to 15 were smoking, while many more pre-teens could be added to that number.

“WHO calls on all sectors to help stop marketing tactics of tobacco and related industries that prey on children and young people,” the UN health agency said.

“The tactics are very mean by the tobacco industry,” said Rudiger Krech, the WHO’s director of health promotion.

“In some countries where it’s not regulated you find tobacco products close to candy in the supermarkets,” he told a virtual press briefing.

“You find ‘advisers’ going into schools to educate young children on using e-cigarettes; you find giving out free cigarettes in developing countries.

“They’re targeting these children and adolescents. Ninety percent of all smokers start before 18, and that’s deliberate: it’s not a mistake.

“What they do is deadly.”

Replacing dead users

Vinayak Prasad, coordinator of the WHO’s No Tobacco Unit, said the industry was spending $1 million per hour on marketing.

“They’re doing it to find replacement users: eight million premature deaths each year,” he said.

Data from 39 countries showed that around nine percent of children aged 13 to 15 were now using e-cigarettes, while a huge increase in their use had been witnessed in the United States, said the WHO.

As for claims that e-cigarettes are safer, Krech said: “All tobacco products are harmful.”

Adriana Blanco Marquizo, who heads the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, added:

“Smoking a cigarette is so dangerous, it’s very difficult to find something that is more dangerous.”

The physician said the prevalence of smoking was going down but also, the absolute number of smokers was declining for the first time, despite the global population increasing.

Logo on face masks

Krech said that during the coronavirus lockdown, there had been a “huge uptake” of people trying to give up smoking — and the industry had responded.

During the COVID-19 crisis, some tobacco companies have been putting their logo on free face masks.

The industry has offered doorstep delivery during quarantine and, in some countries, lobbied for tobacco products to be listed as “essential”, the WHO claimed.

“They see their market go, so that’s why they don’t leave anything open where they can interfere,” said Krech.

The WHO on Friday launched a classroom toolkit aimed youngsters aged 13-17 to show them how the tobacco industry tries to “manipulate them into using deadly products”.

It also called on social media platforms to ban the marketing of tobacco products.

Blanco Marquizo said that adolescents could be empowered to protect themselves “when they understand the intentions of an industry that really wants them hooked in an addictive behaviour just in order to keep their profits”.

Nicholas Martinez, a 17-year-old from Florida’s 6,500-strong group Students Working Against Tobacco, said it was “the only product that if you use it the right way — the way it’s intended — it will kill you.

“It’s a cool thing? It’s more cool to be smart, and alive when everybody else is dead,” he said.

by Robin Millard for Agence France-Presse (AFP)



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Canadian funds giant Brookfield makes 11th hour bid for Virgin Australia

Canadian asset manager Brookfield has made an 11th hour pitch to re-enter the race to buy Virgin Australia ahead of administrators Deloitte choosing a final shortlist of bidders over the weekend.

Four bidders – private equity firm Bain Capital, Melbourne outfit BGH Capital, American ultra-low cost airline specialist Indigo Partners and the Richard Branson linked Cyrus Capital – had until today to submit second-round offers for the collapsed carrier.

Deloitte is expected to choose two final bidders over the weekend. Credit:Getty

Brookfield, which manages $US515 billion ($800 billion) of assets around the world, walked away from the sale process last Monday over concerns that Virgin could run out of cash before a new owner was installed.

But sources close to the administration said Brookfield had submitted another proposal to rescue the airline to Deloitte on Friday, and believes the administrators will consider its against what the other parties submit.

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Coronavirus Outbreak LIVE Updates: India registers as ninth worst-hit country with 1,65,799 cases; toll surpasses China at 4,706

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Coronavirus Outbreak LATEST Updates: India is now the ninth worst-hit country, according to the Johns Hopkins University tracker. According to the tracker, the country’s tally is 1.65 lakh and the toll is 4,706 as of Friday morning. The toll is more than that of China where 4,638 people have died so far.

According to the Union Health Ministry, with 7466 new Covid-19 cases in 24 hours, ​the total cases have reached 1,65,799. The total active cases are now at 89,987, with  71,105 patients have recovered and 4,706 have deaths.

With 9 new positive cases for COVID-19 in Himachal Pradesh — five from Hamirpur and four from Kangra districts, total positive cases in the state rises to 290 including 208 active cases, said state health department.

US President Donald Trump is feeling ‘absolutely great’ after taking a two-week dose of antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine and will take it again if he thinks he is exposed to the coronavirus, a top White House official has said.

The count of coronavirus cases in Dharavi in Mumbai rose to 1,675 on Thursday as 36 more people tested positive for the infection, an official of the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) said. In good news, no death due to COVID-19 was reported in the slum-dominated area since Wednesday evening. The death toll in the area thus stands at 70.

On a day that the toll due to COVID-19 rose to 4,531 in India and the number of cases climbed to 1,58,333, the Supreme Court issued a slew of directives aimed at ensuring relief to stranded migrant workers across the country.

In the past 24 hours, the country reported 194 deaths and 6,566 cases, the Union health ministry said.

The number of active COVID-19 cases stands at 86,110 while 67,691 people have recovered and one patient has migrated, according to the ministry.

“Thus, around 42.75 percent patients have recovered so far,” a senior official said.

In the hearing on Thursday, the Supreme Court directed that no migrant worker should be charged for travelling to their home towns and made it obligatory for states to provide food and shelter for those languishing on roads.

Representational image. AP

SG lashes out at ‘armchair intellectuals’

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta complained to the Supreme Court that there are “arm chair intellectuals” acting as “prophets of doom” in the country by spreading negativity and not recognising the “humongous” efforts being made to deal with migrant workers’ crisis following the COVID-19-induced lockdown.

A bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, Sanjay Kishan Kaul and MR Shah, hearing a suo motu case on the miseries faced by migrant workers during the lockdown, was also informed by Mehta, appearing for the Centre, about the steps taken by the government to deal with the crisis.

He said that around one crore migrant workers have been transported due to their native states, but there are some who do not want to shift due to the reopening of the activities.

“Migrants are walking because of anxiety or local level instigation where they are said ‘walk now, trains won’t run’,” he told the court.

 

The SC bench asked Mehta about the confusion over the payment of travel fare of stranded migrant workers and said that migrant workers should not be made to pay for their journey back home.

“What is the normal time? If a migrant is identified, there must be some certainty that he will be shifted out within one week or ten days at most? What is that time? There had been instances where one state sends migrants but at the border another State says we are not accepting the migrants. We need a policy on this,” the bench told Mehta.

The bench, questioning him over the travel-fare for the migrant workers, said: “In our country, the middlemen will always be there. But we don’t want middlemen to interfere when it comes to payment of fares. There has to be a clear policy as to who will pay for their travel.”

State-wise cases and deaths

Of the 194 deaths reported since Wednesday morning, 105 were in Maharashtra, 23 in Gujarat, 15 in Delhi, 12 in Uttar Pradesh, eight in Madhya Pradesh, six each in Tamil Nadu, Telangana and West Bengal, three each in Karnataka and Rajasthan, two each in Bihar and Jammu and Kashmir and one each in Andhra Pradesh, Haryana and Kerala.

Of the total 4,531 fatalities, Maharashtra tops the tally with 1,897 deaths followed by Gujarat with 938 deaths, Madhya Pradesh with 313, Delhi with 303, West Bengal with 289, Uttar Pradesh with 182, Rajasthan with 173, Tamil Nadu with 133, Telangana with 63 and Andhra Pradesh with 58 deaths.

On Thursday, the toll reached 47 in Karnataka and 40 in Punjab. Jammu and Kashmir has reported 26 fatalities due to the disease, Haryana has 18 deaths while Bihar has registered 15. Odisha and Kerala have reported seven deaths each, Himachal Pradesh five, while Jharkhand, Uttarakhand, Chandigarh and Assam have recorded four deaths each so far.

Meghalaya has reported one COVID-19 fatality so far, according to data from the Union health ministry.

According to the ministry’s website, more than 70 percent of the deaths are due to comorbidities.

As per the ministry’s data updated in the morning, the highest number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country are from Maharashtra at 56,948 followed by Tamil Nadu at 18,545, Delhi at 15,257, Gujarat at 15,195, Rajasthan at 7,703, Madhya Pradesh at 7,261 and Uttar Pradesh at 6,991.

The number of COVID-19 cases has gone up to 4,192 in West Bengal, 3,171 in Andhra Pradesh and 3,061 in Bihar.

Whereas, it has risen to 2,418 in Karnataka, 2,139 in Punjab, 2,098 in Telangana, 1,921 in Jammu and Kashmir and 1,593 in Odisha.

Haryana has reported 1,381 coronavirus cases so far while Kerala has 1,004 cases. A total of 781 people have been infected with the virus in Assam and 448 in Jharkhand.

Uttarakhand has 469, Chhattisgarh has 369, Chandigarh has reported 279 cases, Himachal Pradesh has 273, Tripura has 230 and Goa has registered 68 cases so far.

Ladakh has reported 53 COVID-19 cases, Puducherry has 46 instances of infection, Manipur has 44, while Andaman and Nicobar Islands has registered 33 cases.

Meghalaya has registered 20. Nagaland has reported four infections, Dadar and Nagar Haveli and Arunachal Pradesh have reported two cases each while Mizoram and Sikkim have reported a case each till now.

367 domestic flights operated till 5 pm

A total of 367 domestic flights, carrying 30,136 passengers, operated throughout the country till 5 pm on Thursday, Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said.

Airports in West Bengal also started operations on Thursday, three days after domestic air travel resumed in India after a gap of two months.

All scheduled domestic passenger services were suspended in India from 25 March to 24 May due to restrictions in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

Earlier in the day, Puri had said that 460 domestic flights carrying 34,336 passengers were operated on Wednesday.

In the case of West Bengal, the minister on Sunday had said that the state will handle domestic flights from Thursday.

A total of 428 domestic flights carrying 30,550 passengers and 445 domestic services carrying 62,641 flyers were operated in the country on Monday and Tuesday, respectively.

With inputs from PTI

Updated Date: May 29, 2020 10:11:05 IST

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#EUBudget – A green and just recovery

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As announced by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen (pictured) on 27 May, the Commission is proposing a new REACT-EU initiative to increase cohesion support to member states to make their economies more resilient and sustainable in the crisis repair phase. This will help to bridge the gap between first response measures and longer-term recovery. Programmes such as the European Social Fund and the Fund for European Aid for the Most Deprived can be topped-up using part of the €55 billion in fresh funding available.

Beyond the immediate crisis response, cohesion policy will be crucial to ensuring a balanced recovery in the longer term, avoiding asymmetries and divergences of growth between and within member states.

The Commission is therefore also adjusting its proposals for the future cohesion and social policy programmes to give even stronger support to recovery investments, for example in the resilience of national healthcare systems, in sectors such as tourism and culture, in support for small and medium-sized enterprises, youth employment measures, education and skills, and measures combatting child poverty.

Finally, the Commission is also strengthening the Just Transition Mechanism, a key element of the European Green Deal, to ensure social fairness in the transition towards a climate-neutral economy in the most vulnerable coal – and carbon-intensive regions.

More information

Memo: EU budget for recovery: Questions and answers on REACT-EU, cohesion policy post-2020 and the European Social Fund+

Memo: EU budget for recovery: Questions and answers on the Just Transition Mechanism

Factsheet: Cohesion policy at the centre of a green and digital recovery

Factsheet: Reinforcing EU social funds to help recover from the crisis

Press release: Commission proposes a public loan facility to support green investments together with the European Investment Bank

EU long-term budget 2021-2027: Commission Proposal May 2020

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Protests Erupt Nationwide Over Death Of George Floyd In Minneapolis

Protests erupted across the U.S. on Thursday following days of increasingly tense demonstrations in Minneapolis over the death of George Floyd, a handcuffed Black man who died after a white police officer knelt on his neck.

Floyd died on Monday after a police officer pinned him to the ground for several minutes while he repeatedly pleaded, “I can’t breathe.” The shocking incident, which was captured on video, has prompted a nationwide outcry. The four officers involved were fired, but Floyd’s family, community leaders and protesters are calling for their arrest and an end to police violence.

Demonstrations rocked Minneapolis on Tuesday, Wednesday and into Thursday night, leading to looting and violent clashes with police, who fired tear gas and rubber bullets. One person was fatally shot.

Floyd’s brother, Philonese Floyd, stressed on CNN on Thursday morning that protests should be peaceful, but he said people were acting out because they are “torn and hurt because they’re tired of seeing Black men die. Constantly, over and over again.”

“These officers, they need to be arrested right now. They need to be arrested and held accountable about everything because these people want justice right now,” he said. He called for the four officers to be “arrested, convicted of murder and given the death penalty.”

Videos on social media show protesters in cities across the U.S. calling for justice for Floyd.

In Minnesota, for the third consecutive night, groups rallied in St. Paul and in neighboring Minneapolis, scattered across the city on street corners, at the intersection where Floyd died and outside the Minneapolis 3rd Precinct police station, where the officers were believed to have worked. Reports indicated the precinct was breached by protesters Thursday night and nearby buildings were set alight. The Minneapolis Police Department released a statement that the precinct had been evacuated.

Earlier Thursday, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz declared a state of emergency and activated the National Guard as the city braced for the night’s protests.

Earlier, groups also stood outside the home and government offices of Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman. who will handle the investigation, to demand criminal prosecution of the officers involved: Derek Chauvin, the man who pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck; Thomas Lane; Tou Thao; and J. Alexander Kueng. 



Protesters angered by the death of George Floyd stand Wednesday outside the home of Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman in Minneapolis. The mayor of Minneapolis called for criminal charges against the white police officer seen on video kneeling against the neck of a handcuffed Black man who died in police custody.

In New York, more than 40 people were arrested Thursday night in Manhattan as hundreds protested police violence. Floyd’s death particularly struck a nerve in the city as it drew grim comparisons to the death of Eric Garner, a Black man whose final words before he died in police custody were “I can’t breathe.”

Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, told NBC News that hearing those words again was like “a recurring nightmare.”

Peaceful protests across Denver also escalated Thursday evening, after gunshots were fired near the Colorado State Capitol. 

“We do believe that the shots were towards the Capitol, but we do not at this point have any correlation to the protest or the protesters,” Denver police spokesman Kurt Barnes told the Denver Post. No injuries were reported.

Police also fired tear gas and pepper spray to disperse hundreds of protesters on the Capitol lawn and on Interstate 25, where protesters blocked traffic.

Several hundred protesters, some carrying signs reading “Black lives matter,” marched through downtown Denver.

A video also appeared to show a car drive through a crowd of protesters downtown and turn to knock over a protester.

In California, a protest in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday grew fraught, leading to two police cars being vandalized and one demonstrator hurt, the Los Angeles Times reported.

In a statement to the newspaper, the Los Angles Police Department said, “We hear your anger and your pain. We will always facilitate freedom of speech. Period. All we ask is that protests are held in a safe and legal manner.”

A smaller protest was also held in Oakland on Thursday.

Demonstrators block traffic during a protest Wednesday in Los Angeles over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.



Demonstrators block traffic during a protest Wednesday in Los Angeles over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

In Birmingham, Alabama, more than 100 people gathered to express their anger over Floyd’s death.

“We didn’t come here to be nice tonight. We didn’t come here to play around tonight. Hopefully we are here because we are tired of what’s happening,” Carlos Chaverst, one of the organizers, told local news site Al.com. “We should be fed up with seeing Black men and women being killed in the street by police.”

Meanwhile, in Louisville, Kentucky, more than 500 people gathered to protest the shooting death of Breonna Taylor. Taylor was killed by police on March 13 when they entered her apartment with a drug warrant looking for someone else.

According to the Louisville Courier-Journal, gunshots were reported just before 11:30 p.m. in downtown Louisville after several hours of peaceful demonstrations. Protesters had marched and chanted “No justice, no peace,” but the situation escalated when a crowd reportedly tried to flip a vehicle.

Peaceful protests in Columbus, Ohio, broke out into chaos Thursday night after people began throwing objects at police, prompting the officers to fire tear gas to push back crowds, NBC4i reported.

Protesters had chanted “Black lives matter” and “Say his name.”

The Ohio Statehouse was reportedly breached after windows were broken.



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