Month: February 2020

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Today's Headlines: Trump’s remaking of the NSC

February 13, 2020 | News | No Comments

President Trump’s national security advisor has taken a wrecking ball to parts of the National Security Council.

TOP STORIES

Trump’s Remaking of the NSC

The National Security Council has served as the intelligence and foreign policy hub of the White House since 1947. But in less than half a year, it’s undergone a remarkable transformation.

Since President Trump chose Robert O’Brien as his national security advisor in September, O’Brien has dismissed or transferred about 70 people, or about one-third of those employed by or temporarily assigned to the NSC, according to senior administration officials. He’s expected to make a final round of cuts this week.

That comes on top of the high-profile removal of Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, a key witness in Trump’s impeachment case, and his twin brother, Lt. Col. Yevgeny Vindman, an ethics lawyer.

O’Brien has denied that his downsizing of the NSC is an effort to dismantle what Trump has called the “deep state” and said that his primary aim isn’t to remove career government employees and other professionals in favor of Trump loyalists. But he conceded that the realignment has increased the proportion of politically appointed staffers.

Will Black Voters Save Biden?

After defeats in Iowa and New Hampshire, former Vice President Joe Biden is looking to South Carolina for an overwhelmingly primary victory that would salvage his presidential campaign. His campaign has long regarded the state as Biden’s firewall, given his long-standing support from African Americans, who make up 3 out of 5 Democratic voters, and his close association with the nation’s only black president. Yet some black voters can’t help but reconsider, discouraged by Biden’s poor performance. And Biden isn’t the only candidate scrambling for black voters’ support.

More Politics

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— Top Justice Department officials including Atty. Gen. William Barr are coming under fire for jettisoning a recommendation by career prosecutors that Roger Stone, a longtime confidant of President Trump, receive a stiff prison sentence.

— Former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick has dropped out of the presidential race. He was the last remaining black candidate in a Democratic field once defined by its diversity.

— Iowa Democratic Party Chairman Troy Price has resigned after a disastrous caucus process beset by technical glitches led to a days-long delay in reporting the results, inconsistencies in the numbers and no clear winner.

Honoring America’s Jewish Soldiers

There should have been about 330 Jewish grave markers in the American military cemetery at Normandy. But when Shalom Lamm began counting, he found only 149 — and many seemingly Jewish names carved onto crosses. Enter Operation Benjamin, a volunteer-driven project by Jewish scholars to correct the record at U.S. military cemeteries around the world. Through independent genealogical research, they’re changing the grave markers of Jewish soldiers buried under crosses.

“There is an idea in Judaism that there is no greater kindness than that of the living to the dead,” says Rabbi John Franken, who went to see his uncle’s new Star of David marker installed in the Philippines, where he died fighting the Japanese during World War II. “That feels like what we are doing for these men. It’s the eulogy they never received.”

Clearing Their Names

The Los Angeles Police Department and the California attorney general’s office are each investigating allegations that officers intentionally falsified information used to identify gang members or their associates, placing them in a secretive gang database known as CalGang. An L.A. Times review has found that all 15 people who have gone to court to challenge the LAPD’s decision to place them or their child in CalGang have successfully had their names removed. The department insists the removals don’t suggest it is putting people in the database who don’t deserve to be there.

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FROM THE ARCHIVES

On this day in 2016, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was found dead in his room while staying at a Texas ranch. He was 79. Appointed in 1986, he was known as a conservative with “a zest for verbal combat,” as The Times wrote in his obituary. His death was just as controversial. Local and federal officials said his death was caused by natural causes, but conspiracy theories still swirled. Other questions were raised about the circumstances of his visit to the ranch.

Lawmakers also fought over who would replace him, with Republican Senate leaders refusing to consider then-President Obama’s pick, moderate Merrick Garland. Scalia’s seat on the court remained vacant until 2017, when President Trump’s nominee Neil M. Gorsuch was approved.

CALIFORNIA

— Alarmed about people being “squeezed out” of their homes, an L.A. City Councilman wants to limit rent increases for hundreds of thousands of tenants, tightening the rules under a long-standing city ordinance.

— Two other councilmen want to end the permitted killing of mountain lions after one was put down in the Santa Monica Mountains last month.

— Doctors and experts say the official death toll in the Camp fire should include 50 more people.

— The California bullet train’s projected price tag just got $1.3 billion bigger.

— A new earthquake early warning app for smartphones lets you see a countdown before the shaking actually starts.

HOLLYWOOD AND THE ARTS

— What doesn’t kill Ozzy Osbourne makes him even Ozzier.

— Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti is going Hollywood-ish. He’ll make a cameo as himself on ABC’s “black-ish.”

Huey Lewis opened up about his “brutal” struggle with his hearing loss and Selma Blair about hers with multiple sclerosis and “feeling alone and vulnerable and scared about the future.”

— “Survivor” has moved on from its #MeToo scandal. Former contestant Kellee Kim has not.

— Think you have what it takes to become a Lego Master? These experts say it’s not as easy as it sounds.

NATION-WORLD

—Health authorities in China’s Hubei province reported more than 15,000 new cases of coronavirus Thursday morning, bringing the nationwide total to nearly 60,000. The new numbers don’t indicate rapid overnight spread of the virus in Hubei, but a change in the way patients are counted there.

— Incidents of white supremacist propaganda distributed across the nation jumped by more than 120% between 2018 and last year, according to the Anti-Defamation League, making 2019 the second straight year it’s more than doubled.

— Countries across Latin America and the Caribbean are making it tougher for millions fleeing Venezuela to find sanctuary, and their new visa and passport requirements have spurred unauthorized and dangerous border crossings, a new report finds.

Six Citgo executives jailed in Venezuela on embezzlement charges have been moved to harsher facilities after Trump’s red-carpet treatment of the country’s opposition leader during his State of the Union address.

— When NASA’s Mars 2020 rover blasts off this summer, it will mark the first step of an ambitious plan to bring pieces of the red planet back to Earth.

— Those halfway underground homes in “Parasite”? They’re real, and in South Korea, they’re spaces of desperation and dreams.

BUSINESS

— The overwhelming majority of performing artists we talked to said that California’s new labor law AB 5 is hurting their careers. Here’s what else they had to say.

— Tech giants like Apple and Amazon are transforming Culver City, making it one of the fastest-growing digital media hubs in Southern California. Should they pay more in taxes?

— Despite digital media growth, L.A.’s “creative economy” lost jobs in 2018. Experts blame fashion and toy makers moving abroad.

SPORTS

Major League Baseball has announced rule changes for the 2020 season, including a three-batter minimum for relief pitchers and higher active roster limits.

— The Dodgers reportedly alerted the Nationals to the Astros’ sign-stealing ahead of the World Series last year. Meanwhile, the Angels’ Andrew Heaney sounds disgusted at the Astros’ lack of remorse.

OPINION

— No one will ever know for sure what transpired before Kobe Bryant’s helicopter crashed, but The Times’ editorial board says it should still have us thinking about the safety of our airspace.

— We have a fake eyelashes epidemic. Columnist Robin Abcarian blames Fox News and the Kardashian sisters.

WHAT OUR EDITORS ARE READING

— American public schools are funded by local property taxes. That worsens inequality, experts say, and Maryland has a $4-billion plan to fight it. (Bloomberg Businessweek)

— Every year, thousands of American kids are removed from their homes and put in foster care, only to be returned within days. It “felt like being kidnapped,” one said. (Marshall Project)

— Look at these very good dogs. (New York Times)

ONLY IN CALIFORNIA

Steve Searles used to be a surfer, conquering the waters off Orange County. These days, he’s taming a different kind of beast. They call him the “bear whisperer” of the Eastern Sierra. He’s a 60-year-old wildlife officer — not quite a cop, but not quite a civilian. His job is to keep the bears (and local humans) in check, and he does it with words, not bullets. It’s an approach that’s earned him global recognition, an Animal Planet show and, he says, even a few stalkers. But he’s just following the bears’ lead, especially that of one named Big. “Big taught me that if you’re tough you shouldn’t have to carry a gun,” he said.

Comments or ideas? Email us at [email protected].


PALOCH, South Sudan — 

The oil industry in South Sudan has left a landscape pocked with hundreds of open waste pits, the water and soil contaminated with toxic chemicals and heavy metals including mercury, manganese and arsenic, according to four environmental reports obtained by the Associated Press.

The reports also contain accounts of “alarming” birth defects, miscarriages and other health problems among residents of the region and soldiers who have been stationed there. Residents describe women unable to get pregnant and having excessive numbers of miscarriages, and babies born with severe birth defects.

Abui Mou Kueth’s infant son, Ping, was born with six fingers on each hand, one stunted leg, a deformed foot and kidney swelling.

“I was shocked the first time I saw the baby,” she said, cradling him in her arms.

She said he was not able to breastfeed and needed special formula. “I am worried about his future.”

The AP obtained the reports and supporting documents from people with close knowledge of the oil operations, one of whom works in the industry. The reports have never been released publicly.

The reports, which date as far back as 2013, were presented to the oil companies and South Sudan’s ministry of petroleum but subsequently buried, according to four people with close knowledge of the oil operations and the documents. All spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of their safety.

“South Sudan is running one of the dirtiest and poorest managed oil operations on the planet,” said Egbert Wesselink, the former head of a European coalition of more than 50 nonprofit organizations focused on the impacts of the country’s oil sector. He worked on the oil fields in South Sudan before the country gained independence in 2011 and now works with PAX, a Dutch-based human rights organization.

“I don’t think there’s a single major industrial operation on Earth that’s getting away with this,” he said.

There’s been no clear link established between the pollution and the health problems.

But community leaders and lawmakers in the oil-rich areas in Upper Nile and Unity states — in the northeast and north of the country bordering Ethiopia and Sudan — accuse South Sudan’s government and the two main oil consortiums, the Chinese-led Dar Petroleum Operating Co. and the Greater Pioneer Operating Co., of neglecting the issue and trying to silence those who have tried to expose the problem.

An AP reporter looking into the pollution and health issues was detained and questioned by government officials and government security forces working on behalf of the oil companies.

Neither company responded to multiple requests for comment on the reports, and did not answer detailed questions sent by email and text message from the AP.

The reports show that the government and the oil companies have been aware for years that contamination from drilling could be causing severe health problems in the local population. But little has been done, local residents say, to clean up the mess. Promises by the government and the oil companies to tackle the pollution have repeatedly been broken, they say.

“People are dying of unknown diseases,” said Simon Ngor, a pastor with a church in Melut, a small village in the oil-rich area of Upper Nile state. “The oil company says they’re working on it but I don’t think they actually are.”

The environmental and health problems are particularly damaging in South Sudan, a country that was only established nine years ago and shortly after was torn apart by civil war and famine. It’s among the poorest nations in the world and depends on its oil industry to survive.

Waste pits, birth defects

The oil-rich area around Paloch, a city in Upper Nile state, is dotted with exposed pools of toxic water. A chemical junkyard in Gumry town, about 45 minutes from Paloch, was strewn with overflowing containers of black sludge that seeped into the ground and were surrounded by toxic waste when an AP reporter visited in September 2018.

The air inside the yard, which was unsecured and easy to enter, smelled overwhelmingly of chemicals. Rows of stacked shipping containers lined the inner perimeter of the yard, some were left open exposing bags of what appeared to be chemicals. Many containers had labels stipulating there were hazardous toxins inside. Trash was heaped in various corners of the plot.

The junkyard caught fire in May and has yet to be cleaned up, according to a resident who visited in September and spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of their safety.

The AP interviewed more than two dozen people in Paloch and the surrounding areas, and residents reported alarming health problems that echoed those found in the buried reports: babies with birth defects, miscarriages and people dying of unexplained illnesses.

Dr. Bar Alony Wol, the county health department director, pulled out his phone in his small one-room office in Melut and pointed to a photo of a baby girl born in September 2018 with her intestines outside her body. A few years ago, he said, he saw a baby born with no head.

“We’re losing children,” said Nyaweir Ayik Monyuak, chairman of the Women’s Association in Melut. The 43-year-old lost two children of her own between 2008 and 2011.

She and a dozen other women were crowded on a tattered L-shaped sofa in a dimly lit shed that serves as a meeting place in Melut. One by one, the women took turns telling their harrowing stories.

Six had lost babies in the last 10 years. And all of them knew someone who had given birth to a child with deformities, had struggled to conceive or had miscarriages.

When some of the shyer women were hesitant to speak up, the more vocal ones encouraged them to share their experiences.

Ajok Ayel said she lost a child in 2010 and hasn’t been able to get pregnant since.

“I’d like to leave if possible,” said Jessica Uma, 34, who said she had two miscarriages in 2012 and 2013 and used to get body rashes when showering.

When doctors removed Ngor Maluol’s dead daughter after she miscarried in 2018, the baby’s head was concave and looked as if she’d been hit, she said.

Many women can’t even get pregnant, Monyuak said.

Many of the residents said the health problems got worse after people started drinking water from white containers that began appearing several years ago in markets and along roadsides.

The same containers were strewn about the Dar Petroleum chemical junkyard, with labels saying they contained a chemical demulsifier called Phasetreat, used by the oil company during drilling to separate crude oil from water.

The containers, which were also mentioned in the 2013 report, had hazardous substance warning labels. The chemicals are supposed to be “taken to a suitable and authorized waste disposal site,” according to a spokesperson for Clariant, one of the world’s leading specialty chemical companies and provider of Phasetreat.

“Under no circumstances should these empty containers be used by people for any reason, in particular for holding drinking water,” said Rick Steiner, an oil pollution adviser in Alaska who consults for governments, aid groups and the United Nations on oil spills.

It is unclear how the empty containers were taken from Dar Petroleum’s secure compound. It took at least two years for the company to stop people from using them, local residents say.

“The oil company knew what was going on. There is no way the white containers could have left their yard without the staff in charge knowing. But they’ll never take responsibility for it,” said Ramadan Chan Liol, chairman of the Padang Community Union. The group represents people living around the oil areas in Unity and Upper Nile states and acts as a liaison with the oil company.

The studies

The four surveys bear out what the AP found on the ground, and show that the government and oil companies are aware of the pollution and health problems. But the people who provided the reports to the AP said they were purposely buried.

The earliest survey, from 2013, was led by then-Minister of Petroleum, Mining & Industry, Stephen Dhieu Dau, with support from the Ministry of Health.

A group of 10 South Sudanese researchers, including an infectious-disease expert, an epidemiologist, several public health specialists and an environmentalist, toured the oil fields in Upper Nile and Unity states. They found that local residents were complaining of increased miscarriages, stillbirths and incidents of “malformed newborn babies” that didn’t survive. The report, complete with photos, documented “alarming oil spillage” around some of the facilities and noted many people had drowned in the open ponds created by the oil companies.

In 2016, the same two government ministries as well as the environment ministry sent a team to Paloch to study why soldiers stationed there were falling ill.

Soil and water samples from the area, and biological samples from the soldiers were analyzed at the National Health Laboratory Service in South Africa. They found mercury levels in the water were seven times what is permissible under U.S. Environmental Protection Agency standards, and manganese concentrations were 10 times higher than EPA allows, according to a summary of the study obtained by the AP. The chemicals were also found in the soil and in urine samples from some of the soldiers.

“These results are clearly indicating that heavy metals and petrochemicals have contaminated the area,” the summary stated, and it recommended more studies to see if the pollution is connected with the health problems.

In July 2018, Greater Pioneer — which comprises the state-owned China National Petroleum Corp., the Malaysian state-owned Petronas as well as South Sudanese and Indian drillers — commissioned a study by EnviroCare, a South Sudanese waste management company, to determine the state of some oil operations in Unity state that had been abandoned during the country’s civil war.

The company didn’t do any chemical testing but did find significant oil spillage and water pollution at the waste treatment facility. It said that oil production was likely to have caused public health, safety and security hazards, injuries and accidental deaths, and land and water contamination.

One commissioner is quoted saying “some children were born with missing body parts.”

The most recent study, from November 2018, was commissioned by Dar Petroleum to assess the chemical contamination in its oil fields and the surrounding areas.

Researchers took 146 samples of soil, fluids and unidentifiable chemicals and found “extremely high” levels of hydrocarbons — chemicals such as benzene that make up oil and natural gas and can cause serious health effects. It also documented 650 waste pits filled with water contaminated with arsenic and lead, and millions of liters of water contaminated with drilling chemicals sitting in ponds. The report showed at least some waste pit liners had been compromised and that flooding has allowed some chemicals to seep out of the oil field areas.

The report recommended a five-year cleanup that would cost about $58 million. South Sudan expects its oil industry to generate $99 million in revenue each month from July 2019 to June 2020, according to the national budget.

But to date no cleanup has been done, residents say.

‘Public health emergency’

There is no definitive proof that the pollution or the chemical containers caused the birth defects and other health problems that residents around Paloch are complaining of.

South Sudan’s crippling five-year civil war that killed almost 400,000 people and displaced millions has created a dire humanitarian crisis, plunging pockets of the country into famine. Approximately 7 million people are reliant on aid and more than 5.5 million people could go hungry by early this year, according to a statement by the U.N. in December. Years of fighting have impeded access to medical care.

Exposure to toxic chemicals such as lead, arsenic, manganese and benzene can cause a variety of health problems including cancer, respiratory problems, impotence and stillbirths, according to the World Health Organization.

South Sudan has the seventh highest rate of pollution-related deaths in the world, according to the Global Alliance on Health and Pollution, an organization of national environment ministries, international development organizations and NGOs.

Two sets of data seen by the AP, one from a local advocacy group focused on the environment and another by the health ministry, noted an increase in birth deformities and premature deliveries in Unity state between 2015 and 2017.

Birth deformities around the oil fields in Ruweng state (formerly part of Unity state), almost tripled between 2015 and 2017, from 19% to 54%, according to an environmental study by the local advocacy group. The group asked not to be identified because it was still gathering information for the report, which has not yet been published because the research is ongoing.

Additionally, an internal letter from the ministry of health in Ruweng state that was intended for South Sudan’s national health minister in 2018 documented a nearly threefold increase in premature deliveries between 2015 and 2017, from 41 cases to 118. The letter notes that the data were limited to hospital deliveries and excluded babies delivered at home.

The letter also notes that before oil production in the region, in 1999, “there were no alarming reports of women giving birth to deformed babies, experiencing premature birth(s) amongst other environmental related diseases.”

Steiner, the American oil pollution advisor, said there is substantial medical literature linking hydrocarbon exposure with birth defects and that it can reasonably be concluded that petroleum exposure could be a contributing cause of the birth defects in the region.

“The pollution is a public health and environmental emergency,” he said.

After the 2018 report on Upper Nile was presented to the government, officials acknowledged the problem, calling it a “significant risk to the people living within the vicinity of the oil fields and the surrounding environment,” and instructed Dar Petroleum to move ahead with the proposed clean-up, according to a December 2018 letter from the oil ministry seen by the AP.

But Dar Petroleum — a consortium that includes China National Petroleum and Sinopec, another state-owned Chinese company, along with companies in Malaysia and Egypt and South Sudan’s state owned oil company — never acted, according to two people with close knowledge of the oil operations in the area who didn’t want to be named for fear of their safety.

AP called China National Petroleum Corp. and Sinopec multiple times and sent detailed questions by email and fax, but neither company responded. The AP also reached out to Petronas, which did not respond to requests for comment.

South Sudan’s 2012 Petroleum Act says anyone working in the oil industry must comply with best international practices on health and safety.

President Salva Kiir acknowledged in a statement in January that there is a pollution problem in the oilfields and surrounding areas, and said he wants to bring proper environmental standards to the country’s oil exploration operations.

The government in January asked for proposals from companies to perform an “environmental audit” that will evaluate how to clean up the existing pollution and put in place best practices for future oil exploration.

Broken promises

Residents, however, are skeptical, saying the government and oil companies have talked about cleaning up the pollution before.

In July 2018, after residents complained about the pollution, Dar Petroleum sent a delegation of local leaders and government officials to an environmental lab in Uganda. The visit was organized by EnviroCare and EnviroServ, a waste management company based in South Africa with a branch in Uganda, to discuss cleaning up the oil fields, said Yuahanna Ayuel, the youth chairman in Melut.

But after the trip, residents say, the oil company said the cleanup was too expensive.

“I’m angry,” Ayuel said. “Our environment is polluted. It’s a problem and it’s getting worse.”

In February, Phillips Anyang Ngong, a human rights lawyer, sued South Sudan’s Ministry of Petroleum, Greater Pioneer Operating Company and Nile Petroleum — the country’s state-owned oil company — claiming the oil pollution caused health problems and loss of life and demanding $500 million for victims. It’s the first human rights lawsuit due to oil pollution filed in the country, he said.

“Companies are violating the law and the government is not intervening,” he said. “It’s a crisis that needs immediate attention now.”

But the government doesn’t appear to be in a hurry.

South Sudan’s petroleum minister, Awow Daniel Chuang, said until there’s scientific evidence tying health problems to oil pollution, no conclusions should be drawn.

“Only speculations are being made until scientific evidences are out to see the level of damages created by oil operations. Obviously there shouldn’t be conclusions with evidences connected to deformation,” he said.

Health experts who have tackled oil pollution in similar contexts say companies often try to hide any connection between pollution and health problems.

“Polluters try as much as possible not to let connections be drawn from pollution to health issues; they try to connect it to something else, like genetics. This is a known tactic,” said Nnimmo Bassey, executive director for health at the Health of Mother Earth Foundation, a not-for-profit environmental group based in Nigeria.

Bassey’s work focuses on the Niger Delta, where a 2011 U.N. environment report found pollution from over 50 years of oil operations in Ogoniland, Nigeria, penetrated further and deeper than people realized, causing grave health and environmental risks.

“They do it in South Sudan, in Nigeria, everywhere,” he said.

That’s what baby Ping’s father, Cornelious Mayak Geer, believes is happening to his family.

In July 2019, the Greater Pioneer Operating Company flew the family to Nairobi, Kenya, for what they thought would be medical treatment for Ping. Geer says the company told him that they would first do tests to determine if Ping’s deformities were tied to oil pollution. If they found a link, they would pay for treatment, Geer says the company officials told him.

Doctors at the Aga Khan Hospital in Nairobi told Geer that the baby needed surgery, according to Geer, but Greater Pioneer refused to pay. Geer says he pushed for medical tests to determine whether Ping’s problems were linked to oil pollution, but the doctors in Nairobi said they couldn’t do such tests.

Geer refused to give up, and in January, Greater Pioneer flew them to Berlin, where the whole family underwent 10 days of tests on their blood and hair and were sent home. The baby received no medical care.

Geer said the company told him the child’s problems were genetic and not caused by oil pollution. But they never shared any test results with him.

“Results for the child will not come. They’re still playing games,” he said.

Geer is losing hope.

“The baby still cries day and night because of the pain and not feeling well,” he said. “They’re just buying time until the baby dies.”

Nyawiir Adoup, a 37-year-old Paloch resident whose home is a short drive from an open waste pit, had a similar experience. In 2013, she miscarried and then had a baby who was born dead, without a nose or eyes. Dar Petroleum brought her and her husband first to Kenya and then to Germany for tests.

They spent more than a month in Germany in 2014, according to Adoup’s husband, Deng Awaj Awol. But they have never received results.

“We weren’t told what was happening and when we came back to Juba I asked for the results and they refused,” Awol said.

In 2015, Adoup then gave birth to a second stillborn child, this one born with a gaping hole in its stomach.

“You could see through,” she said. “I was crying.”

The AP obtained a copy of the couple’s medical report from Germany, which was dated Oct. 20, 2014. It was addressed to the health safety and environment department at Dar Petroleum and submitted by the doctor who accompanied the family. It showed they saw specialists in occupational medicine, nuclear medicine, gynecology and human genetics, according to the report.

Dr. Robert Middleberg, a forensic toxicologist at the NMS Labs in Horsham, Penn., reviewed the records and said they showed the couple were exposed to toxic chemicals, some of which are associated with inducing abortion. But, he said, the analyses were missing crucial details, including any numbers in the toxicology reports that he reviewed.

“Sometimes I still feel sick, my body isn’t normal,” said Adoup. “Sometimes I have nightmares of having another [child] like the previous ones.”

Environmental experts say there is little incentive for multinational companies to do anything because it is easy to get away with things in impoverished countries such as South Sudan.

That’s in part because the country is so dependent upon its oil sector.

Oil accounts for almost all the country’s exports and more than 40% of its gross domestic product, according to the World Bank. As South Sudan emerges from years of fighting, it is trying to revive its economy by expanding the industry. In October, the ministry of petroleum announced plans to open 14 oil blocks this year for exploration.

“No one’s really watching. The government is neither willing nor able to monitor and enforce its own environmental laws,” said Luke Patey, senior researcher studying China’s oil investments in Africa at the Danish Institute for International Studies.

He said the result is “a vicious cycle of negligence.”


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LONDON — 

U.K. Treasury chief Sajid Javid unexpectedly resigned Thursday, throwing a carefully planned shakeup of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservative government into turmoil.

Javid had been widely expected to keep his job — the second most powerful in the government — as Johnson fired some Cabinet members and promoted more junior ministers to top jobs.

He smiled as he entered the prime minister’s 10 Downing St. office on Thursday morning to meet Johnson. But a spokesman confirmed soon after that Javid had quit.

The government announced that he would be replaced by Rishi Sunak, who was previously a deputy to Javid at the Treasury.

Javid’s resignation follows reports he had clashed with Johnson’s powerful advisor, Dominic Cummings, a self-styled political disruptor who is mistrusted by many lawmakers and officials.

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Javid had been due to deliver his annual budget in less than a month. His resignation shakes the government as it faces the challenge of negotiating a new relationship with the 27-nation European Union by the end of this year.

Johnson also has ambitious infrastructure plans, including a $130-billion high-speed railway connecting London to central and northern England, and has vowed to boost poorer regions outside the economic hub of London and southeast England.

Britain’s Press Assn. news agency reported that Javid had quit after being told to fire all his aides and replace them with staff appointed by the prime minister’s office.

Paul Dales, chief U.K. economist at Capital Economic, said Javid had appeared reluctant to increase public borrowing to fund higher spending.

He said Javid’s departure should “allow the government to push through even bigger increases in public investment and perhaps resuscitate tax cuts that previously looked dead in the water.”

The resignation was a curveball in a Cabinet shake-up that was intended to tighten Johnson’s grip on government after winning a big parliamentary majority in December’s election. That victory allowed Johnson to take Britain out of the European Union last month, delivering on his key election promise.

Now his Conservative administration faces the even bigger challenge of negotiating a new trading relationship with the EU while also seeking trade deals with the United States and other countries.

Britain and the EU are aiming to have a deal covering trade, security and other areas in place by the time a post-Brexit transition period ends on Dec. 31.

So far, the two sides are far apart in their demands. And even with a deal, Britain faces a huge adjustment when decades of seamless trade and travel with the EU end at the start of 2021.

Johnson had intended to keep the most senior ministers in their jobs. His office said Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, Home Secretary Priti Patel, Justice Secretary Robert Buckland and Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove were all staying.

Several high-profile women in Johnson’s government, including Business Secretary Andrea Leadsom, Environment Secretary Theresa Villiers and Housing Minister Esther McVey, all said they had been fired.

Johnson also sacked Northern Ireland Secretary Julian Smith — another surprise move. Smith had been widely praised for helping to end political deadlock that left Northern Ireland without a regional government and assembly for three years. After pressure from the British and Irish governments, the main Irish nationalist and British unionist power-sharing parties returned to work last month.

As well as reworking his Cabinet, Johnson appointed a new leader for the U.N. climate change conference that Britain is due to host later this year. The summit, known as the 26th Conference of the Parties, or COP26, is scheduled to be held in Glasgow, Scotland, in November.

Planning for that has gotten off to a rocky start, with Johnson last week firing Claire O’Neill, a former British government minister appointed last year to head up the event.

The government said Thursday that Alok Sharma, previously in charge of international development, would become business secretary and also take charge of COP26.


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — 

On Thursday, for the first time in a week, 26-year-old Abdullah left his small dorm room at the Wuhan University of Technology in China to buy fruit and spices to cook the food of his native Pakistan.

As Wuhan is gripped by the coronavirus outbreak, Abdullah and hundreds of Pakistani students are locked down on their campuses, barred by university officials from leaving for days at a time, phone and WeChat messages their only link to the dire situation outside their doors.

“I spend almost 10 hours a day on the phone talking to my family and friends back in Pakistan,” said the 26-year-old doctoral student, who asked that his full name not be used for fear of reprisals from either his government or China’s. “There is nothing to do in this small room. I fear that I’ll go mad in the next few days.”

While more than 20 countries have evacuated their nationals from Wuhan, the epicenter of the outbreak that has sickened more than 60,000 people worldwide since December, Pakistan has resisted calls to bring home several hundred increasingly worried citizens, many of them students.

For Prime Minister Imran Khan, the decision hinges on health as well as politics.

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Officials say Pakistan lacks the capacity to deal with an epidemic if large numbers of infected people reach its shores. But China is also one of Pakistan’s most important allies and benefactors, and analysts say that Khan is attempting to show solidarity with Chinese leader Xi Jinping by insisting Pakistani students are safe and well cared for in Wuhan.

“Pakistan stands with the people & govt of China in their difficult & trying time and it will always stand by them,” Khan tweeted Wednesday. “We will be extending every material & moral support to China just as China has always stood by us during all our times of trial and tribulation.”

Khan said he had instructed his foreign affairs ministry “to do everything possible for our students who are stuck in Wuhan,” but officials said that would not include bringing them home. Flights from China to Pakistan are operating, but students cannot leave Wuhan without government approval.

A foreign ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the government’s thinking, said that keeping the students in Wuhan was “in the best interests of the students and Pakistan,” and added that the United Nations World Health Organization had said that evacuations were not necessary.

“We all know the health infrastructure in Pakistan is not capable of dealing with such epidemics,” the official said. “It could have devastating implications for Pakistan and families of the students if some infected students come back.”

The United States, Canada, Singapore, the Philippines, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia and Thailand are among the countries that have flown citizens home from parts of China that have been hit by the outbreak. Pakistan and Cambodia, another country with close ties to Beijing, stand out for saying they will not carry out evacuations.

Hun Sen, Cambodia’s authoritarian prime minister, said bluntly that his decision was a kind of “soft diplomacy” and a form of thanks to China, which is his country’s No. 1 trading partner and source of tourism.

“We are keeping [Cambodian students] there to share [Chinese people’s] happiness and pain and to help them solve this situation,” Hun Sen said last month.

For financially strapped Pakistan, locked in a blood feud with neighboring India and increasingly estranged from the U.S., its longtime ally, China represents the last major nation it can count on. Beijing has pledged tens of billions of dollars in grants and loans to Pakistan under Xi’s Belt and Road infrastructure program.

“Owing to our historic, long relationship and trust in our iron brother China, the Pakistani government decided to follow international practices and standards in such emergency situations and believed that China is going to stamp this virus out soon,” said Hamayoun Khan, secretary general of the Pakistan Council on China, a private think tank.

“Pakistani citizens will be more comfortable in terms of available medical infrastructure and facilities in China than in Pakistan,” Khan added.

As families and opposition politicians call for bringing the students home, Khan’s government has tried to reassure people it is closely monitoring their status. Zafar Mirza, Khan’s adviser on health issues, spoke to students in Hubei this week via Skype and said he “reassured them we are doing everything to make sure they are taken care of.”

“China also committed to taking care of Pakistan students like their own children,” Khan tweeted.

For the roughly 800 Pakistani students in Wuhan, their government’s words ring hollow.

“We acknowledge the efforts of Chinese authorities to support us during these tough times. But we want to go back to Pakistan,” Abdullah said. “We are ready to put ourselves in quarantine for two weeks [if brought back to Pakistan], but don’t leave us here.”

Abdullah said that at least four Pakistani students had tested positive for the coronavirus since last month. All have been treated and released from hospitals, he said.

There are normally about 1,300 Pakistani students enrolled at 25 universities in Wuhan, a city of 11 million in central China. About 500 students left China due to school holidays before the outbreak, students said.

For those left, life is increasingly limited. Abdullah, who stayed behind over the holiday to complete projects in the university lab, said the university was providing them with basic food. But he had to argue with staff at his dormitory for three hours to get permission to step outside for two hours Thursday.

He went looking for fresh fruit and spices but found that almost every shop on campus was closed, and that one didn’t have anything he wanted. He saw only one other person walking around campus, wearing a mask.

Depressed, he returned to his room after 45 minutes.

Special correspondent Sahi reported from Islamabad and Times staff writer Bengali from Singapore.


Lyst has released its list of the hottest fashion brands and products
based on consumer searches in the final three months of 2019, with
Off-White, Gucci, and Balenciaga coming out on top.

Off-White retained its crown as the hottest brand in the world according
to The Lyst Index thanks to strong demand for the luxury-meets-streetwear
brand’s t-shirts, hoodies, sneakers and accessories.

The following 19 hottest brands in the top 20 were Gucci, Balenciaga,
Moncler, Versace, Fendi, Prada, Valentino, Saint Laurent, Burberry, Stone
Island, Nike, Givenchy, Bottega Veneta, Vetements, Yeezy, Acne Studios,
Canada Goose, Dr Martens and Loewe.

Noticeable changes in the overall list included Bottega Veneta which
continued to climb, moving up two places following a 32 percent increase in
searches for the brand in the three-month period, and Vetements, which fell
five places to 15th spot after the announcement last year that designer
Demna Gvasalia was stepping down.

The three most significant changes in the list this quarter were driven
by a seasonal demand for insulated outerwear and robust footwear, with
outerwear brand Moncler rising 10 places to 4th position, Canada Goose
climbing 14 places to 18th position, and Dr Martens up 12 places to 19th
position.

Lyst highlighted that this most recent list – and the final one of the
decade – suggests a shift towards a more sustainable and “less
streetwear-focused” future of fashion.

Gucci and Moncler selling hottest products

In womenswear, the Gucci logo belt was once again the world’s hottest
fashion product, topping the list for the second time and averaging over
165,000 online monthly searches between October and December. In second
place, and a new entry on the list, Amina Muaddi’s Gilda heels counted an
average of 60,500 monthly searches between October and December.

The following womenswear products in the top 10 list were Prada’s
Monolith leather boots, Acne Studios’ multi check scarf, Bottega Veneta’s
The Pouch mini leather clutch, Spanx’s faux leather leggings, Balenciaga’s
Hourglass top handle bag, Dr Martens’ Farylle ribbon lace chunky leather
boots, UGG’s Scuffette II slippers, and Arket’s down puffer coat.

In menswear, Moncler’s 1,200 dollar Maya jacket topped the list, seeing
a 199 increase in searches in the final quarter of 2019, with Gucci’s GG
wool jacquard scarf coming in second place. The following menswear products
in the top 10 list were Alexander McQueen’s exaggerated-sole leather
trainers, Moncler’s Down Gui vest, Yeezy’s 500 Stone sneakers, Stone
Island’s cargo trousers, Acne Studios’ Face-Patch beanie, Nike’s Air Force
1 ”Para-Noise” trainers, Off-White’s Diag Waterfall Over hoodie, and
Barbour’s Chelsea Sportsquilt jacket.

Photo credit: Off-White

The Argentine coach hopes to be back in the English top-flight before long as he awaits his next challenge

Mauricio Pochettino says he “would love” to return to managing in the Premier League.

The Argentine coach has been out of work since he was sacked by Tottenham in November after a disappointing start to the season, despite reaching the Champions League final last term.

Pochettino has been heavily linked to the Manchester United job in the past, while Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Juventus have also reportedly shown interest him.

More teams

And the 47-year-old says he would be happy to manage in the English top-flight again as he waits for his next challenge to come along.

“To be honest, I would love to work in the Premier League,” he told the In the Pink podcast. “It’s going to be difficult, I know, and for now it’s a moment to wait and we’ll see what happens.

“It’s a moment of recovery, to think about yourself a little bit, and to be ready because in football always something can happen and you need to be ready.

“I’m ready and waiting for a new challenge. I have the belief and confidence that the next challenge will be fantastic.”

Pochettino spent five years in charge of Tottenham and sealed Champions League qualification in each of his last four seasons in north London.

As well as finishing as runners-up in the Champions League in 2019, they finished second in the English top-flight and Carabao Cup in 2016-17 and 2014-15 respectively. 

“Of course I feel very proud about everything I achieved at Tottenham and when I analyse my time there, plenty of positive things happened,” Pochettino added. “I took charge at a pivotal moment for the club.

“Everything I had to do was very scary in those moments. To destroy White Hart Lane and to build a new stadium, to play at Wembley and Milton Keynes, only football people know how difficult it was to deal with these situations.

“To apply a new philosophy and new ideas was very tough but I feel very proud with the success that we had and to take Tottenham to a different level.

“To play in the Champions League for three or four years and finish above Arsenal many times was a great legacy for us. To win a title would be a great reward but for us that is the legacy, to have the club and the stadium at Tottenham. That is more than winning titles.”

The former Southampton boss says he has noticed some big changes in English football since his arrival from Espanyol in 2013.

“The young English managers today have the influence of the European people. Before, English football was closed. It was difficult to share and mix here but the European coaches have been influential,” he said. 

“People have been more open to discover a different type of football.

“When I first arrived at Southampton the players would say you have to play long balls in behind the full-backs and press, the approach was always like this.

“To change this mentality was tough but you can see a different style in football now and that makes the Premier League the best league in the world.”

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Jennifer Aniston vit d’or et de diamants

February 13, 2020 | News | No Comments

Hier, mercredi 19 août, Jennifer Aniston foulait son premier tapis rouge depuis son mariage. A l’occasion de l’avant-première du film She’s funny that way, qui s’est déroulée à Los Angeles, l’actrice a dévoilé son alliance au grand jour.

Il ne manquait plus que ça. Tout juste revenue de sa lune de miel à Bora Bora où Jennifer Aniston a invité sa famille et ses plus proches amis à passer quelques jours, l’actrice revient sur le devant de la scène. Hier, mercredi 19 août, les people avaient rendez-vous à l’avant-première du film Broadway Therapy (She’s funny that way, en VO), à Los Angeles. Parmi les VIP, Jennifer Aniston. L’actrice a fait sa première apparition depuis son mariage avec Justin Theroux qu’elle a organisé secrètement le 5 août dernier. Et si l’Américaine de 46 ans a retenu l’attention des photographes par sa jeunesse éternelle et son style irréprochable (elle était vêtue d’un pantalon tailleur noir), c’est pour tout autre chose qu’elle a provoqué l’émoi de ses fans: son alliance! C’est avec le sourire que la star de la série Friends arborait, fièrement, à l’annulaire gauche une bague en or, sublimée par une rivière de diamants. Un anneau qui, visiblement, ne laisse pas indifférent. « Les gens sont venus féliciter Jennifer » confie une témoin au site People. « Elle était très gentille et sincère quand elle les remerciait. Elle semblait être comme sur un nuage », ajoute la source.

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Il faut dire que Jen a de quoi être heureuse. Cette union marque la fin d’un long périple de célibat. Cette fois, c’est sûr, Jennifer a définitivement oubliéBrad Pitt avec qui elle s’était mariée en juillet 2000. Justin et Jennifer se sont rencontrés sur le tournage de Tonnerre sous les Tropiques en 2008 mais ce n’est que trois années plus tard que le coup de foudre avait opéré. Depuis, tout était fait pour que cela dure.

Crédits photos : Chris DELMAS / VISUAL Press Agency

Drame de Virginie: Qui est le tireur?

February 13, 2020 | News | No Comments

Les images ont fait le tour de la planète en quelques minutes. Mercredi matin, en direct à la télévision américaine, un homme a abattu deux jeunes reporters. Il s’appelait Bryce Williams, avait 41 ans et connaissait les victimes.

Bryce Williams serait actuellement entre la vie et la mort. Quelques heures après avoir traumatisé les Etats-Unis en abattant deux jeunes journalistes en plein direct, l’homme a été rattrapé par les forces de l’ordre de l’Etat de Virginie. Après une courte confrontation, il aurait été grièvement blessé, à en croire les informations du Huffington Post. Les chaînes américaines CNN et WHSV annoncent quant à elles qu’il se serait donné la mort.

La jeune reporter Alison Parker était âgée de 24 ans. Son caméraman, Adam Ward, en avait 27. Tous deux effectuaient ce matin une interview au bord d’un lac de Moneta, en Virginie, lorsqu’un homme leur a tiré dessus à bout portant. Les deux jeunes gens sont décédés brutalement. La femme qu’ils interviewaient, Vicki Gardner, a elle été touchée au dos. Ses jours ne sont plus en danger selon la chaîne ABC News.

Loin de l’image clichée du tireur ermite, sorti de sa forêt des complots plein la tête pour faire un carnage, le tireur s’avère être un ancien collègue des deux victimes. Son nom d’emprunt, en tant que journaliste, est Bryce Williams. Son vrai nom, Vester Lee Flanagan. Agée de 41 ans, il a longtemps travaillé dans les différentes antennes de la chaîne WDJB7 avant d’être muté en Virginie il y a trois ans. Il travaillait alors comme présentateur dans la même chaîne que ses deux victimes et les côtoyait régulièrement de façon professionnelle, rapporte CNN.

Suite à son crime, le tireur n’a pas hésité à diffuser une vidéo du meurtre sur sa page Facebook. Il a également publié de nombreux tweets pour justifier son geste. L’un d’entre eux disait simplement « Alison a tenu des propos racistes ». Depuis, tous les comptes liés à l’auteur du double meurtre ont été fermés par les autorités. Avant d’être rattrapé par la police, Bryce Williams a également envoyé un fax de 23 pages à ABC News. La chaîne a immédiatement transmis les documents aux autorités. En l’an 2000, il avait poursuivi son employeur de l’époque, la chaîne WTWC-TV pour « discrimination raciale ». Un accord avait été trouvé entre la chaîne et le journaliste.

Alison, sa première victime, était en couple avec l’un des journalistes de la chaîne, Chris Hurt. Adam Ward, son caméraman, était lui fiancé à la productrice de l’émission, Melissa Ort. Cette dernière a assisté à la scène depuis la régie du studio. Le couple devait quitter la chaîne et la région dans les jours à venir pour débuter une nouvelle vie ailleurs.

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Déjà papa de quatre enfants, l’acteur Jude Law l’est devenu pour la cinquième fois en mars dernier. Le bébé, né d’une relation de seulement quelques semaines, fait la joie de sa maman, une chanteuse de 23 ans qui ne cesse de poster des photos de Ada. La jolie petite fille commence déjà à montrer plusieurs signes de ressemblance avec son papa.

Elle a les yeux bleu gris à tomber par terre et un sourire photogénique hérité de son papa. Tout comme son père Jude Law, la petite Ada commence déjà à faire du charme à tout le monde. Prise en photos à de multiples reprises par sa maman et omniprésente sur le compte Instagram de celle-ci, la petite Ada a dernièrement été prise en photo par un photographe professionnel. Enlacée par sa mère, la petite présente un regard rieur, sa petite menotte dans la bouche, devant le visage aimant de sa maman.

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La jolie petite fille ressemble à son illustre père. Ada semble en effet avoir hérité du regard ravageur de Jude Law, des ses yeux bleu gris dans lesquels se plongent sa mère sur la photographie. A à peine 6 mois, la petite fille sait déjà comment poser face à l’objectif : rares sont les bébés aussi photogéniques que la fille de Jude Law.

Peu présent sur les réseaux sociaux, l’acteur n’a pas encore diffusé de photographies de lui portant dans ses bras son dernier bébé. La maman de la petite fille, séparée de Jude Law depuis le début de sa grossesse, avait fait exprès de déménager dans le luxueux quartier d’Hampstead à Londres pour que l’acteur puisse lui aussi profiter de sa fille. Elle a récemment confié au Dailymail que Jude Law était un excellent papa qui passe beaucoup de temps avec sa petite dernière. Et il change même les couches…

Mummy and baby moments ❤️❤️❤️ thank you @isabellalombardini for capturing this.Une photo publiée par Catherine Harding (@cat_cavelli_) le 26 Août 2015 à 9h31 PDT

Invité sur le plateau de Vivement dimanche sur France 2 dimanche dernier, Pierre Arditi s’est adressé avec émotion à Sabine Azéma, la veuve de son ami Alain Resnais, qu’il n’a pas revue depuis longtemps, bien trop longtemps.

Pierre Arditi est de retour sur les planches. A l’affiche de la nouvelle pièce de Florian Zeller, Le Mensonge au théâtre Edouard VII, aux côtés de son épouse Evelyne Bouix, le comédien a eu la joie de venir parler de ce nouveau rôle dans l’émission de Michel Drucker. Un an et demi après la mort d’Alain Resnais, Pierre Arditi est aussi revenu sur sa collaboration avec le réalisateur et surtout la grande amitié qui les liait. En effet, dès les années 1980, Alain Resnais s’entoure d’un trio talentueux qui ne le quittera pas: Pierre Arditi, André Dussolier et Sabine Azéma, qui devient d’ailleurs son épouse en 1998, sont inséparables. Mais bien des choses ont changé depuis la disparition de Alain Resnais.

Grands amis avant la mort de celui qui les a réunis, Pierre Arditi et Sabine Azéma ne sont plus aussi proches que par le passé. C’est un immense regret pour Pierre Arditi, qui a adressé un émouvant message à la comédienne durant l’émission: “Je n’ai pas vu Sabine depuis longtemps. Et même très longtemps, trop longtemps. C’est de ma faute, c’est elle qui appelle et moi qui ne répond pas toujours,” explique-t-il en regardant Michel Drucker. Son regard se détourne, les larmes montent. “Donc Sabine, chère Sabine, je voulais juste te dire que tu ne disparais pas de ma vie. Et que je vais te rappeler, dès que j’aurai passé quelques jours, là, pour le spectacle. Parce que tu me manques. Voilà. Pardonne-moi mais tu me manques, “ a-t-il ajouté sous les applaudissements émus du public.

Crédits photos : Tony Barson

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