Director and screenwriter Basu Chatterjee passes away at 93 : Bollywood News – Bollywood Hungama

The legendary director, Basu Chatterjee who has directed films like Priyatama, Rajnigandha, Ek Ruka Hua Faisla, and Chitchor passed away earlier today. He was also a screenwriter who made a name for himself in the regional industry with his Bengali films.

According to the reports, Basu Chatterjee passed away due to age-related ailments at the age of 93. His last rites were performed today at 2 PM in Santacruz and the president of IFTDA, Ashoke Pandit, took to his Twitter to announce the tragic news. Gulabo Sitabo director, Shoojit Sircar also recalled his first job under Basu Chatterjee’s guidance as an assistant director.

Take a look at their tweets.

May his soul rest in peace.

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Finding Treasure in the Attic

When John Weiss, 38, left New York City in March to ride out the coronavirus at his childhood home in Stamford, Conn., he knew it would be an opportunity for some quality family time.

His father, Steven, a 76-year-old real estate lawyer, saw it as a way to finally get some help cleaning out the attic. “Usually when he is here, it’s a social visit, and I can’t enlist him to be a laborer,” he said. “As a free tenant, I can now.”

The result: the discovery of some long-forgotten treasures and a chance to explore some family history.

At the top of the list was an old baseball glove that belonged to Steven Weiss’s father, Edward Weiss, when he played in the semiprofessional Industrial Baseball League in the 1950s. He played for two teams in the New York area: the 42nd Ward and Abraham & Strauss.

“The glove is a treasured item for all of us but we haven’t seen it in, I want to say, 30 years,” said Steven Weiss.

They also uncovered Steven Weiss’s New York Air National Guard uniforms from his days as a staff sergeant during the Vietnam War era, as well as TWA flight attendant uniforms and crew kits that belonged to Steven’s wife, John’s mother. “It brought back a lot of wonderful memories of seeing the world and a bygone era of air travel,” John Weiss said.

“Every time we find something I get to hear so many stories,” said John, who owns a public-relations firm in Manhattan and Los Angeles. “I haven’t been recording them, but I should.”

Many families that are sheltering in place together are using the downtime to clean and rummage through forgotten spaces in their homes. Some are reuniting with precious items they haven’t seen or thought about in decades. Others are finding items of historical or personal value they never knew existed. And some younger people are restoring their newfound treasures and putting them to use.

“The baseball glove is definitely coming back to Manhattan with me,” John Weiss said. “These are things I want to pass to future generations.”

Credit…Christine Williams

His father said their time in the attic has been a silver lining during the pandemic. “Having John work next to me hand in hand, we just don’t get to spend that much time together anymore,” he said. “You can’t put a value or price on this time.”

In Los Angeles, Christine and Travis Williams have finally had a chance to fully explore the house that Mr. Williams inherited from his grandmother in 2017. The couple, both 35, run an oil-change shop together, but business has been slow, giving them some free time.

“I don’t want to say she was a hoarder, but she had a big collection of a lot of different items,” Ms. Williams said. “We cleared a little space in the basement and put a little TV down there so we can watch while we work. We’ve probably spent 20 hours down there so far.”

They’ve been amazed by their discoveries.

They knew Mr. Williams’s grandmother, Paula Jan Holland, had been a model, but they had no idea she also worked in Hollywood, including for Walt Disney Productions. They found vintage promotional artwork for “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” and “Pete’s Dragon.” They found several original screenplays, even rough drafts, for works including “Something Wicked This Way Comes,” by Ray Bradbury. One of their favorite finds was a program for an early Los Angeles production of “Grease” (“The New 50’s Musical Comedy Hit”).

“It’s almost like a museum down there. I think some of it might be valuable,” Ms. Williams said, adding that she only wishes her husband’s grandmother were alive to give them a tour. “I have all the Disney questions, like, “Who did you work with? What did you see?’ And there are so many screenplays down there. I want to know more about them.”

Others are finding items that belong to older family members who are alive and can still appreciate them.

Sara Beckstead, 31, who works for a real estate developer in Washington D.C., is waiting out the pandemic at her family’s 100-year-old home in Berlin, Md. “It’s the epitome of home sweet home for us,” she said.

When her father spent most of April in the hospital with a non-coronavirus-related illness, she took the time to go through the house, even his room. “I thought he would be upset,” she said. “But when he saw the things I found, he was able to laugh a lot in a moment that was really challenging for him.”

Some of the items once belonged to her. There was a runaway note. “Mom, I ran away, not far away or anything,” it read. “Oh, you don’t need to call the cops or anything. I’m not joking either.”

There was a letter to the Tooth Fairy, and another that she had asked the Tooth Fairy to deliver to Santa Claus. “I was a little hustler,” Ms. Beckstead said.

A more meaningful find was a vintage Rolodex that belonged to her father when he started a jewelry business in Ocean City, eventually expanding to four boutique shops in the Washington area. “It has all his handwritten contacts, people whom he was trying to connect with,” she said. “There is an old number for Cartier and Rolex and all these things. It was just so special to see how he grew his business from the ground up.”

She’s going to place it in a shadow box and hang it in her D.C. apartment. “It will be an inspiration for my future business,” she said.

Carol Navarro, 25, an independent filmmaker and television writer in Manila, recently found her father’s vintage Nikon camera “during one of those mundane days where I decided to explore,” she said. “I went on a cleaning spree during quarantine to pass time.”

The camera was in a room beset by heat and dust, its leather case disintegrating. She plans to restore it. “I’m already thinking of which subjects to shoot outdoors, such as colorful flowers and chubby cats,” she said. “I find it endearing to be using what my father once treasured.”

Some people are even finding treasures that belonged to past tenants.

Kallie Tucker, 34, a stay-at-home mom in Jacksonville, Fla., has lived in her home for two years and had spent many hours working in the garden. But only now, while she is paying more attention to her home, has she discovered one of her favorite plants growing in the garden: a gardenia, with fragrant white flowers. “The previous owners of our home planted and cared for a lot of really beautiful flowers,” she said. “I just really thought by now we had gotten to know all the plants and when they bloomed.”

She now picks gardenias every day for her family to enjoy. “Anything that’s a fun little surprise right now is good for everyone,” she said.

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A Milky Way flash implicates magnetars as a source of fast radio bursts

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Astronomers
think they’ve spotted the first example of a superbright blast of radio waves,
called a fast radio burst, originating within the Milky Way.

Dozens
of these bursts have been sighted in other galaxies — all too far away to see the celestial
engines that power them

(SN: 2/7/20). But the outburst in our
own galaxy, detected simultaneously by two radio arrays on April 28, was close
enough to see that it was generated by a highly magnetic neutron star called a
magnetar.

That
observation is a smoking gun that magnetars are behind at least some of the
extragalactic fast radio bursts, or FRBs, that have defied explanation for over a
decade
(SN: 7/25/14). Researchers describe the magnetar’s
radio burst online at arXiv.org on May 20 and May 21.

“When I first heard about it, I thought, ‘No way. Too good to be true,’” says Ben Margalit, an astrophysicist at the University of California, Berkeley, who wasn’t involved in the observations. “Just, wow. It’s really an incredible discovery.”

In
addition to giving magnetars an edge over other proposed explanations for FRBs,
such as those involving black holes and stellar collisions, observations of
this Milky Way magnetar may clear up a debate among theorists about how magnetars
crank out such powerful radio waves.

Researchers
first noted an intense radio outburst from a
young, active magnetar

about 30,000 light-years away, dubbed SGR 1935+2154, in an astronomer’s telegram. The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity
Mapping Experiment, or CHIME, radio telescope in British Columbia had detected about
30 decillion, or 3 × 1034 ergs of energy from the burst. That was far
brighter than any flash of radio waves previously seen from any of the five
magnetars in and around the Milky Way known to emit radio pulses.

That
report inspired another group of astronomers to check concurrent data from the
Survey for Transient Astronomical Radio Emission 2, or STARE2, detectors in the
southwestern United States. STARE2, which watches the sky for radio signals at
a different set of frequencies than CHIME, measured a whopping 2.2 × 1035
ergs from the burst.

“This thing put out, in a millisecond, as much energy as the sun puts out in 100 seconds,” says Caltech astronomer Vikram Ravi, who was on the team that analyzed the STARE2 data. That made this event 4,000 times as
energetic as the brightest millisecond radio pulse ever seen in the Milky Way. If such an intense burst had happened in a nearby galaxy, it would have looked just like a fast radio burst.

“I was
basically in shock,” says radio astronomer Christopher
Bochenek of Caltech, who combed through the STARE2 data to find the burst.
“It took me a while, and a call to a friend, to calm me down enough to go and
make sure that this thing was actually real.”

The
weakest FRB that has been observed in another galaxy was still about 40 times more
energetic than SGR 1935+2154’s radio flare. But that’s “pretty close, on
astronomical terms,” says Keith Bannister, a radio
astronomer at Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization in Sydney, who was not involved in the work. Magnetars like this
“could be responsible for some fraction, if not all of the FRBs that we’ve seen
so far,” he says. “This motivates future studies to try and find similar sorts
of objects in other, nearby galaxies.”

If
magnetars do generate extragalactic FRBs, then SGR 1935+2154 could give new
insight about how these objects do it. Theorists currently have many competing
ideas about magnetar FRBs, Margalit says. Some think the FRB radio waves
originate right in the thick of the star’s intense magnetic fields. Others
suspect radio waves are emitted when matter ejected from the magnetar collides
with material farther out in space.

Different magnetar FRB scenarios come with different predictions about the appearance of X-rays that should be emitted along with the radio waves. Extragalactic FRBs are so far away that “the X-rays are kind of hopeless to detect,” Margalit says. But SGR 1935+2154 is close enough that spaceborne detectors saw a gush of X-rays from the magnetar at the same time as the radio burst. A closer look at the brightness, timing and frequency of those X-rays could help theorists evaluate magnetar FRB models, Margalit says.

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Philadelphia Inquirer Apologizes For ‘Deeply Offensive’ Headline On Protests Editorial

The Philadelphia Inquirer has apologized for using the headline “Buildings Matter, Too” on a comment piece about the damage caused to buildings in the city during anti-racism protests that have spread nationwide following the death of George Floyd last week.

In an apology that the newspaper’s top editors posted online Wednesday, they acknowledged the headline that appeared in its print edition Tuesday was “unacceptable” and “deeply offensive.”

“We should not have printed it. We’re sorry, and regret that we did,” they wrote.

“The headline offensively riffed on the Black Lives Matter movement, and suggested an equivalence between the loss of buildings and the lives of black Americans,” they continued. “That is unacceptable.”



“While no such comparison was intended, intent is ultimately irrelevant,” read the note signed by the Inquirer’s editor Gabriel Escobar, executive editor Stan Wischnowski and managing editor Patrick Kerkstra.

“An editor’s attempt to capture a columnist’s nuanced argument in a few words went horribly wrong, and the resulting hurt and anger are plain,” they added, announcing a review of the publication’s editing and headline-writing process and promising to “continue training and discussions around cultural sensitivity.”

They also apologized to the newspaper’s employees and its journalists, “particularly those of color, who expressed sadness, anger, and embarrassment in a two-hour newsroom-wide meeting Wednesday.”

“An enormous amount of pressure sits on the shoulders of Black and brown Inquirer journalists, and mistakes like this, made by the publication they work for, are profoundly demoralizing,” they concluded. “We hear you and will continue to listen as we work to improve.”

The online version of the story is headlined: “Damaging buildings disproportionately hurts the people protesters are trying to uplift.”



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President Tokayev pays special attention to social sphere – MEP

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“As the chairman of the EU-Kazakhstan Friendship Group in the European Parliament I have been following with great interest the important developments in the beautiful country of Kazakhstan. Between my first visit to the country in 1993 and today -27 years ago- great progress has been achieved in the country. In the country, underlining the strength of the progressive forces in Kazakhs society,” said MEP Ryszard Czarnecki (pictured), writes Kazinform correspondent.  

“12 June 2019 marked the date when Kassym-Jomart Tokayev became the President of Kazakhstan. His declared main priorities were to ensure the unity of society, protect the rights of citizens and defend the national interests of Kazakhstan. Although in his election program, the President of Kazakhstan did not indicate a timeline for the fulfillment of his promises, last year has been filled with events and concrete decisions, which have found support among the population of the country,” the European parliamentarian stressed.

According to Czrnecki, Kassym -Jomart Tokayev has been paying special attention to the social sphere. Payments and benefits have been increased, the most vulnerable citizens have received support, and people who were left homeless due to man-made disasters and those who lost their incomes due to the coronavirus pandemic have not been forgotten. Considerable sums have been allocated to all of these groups.

“In Europe, the prevailing opinion is that Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, in fact, is building a social welfare state, where special attention is paid to reducing inequality, improving the quality of life of every Kazakh, and where priority is given to solving the day-to-day problems of the people. One of the key initiatives of the President of Kazakhstan, which was closely followed in the European Union, was the creation of the National Council of Public Trust, which discusses the most pressing issues on the domestic agenda,” he added.

“As a result of the work of this advisory body, the most important pieces of legislation in the history of modern Kazakhstan law have been developed, namely the new law on political parties and the law on peaceful assemblies,» the MEP says. President Tokayev, in his words, has faced serious challenges in his post. One of them is the coronavirus pandemic, which took all countries across the world by surprise. But due to brilliant leadership, an uncontrolled explosion of Covid-19 was avoided.

“The President himself told the people of Kazakhstan about the struggle against coronavirus and other vital issues in his messages through social media and video addresses – an unprecedented level of transparency in the region. Much has been decided at the level of the Head of State. Even the approaches pursued in public health care had to be personally reviewed by the President,» he points out. According to the MEP, his last visit to Kazakhstan was two years ago and as an MEP from Poland he takes great pride in the longstanding relations of Poland with Kazakhstan. Throughout the history of the Soviet Union many Polish citizens lived in Kazakhstan have fond memories of the people and the culture.

“In the field of foreign policy, Kazakhstan, as has been the case before, pays special attention to its partnership with the European Union. On 1 March 2020, the European Union-Kazakhstan Enhanced Partnership and Cooperation Agreement came into force. On the basis of this document, we expect that the parties will be able to fully reap the benefits of their partnership. As the Chair of the EU-Kazakhstan Friendship group I will do my utmost to further our relations to our mutual benefit,” he concluded.

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Strawberry Moon 2020: How to see this week’s full moon above the UK

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A spectacular full moon known as a strawberry moon rises behind the Shard skyscraper (Credits: Peter Macdiarmid/LNP)

A spectacular full moon, known as the ‘Strawberry moon’, will fill the skies above the UK this week.

The Strawberry moon will reach its peak on Friday and should be visible from the late afternoon onwards. That’s if the weather stays favourable, of course.

There’s often a myth that the Strawberry moon gets its name because it will appear with a pinkish tinge to it. Unfortunately, that’s not the case.

June’s full moon is known as the Strawberry moon because it coincides with strawberry picking season in the USA.

‘In North America, the harvesting of strawberries in June gives that month’s full moon its name,’ the Royal Observatory explains.

‘Europeans have dubbed it the rose moon, while other cultures named it the hot moon for the beginning of the summer heat.’



The 12 full moons

There are 12 full moons in a year, each with their own unique name.

  • Jan – Wolf moon
  • Feb – Snow moon
  • Mar – Worm moon
  • Apr – Pink moon
  • May – Flower moon
  • Jun – Strawberry moon
  • Jul – Buck moon
  • Aug – Sturgeon moon
  • Sep – Harvest moon
  • Oct – Hunter’s moon
  • Nov – Beaver moon
  • Dec – Cold moon

‘The moon’s phases and the months of the year are inextricably linked. It takes the moon about 29.5 days to go through all of its phases, meaning that each month has on average one full moon.’

You should have a good view of the moon if the weather holds (Reuters)

The good news is that you’ll have plenty of time to spot the Strawberry moon as it should be shining over the UK all night on Friday, June 5 and into Saturday morning.

Lunar calendars predict it will rise above the horizon into the skies over the UK at 9.12pm on Friday evening and be visible – weather permitting – until 5.17am the next morning.



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India, Aus ink landmark defence pact after Modi-Morrison online summit

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India and Australia on Thursday inked a landmark agreement for reciprocal access to military bases for logistics support besides firming up six more pacts to further broad base ties after Prime Minister and his Australian counterpart held an online summit.


The Mutual Logistics Support Agreement (MLSA) will allow militaries of the two countries to use each other’s bases for repair and replenishment of supplies besides facilitating scaling up of overall defense cooperation.


India has already signed similar agreements with the US, France and Singapore.


The other pacts will provide for bilateral cooperation in areas of cyber and cyber-enabled critical technology, mining and minerals, military technology, vocational education, and water resources management.


In the talks, the two sides also deliberated on a host of key issues including dealing with the growing threat of terrorism, maritime security challenges in the Indo-Pacific region, reform in the World Trade Organisation and ways to deal with the coronavirus crisis.



PM Modi during his virtual meeting with the Australian counterpart (PIB)


According to a joint statement issued after the Modi-Morrison talks, both sides discussed the issue of taxation of offshore income of Indian firms through the use of the India-Australia Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) and sought early resolution of the issue.


It said both sides also decided to re-engage on a bilateral Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA) while suitably considering earlier bilateral discussions where a mutually agreed way forward can be found.


The two countries recognised that terrorism remains a threat to peace and stability in the region and strongly condemned the menace in all its forms and manifestations, stressing that there can be no justification for acts of terror on any grounds whatsoever.


The joint statement said both sides support a comprehensive approach in combating terrorism, including by countering violent extremism, preventing radicalisation, disrupting financial support to terrorists and facilitating the prosecution of those involved in acts of terror.



The two sides also called for the early adoption of a Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT).


In his opening remarks, Modi also pitched for a coordinated and collaborative approach to come out of the adverse economic and social impact of the epidemic that has infected around 65 lakh people and killed 3.88 lakh globally. He said a process of comprehensive reforms covering almost all areas has been initiated in India as his government viewed the coronavirus crisis as an “opportunity”.


Referring to the virtual summit, the prime minister termed it “a new model of India-Australia partnership, a new model of conducting business”. It was the first time that Modi held a “bilateral” virtual summit with a foreign leader.


The prime minister described his talks with Morrison as “an outstanding discussion”, covering the entire expanse of ties between the two strategic partners.


“Our government has decided to view this crisis as an opportunity. In India, a process of comprehensive reforms has been initiate in almost all areas. It will soon see results at the ground level,” the prime minister said.


Modi also conveyed his appreciation to Morrison for taking care of the Indian community in Australia, especially the students during the “difficult time”.


In his remarks, Morrison complemented Modi for his “constructive and very positive” role including at the G-20 role in pushing for a concerted global approach in dealing with the coronavirus crisis.


Modi said he believed that it is the “perfect time and perfect opportunity” to further strengthen the relationship between India and Australia.


“We have immense possibilities to make our friendship stronger,” Modi said, adding: “How our relations become a ‘factor of stability’ for our region and for the world, how we work together for global good, all these aspects need to be considered.”


The prime minister said India was committed to expanding its relations with Australia on a wider and faster pace, noting that it is important not only for the two countries but also for the Indo-Pacific region and the world.


“The role of our comprehensive strategic partnership will be more important in this period of a global epidemic. The world needs a coordinated and collaborative approach to get out of the economic and social side effects of this epidemic,” he said.



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Scientists Develop Cellulose-Based Plastic Substitute

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AsianScientist (Jun. 4, 2020) – Researchers at the University of Science and Technology of China have used cellulose, the most abundant organic molecule on Earth, to develop a strong and light plastic substitute. Their findings have been published in Science Advances.

While plastics are strong, lightweight and inexpensive, plastic waste poses an environmental risk. Broken down by waves, sunlight and marine animals, a single plastic bag can become 1.75 million microscopic fragments that end up in our bodies through the food chain and water supply.

To develop an alternative to plastics, a team led by Professor Yu Shu-Hong has turned to cellulose, the main material in the cell walls of plants. Cellulose nanofibers, which can be derived from plants or bacteria, are stronger than steel and more heat resistant than silica glass, making them in ideal nanoscale building block for constructing high-performance materials, Yu said.

Using the bacteria Gluconacetobacter xylinus, the team first produced cellulose hydrogels that they cut into sheets. After treatment, the sheets were stacked, pressed together and heated until they were completely dry, resulting in cellulose nanofiber plates. These cellulose nanofiber plates were four times stronger than steel and tougher than aluminum alloy, despite being only half its density.

Unlike plastics or other polymer-based materials, the cellulose nanofiber plates were extremely heat resistant, with a thermal expansion coefficient similar to that of ceramic materials. Furthermore, the plates retained their strength despite undergoing ten rapid thermal shocks where they were baked at 120°C and then immersed in -196°C liquid nitrogen.

The researchers reported that the plates could be produced for as little as US$0.50/kg, making them cheaper than—and thus likely to displace—most plastics. In particular, they suggested that the low density, toughness and thermal stability of the cellulose nanofiber plates makes it an attractive and environmentally-friendly engineering material particularly useful for aerospace applications.
The article can be found at: Guan et al. (2020) Lightweight, Tough, and Sustainable Cellulose Nanofiber-derived Bulk Structural Materials With Low Thermal Expansion Coefficient.

———

Source: University of Science and Technology of China; Photo: Shutterstock.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.



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3 Men With Right-Wing Extremist Ties Plotted To Terrorize Vegas Protests, Prosecutors Say

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Three Nevada men with ties to a loose movement of right-wing extremists advocating the overthrow of the U.S. government have been arrested on terrorism-related charges in what authorities say was a conspiracy to spark violence during recent protests in Las Vegas.

Federal prosecutors say the three white men with U.S. military experience are accused of conspiring to carry out a plan that began in April in conjunction with protests to reopen businesses closed because of the coronavirus.

More recently, they sought to capitalize on protests over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in Minneapolis after a white officer pressed his knee into his neck for several minutes even after he stopped moving and pleading for air, prosecutors said.

The three men were arrested Saturday on the way to a protest in downtown Las Vegas after filling gas cans at a parking lot and making Molotov cocktails in glass bottles, according to a copy of the criminal complaint obtained by The Associated Press.

“People have a right to peacefully protest. These men are agitators and instigators. Their point was to hijack the protests into violence,” Nicholas Trutanich, U.S. attorney in Nevada, told AP. He referred to what he called “real and legitimate outrage” over Floyd’s death.

The complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas on Wednesday said they self-identified as part of the “boogaloo” movement, which U.S. prosecutors said in the document is “a term used by extremists to signify coming civil war and/or fall of civilization.”

Stephen T. Parshall, 35, Andrew T. Lynam Jr., 23, and William L. Loomis, 40, were being held on $1 million bond each in the Clark County jail Wednesday, according to court records. Lynam is from suburban Henderson and the others are from Las Vegas.

The complaint said Lynam is an Army reservist, with Parshall formerly enlisted in the Navy and Loomis formerly enlisted in the Air Force.

Each currently faces two federal charges — conspiracy to damage and destroy by fire and explosive, and possession of unregistered firearms. In state court, they’ve been accused of felony conspiracy, terrorism and explosives possession. Trutanich said they’ll be prosecuted in both jurisdictions.

“This type of planning and intent on causing mayhem is terroristic and will not be tolerated,” said Steve Wolfson, the district attorney in Las Vegas.

Attorney Monti Levy, representing Loomis, declined to comment about the state case and did not immediately respond to a question about whether she’ll represent Loomis in federal court.

A deputy public defender representing Parshall declined to comment and an attorney appointed to represent Lynam did not immediately respond to messages.

A confidential informant met Lynam and Parshall at an early April rally in Las Vegas calling for the reopening of the state’s economy, the federal complaint said. The men were carrying firearms and Lynam said the group “was not for joking around and that it was for people who wanted to violently overthrow the United States government,” according to the complaint.

The informant said that during a May 27 meeting, Parshall and Loomis “discussed causing an incident to incite chaos and possibly a riot, in response to the death of a suspect,” a reference to Floyd.

Loomis stated he wanted to firebomb a power substation, according to the informant in the criminal complaint.

But on May 28, Lynam instructed the group to observe the riots occurring nationwide and use that momentum as a driving force to possibly take action against a fee station at Lake Mead on federal land north of the Hoover Dam, on May 30. Other targets discussed included a U.S. Forest Service ranger station, the complaint said.

The informant stated that Parshall and Loomis’ “idea behind the explosion was to hopefully create civil unrest and rioting throughout Las Vegas.”

They wanted to use the momentum from riots occurring nationwide because of Floyd’s death “to hopefully stir enough confusion and excitement, that others see the explosions and police presence and begin to riot in the streets out of anger,” the complaint said.

On May 28-29, FBI agents observed Parshall buy fireworks at a tribal travel plaza, and he indicated to the informant that he had glass bottles, rags and gasoline Molotov cocktails, the complaint said.

On May 30, all three and the informant agreed to take part in the Black Lives Matter protest in downtown Las Vegas, the complaint said.

The charges come as intelligence officials are warning that “violent opportunists” have been emboldened nationwide by attacks on law enforcement officials amid protests.

In a Tuesday internal intelligence assessment, U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials warned “this could lead to an increase in potentially lethal engagements with law enforcement officials as violent opportunists increasingly infiltrate ongoing protest activity.”

AP obtained a copy of the document, which cites the shooting of a Las Vegas police officer during protests, and two other officers shooting a heavily armed man at a nearby federal courthouse.

“Law enforcement officers continue to be the primary targets of firearm attacks, though several incidents last night involved violent opportunists shooting into crowds of protesters,” the assessment states.

The anti-government “boogaloo” movement is a loose network of gun enthusiasts who often express support for overthrowing the U.S. government. Its name, a reference to a 1984 movie sequel called “Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo,” is a code word for a second civil war.

The movement is rooted in online meme culture, but the coronavirus pandemic has become a catalyst for real-world activity. Many “boogaloo” followers have shown up at COVID-19 lockdown protests armed with rifles and wearing tactical vests over Hawaiian shirts and leis, a nod to the “big luau” derivation of the movement’s name.

While some “boogaloo” promoters insist they aren’t genuinely advocating for violence, law-enforcement officials say they have foiled bombing and shooting plots by people who have connections to the movement or at least used its terminology.

This story has been corrected to accurately spell the name of Monti Levy.

Associated Press writers Ken Ritter in Las Vegas, Jake Bleiberg in Dallas and Michael Kunzelman in Silver Spring, Maryland, contributed to this report. Sonner reported from Reno.



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Has the UK just canceled summer by imposing a 14-day quarantine?

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(CNN) — Across Europe, beaches are getting ready for their first socially distanced foreign visitors, hotels are airing out rooms and restaurants are laying alfresco tables. With borders now open, the travel industry is trying to salvage as much of the peak tourist season as possible.

Right now, almost everyone’s invited, but despite the alluring prospect of blue Mediterranean seas and bluer skies, one country isn’t coming — and people are getting very angry about it.

For the UK, it seems, summer vacations could still be canceled.

Even as it appears to be emerging from one of the continent’s worst coronavirus outbreaks, the country has decided to suddenly slam its borders shut by imposing a 14-day quarantine that critics say will torpedo the last shreds of hope for its travel industry.

Unless the rules change soon, millions of Britons who’d hoped to ease their post-lockdown blues with an escape to warmer climes will likely have to scrap their plans unless they want to endure enforced isolation on their return or risk a £1,000 fine — about $1,250.

And for the UK’s tourism industry, any prospect of soaking up some much needed foreign tourist dollars is vanishing fast. Britain has many charms, but two weeks’ incarceration inside the same room is not why people visit this sceptered isle.

If that wasn’t enough to stoke frustrations, it seems that far from being stringently enforced, the new regulations will only be lightly policed after they come into effect on June 8, with spot checks that may actually miss the virus carriers they’re designed to keep sequestered.

That stands in contrast to much more stringent measures in Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong, imposed much earlier in the pandemic.

There are claims that visitors or returnees may be able to make use of a “Dublin dodge,” since arrivals from the Republic of Ireland will be exempt from the quarantine. In theory they could travel from anywhere and transit via the UK’s near neighbor.

‘Blunt economic tool’

Greece is opening its beaches and is welcoming foreign visitors.

Byron Smith/Getty Images

And the rules have come far too late for some, with questions asked about why Britain’s borders remained wide open during the height of its virus outbreak and are only now being restricted as the country eases up on social restrictions.

“There’s no doubt that quarantine should have been imposed at the start of the pandemic, in early March, because that’s when it would have been most effective,” says Paul Charles, founder and CEO of The PC Agency, which represents tourism boards including Ireland, New Zealand and Finland in the UK, as well as major brands and operators.

“If you look at countries that have successfully overcome coronavirus, like New Zealand and Vietnam, they have something in common. They put quarantine in place right at the start. That was WHO advice. But our government never did that. So we can’t understand why they’re doing it now when the cases of Covid-19 are falling and also when there is now a test and trace system in place… they are using a blunt economic tool to try and keep cases low.”

There are some exceptions to the quarantine rules. Truck drivers, Covid-19 frontline healthcare workers and elite athletes coming for bio-secure soccer or cricket matches or F1’s British Grand Prix in late July will all be exempt.

Everyone else will be required to fill out a form prior to arrival, on pain of a £100 fine, providing the government with an address for where they plan to isolate for two weeks.

While the £1,000 fines will be imposed on those who breach the conditions in the UK, only a fifth of travelers are expected to get spot checks. The Metropolitan Police force, which covers London, has said it doesn’t have the time to enforce it.

Some conditions of the quarantine have further fueled questions over its likely effectiveness. Arriving travelers will be able to go to their destination on public transport and leave their accommodation to shop for essentials. In Hong Kong, arrivals are given a prison-style wristband and told not to leave their government-mandated hotel room for two weeks.

‘Right move, wrong time’

Restaurants are opening again in France, where border restrictions to other EU countries have been lifted.

Restaurants are opening again in France, where border restrictions to other EU countries have been lifted.

BERTRAND GUAY/AFP via Getty Images

So why now? The UK government says quarantine is being introduced in June precisely because other countries are opening up and it says that means a higher risk of new cases of coronavirus arriving from abroad.

“Travelers from overseas could become a high proportion of the overall number of infections in the UK, and therefore increase the spread of the disease,” the UK’s Home Secretary, Priti Patel, told parliament on Wednesday.

Her announcement drew condemnation both from members of her ruling Conservative Party and the main opposition Labour Party. Lawmaker Liam Fox, a former Conservative trade minister, described it as “unnecessary economic isolation” that would stifle post-virus recovery.

“If such a barrier was required, why was it not introduced earlier in the outbreak?” he added. Fellow Conservative member of parliament Steve Brine called it “the right move at the wrong time.”

It’s a view echoed by George Morgan-Grenville, CEO of tour operator Red Savannah. “By pursuing its quarantine plans without due regard for the economic consequences, the government is choosing to ignore the devastation it will cause to companies, to employment and to the lives of all those whose jobs will be lost,” he says.

“I think it’s too late,” agrees Brian Young, managing director of G Adventures, which offers small group tours around the globe. “The impact on this whole sector knocks customer confidence. It takes time to get things going. If the quarantine goes on beyond the end of June, the summer season will be lost completely. Places like Greece are very dependent on tourism and can’t afford to lose their whole summer.”

Patel defended her government’s measures against questions about why the quarantine wasn’t brought in earlier to prevent the tens of thousands of people who continued to enter the country when Covid-19 infections were soaring.

“Some have suggested that public health measures should have been introduced when the virus was at its peak. However, at that time the scientific advice was clear that such measures would have made little difference when domestic transmission was widespread,” she told parliament.

The government’s argument for implementing quarantine now has been met with disbelief from the wider travel industry.

Some 300 companies, including luxury brands Black Tomato and Kuoni, as well as major players such as Travelbag and Netflights, have endorsed a letter sent to Patel demanding quarantine be scrapped before it’s implemented, saying it will devastate a sector already reeling from the outbreak.

A new survey of 124 UK travel and hospitality business owners and CEOs found that 60% expect to make staff redundant when the measures come into force. A total of 94% believe summer bookings will disappear if the quarantine is enforced. Meanwhile, 99% believe the policy will damage the economy. Tourism accounts for around four million jobs in the UK, 11% of the total workforce.

Germany’s foreign minister, Heiko Maas, has said that his country will advise against nonessential travel to the UK for as long as quarantine measures are in place.

‘Madness’

People arriving in the UK will be allowed to travel to their place of quarantine by public transport.

People arriving in the UK will be allowed to travel to their place of quarantine by public transport.

TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images

Mirjam Peternek-McCartney, CEO of travel communications firm Lemongrass Marketing, puts things in stark terms. “Tour operators are suffering, carriers are suffering, hoteliers are suffering and UK cities that welcome international tourists, such as London and Oxford, will see many businesses which rely wholly on tourism go bust,” she warns.

Robin Sheppard, founder and chairman of Bespoke Hotels Group, the UK’s largest independent hotel group, says he’s baffled by the timing.

“Had it come in around March 23 I would have understood it, but to introduce it now, so imprecisely, seems very foolish,” he said. “I don’t disagree with the original sentiment, it’s just the wrong time. To have not listened to the public reaction to this and adjusted the plan is just madness.”

In another letter addressed to Patel and the UK’s foreign secretary Dominic Raab sent on June 1, Julia Lo Bue-Said, chief executive of The Advantage Travel Partnership, expressed concern that the government was viewing opposition to quarantine as simply being a concern of luxury operators.

Refuting this, and citing smaller companies’ fear of going out of business, she demanded an end to the quarantine plans. She also asked for changes to the current UK Foreign Office travel advice, which warns against all but essential travel, and the establishment of so-called air bridges.

A bridge too far?

The latter have become a hot topic, pushing the idea that routes to countries with low infection rates could be established, bypassing the need for quarantine. Some 94% of UK travel companies are said to favor the plan.

Portugal’s foreign minister has already said it will be happy to welcome UK tourists from late June under such plans, with Spain and Italy also said to be keen to extend a welcome to Brits desperate to get abroad this year, boosting their vital tourism sectors in the process.

“The government needs to talk down the word ‘quarantine’ and talk up air bridges and test and trace, which are the right things to do from a health point of view but also the right thing to help the economy recover,” says Paul Charles. “The very talk of quarantine measures is damaging bookings. Over the last three weeks they’ve collapsed. The industry is suffering from no sales in April, no sales in May and now the prospect of none in June. People are worried about being stuck on their return.”

In her statement to parliament, Patel said the option for air bridges was being actively explored and the quarantine measures would be reviewed after three weeks.

Sean Moriarty, CEO of the Quinta do Lago resort in Portugal’s Algarve region said that establishing such corridors of free movement would help, but may not be enough.

“Even with air bridges in place, we are aware that travelers are understandably going to be more cautious about going on holiday,” he said. “However, we are already witnessing a huge increase in bookings and inquiries for extended villa holidays at Quinta do Lago from July through to October, where guests will be working from home and using spare rooms for offices or studies.”

Will UK travelers be welcome?

CNN’s Atika Shubert reports on plans underway in Spain to ease foreign travel restrictions in an effort to welcome back tourists, despite concerns over Covid-19.

A question also remains as to whether destinations with unfettered travel links to the UK would be happy to welcome its citizens as visitors. The country’s death rate from Covid-19 is the second highest in the world after the United States, with a death toll of close to 40,000. Infection rates remain at around 1,500 new cases a day. Why would countries in Europe that have succeeded in suppressing the disease want to risk accepting UK visitors?

“There’s no doubt that some of our clients are cautious about welcoming British visitors too quickly,” says Paul Charles. “A measured approach is important. As the technology improves, case numbers decline and more confidence returns, many will realize that British visitors will be traveling from July. The key is to put the confidence back.”

That confidence does seem to be there, but the quarantine means businesses can’t see a way to appeal to UK visitors.

“We’ve been in touch with our local hosts all over the world frequently throughout this pandemic to get their thoughts and insights on the situation in their local communities,” says Sam Bruce, co-founder of Much Better Adventures, which teams up with guides and hotels to offer outdoor adventures in countries including Morocco, Costa Rica and Romania. “They understand the principle behind [quarantine], but are naturally very concerned about the damage to business and their local economies. Most remain keen to get back up to speed as quickly as possible and welcome adventurers back from the UK.

“Many of our destinations with much lower infection rates are preparing to open their borders, with well defined plans to manage the risk including strong testing capacity on arrival, yet will still be unable to attract UK customers back due to the quarantine they face on their return to the UK.”

Robin Sheppard reflects Bruce’s view, saying he doesn’t believe companies overseas are concerned about Brits traveling. “I don’t think they see us as a pariah or some kind of blight on the world,” he says. However, he adds that he doesn’t believe many from the UK will jet off this summer. “An awful lots of Brits have already resigned themselves to not having an international holiday this year,” he says.

Despite that, tourism boards are already offering inducements to try and entice Brits to book now for later in the summer, in a bid to drum up business.

“Even if we can’t immediately go everywhere, plenty of places are explicitly keen to welcome us back and some places — for example Sicily — are offering discounts and freebies to draw tourists back,” says Ant Clarke-Cowell, associate brand director at Holiday Extras. “Others, like Cyprus, are offering to cover the healthcare costs of any visitors who fall ill there.”

For Brian Young from G Adventures, the measures being put in place at UK airports, including temperature checks, and safeguarding by airlines who demand passengers wear face coverings, should assuage concerns from the suppliers he works with around the world.

“The necessary measures are being put in place to ensure customer welfare,” he says. “It’s time to start opening up and getting things moving.”

Whether Young gets his wish and whether UK travelers will be taking to the skies later this summer, however, remains to be seen.

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