Saturday, June 22, 2019

Oregon Republicans Flee in Face of Climate Change Bill

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Oregon Republicans Flee in Face of Climate Change Bill

Oregon state Republicans would rather go AWOL than let a climate bill pass that they say would raise costs for rural Oregonians. 

A bill requiring polluters to pay for their greenhouse gas emissions seemed poised to clear the state's Democrat-controlled Legislature this week. But as the measure headed to a vote in the northwest U.S. state's Senate, Republican members left the state, leaving the chamber short of a quorum and grinding legislative business to a halt. 
 
Putting a price on carbon pollution, as Oregon's plan would do, is the climate change strategy economists swear by. Even Republican elder statesmen back it.
 
But the Oregon walkout is the latest demonstration that it can still be a tough sell politically. 
 
Pay to pollute 
 
After roughly two centuries of polluting for free, economists say fossil fuel industries should pay for the damage their greenhouse gases cause to the climate. And making carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions more expensive, they say, is the most efficient way to reduce them. 
 
Oregon's cap-and-trade proposal is one way to accomplish that. 
 
The state would set a limit, or cap, on total CO2 emissions. Power plants, factories, refineries and other industries would have to buy allowances for each ton they produce. 
 
That provides an incentive to emit less. And companies with allowances left over can trade them with those having a harder time reducing pollution. 
 

cap-and-trade opponent's truck
The truck of a logger and cap-and-trade opponent is parked in Salem, Ore., June 20, 2019.

Who pays? 
 
Industries that have to buy carbon allowances would most likely pass the cost on to consumers. 
 
One place consumers would most likely see that cost is at the gas pump. By some estimates, the program would raise fuel prices at least 16 cents per gallon in the first year and go up from there. 
 
Critics say the cost would fall harder on rural residents, who tend to drive farther than city dwellers. And farmers would pay more to drive planting and harvesting equipment. 
 
"We are against job-killing bills that will decimate rural Oregon, who many of my caucus members represent," Senate Republican leader Herman Baertschiger Jr. said in a statement after the bill cleared the Oregon state House. 
 
But studies have shown that rural areas fare better under cap-and-trade programs than urban areas do. One study found the relatively small losses fell more heavily on urban areas. Another found net gains from increased energy efficiency, with bigger benefits to rural residents.  
 
Supporters say the bill's writers were careful. 
 
"There are tons of details that really speak to how tailored the policy became for specifics of Oregonians," said Pam Kiely with the Environmental Defense Fund. "It's not cut-and-paste." 
 
The bill includes measures to cushion the blow for some industries and residents. 
 
A tax credit would help low-income people defray higher fuel costs. Part of the revenue from selling pollution allowances would be used to help them weatherize their homes, reducing their heating and cooling bills. 
 
"We want to make sure this program doesn't create an overall burden on low-income people," said state Sen. Michael Dembrow, one of the bill's Democratic backers. 
 
Also, heavy-polluting industries that might leave the state and set up shop elsewhere would get a break on their emissions allowances. 
 

kate brown speaks at nga meeting
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown speaks at the National Governors Association 2019 winter meeting in Washington, Feb. 23, 2019.

'Come armed' 
 
Oregon's state Senate Republicans are not sold. 
 
When Democratic Gov. Kate Brown sent the state police to find the missing lawmakers and return them to the capital, Republican Sen. Brian Boquist responded, "Send bachelors and come heavily armed. I'm not going to be a political prisoner in the state of Oregon. It's just that simple." 
 
Oregon is not the first state to struggle with the politics of pricing carbon. 
 
New Jersey withdrew from the nation's first cap-and-trade program under Republican Gov. Chris Christie in 2011. The state is now returning to the nine-state program under Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy. 
 
This year, Virginia Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam's administration issued rules to join the program, known as the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative. But the state's Republican legislature blocked them. 
 
It's a global phenomenon. 
 
Australia's Labor government launched a carbon-pricing program in 2012. Two years later, a new conservative government repealed it.  
 
Canada imposed a nationwide carbon tax this year under Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Several Canadian provinces led by Conservatives are fighting it in court. 
 
Meanwhile, in Oregon, legislative business is piling up as the June 30 end of the session nears. Brown has threatened to fine absent lawmakers $500 per day. 


June 23, 2019 at 07:16AM

Visitors' crude photo-ops raise overtourism concerns on Easter Island, expert claims

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Visitors' crude photo-ops raise overtourism concerns on Easter Island, expert claims One expert is exhausted with the not-so-funny photo-ops that increasing numbers of tourists are reportedly taking.
June 23, 2019 at 03:21AM

Lisa Marie Presley posts rare photo with all four of her kids

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Lisa Marie Presley posts rare photo with all four of her kids Lisa Marie Presley shared a sweet family photo that included all four of her children on Thursday.
June 23, 2019 at 02:05AM

Sudan Protesters Hold Night Gatherings to Rekindle Movement

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Sudan Protesters Hold Night Gatherings to Rekindle Movement

As night fell, residents of a southern district in Khartoum briskly moved to set the stage for Sudanese protest leaders giving a brief on the movement's latest updates.

Grappling with a power outage, blocked internet access and heightened security, people from the Jabra district had few means to organize the meeting which drew dozens from the neighborhood.

Within a few hours, power generators were fetched, loud speakers set up, plastic chairs lined up and cars blazed their headlights on the podium where protest leaders were to give their speech.

Roadblocks were also set up to secure the entrances of the area.

"The campaign keeps us updated with whatever new is happening about the situation in Sudan," said Mujahed Abdelnaby who was attending the gathering.

Sudan's ruling generals have largely cut internet services in the wake of a deadly dispersal of a sit-in outside the army headquarters where thousands had been camped since April 6.

The crowds who were initially demanding the ouster of veteran leader Omar al-Bashir stayed put after his fall to call on the generals who took over to hand power to civilians.

But on June 3 armed men in military fatigues launched a bloody crackdown on the encampment, killing more than 100 people according to medics linked to protesters. Official figures stand at 61.

Since then campaigning has been restricted, particularly with increased deployment of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces across Khartoum.

The forces, which are led by the deputy chief of Sudan's transitional military council, are accused by protesters of leading the encampment's dispersal.

The council, which had previously vowed not to disperse the sit-in, denied ordering the violence and said it had only planned a purge of a nearby area called Colombia notorious for drug peddling.

'No longer scared'

Last week, protest leaders from the Alliance for Freedom and Change started organising daily simultaneous gatherings to revive the protest movement.

"We just want to keep the communication going with the people to confront the blackout imposed by the military council," said Waheeb Mohamed Saeed, a leading activist within the alliance.

Ahead of his speech at Jabra, he explained the campaigns are circulated via text messages and word of mouth among residents.

Demonstrators, meanwhile, started chanting to rhythmical beats their catchcry of "freedom, peace and justice".

"We will bring civilian rule no matter how long it takes," they vowed.

Similar rallies, gatherings and marches were regularly announced online, drawing thousands prior to the sweeping internet blackout.  

"We have been calling for the resumption of internet services as part of conditions to restart negotiations," Saeed said.

Talks between protest leaders and the military council had collapsed before the dispersal of the sit-in.

Both sides recently agreed to mediation efforts led by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

Protest leaders say the mediation is pegged on releasing all detainees and ensuring freedoms.

But the military council's chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan called for "unconditional" negotiations to be resumed.

"If all fails, we will press ahead with peaceful forms of escalation including civil disobedience," Saeed said.

Following the sit-in dispersal, businesses across Sudan were shut and residents stayed indoors after protest leaders called for a nationwide general strike.

Last week, hundreds of protesters took to the streets reviving calls for civilian rule across several Sudanese states including the capital's twin city Omdurman.

Dozens of employees from private companies and ministries, including oil and information, held silent demonstrations outside their offices in Khartoum.

For Lamia Babiker, who was attending the Jabra gathering, the deadly dispersal of the sit-in only rekindled the protest spirit.

"Now people can tell what's right and what's wrong," she said.

"People from several districts were killed and others have been missing since the dispersal. We are no longer scared."


June 22, 2019 at 10:28PM

UN Human Rights Chief Urges Venezuelan Government to Free Jailed Dissidents

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UN Human Rights Chief Urges Venezuelan Government to Free Jailed Dissidents

U.N. Human Rights chief Michelle Bachelet is urging the Venezuelan government to free hundreds of jailed dissidents who were arrested for participating in peaceful protests.

Her request came at the end of a three-day visit Friday to Venezuela during which she met with President Nicolas Maduro and opposition leader Juan Guaido.

At a Caracas news conference before leaving the country, Bachelet called on the government "to release all those who are detained or deprived of their liberty for exercising their rights in a peaceful manner."

Rights groups have been pressuring Bachelet to advocate on behalf of more than 700 people they say have been jailed for political reasons, a claim Maduro denies.

'Serious' humanitarian crisis

Bachelet, who said Venezuela faced a "serious" humanitarian crisis, also met with activists and victims of human rights violations, many of whom have been accused of conspiracy to overthrow the government.

"It was deeply painful to hear the desire of the victims, of their families, to obtain justice in the face of serious human rights violations," she sald.

Maduro said that he will take the recommendations of Bachelet seriously. After meeting Bachelet, Maduro said, "There are always going to be different criteria in every country, but I told her that she can count on me, as president, to take her suggestions, her recommendations and her proposals seriously."

Earlier, Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido said that Bachelet will leave two delegates in Venezuela to monitor the country's human rights situation, a development Bachelet confirmed.

Guaido said Bachelet's team would investigate issues related to the country's lack of food and medicine. They will also look into allegations President Maduro's government has violated human rights while cracking down on the opposition.

Some activists released

The trip to Venezuela was Bachelet's first as chief of the U.N. watchdog. Her predecessor, Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, was repeatedly denied access to the country for what he considered the government's refusal to recognize the humanitarian crisis.

Maduro appears to have taken a more diplomatic approach this time, as he released on the eve of her arrival 28 opposition activists many considered political prisoners.

Bachelet arrived in Venezuela at the invitation of the government. Her visit preceded a three-week U.N. Human Rights Council session that begins on June 24.

The U.S. and other Western states are expected to denounce Maduro's government for its alleged use of excessive force and mismanagement, which has led to chronic shortages of essentials, such as food and medicine.

The U.N. says the political and economic crisis in the oil-rich country has forced some 4 million people to flee the country since 2015.

Bachelet also has criticized sanctions imposed against Maduro's government by U.S. President Donald Trump, contending trade restrictions on trade could adversely affect the general population.

 


June 22, 2019 at 10:06PM

Iran Warns of Firm Response to any US Threat

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Iran Warns of Firm Response to any US Threat

VOA congressional correspondent Katherine Gypson and VOA Persian's Katherine Ahn contributed to this report from Washington.


WASHINGTON — Iran warned Saturday that it would react sharply to any perceived aggression against it.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi told the semi-official Tasnim  news agency that Iran would not allow any of its borders to be violated.  He said "Iran will firmly confront any aggression or threat by America."

Britain's Middle East minister travels to Tehran Sunday for talks with Iranian officials.  Britain's Foreign Office said Andrew Murrison will call for "urgent de-escalation in the region."  Murrison will also discuss Iran's threat to cease complying with the nuclear deal that the United States pulled out of last year.  

Friday U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted that the United States was "cocked & loaded to retaliate last night on 3 different sights when I asked, how many will die. 150 people, sir, was the answer from a General. 10 minutes before the strike I stopped it," Trump tweeted, saying the action would have been disproportionate.

"I am in no hurry," Trump added.

The president also said that he authorized additional "biting" sanctions against Iran late Thursday night as part of his administration's maximum pressure campaign to force Iran to restart negotiations over its nuclear program.

"Iran can NEVER have Nuclear Weapons, not against the USA, and not against the WORLD!" Trump tweeted.

The move appears to pull Washington and Tehran back from the brink of armed conflict that could engulf the Middle East. President Trump spoke Friday with Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

"The two leaders discussed Saudi Arabia's critical role in ensuring stability in the Middle East and in the global oil market," said White House spokesperson Hogan Gidley. "They also discussed the threat posed by the Iranian regime's escalatory behavior."
 
U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday, "We are in an extremely dangerous and sensitive situation with Iran. We must calibrate a response that de-escalates and advances American interests, and we must be clear as to what those interests are.'' She added that any hostilities against Iran must first be approved by Congress.
 
Concern about a potential armed confrontation between the U.S. and Iran has been growing since U.S. officials recently blamed Tehran for mine attacks on two oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, allegations Tehran denies, and Iran's downing of an unmanned U.S. drone this week.

James Phillips, a senior researcher at the conservative Washington-based Heritage Foundation, said he believes the immediate risk of a U.S.-Iran conflict has passed. "It's probably over as far as the incident goes with the shoot down of the drone. But, I think if there are further provocations, the president will respond in a strong and effective manner," he said.
 
Phillips also said he does not expect Tehran to accept U.S. calls for negotiations while Trump continues a "maximum pressure campaign" of sanctions on Iran. "I doubt that Tehran will be serious until it sees who wins the next presidential election," he said.

The U.S. announced this week it was authorizing another 1,000 troops — including a Patriot missile battery and additional manned and unmanned reconnaissance aircraft to bolster defenses at U.S. positions in Iraq and Syria.

Trump earlier said the unmanned surveillance drone that was shot down was flying over international waters in the Strait of Hormuz when it was hit by an Iranian missile, and said the incident was a "very bad mistake."

Iran says the drone flew into its air space, a "blatant violation of International law."

Friday, the head of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, showed off pieces of wreckage he said Iran had recovered after shooting down the U.S. drone.

He also said Iran itself had shown restraint, opting not take shoot down another U.S. plane, sparing American lives.

"Another spy aircraft called P8 was flying close to this drone," Hajizadeh said. "That aircraft is manned, and has around 35 crew members, well we could have targeted that plane."

"It was our right to do so, and yes it was American, but we didn't do it," he said.

U.S. Air Forces Central Command, which oversees U.S. military activity in the region, has called many of the Iranian claims "categorically false."

Central Command spokesman Lt. Col. Earl Brown rejected Iran's claims that a surveillance plane was flying alongside the drone, saying, "At no point in time did any U.S. aircraft enter Iranian airspace on June 19."

The U.S. Defense Department has also released images to bolster its assertion the drone did not enter Iranian airspace. But a news report said the department erroneously labeled the drone's fight path the location where it was shot down. An image apparently showing the airborne drone exploding provided little context.

"It's a really dangerous game and if I was flying in that region – which I have before – I'd be a little more nervous," Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a Republican member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and a U.S. Air Force Veteran who flew missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, told reporters Friday.

Kinzinger said Iran has moved the situation "this time - and multiple times prior - into the kinetic military realm. This is not the president doing it. I think a military response, even a small one is appropriate but if there's a strong economic cost then I think that could work, too."

But in recent days, Democrats have expressed concern Trump has not adequately consulted with the U.S. Congress on a military response they say could have grave consequences.

"I think every president would probably say initial, retaliatory strikes are ok but let's de-escalate this, let's look for a diplomatic solution," Rep. Ami Bera, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told VOA. "He (Trump) may be walking right into the hands of what the Revolutionary Guards want."


June 22, 2019 at 08:37PM

Lawmakers Alarmed by State of Federal Lockups for Migrant Kids

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Lawmakers Alarmed by State of Federal Lockups for Migrant Kids

Lawmakers on Friday were calling for swift change after reports this week of more than 250 infants, children and teens being held inside a windowless Border Patrol station, struggling to care for each other with inadequate food, water and sanitation.

It's a scene that is being repeated at other immigration facilities overwhelmed with too many migrant children and nowhere to put them.

"This facility wasn't even on our radar before we came down here," said law professor Warren Binford, a member of the team that interviewed dozens of children this week detained in Clint, about a half-hour drive from El Paso. Fifteen children had the flu, another 10 were quarantined.

Dr. Martin Garza, right, a pediatrician who volunteers at Catholic Charities in McAllen, Texas, checks migrant families just released from immigration detention, March 15, 2019.
Dr. Martin Garza, right, a pediatrician who volunteers at Catholic Charities in McAllen, Texas, checks migrant families just released from immigration detention, March 15, 2019.

'Everyone is sick. Everyone'

At another Border Patrol station in McAllen, Texas, attorney Toby Gialluca said all the children she talked to last week were very sick with high fevers, coughing and wearing soiled clothes crusted with mucus and dirt after their long trip north.

"Everyone is sick. Everyone. They're using their clothes to wipe mucus off the children, wipe vomit off the children. Most of the little children are not fully clothed," she said.

Gialluca said migrant teens in McAllen told her they were offered frozen ham sandwiches and rotten food.

At both detention facilities, the children told attorneys that guards instructed girls as young as 8 to care for the babies and toddlers.

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott speaks at a news conference in Austin, Texas, about a lawsuit challenging the president's use of an executive order to ease the threat of deportation for some undocumented immigrants, December 3, 2014.
FILE - Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott speaks at a news conference in Austin, Texas, about a lawsuit challenging the president's use of an executive order to ease the threat of deportation for some undocumented immigrants, Dec. 3, 2014.

State and federal fingerpointing

State and federal elected officials Friday demanded change about conditions at Clint, McAllen and other Border Patrol stations. There was plenty of angry fingerpointing as well.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott slammed Congress as "a group of reprobates" for failing to provide adequate border security funding.

"Every child who is not being taken care of adequately at the border, Congress is an accomplice to any harm they suffer," he said.

Oregon's Sen. Jeff Merkley pushed the Department of Homeland Security to publish a remediation plan "to immediately end these abuses." He gave them a deadline of July 12.

Republican Congressman Will Hurd, whose district includes Clint, said the tragic conditions "further demonstrates the immediate need to reform asylum laws and provide supplemental funding to address the humanitarian crisis at our border."

His Democratic counterpart, Congresswoman Veronica Escobar of El Paso, said she has already asked the Customs and Border Protection commissioner for a "full accounting" of the situation.

And Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand blamed the Trump administration's mismanagement of the nation's immigration system.

"This is a dark moment for our country, and history will not be kind to the perpetrators of this cruelty," Gillibrand said. "All Americans should be alarmed and demand an end to this immediately."

System overwhelmed

Border Patrol stations are designed to hold people for less than three days, but some children held in Clint and McAllen have been in there for weeks. Legally, migrants younger than 18 should be moved into Office of Refugee Resettlement care within 72 hours.

But federal officials have said they have hit a breaking point. That's in part because over the last year, migrant children have been staying longer in federal custody than in the past, leading to a shortage of beds in facilities designed for longer-term stays.

The lawyers inspected the Border Patrol facilities as part of a Clinton-era legal agreement known as the Flores settlement that governs detention conditions for migrant children and families.

In an emailed statement Friday, Customs and Border Protection said the agency leverages its limited resources to provide "the best care possible to those in our custody, especially children."

The statement said "our short-term holding facilities were not designed to hold vulnerable populations and we urgently need additional humanitarian funding to manage this crisis."

In addition, the agency said all allegations of civil rights abuses or mistreatment are taken seriously and investigated.

Earlier this week, acting Customs and Border Protection Commissioner John Sanders urged Congress to pass a $4.6 billion emergency funding package that includes nearly $3 billion to care for unaccompanied migrant children.

He said Customs and Border Protection stations are holding 15,000 people, more than three times their maximum capacity of 4,000.


June 22, 2019 at 05:14PM

Honestly, You're More Likely to Return a Lost Wallet With Cash Inside

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Honestly, You're More Likely to Return a Lost Wallet With Cash Inside

What would you do if you found a lost wallet? New research suggests that your answer may depend on what you find inside.

In 38 out of the 40 countries studied, people were more likely to return a lost wallet if it contained money. The finding, which goes against existing models of human behavior, could help policymakers find ways to encourage people to be more honest in social and business settings.

Economic models predict that people are more likely to be dishonest if there's money on the line. Financial self-interest isn't the only important factor, though. The new study suggests that it's also important for people to see themselves as honest.

Self-interest versus self-image

In order to investigate how self-interest and self-image interact in the real world, a research team led by Alain Cohn of the University of Michigan used a classic moral dilemma: finding a lost wallet.

The researchers turned in 17,303 "lost wallets" to employees at public places like banks, theaters and post offices in 355 cities spread across 40 countries. The transparent plastic showcased the contents: business cards, a grocery list and a key. In addition to those personal items, some wallets contained money, $13.45 in local currency, adjusted for the country's purchasing power, and others contained none.

The researchers tallied the number of wallets returned and investigated whether the people who received them were less likely to return them if they contained money, as expected.

"To our surprise, the answer is overwhelmingly no," Cohn said in a teleconference.

Money made a difference

In nearly all of the countries studied, people were more likely to return a lost wallet that contained money than one that didn't. Participants in Switzerland and Norway were most likely to reach out to the owner, and those in China and Morocco were least likely, but the trend persisted across the globe. On average, the return rate rose from 40 percent when the wallet didn't contain money to 51 percent when it did.

Raising the financial stakes strengthens the effect.

In the U.S., U.K. and Poland, the researchers increased the amount of money from $13.45 to $94.15. With even more to gain from dishonesty, people were more likely to return the lost wallet. The average percentage of wallets returned jumped from 61 percent to 72 percent when the amount of money was increased.

"While the results were initially surprising to us, we were not the only ones who did not anticipate this pattern," Cohn said.

The researchers asked economists and non-economists to predict the outcome of the study. Both groups incorrectly predicted that the more money the wallet contained, the less likely the participants would be to return it.

Although the respondents believed that people were more likely to keep lost wallets that contained money, another group surveyed felt that the more money they found in a lost wallet, the more it would feel like stealing if they kept it. 

"The evidence suggests that people tend to care about the welfare of others and they have an aversion to seeing themselves as a thief," Cohn said.

Selfless tendencies

Do people think only of themselves when considering a dishonest act, or do they think of others as well? To test this, the researchers removed the keys from some of the wallets in the U.S., U.K. and Poland and found that the average return rate was 9.2 percent higher when the wallets contained a key.

Since the key is valuable to the wallet owner but not the wallet finder, an increase in the return rate for wallets with a key shows that people consider how others may be harmed by their dishonesty.

While other studies have shown that people weigh the monetary rewards against the damage done to their self-image when acting dishonestly, this is the first field study to show that this is a global phenomenon.

"It's so much work to run a study across so many national cultures and with so many observations. This is not an easy thing to pull off and to do it in such a controlled, really well-organized way, this is really something," said Nina Mazar, a professor of marketing at Boston University who was not involved in the study.

In the case of a lost wallet, the right thing to do is clear. 

Most scenarios aren't so obvious, though, and researcher Cohn suggests that a next step could be to study cases "where perhaps it's less clear whether doing the wrong thing is actually being seen as wrong." 

The study underscores the importance of self-image concerns in decision making, and exploring the more nuanced situations can help researchers understand why people choose to act dishonestly, which can help policymakers encourage civic honesty around the world.


June 22, 2019 at 04:36PM

List of awards and honours of Valentina Tereshkova

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List of awards and honours of Valentina Tereshkova

Coffeeandcrumbs: ce


[[File:RIAN archive 612748 Valentina Tereshkova.jpg|thumb|Tereshkova in uniform with honours, 1969]]
This is an incomplete '''list of awards and honours received by [[Valentina Tereshkova]]'''.
== Soviet ==
She was decorated with the [[Hero of the Soviet Union]] medal, the USSR's highest award. She was also awarded the [[Order of Lenin]], [[Order of the October Revolution]], numerous other medals, and foreign orders including the [[Karl Marx Order]], United Nations Gold Medal of Peace, and the Simba International Women's Movement Award. She was also bestowed the titles of the [[Hero of Socialist Labor]] in Czechoslovakia, [[Hero of Labor (Vietnam)|Hero of Labor]] in Vietnam, and [[Hero of the Mongolian People's Republic]].

*[[Merited Master of Sports of the Soviet Union]] (June 1963)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
* [[Hero of the Soviet Union]] (<!-- 22 June -->1963)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
*[[Order of Lenin]] (<!-- 22 June -->1963,<ref name="nik">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> <!-- 6 May -->1981<ref name=RIA>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> – for making progress on the development and strengthening of ties with the progressive community and peace-loving forces of foreign countries
* [[Order of the October Revolution]] (<!-- 1 December -->1971)<ref name=":5">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
* [[Order of the Red Banner of Labour]] (<!-- 5 March -->1987)<ref name=":5" /> – for social activities
*[[Order of the Friendship of Peoples]]<ref name=":5" />
*[[Pilot-Cosmonaut of the Soviet Union]] (1963)<ref name="nik" />

== Other Warsaw Pact awards ==
* Gold star [[Hero of Socialist Labour]] (Czechoslovakia) (August 1963)<ref></ref>
* Gold star Hero of Socialist Labour (Bulgaria) (Bulgaria, 9 September 1963)<ref name=RIA />
* [[Order of Georgi Dimitrov]] (Bulgaria, 9 September 1963)
* [[Order of Karl Marx]] (October 1963, East Germany)<ref name=dn>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
* (October 1963, East Germany)
* [[Cross of Grunwald]], 1st class (October 1963, Poland)
* Order of the National Flag with diamonds (Hungary, April 1965)
* Order "For Achievements in Science" (Romania, 17 November 1973)
* Medal "For Strengthening Brotherhood in Arms" (Bulgaria, 1976)
* [[Order of Klement Gottwald]] (Czechoslovakia)

Streets in Ukraine that bore Tereshkova's name have been renamed due to the country's [[decommunization in Ukraine|2015 decommunisation law]].<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref><ref></ref>

== Other international awards ==
[[File:RIAN archive 837790 Valentina Tereshkova and Neil Armstrong.jpg|thumb|upright|Valentina Tereshkova and [[Neil Armstrong]], 1970]]
* [[Order of Tri Shakti Patta]], 1st class (Nepal, November 1963)
* [[Star of the Republic of Indonesia]], 2nd class (November 1963)
* [[Order of the Volta]] (Ghana, January 1964)
* "Gold Soyombo" [[Hero of Labour (Mongolia)]]<ref name=RIA />
* [[Order of Sukhbaatar]] (Mongolia, May 1965)
* Order of the Enlightenment (Afghanistan, August 1969)
* Order of Planets (Jordan, December 1969)
* [[Order of the Nile]] (Egypt, January 1971)
* "Gold Star" [[Hero of Labour (Vietnam)]] (October 1971)<ref name=RIA />
* [[Order of Bernardo O'Higgins]] (Chile, March 1972)
* [[Order of the Yugoslav Flag]] with sash (November 1972)
* Grand Cross of the [[Order of the Sun (Peru)|Order of the Sun]] (Peru, 1974)
* [[Order of Playa Girón]] (Cuba, 1974)
* [[Ana Betancourt#Commemorations|Order of Ana Betancourt]] (Cuba, 1974)
* Order of Friendship (Laos, 1997)<ref></ref>
* [[Order of Duke Branimir]], with sash (Croatia, 17 February 2003)
*She received the [[Eduard Rhein Ring of Honor]] from the German [[Eduard Rhein Foundation]] in 2007.<ref></ref><ref></ref>

== Russian ==

*[[Order of Merit for the Fatherland]]:<ref name=":5" />
**1st class (1 March 2017)<ref></ref>
**2nd class (6 March 2007)<ref name=RIA /> – for outstanding contribution to the development of domestic spaceLiquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)
**3rd class (6 March 1997)<ref name=RIA /> – for services to the state and the great personal contribution to the development of domestic spaceLiquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)
*[[Order of Alexander Nevsky]] (2013)<ref></ref><ref></ref>
*[[Order of Honour (Russian Federation)|Order of Honour]] (10 June 2003)<ref name=RIA /> – for outstanding contribution to the development and strengthening of international scientific, cultural and social ties
*[[Order of Friendship]] (<!-- 12 April -->2011) – for outstanding contribution to the development of national manned space flight and long-term fruitful public activity<ref></ref>
*[[Russian Federation State Prize]] for outstanding achievements in the field of humanitarian action in 2008 (4 June 2009)<ref name=RIA />
* (2016)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
* (2018)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
* Certificates of appreciation from the Government of the Russian Federation;
**16 June 2008, – for long-term fruitful state and public activities, considerable personal contribution to the development of manned space flight and in connection with the 45th anniversary of spaceflight<ref></ref>
**12 June 2003, – for large contribution to the development of manned space flight<ref></ref>
**3 March 1997, – for the contribution to the development of space, the strengthening of international scientific and cultural ties and years of diligent work<ref></ref>

== Scientific, social, and religious organisations ==
[[File:Valentina Tereshkova and Catherine Coleman.jpg|right|thumb|Valentina Tereshkova and NASA astronaut [[Catherine Coleman]] at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in December 2010]]
* Gold Medal, Tsiolkovsky [[Academy of Sciences of the USSR]]
* Gold Medal of the British Society for interplanetary communications "For achievements in space exploration" (February 1964)<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>
* [[Gold Space Medal]] (FAI, 1963)<ref></ref>
* Award Galambera Astronautics
* Gold Medal of Peace Joliot-Curie (France, 1964)
* Order "Wind Rose" International Committee of the National Aeronautics and Space Missions
* "Golden mimosa" of the Italian Union of Women (1963)
* Sign of the Komsomol "For active in the League" (1963)
* Gold Medal [[All-Russia Exhibition Centre|Exhibition of Economic Achievements]] (28 June 1963)
* Honour of [[DOSAAF]] (1 July 1963)
* [[Order of St. Euphrosyne, Grand Duchess of Moscow]], 2nd class (2008)
== References ==

June 22, 2019 at 03:29PM

Dr. Bijaya Kumar Sahoo

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Dr. Bijaya Kumar Sahoo

Newid152019:


<gallery>
Dr.Bijoy K Sahoo - 3(2).jpg|Dr. Bijaya Sahoo
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CA Dr. Bijaya Kumar Sahoo <ref> http://bit.ly/2Frd9xy>
Dr. Bijaya Kumar Sahoo has been appointed as the Advisor of Odisha Adarsh Vidyalaya Sangathan (ODVS) by Government of Odisha <ref> http://bit.ly/2ZF9XpW </ref> <ref> http://bit.ly/2FomDtC>

in the rank and status of Minister of State.was born on June 1, 1963 in Khurda, Odisha. He completed his Commerce Degree from Revenshaw College under Utkal University, Cuttack, Odisha in 1982. Later he completed his Chartered Accountancy from Kolkata and received a Certificate of Practice from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India in 1986 after completing his internship from Price WaterHouse Cooper . He started practicing with A.K Sabat & Co., Bhubaneswar.

He has founded a series of successful educational institutions like SAI International School<ref> http://bit.ly/2ZCr7Ev>, SAI Angan<ref> http://bit.ly/2FqpJNv>, SAI International College of Commerce <ref> http://bit.ly/2ZFa056 </ref> and SAI International Residential School <ref> http://bit.ly/2Fkf1bx>. In his professional front, he is the Director of Allahabad Bank, Director of Hindustan Shipyard Limited<ref> http://bit.ly/2ZFa19a>, former Board Member of Central Electricity Supply Utility (CESU) and Member of Shri Jagannath Temple<ref> http://bit.ly/2FqT76r>, Managing Committee and Chairperson Eastern Zone of FICCI Arise<ref> http://bit.ly/2ZCF1GD>

Dr. Bijaya Kumar Sahoo, Chairman, SAI International, was felicitated for his exemplary service to the society by the Red Cross Society, on June 20, 2019 by the Hon'ble Governor of Odisha Shri Ganeshi Lal <ref> http://bit.ly/2FqpD8F> <ref> http://bit.ly/2ZFa3hi
</ref>. He had been placed amongst the 51 New Millennium Edupreneurs in India by Education World and featured in their anniversary issue in 2013. His other awards include: • Lifetime Achievement Award for Education Excellence and bringing Innovation in Learning by Brainfeed, an Educational Initiative • Odisha Living Legend Award <ref> http://bit.ly/2Fn1AHW </ref> • Corporate Odisha Award for Steering Leadership & Entrepreneurial Values • My City Links Icon Achievers Award, 2018, instituted by My City Links (MCL) <ref> http://bit.ly/2Fn1AHW </ref> • Recipient of Best BPO award from State of Orissa. • Recipient of Best Chairman Award from Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. • Ambassador of Goodwill to USA due to his active involvement in social sector and recipient of "Four Avenues of Service" Award from Rotary International, USA. • Elected as first President of Confederation of Information Technology Enterprises, Orissa.

June 22, 2019 at 03:28PM

Istanbul Goes Back to Polls in Critical Vote

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Istanbul Goes Back to Polls in Critical Vote

Istanbul votes again in a mayoral election Sunday, after authorities voided an opposition victory in March that ended 15 years of control by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's AKP Party.

The CHP's Ekrem Imamoglu, a once-obscure opposition figure, pulled off the political upset, but it was eventually undone by Turkey's president, who cited mistakes in the appointment of polling station officials. Imamoglu was booted out of his office and Turkish officials ordered a re-run.

Erdogan, in what is being seen as a last-minute bid to win Sunday, is looking to an imprisoned Kurdish rebel leader in an effort to deny the opposition key Kurdish votes.

Jailed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan, in a handwritten letter, called on Kurds to remain "neutral" in Sunday's vote.

Embed
Istanbul Goes Back to Polls in Critical Vote video player.

Now, Imamoglu is back on the campaign trail, targeting electoral strongholds of his opponent.

Thousands turned out Wednesday to hear his message in Istanbul's Sancaktepe district, a faraway suburb dominated by AKP supporters.

"What do we love?" Imamoglu asked, speaking on top of a campaign bus. "We love democracy. We love freedom, we love fraternity (brotherhood), we love peace. We love being united with our nation."

This Imamoglu supporter says the re run of the Istanbul vote is undemocratic. VOA/D. Jones)
This Imamoglu supporter says the re-run of the Istanbul vote is undemocratic. (VOA/D. Jones)

Defending democracy slogan

Imamoglu's message of reaching across Turkey's deep political divide is widely seen as having been key to his victory in the March poll. Coupled with his slogan of defending democracy in Turkey, some see him picking up steam on the campaign trail.

"We are definitely putting up a struggle for rights, law and justice. We are putting up a fight against those who stole our democratic rights on March 31st," he said to the cheering crowd.

The message of democracy resonated with some voters listening to Imamoglu.

"For me, Imamoglu had already won," said a retiree, who declined to be named. "As this is a case of stealing, we will go and vote for Imamoglu again just to spite them."

With 1 in 3 Istanbul youths unemployed CHP opposition candidate Ekrem Imamoglu pledge to create jobs is seen as a vote winner.
With 1 in 3 Istanbul youths unemployed CHP opposition candidate Ekrem Imamoglu pledge to create jobs is seen as a vote winner. (VOA/D. Jones)

With 1 in 3 youth unemployed in Istanbul, a city hit hard by the country's economic slowdown, it is the economy that matters most for some.

"He promises jobs. We are unemployed. We are university graduates but have no jobs. We don't get posts," said Neslihan, who only gave her first name. "People are hungry. They cannot take bread to their homes. All the beautiful things will come with Imamoglu."

"Republican People's Party (CHP) received a very positive reaction that it had not seen for a long time and could increase its share of votes compared to past," says Nazli Okten, who teaches sociology at Istanbul's Galatasaray University.

AKP candidate Binali Yildirm seeks to rally the base saying the opposition stole his victory in March poll for Istanbul mayor.
AKP candidate Binali Yildirm seeks to rally the base saying the opposition stole his victory in March poll for Istanbul mayor. (VOA/D. Jones)

AKP candidate fights back

Across the city in the Kucukcekmece district, AKP candidate Binali Yildirim avoids talking about the economy and focuses on his claim the March election was stolen from him by fraud, a charge not upheld by the electoral authorities.

"Do not forget that we have unfinished business left from March 31st," said Yildirim in a speech to supporters in Istanbul.

The crowd shouts back, "We will not forget."

Kucukcekmece is an AKP stronghold. Yildirim is also seeking to rally the base with a message of defending democracy.

"Justice will be served, that is how we should call it," said Hanife, a shop owner. "Justice will be served. Our votes were not counted, in the last election. Where did they disappear? Where has my vote gone?"

Hanife, an AKP supporter, backs the Istanbul revote saying the March vote was unfair. (VOA/D. Jones)
Hanife, an AKP supporter, backs the Istanbul revote saying the March vote was unfair. (VOA/D. Jones)

Hanife is one of many who credit their success to AKP party rule in Istanbul.

"I am a shop owner for 12 years and have been living here for 22 years. I own a clothing store, a boutique, and I opened it with my state's support. I got a credit from our state and opened it. That is why I support them," Hanife said.

With Istanbul accounting for a third of the Turkish economy and its $8 billion budget, the stakes are high in Sunday's poll.

"Politically, this is a vital importance in terms of the use and distribution of Istanbul resources," sociologist Okten said. "The side that uses these resources wisely will get a significant share of votes in the general elections in the long run."

In a last-minute move, Erdogan has stepped into the campaign as the latest opinion polls point to a resounding defeat for his candidate, a signal the Istanbul election could prove to be as much about his future as the city's.


June 22, 2019 at 02:16PM

H.R. 40 - Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act

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H.R. 40 - Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act

Om777om:


'''H.R. 40 - Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act''' is a United States House of Representatives bill, first proposed by [[John Conyers Jr.|Rep. John Conyers, Jr.]] (U.S. Representative for Michigan, now retired). The Bill proposes that a Commission be created to study and submit a formal report with it's findings and recommendations on appropriate remedies to Congress concerning "the fundamental injustice, cruelty, brutality, and inhumanity of slavery in the United States and the 13 American colonies between 1619 and 1865.


==Bill excerpt==
*(a) Findings.—The Congress finds that—<BR>(1) approximately 4,000,000 Africans and their descendants were enslaved in the United States and colonies that became the United States from 1619 to 1865;<BR>(2) the institution of slavery was constitutionally and statutorily sanctioned by the Government of the United States from 1789 through 1865;<BR>(3) the slavery that flourished in the United States constituted an immoral and inhumane deprivation of Africans' life, liberty, African citizenship rights, and cultural heritage, and denied them the fruits of their own labor;<BR>(4) a preponderance of scholarly, legal, community evidentiary documentation and popular culture markers constitute the basis for inquiry into the on-going effects of the institution of slavery and its legacy of persistent systemic structures of discrimination on living African-Americans and society in the United States; and<BR> (5) following the abolition of slavery the United States Government, at the Federal, State, and local level, continued to perpetuate, condone and often profit from practices that continued to brutalize and disadvantage African-Americans, including share cropping, convict leasing, Jim Crow, redlining, unequal education, and disproportionate treatment at the hands of the criminal justice system; and <BR>(6) as a result of the historic and continued discrimination, African-Americans continue to suffer debilitating economic, educational, and health hardships including but not limited to; having nearly 1,000,000 Black people incarcerated; an unemployment rate more than twice the current White unemployment rate; and an average of less than 1⁄16 of the wealth of White families, a disparity which has worsened, not improved over time.
**H.R.40 - Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act 115th Congress [http://bit.ly/2fr2kyF full text], [http://bit.ly/2IXZLSL pdf document]

==See also==
* [[Reparations for slavery]]
* [[Racism in the United States]]
* [[Slavery]]
* [[The National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America]]

==External links==

H.R.40 - Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans Act 115th Congress
:[http://bit.ly/2fr2kyF full text],
:[http://bit.ly/2IXZLSL pdf document]
==References==

June 22, 2019 at 11:31AM

Trump Warns Iran that US 'Cocked & Loaded' but 'In No Hurry'

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Trump Warns Iran that US 'Cocked & Loaded' but 'In No Hurry'

Capitol Hill correspondent Katherine Gypson and VOA Persian's Katherine Ahn contributed to this report from Washington.

The United States was "cocked & loaded," ready to strike three sites in Iran in retaliation for the downing of a U.S. drone over the Strait of Hormuz but called off the attacks at the last possible moment to spare Iranian lives.

The revelation by U.S. President Donald Trump on social media Friday followed news reports that the president initially authorized strikes on a handful of Iranian targets, such as radar installations and missile batteries, before pulling back.

"We were cocked & loaded to retaliate last night on 3 different sights when I asked, how many will die. 150 people, sir, was the answer from a General. 10 minutes before the strike I stopped it," Trump tweeted, saying the action would have been disproportionate.

"I am in no hurry," Trump added. 

The president also said that he authorized additional "biting" sanctions against Iran late Thursday night as part of his administration's maximum pressure campaign to force Iran to restart negotiations over its nuclear program.

"Iran can NEVER have Nuclear Weapons, not against the USA, and not against the WORLD!" Trump tweeted.

The move appears to pull Washington and Tehran back from the brink of armed conflict that could engulf the Middle East. President Trump spoke Friday with Saudi Arabian Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

"The two leaders discussed Saudi Arabia's critical role in ensuring stability in the Middle East and in the global oil market," said White House spokesperson Hogan Gidley. "They also discussed the threat posed by the Iranian regime's escalatory behavior."

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Friday, "We are in an extremely dangerous and sensitive situation with Iran. We must calibrate a response that de-escalates and advances American interests, and we must be clear as to what those interests are." She added that any hostilities against Iran must first be approved by Congress.

Concern about a potential armed confrontation between the U.S. and Iran has been growing since U.S. officials recently blamed Tehran for mine attacks on two oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, allegations Tehran denies, and Iran's downing of an unmanned U.S. drone this week.

This June 13, 2019, image released by the U.S. military's Central Command, shows damage and a suspected mine on the Kokuka Courageous in the Gulf of Oman near the coast of Iran.
This June 13, 2019, image released by the U.S. military's Central Command, shows damage and a suspected mine on the Kokuka Courageous in the Gulf of Oman near the coast of Iran.

James Phillips, a senior researcher at the conservative Washington-based Heritage Foundation, said he believes the immediate risk of a U.S.-Iran conflict has passed. 

"It's probably over as far as the incident goes with the shoot down of the drone. But, I think if there are further provocations, the president will respond in a strong and effective manner," he said.

Phillips also said he does not expect Tehran to accept U.S. calls for negotiations while Trump continues a "maximum pressure campaign" of sanctions on Iran. 

"I doubt that Tehran will be serious until it sees who wins the next presidential election," he said.

The U.S. announced this week it was authorizing another 1,000 troops, including a Patriot missile battery and additional manned and unmanned reconnaissance aircraft, to bolster defenses at U.S. positions in Iraq and Syria.

Trump earlier said the unmanned surveillance drone that was shot down was flying over international waters in the Strait of Hormuz when it was hit by an Iranian missile, and said the incident was a "very bad mistake."

Iran says the drone flew into its air space, a "blatant violation of International law."

Friday, the head of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, showed off pieces of wreckage he said Iran had recovered after shooting down the U.S. drone.

He also said Iran itself had shown restraint, opting not to shoot down another U.S. plane, sparing American lives.

"Another spy aircraft called P8 was flying close to this drone," Hajizadeh said. "That aircraft is manned, and has around 35 crew members, well we could have targeted that plane."

"It was our right to do so, and yes it was American, but we didn't do it," he said.

U.S. Air Forces Central Command, which oversees U.S. military activity in the region, has called many of the Iranian claims "categorically false."

Central Command spokesman Lt. Col. Earl Brown rejected Iran's claims that a surveillance plane was flying alongside the drone, saying, "At no point in time did any U.S. aircraft enter Iranian airspace on June 19."

The U.S. Defense Department has also released images to bolster its assertion the drone did not enter Iranian airspace. But a news report said the department erroneously labeled the drone's fight path the location where it was shot down. An image apparently showing the airborne drone exploding provided little context.

"It's a really dangerous game and if I was flying in that region, which I have before, I'd be a little more nervous," Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a Republican member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and a U.S. Air Force Veteran who flew missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, told reporters Friday.

Kinzinger said Iran has moved the situation "this time — and multiple times prior — into the kinetic military realm. This is not the president doing it. I think a military response, even a small one is appropriate but if there's a strong economic cost then I think that could work, too."

But in recent days, Democrats have expressed concern Trump has not adequately consulted with the U.S. Congress on a military response they say could have grave consequences.

"I think every president would probably say initial, retaliatory strikes are ok but let's de-escalate this, let's look for a diplomatic solution," Rep. Ami Bera, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told VOA. "He (Trump) may be walking right into the hands of what the Revolutionary Guards want."


June 22, 2019 at 10:36AM

Friday, June 21, 2019

2019 South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships

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2019 South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships

ThiagoSimoes: ←Created page with 'The '''2019 South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships''' was held in Santiago, Chile, from June 18 to 23, 2019.<ref>[http://www.re...'


The '''2019 South American Artistic Gymnastics Championships''' was held in [[Santiago, Chile|Santiago]], [[Chile]], from June 18 to 23, 2019.<ref>[http://bit.ly/2YaH2K8 Consugi] (in Spanish)</ref> The competition was organized by the Chilean Gymnastics Federation and approved by the International Gymnastics Federation.<ref>[http://bit.ly/31NsIt7 International Gymnastics Federation event status]</ref>

==Participating nations==
*
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==Medalists==
{|
|- style="background:#dfdfdf;"
| colspan="4" style="text-align:center;"| '''Men'''
|-
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| <br><small>[[Arthur Mariano|Arthur Nory]]<br>[[Francisco Barretto Júnior|Francisco Barreto]]<br>[[Lucas Bitencourt]]<br>[[Leonardo Souza]]<br>[[Pericles Silva|Péricles Silva]]<br>[[Tomas Florêncio]]</small>
| <br><small>[[Andres Martinez (gymnast)|Andres Martinez]]<br>[[Didier Yamit Lugo Sichaca|Didier Lugo]]<br>[[Javier Sandoval]]<br>[[Jose Manuel Martinez (gymnast)|Jose Manuel Martinez]]<br>[[Jose David Toro (gymnast)|Jose David Toro]]<br>[[Carlos Calvo (gymnast)|Carlos Calvo]]</small>
| <br><small>[[Adickxon Trejo]]<br>[[Junior Rojo]]<br>[[Maycol Puentes]]<br>[[Jostyn Fuenmayor]]<br>[[Orlando Briceño]]<br>[[Edwin Acosta]]</small>
|-
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| colspan="4" style="text-align:center;"| '''Women'''
|-
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| <br><small>[[Abigail Magistrati]]<br>[[Luna Fernandez]]<br>[[Martina Dominici]]<br>[[Agustina Pisos]]<br>[[Sira Macias]]<br>[[Valeria Pereyra]]</small>
| <br><small>[[Franchesca Santi]]<br>[[Maria del Sol Perez]]<br>[[Maria del Mar Perez]]<br>[[Simona Castro]]<br>[[Martina Castro]]<br>[[Makarena Pinto]]</small>
| <br><small>[[Ariana Orrego]]<br>[[Fabiola Diaz]]<br>[[Nicole Espinoza]]<br>[[Nadya Chacon]]<br>[[Ana Sarango]]<br>[[Venere Horna]]</small>
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==References==



2019


[[Category:2019 in gymnastics]]
[[Category:South American Gymnastics Championships]]
[[Category:International gymnastics competitions hosted by Chile]]
[[Category:2019 in Chilean sport]]


June 22, 2019 at 09:17AM

CTET admit card 2019

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CTET admit card 2019CTET, ctet.nic.in admit card 2019, ctet.nic.in
June 22, 2019

Lack of Internet Access Hurting West Virginians

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Lack of Internet Access Hurting West Virginians

Work starts early at Sprouting Farms in Summers County, West Virginia.

Employees in this rural region of the state handpick the organic produce, rinse, prepare and box it up on site, ready to distribute to area customers.

Connectivity is key

The farm also serves as a training center for aspiring farmers who want to learn how to grow — and market — sustainable produce.

Embed
Lack of Internet Access Hobbles West Virginians video player.

The challenge is making that process profitable, says project director Fritz Boettner.

"Our bottom line, everything that we do here, is to make farming a profitable business for every farmer, not just on this farm, but every farmer in the state," he says. "So in order to improve the bottom line for the farmer, we have to keep what I would call the food hub costs down. So that's the cost of aggregation, distribution, marketing, all those things."

And that, he adds, takes broadband connectivity, which is limited or unavailable in rural areas such as this.

"Right now I would say half of our farmers maybe do not have access to solid internet or even cellphone communication to make these types of transactions happen," he says.

The hills and valleys of West Virginia make it difficult to run fiber optic cable.
The hills and valleys of West Virginia make it difficult to run fiber optic cable.

And while there is fiber-optic cable available nearby, it would cost Boettner $500 a month, plus a $3,000 installation fee, to access it — a price, he says, that's simply too expensive for small businesses like his.

"It's just frustrating to know that very high-speed internet exists right down the road at a public school, and it can't find its way here," he says. "And I'm sure in West Virginia, in these small rural towns like this, it's like this everywhere."

The magic of broadband

In the town of Hinton, a 30-minute drive from Sprouting Farms, connectivity is not an issue.

Once a thriving railroad community, the town now depends on high-speed internet to connect with the outside world.

The town of Hinton, West Virginia has a number of flourishing businesses, thanks to high-speed internet connectivity.
The town of Hinton, West Virginia has a number of flourishing businesses, thanks to high-speed internet connectivity.

Ken Allman, who owns several businesses in the area, says his main online business venture, which connects hospitals and physicians around the world, would not exist without that access.

"The fact that our team of people in Hinton, West Virginia, are working with people in Mumbai, India, or in Tel Aviv, Israel, to solve problems in our field across the U.S. speaks to the magic of what broadband and mobile can do in a small community," he says.

Fiber of the community

The town is a perfect example of adaptation.

"Hinton wouldn't be here if it wasn't for the railroad in the 1870s," Allman says. "The railroad was the broadband of the time. It brought the mail, it brought the people, it brought the cargo. It was the broadband of the time."

Organic kale is hand picked, washed and packed on site at Sprouting Farms, West Virginia.
Organic kale is hand picked, washed and packed on site at Sprouting Farms, West Virginia, for retail and wholesale.

Now broadband is the fiber-optic cable that runs through the community and makes commerce possible.

"It's very difficult to operate a business without reliable broadband," Allman says. "We require it to support our back office functions, as well as the services we deliver to our clients. ... We also need mobile to support our people while they're trying to do their jobs.

"It's very difficult to operate a business without reliable broadband, without reliable mobile communications as well," he says. "The two really complement each other, and you need them in order to function on a day-to-day basis."

An essential part of modern life

Joe Brouse agrees.

As executive director of the New River Gorge Regional Development Authority, his job is to help stimulate and promote economic development in the region.

But he says lack of connectivity is hindering that objective.

"This problem with coverage is affecting everyone," he says. "I mean, it's an ecosystem. You have to have businesses, they have to have employees, employees have to have places to live, and parents have to have good schools for their children. Part of being a good school in this day and age is having access to broadband.

"So businesses expect it. Households expect it. If people want to live here, they need to have access. It's an aspect of being in the modern world."

Sandstone Falls, West Virginia.
Sandstone Falls, West Virginia.

Hills and valleys

The topography of the state and low population levels are among the reasons why affordable broadband is lacking, he says.

"Population, customers, are figured into models of profitability."

But he remains hopeful.

"Our economic development agency works with the state of West Virginia, with our congressional offices who have been leaders on this issue, as well as other public development agencies, to look at creative solutions that might involve a mixture of grant and loan programs, to entities that can own the fiber [-optic cable] and help with the delivery system," he says.

"It's a different model than just having the provider come in, but it's a model that we can own, and it's a model that will allow us to get there quicker," he adds.

He points to the town of Hinton as an ideal model.

"By many standards, it's a small place, but it's actually ahead of the game in terms of providing broadband, and that's the story we want to tell all over the state in rural Appalachia."

That's encouraging news for Fritz Boettner.

"If I'm thinking about the future, and we're going to grow these farmers, and they're going to be doing more, we want more farmers in the network. That connectivity issue needs to be dealt with."


June 22, 2019 at 07:33AM

Trump tweets bizarre video suggesting he could be president '4EVA'

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Trump tweets bizarre video suggesting he could be president '4EVA' The commander-in-chief turned troller-in-chief Friday, tweeting out a video sure to send shivers down the spines of his biggest critics.
June 22, 2019 at 06:50AM

Ambalal Cuboid Theory

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Ambalal Cuboid Theory

Kparmar24: Ambalal Cuboid Theory


== Ambalal Cuboid Theory 1.1 ==

A² + B² + C² = D²
A = a, where a is any member of [ N, Z, Q, R ]
Put B = a+1 , means B=A+1
C = a²+a, means C=A×B
D = a²+a+1 means D=C+1

Results: - A² + B² + C² = D² becomes true for any value of a where a is any member of [ N, Z, Q, R ]

Proof:
D²-C² = (a²+a+1 )² – (a²+a)²
= (1)( 2a²+2a+1)
= (a²+a²+2a+1)
= a²+(a+1)²
= A² + B²
∴ A² + B² + C² = D²

For Example 1:

A= , B= a+1 , C= A*B, D=C+1
Put a = 5 in A² + B² + C² = D²
Then (5)² + (6)² + (30)² = (31)²
∴25 + 36 + 900 = 961
Example 2:
Put a = -7
Then (-7)² + (-6)² + (42)² = (43)²
∴49 + 36 + 1764 = 1849

Example 3:
Put a =1.7
Then (1.7)² + ( 2.7)² + (4.59)² = (5.59)²
∴2.89 + 7.29 + 21.0681 = 31.2481

Example 4:
Put a =35
Then ( 35 )2+( 85 )2+( 2425 )2=( 4925 )2
925 + 6425 + 576625 = 2401625
9x2525x25 + 64x2525x25 + 57625x25 = 240125x25
∴ 225625 + 1600625 + 576625 = 2401625

Now for your satisfaction, take A= any value a, then take B= a+1 , C= A*B, D=C+1
and put in formula A² + B² + C² = D² to get successful result

June 22, 2019 at 05:28AM

Paper Shortage in Zimbabwe Makes Passports Elusive 

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Paper Shortage in Zimbabwe Makes Passports Elusive 

Delays in obtaining passports are making some Zimbabweans think of "jumping the border" to look for jobs and a better life. People are still applying for the documents so they can travel legally, but the wait is long and hopes are growing dim. 

A line formed Thursday evening near midnight outside Harare's only passport office. The people covered themselves in blankets or plastic. It was chilly, being winter in this part of the world. Some started a fire to keep the cold at bay. 

Applicants outside a Harare passport office
Applicants outside a Harare passport office use fire to keep cold at bay, June 21, 2019. (C. Mavhunga/VOA)

By 4 a.m. Friday there were about 20 people in line, and they were already worried. Passport office authorities are accepting between five and 15 applicants a day. 

The people in line were reluctant to talk at first, but after agreeing on nicknames they opened up, starting with "Joe," 34. 
 
Joe said he wanted a passport because the economy has really collapsed. He said he wanted to leave the country because he couldn't survive in Zimbabwe. He said he would try to leave even without a passport — that's called "jumping the border" — because there was nothing else he could do in Zimbabwe.  
 
Highly skilled and semiskilled Zimbabweans have been leaving the country for decades, moving to nearby South Africa or Botswana or far away to Britain and U.S. in search of greener pastures.  
 
Now, even more Zimbabweans want to leave, unable to find jobs in the moribund economy.  
 
Last month, officials told parliament that Zimbabwe's chronic shortage of foreign currency was causing delays in processing passports, because there was not enough paper for the travel documents.  
 
Mangena, 43, said he feared his 5-year-old daughter would miss the wedding of her grandmother, who has resettled in the U.S. He said he first applied for his daughter's passport last August. For three weeks, he said, he has been coming to apply for an emergency passport and even offered to pay more for such processing, to no avail. Now the time for his trip is fast approaching, and he said he was getting anxious, afraid. He has no one to leave his daughter with. 

Everything else is ready for the trip, but officials are telling him there's no paper on which to print passports.  

Cain Mathema, Zimbabwe's minister of home affairs, is pictured in early June 2019 in Harare. (C. Mavhunga/VOA)
Cain Mathema, Zimbabwe's minister of home affairs, is pictured in early June 2019 in Harare. (C. Mavhunga/VOA)

Early this month, Cain Mathema, Zimbabwe's minister of home affairs, said the production of passports would increase because the government had made available more machinery and printing paper. He said printing a few passports a day was going to be thing of the past. 

But more than two weeks later, the situation is the same, if not worse. 

That cannot come as good news to Joe, Mangena and the other 280,000 Zimbabwe on the passport waiting list.  For them, jumping the border is looking like a better option every day. 


June 22, 2019 at 04:29AM

Colin Reed: Biden and Hillary: The eerie similarities between Joe's 2020 bid and Clinton's failed campaign

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Colin Reed: Biden and Hillary: The eerie similarities between Joe's 2020 bid and Clinton's failed campaign Both Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden sought to be the standard bearer of a party that had moved past their brand of politics.
June 22, 2019 at 12:56AM

Dte.kar.nic.in Diploma Results 2019

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Dte.kar.nic.in Diploma Results 2019
June 21, 2019 at 07:00PM

Odisha Result

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Odisha Resultchseodisha.nic.in 2019 arts, 2 arts result 2019, odisha 2 result 2019
June 21, 2019 at 03:00PM

Odisha Result

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Odisha Result2 arts result 2019, chseodisha.nic.in 2019 arts
June 21, 2019 at 03:00PM

Www.ssc.nic.in

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Www.ssc.nic.inwww.ssc.nic.in 2019 result, ssc. nic. in
June 21, 2019 at 01:00PM

Straight Talk Africa

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Straight Talk Africa

Join us every Wednesday as Shaka and his guests discuss topics of special interest to Africans, including politics, economic development, press freedom, health, social issues and conflict resolution.

 

Broadcast Schedule

Straight Talk Africa is broadcast live every Wednesday from 1830-1930 UTC/GMT simultaneously on radio, television and the Internet.

 

Join the Discussion

Find us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

Watch us on YouTube


Contact Us:
E-mail africatv@voanews.com

Postal Mail
Voice of America
TV to Africa - Suite 1613
330 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20237
USA

Internship Opportunities

In the competitive and changing television industry, nothing is more valuable for job-seekers than "real world" experience. The Straight Talk Africa internship program offers motivated and outstanding students exciting opportunities to experience practical journalism.  In addition to helping to get our weekly studio programs on-the-air, interns also produce a final project for their portfolios. Projects include writing and producing promos, stories, and even full-length documentary or magazine shows.

Watch our interns in action

For more information and/or send your resume to: 
africatv@voanews.com
Attention to Roblyn Hymes.


July 04, 2019 at 03:30AM

Straight Talk Africa

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Straight Talk Africa

Join us every Wednesday as Shaka and his guests discuss topics of special interest to Africans, including politics, economic development, press freedom, health, social issues and conflict resolution.

 

Broadcast Schedule

Straight Talk Africa is broadcast live every Wednesday from 1830-1930 UTC/GMT simultaneously on radio, television and the Internet.

 

Join the Discussion

Find us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

Watch us on YouTube


Contact Us:
E-mail africatv@voanews.com

Postal Mail
Voice of America
TV to Africa - Suite 1613
330 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20237
USA

Internship Opportunities

In the competitive and changing television industry, nothing is more valuable for job-seekers than "real world" experience. The Straight Talk Africa internship program offers motivated and outstanding students exciting opportunities to experience practical journalism.  In addition to helping to get our weekly studio programs on-the-air, interns also produce a final project for their portfolios. Projects include writing and producing promos, stories, and even full-length documentary or magazine shows.

Watch our interns in action

For more information and/or send your resume to: 
africatv@voanews.com
Attention to Roblyn Hymes.


June 27, 2019 at 03:30AM

Rep. Mark Green: If US doesn't respond to Iran, 'We are incentivizing future attacks'

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Rep. Mark Green: If US doesn't respond to Iran, 'We are incentivizing future attacks' The U.S. must offer a "measured response" to Iran's downing of an American drone over the Strait of Hormuz, according to a Republican lawmaker.
June 21, 2019 at 12:45PM

Peter de Waal

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Peter de Waal

Aliaretiree: /* Biography */


'''Peter de Waal''' (1938-) is an Australian LGBT rights activist and author. He was a foundation member of the Campaign Against Moral Persecution (CAMP) and participated in the first Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras.

==Biography==
De Waal was born in 1938.<ref></ref> As lifelong activists for the gay and lesbian community in Sydney, de Waal and his partner [[Peter Bonsall-Boone]] shared Australia's first televised gay kiss, established a counselling service from their Balmain home and confronted police during the first [[Sydney Mardi Gras]] parade in 1978.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref><ref></ref>

De Waal was one of the group known as the "78ers" who participated in the events in Sydney in 1978 including the first [[Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras]] parade, protests at Darlinghurst and Central Police Stations and Central Court, and marches through the city.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref name ="apology"></ref> De Waal attended the New South Wales State Parliament formal bipartisan apology to the 78ers on 25 February 2016.<ref name ="apology"/><ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref>

==Works==
*
*
*
*

==Awards==
In June 2017, de Waal and Bonsall-Boone (posthumously) were both inducted as a [[Member of the Order of Australia]] in the [[2017 Queen's Birthday Honours (Australia)|2017 Queen's Birthday Honours]],<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2)</ref> "for significant service to the community as a LGBTQI advocate and supporter, and through a range of volunteer roles."<ref></ref>

==References==



[[Category:1938 births]]
[[Category:LGBT rights activists from Australia]]
[[Category:Members of the Order of Australia]]
[[Category:People from Sydney]]
[[Category:LGBT culture in Sydney]]

June 21, 2019 at 12:39PM

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