Saturday, June 27, 2020

Spanish Colonial Monuments Fuel Race Strife in US Southwest

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Spanish Colonial Monuments Fuel Race Strife in US Southwest

Statues of Spanish conquistador Don Juan de Oñate are now in storage after demonstrators in New Mexico threatened to topple them. Protesters in California have pulled down sculptures of Spanish missionary Junipero Serra, and now schools, parks and streets named after Spanish explorers are facing uncertain futures.

As statues and monuments associated with slavery and other flawed moments of the nation's history come tumbling down at both the hands of protesters and in some cases decisions by politicians, the movement in the American Southwest has turned its attention to representations of Spanish colonial figures long venerated by some Hispanics but despised by Native Americans.  

Protesters say figures such as Oñate, who led early Spanish expeditions into present-day New Mexico, shouldn't be celebrated. They point to Oñate's order to have the right feet cut off of 24 captive tribal warriors after his soldiers stormed Acoma Pueblo. That attack was precipitated by the killing of Onate's nephew.

File - In this Sept. 23, 2015 file photo, an interview is conducted next to a statue of Junipero Serra at the Carmel Mission in… File - In this Sept. 23, 2015 file photo, an interview is conducted next to a statue of Junipero Serra at the Carmel Mission in…
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They say other Spanish figures oversaw the enslavement of Indigenous populations and tried to outlaw their cultural practices.

Some Hispanics who trace their lineage to the early Spanish settlers say removing the likenesses of Oñate and others amounts to erasing history — a complicated history both marred by atrocities against Indigenous people and marked by the arduous journeys that many families made for the promise of a new life or to escape persecution in Spain.

That history remains tightly woven into New Mexico's fabric as many Native American Pueblos still are known by the names given to them by the Spanish and many continue to practice Catholicism — something even Pueblo leaders acknowledge.

"New Mexico is a special place for all of us. We are all neighbors. We share food, we work together, and in many cases, our family relations go back generations," said J. Michael Chavarria, chairman of the All Pueblo Council of Governors and governor of Santa Clara Pueblo.

Earlier this month, demonstrators tried to tear down an Oñate statue outside an Albuquerque museum using chains and a pickax. A fight that broke out resulted in gunfire that injured one man. The next day, Albuquerque removed the statue and placed it in storage.

Another Oñate statue was removed by Rio Arriba County officials ahead of a planned protest that sought its removal, drawing praise from activists and some Pueblo leaders.

A graffiti reading A graffiti reading
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Albuquerque City Councilor Cynthia Borrego, who is Hispanic, acknowledged the sordid aspects of history during a city-sponsored prayer and healing event prompted by the protests.

"We also have to remember, those were times of war ... but we can't go back 500 years," she said.

Daniel Ortiz, 58, a retired financial adviser in Santa Fe, can trace his family's roots over 14 generations. He said the statues' removals amount to anti-Hispanic sentiment and a dismissal of Hispanics' unique contribution to area.  

"This is the work of a small, radical Native American group, not our Pueblos," Ortiz said. "They've hijacked the Black Lives Matter movement and our Anglo leaders are too scared to stand up to them."  

A couple stop to look at a bust of Belgium's King Leopold II, which has been damaged by red paint, graffiti and cement, at a park in Ghent, Belgium, June 19, 2020. A couple stop to look at a bust of Belgium's King Leopold II, which has been damaged by red paint, graffiti and cement, at a park in Ghent, Belgium, June 19, 2020.
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Ortiz is leading a online petition calling for the monuments' return.

Others have taken to social media to call the vandalism an act of "Hispanicphobia," linking it to anti-immigrant sentiment.  

Even the Spanish Embassy in the U.S. has weighed in, saying that defending the Spanish legacy is a priority and educational efforts will continue for "the reality of our shared history to be better known and understood."

Spanish explorers were the first Europeans to set foot in the present-day American Southwest. It started with expeditions in the 1540s as the Spanish searched for the fabled Seven Cities of Gold. Decades later, colonization ramped up and Santa Fe was established as a permanent capital in 1610.

Spanish rule over the New Mexico territory lasted for about two centuries until the area briefly became part of the Republic of Mexico before it was taken over by the U.S.

Spain's enduring hold over the territory made it unlike other areas in the Southwest and opened the door for memorializing the Spanish influence.

Some scholars say the phenomenon of commemoration is linked to efforts that originated more than a century ago as Hispanics tried to convince white members of Congress that New Mexico should become a state.  

During the 19th Century, white people moved into the territory and held racist views toward the region's Native American and Mexican American population, according to John Nieto-Phillips, author of "The Language of Blood: The Making of Spanish-American Identity in New Mexico, 1880s-1930s."

"They derided particularly the Mexican population as mongrels and mixed-blood who were incapable of governing themselves," said Nieto-Phillips, the diversity and inclusion vice provost at Indiana University.

Paint and protest graffiti covers the Jefferson Davis Memorial in Richmond, Va., June 7, 2020, following a week of unrest in the U.S. against police brutality and racism in policing. Paint and protest graffiti covers the Jefferson Davis Memorial in Richmond, Va., June 7, 2020, following a week of unrest in the U.S. against police brutality and racism in policing.
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As a result, Nieto-Phillips said elite Hispanics in the region took on a solely Spanish American identity over their mixed heritage as a means to embrace whiteness. Some Hispanics adopted notions about "pure" Spanish blood as part of the eugenics movement that peaked in the 1920s and '30s to argue they were racially different than other ethnic Mexicans in Texas and California, he said.  

It's an identity that continues today. The conquistador image has appeared on university emblems, moving truck companies, and once was the mascot of Albuquerque's minor league baseball team. Meanwhile, Latinos in other southwestern states often identify as Mexican American or mestizo, a mixture of Spanish and Native American ancestry.

Yet, in recent years, the Spanish conquistador and all the effigies connected to it  have seen intense criticism thanks to a new politicized coalition of Native American and Latino activists. Protests have forced the cancellation of Santa Fe's annual "Entrada" — a reenactment of when the Spanish reasserted themselves following the Pueblo Revolt.

In California, people have been defacing Serra's statues for years, saying the Spanish priest credited with bringing Roman Catholicism to the western United States forced Native Americans to stay at the missions after they were converted or face brutal punishment. Protesters in Los Angeles and San Francisco recently brought down statues of Serra.

The recent violence in New Mexico has forced some elected officials to consider removing public art and renaming schools linked to Spanish conquistadors.

Vanessa Fonseca-Chávez, who grew up in Grants, New Mexico, and is the author of an upcoming book on colonial legacies in the Southwest, said she understands how Hispanics can be excited about being able to trace their history to early New Mexico settlements that predate even the Massachusetts Bay Colony.  

But along with those prideful reflections should come a critical examination of colonial legacy and the anger spurred by those monuments.

"These incidents didn't happen in a vacuum," said Fonseca-Chávez, an assistant English professor at Arizona State University. "This has been building for more than 20 years ... people are really getting frustrated at the lack of historic and social consciousness about New Mexico's history."


June 28, 2020 at 12:58AM

UP board result.nic.in 2020

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June 27, 2020 at 06:00PM

Native Americans Protesting Trump Trip to Mount Rushmore

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Native Americans Protesting Trump Trip to Mount Rushmore

President Donald Trump's plans to kick off Independence Day with a showy display at Mount Rushmore have angered Native Americans, who view the monument as a desecration of land violently stolen from them and used to pay homage to leaders hostile to Indigenous people.

Several groups led by Native American activists are planning protests for Trump's July 3 visit, part of Trump's "comeback" campaign for a nation reeling from sickness, unemployment and, recently, social unrest. The event is slated to include fighter jets thundering over the 79-year-old stone monument in South Dakota's Black Hills and the first fireworks display at the site since 2009.

But it comes amid a national reckoning over racism and a reconsideration of the symbolism of monuments around the globe. Many Native American activists say the Rushmore memorial is as reprehensible as the many Confederate monuments being toppled around the nation.

"Mount Rushmore is a symbol of white supremacy, of structural racism that's still alive and well in society today," said Nick Tilsen, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe and the president of a local activist organization called NDN Collective. "It's an injustice to actively steal Indigenous people's land, then carve the white faces of the colonizers who committed genocide."

While some activists, like Tilsen, want to see the monument removed and the Black Hills returned to the Lakota, others have called for a share in the economic benefits from the region.

Trump has long shown a fascination with Mount Rushmore. South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem said in 2018 that he once told her straight-faced that it was his dream to have his face carved into the monument. He later joked at a campaign rally about getting enshrined alongside George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln. And while it was Noem, a Republican, who pushed for a return of fireworks on the eve of Independence Day, Trump committed to visiting South Dakota for the celebration.

Some wildfire experts have raised concerns the pyrotechnics could spark fires, especially because the region has seen dry weather this year. Firefighters called in crews from two other states to help Thursday as a blaze consumed approximately 150 acres (61 hectares) about 6 miles (10 kilometers) south of the monument.

The four faces, carved into the mountain with dynamite and drills, are known as the "shrine to democracy." The presidents were chosen by sculptor Gutzon Borglum for their leadership during four phases of American development: Washington led the birth of the nation; Jefferson sparked its westward expansion; Lincoln preserved the union and emancipated slaves; Roosevelt championed industrial innovation.

And yet, for many Native American people, including the Lakota, Cheyenne, Omaha, Arapaho, Kiowa and Kiowa-Apache, the monument is a desecration to the Black Hills, which they consider sacred. Lakota people know the area as Paha Sapa — "the heart of everything that is."

As monuments to Confederate and Colonial leaders have been removed nationwide, some conservatives have expressed fear that Mount Rushmore could be next. Commentator Ben Shapiro this week suggested that the "woke historical revisionist priesthood" wanted to blow up the monument. Noem responded by tweeting, "Not on my watch."

The governor told Fox News on Wednesday, "These men have flaws, obviously every leader has flaws, but we're missing the opportunity we have in this discussion to talk about the virtues and what they brought to this country, and the fact that this is the foundation that we're built on and the heritage we should be carrying forward."

Tim Giago, a journalist who is a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe, said he doesn't see four great American leaders when he looks at the monument; he sees four white men who either made racist remarks or initiated actions that removed Native Americans from their land. Washington and Jefferson held slaves. Lincoln, though he led the abolition of slavery, approved the hanging of 38 Dakota men in Minnesota after a violent conflict with white settlers there. Roosevelt is reported to have said, "I don't go so far as to think that the only good Indians are dead Indians, but I believe nine out of every 10 are ..."

The monument has long been a "Rorschach test," said John Taliaferro, author of "Great White Fathers," a history of the monument. "All sorts of people can go there and see it in different ways."

The monument often starts conversations on the paradox of American democracy — that a republic that promoted the ideals of freedom, determination and innovation also enslaved people and drove others from their land, he said.  

"If we're having this discussion today about what American democracy is, Mount Rushmore is really serving its purpose because that conversation goes on there," he said. "Is it fragile? Is it permanent? Is it cracking somewhat?"

The monument was conceived in the 1920s as a tourist draw for the new fad in vacationing called the road trip. South Dakota historian Doane Robinson recruited Borglum to abandon his work creating the Stone Mountain Confederate Memorial in Georgia, which was to feature Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis and Stonewall Jackson.

Borglum was a member of the Ku Klux Klan, according to Mount Rushmore historian and writer Tom Griffith. Borglum joined the Klan to raise money for the Confederate memorial, and Griffith argues his allegiance was more practical than ideological.

Native American activists have long staged protests at the site to raise awareness of the history of the Black Hills, which were seized despite treaties with the United States protecting the land. Fifty years ago, a group of activists associated with an organization called United Native Americans climbed to the top of the monument and occupied it.  

Quanah Brightman, who now runs United Native Americans, said the activism in the 1970s grew out of the civil rights movement of the 1960s. He hopes a similar movement for Native Americans comes from the Black Lives Matter movement.

"What people find here is the story of America — it's multidimensional, it's complex," Griffith said. "It's important to understand it was people just trying to do right as best they knew it then."

The White House declined to comment.

 


June 27, 2020 at 08:26PM

In Belgian town, Monuments Expose a Troubled Colonial Legacy

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In Belgian town, Monuments Expose a Troubled Colonial Legacy

For a long time, few people in the small Belgian town of Halle paid much attention to the monuments. They were just fixtures in a local park, tributes to great men of the past.

But these are very different times, and yesterday's heroes can be today's racist villains.

And so it was that three weeks ago, a bust of Leopold II, the Belgian king who has been held responsible for the deaths of millions of Congolese, was spattered in red paint, labeled "Murderer," and later knocked off its pedestal.

Nearby, a pale sandstone statue formally known as the "Monument to the Colonial Pioneers" has stood for 93 years. It depicts a naked Congolese boy offering a bowl of fruit in gratitude to Lt. Gen. Baron Alphonse Jacques de Dixmude, a Belgian soldier accused of atrocities in Africa.

These monuments, and others across Europe, are coming under scrutiny as never before, no longer a collective blind spot on the moral conscience of the public. Protests sweeping the world that followed the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed last month by Minneapolis police, are focusing attention on Europe's colonial past and racism of the present.

Eric Baranyanka, right, and his foster mother Emma Monsaert look at a photo of Eric as a young boy in Lembeek, Belgium, June 22, 2020.

Eric Baranyanka, a 60-year-old musician who came to Halle as a refugee from Belgium's African colony of Burundi when was 3, said he has always found the statue of Jacques "humiliating."

"I had this pride being who I was. It was in complete contradiction with that statue," he said.

But Halle Mayor Marc Snoeck appears to be more representative of his citizenry. He said he "never really noticed" the monuments until an anti-colonial group raised awareness of them a dozen years ago in the town of 40,000 people about 15 kilometers (10 miles) south of Brussels.

"I'm part of an older generation and I heard precious little during my studies about colonialism, the Congo Free State and the Belgian Congo," said the 66-year-old Snoeck, noting he was taught about how Europeans brought civilization, not exploitation and death, to the heart of Africa.

A statue of former Belgian King Leopold II has been vandalized, in the park of the Africa Museum, in Tervuren, near Brussels, Belgium, June 9, 2020.

Statues of Leopold, who reigned from 1865 to 1909, have been defaced in a half-dozen cities, including Antwerp, where one was burned and had to be removed for repairs. It's unclear if it will ever come back.

But Leopold is hardly the only focus. Snoeck found it remarkable that protesters have not targeted the statue of Jacques, which he called "possibly even worse."

The mayor said the statue is known locally as "The White Negro," because of the hue of the sandstone depicting the Congolese youth offering the fruit to the colonial-era Belgian who condoned or was responsible for murders, rapes and maiming workers in the Congo Free State.

Baranyanka was lovingly raised by a white foster family in Halle and said he never experienced prejudice until after he had been in Belgium for about a decade.

His 98-year-old foster mother Emma Monsaert recalls others in town asking her if she was really going to take in a Black youth in the 1960s: "I said, 'Why not, it is a child after all.'"

But at school, Baranyanka found out how others felt about race.

One teacher poured salt on his head, he recalled, saying it would make it whiter. When he wanted a part in a school play of the 17th century fairy tale "Puss in Boots," he was denied a role, with a teacher telling him: "Mr. Baranyanka, in those days there were no Blacks in Europe."

He counts himself lucky to have had a close circle of friends that survives to this day. As a teenager, he often talked to them about the monuments, his African roots and Leopold's legacy.

A statue of Belgium's King Leopold II is smeared with red paint and graffiti in Brussels, June 10, 2020. King Leopold II is now increasingly seen as a stain on the nation.

"They understood, and they were grateful I explained it," he said.

On Tuesday, Congo celebrates 60 years of independence from Belgium. The city of Ghent will remove a statue of Leopold to mark the anniversary and perhaps take a healing step forward.  

Eunice Yahuma, a local leader of a group called Belgian Youth Against Racism and the youth division of the Christian Democrats, knows about Belgium's troubled history.

"Many people don't know the story, because it is not being told. Somehow they know, 'Let's not discuss this, because it is grim history,'" said Yahuma, who has Congolese roots. "It is only now that we have this debate that people start looking into this."

The spirit of the times is different, she said.

"Black people used to be less vocal. They felt the pain, but they didn't discuss it. Now, youth is very outspoken and we give our opinion," Yahuma added.

History teachers like 24-year-old Andries Devogel are trying to infuse their lessons with the context of colonialism.

"Within the next decade, they will be expecting us to stress the impact of colonialism on current-day society, that colonialism and racism are inextricably linked," Devogel said. "Is contemporary racism not the consequence of a colonial vision? How can you exploit a people if you are not convinced of their second-class status?"

The colonial era brought riches to Belgium, and the city of Halle benefited, building a rail yard that brought jobs. Native son Franz Colruyt started a business that grew into the supermarket giant Colruyt Group with 30,000 employees — one of them Baranyanka's foster father.

A man walks with his shopping bags past the Monument for the Congo Pioneers in Halle, Belgium, June 24, 2020. In Halle, a small trading town of 40,000, as across much of Europe, the tide is turning and a new consciousness is taking shape.

Halle has escaped the violence seen in other cities from the protests, and officials would rather focus attention on its Gothic church, the Basilica of St. Martin, as well as its famous fields of bluebells and Geuze beer.

Baranyanka, who will soon stage a musical show of his life called "De Zwette," — "The Black One," returned recently to the park and the monuments.

Despite the hostility and humiliation he felt as a youngster, he didn't consider their destruction as the way to go.

"Vandalism produces nothing, perhaps only the opposite effect. And you see that suddenly such racism surges again," he said. "It breeds polarization again. This thing of 'us against them.'"

Devogel, the teacher, says it is the task of education "to let kids get in touch with history."

"Otherwise, it will remain a copper bust without meaning," he said of the Leopold II monument. "And you will never realize why, for all these people, it is so deeply insulting."

 


June 27, 2020 at 07:32PM

Friday, June 26, 2020

$300G Lamborghini wrecked 20 minutes after leaving dealership

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$300G Lamborghini wrecked 20 minutes after leaving dealership Supercar broke down on the highway.
June 27, 2020 at 01:17AM

Thunderstorm In bihar

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Thunderstorm In bihar
June 26, 2020 at 08:00PM

Coronavirus live updates: Get the latest developments here

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Coronavirus live updates: Get the latest developments here Get the latest news on COVID-19 here.
June 26, 2020 at 10:07PM

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Hun Sen Tempers Speculation Son Will Be Next Cambodian Leader

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Hun Sen Tempers Speculation Son Will Be Next Cambodian Leader

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has groomed his eldest son as a potential successor ever since that son, Hun Manet, graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point almost 20 years ago, and is confidently predicting his ruling Cambodian People's Party will remain in power for another 100 years.
 
Analysts say, though, that that rise is far from certain and Lieutenant General Hun Manet – who also heads the army – will have to negotiate the CPP politburo, factionalism, a fickle public and China to win enough support to govern this one-party state.
 
Even Hun Sen, the region's longest-serving leader, has tempered recent speculation that the top job was his son's for the taking, saying there were many capable candidates who could contest any future leadership bid.
 
"It depends on people's voices. The first concern is whether the party would accept him. The second is the general elections," he said in a speech after the latest bout of leadership speculation.
 
"I will support and educate him to unleash his fullest potential."

FILE - Son of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, Lt. Gen. Hun Manet, inspects military vehicles at ceremony at the National Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, June 18, 2020.

Hun Manet's elevation through the military ranks was swift, and his recent appointment as chairman of the CPP's youth wing, alongside a political mission to China, and his father's authoritarian rule, had further fueled talk about his political ambitions.
 
Gavin Greenwood, an analyst with A2 Global Risk, a Hong Kong-based security consultancy, told VOA that in raising Hun Manet's potential succession, legitimate questions about Hun Sen's rule are also raised, ranging from the prime minister's health to military loyalty.
 
"It's always where the trouble is now, in places with a strong ruler. It's very rarely that the masses coming up from the bottom who are the threat, it's the people around you," he said, adding the leadership talk was one way keeping the troops in line.
 
"Why is he raising this whole issue now, specifically, or does he feel threatened?
 
"Is this essentially a warning to sections of the military that they need to remain loyal and to follow the dynasty and his son?" Greenwood asked.
 
"There's more questions than answers, but with autocracy that's usually the case," he said.

FILE - Son of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, Hun Manet (L), and his wife Pich Chanmoy show their inked fingers after casting their votes in general elections in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, July 29, 2018.

Hun Sen returned his country to being a one-party state in 2018 elections, widely derided as a sham, when the CPP won all 125 seats in the National Assembly, the lower house of the country's Parliament.
 
Victory was assured after the main political opposition party was banned, independent newspapers were closed or sold to government-friendly interests and human rights activists were jailed or fled.
 
Opposition leader Kem Sokha remains under house arrest on treason charges.
 
Carl Thayer, emeritus professor with the University of New South Wales, said that by grooming his son for leadership through political appointments but playing down his prospects in public, Hun Sen was limiting any potential rivals for the leadership.
 
"The minute Hun Sen says that; that's the anointed one, then it gives the opposition, disgruntled forces the opportunity to attempt to organize and block it. So to keep everybody guessing is probably the better game that there is," he said.
 
Prior to elections two years ago Hun Sen, 67, said, despite health concerns, he would lead Cambodia for another 10 years, until he is 75. He has also eschewed the West and its criticisms while forging closer ties with China, which has invested billions of dollars in Cambodia.  
 
"China is absolutely crucial," Greenwood said in regard to any transfer of power. "Their record is that every country that borders China, China has – as far as its concerned – has issues with.
 
"The last thing they want in any of these countries is something that's going to affect stability and order and cause any sort of repercussions and resonances that's might come back over the border at them."
 
Thayer echoed those sentiments.
 
"Whenever there's a leadership transition, or about to be, China makes it clear to its friends who it doesn't like, who it sees as anti-China, and who it would object to.
 
"So, China's got to be convinced that Hun Manet will carry on like his  father and protect China's interest and that the transition would not be destabilizing."
 
Until then, Thayer said Hun Sen would remain the sole person to determine who replaces him, and he would be ably backed by Hun Manet and another son Hun Manith who is also in the military and heads the Defense Ministry's Intelligence Directorate.  
 
"Hun Sen is the center of that regime and his network protects him," he said. "He's got two sons in the military. They would ensure, in the meantime, that the military isn't used or moves against Hun Sen."
 


June 25, 2020 at 09:43PM

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Petrol price

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Petrol pricepetrol price in delhi
June 24, 2020 at 08:00PM

Unicorn Ridge

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Unicorn Ridge

Nhk9:


|easiest_route=|first_ascent=|last_eruption=|volcanic_arc/belt=|age=|type=|topo=|coordinates_ref=|range=|photo=|location=|listing=|label_position=|map_caption=Location of Unicorn Ridge in Hong Kong|map=Hong Kong|prominence=|elevation_ref=|elevation_m=437|photo_caption=|other_name=雞胸山}}'''Unicorn Ridge''' () is a [[List of mountains, peaks and hills in Hong Kong|mountain]] in [[Hong Kong]] at in height.<ref></ref> It is one of the [[Eight Mountains of Kowloon|Eight Mountains of the Kowloon Ridge]] and falls within [[Lion Rock Country Park]].

The summit of Unicorn Ridge is just above [[MacLehose Trail]], west of [[Sha Tin Pass|Shatin Pass]].<ref></ref>

== See also ==

* [[Gin Drinkers Line]]
*
* [[Fei Ngo Shan Road]]
* [[Eight Mountains of Kowloon]]

<br />

== References ==

June 25, 2020 at 01:35AM

Appeals court orders Flynn case dismissal, after years-long legal saga

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Appeals court orders Flynn case dismissal, after years-long legal saga A federal appeals court on Wednesday ordered a lower court to allow the case against former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn to be dismissed, as requested by the Justice Department -- likely ending the years-long legal saga stemming from the Russia investigation. 
June 24, 2020 at 11:27PM

Australian man jumps bail, found hiding in air vent of cargo ship in attempt to flee country, police say

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Australian man jumps bail, found hiding in air vent of cargo ship in attempt to flee country, police say An Australian man facing sexual assault charges jumped bail and was found hiding in an air conditioning vent on a cargo ship bound for Malaysia, authorities said Wednesday.
June 24, 2020 at 11:07PM

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Trump Jr. trolls by suggesting torn-down statues should be replaced with a 'more sturdy statue' of his father

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Trump Jr. trolls by suggesting torn-down statues should be replaced with a 'more sturdy statue' of his father Donald Trump Jr., in a seemingly facetious remark Tuesday, suggested any statues torn down during recent protests be replaced with a "more sturdy" statue of his father, President Trump.
June 24, 2020 at 07:30AM

The Infodemic: Blood Type Won't Make You Immune to Coronavirus

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The Infodemic: Blood Type Won't Make You Immune to Coronavirus

Fake news about the coronavirus can do real harm. Polygraph.info is spotlighting fact-checks from other reliable sources here​.

 

Daily Debunk

Claim: People with blood type O are more protected against COVID-19.

Verdict: Lacks Context

Read the full story at:Health Feedback

 

Social Media Disinfo

Screenshot
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Fresh false claims about COVID-19 vaccine and 5G technology spread online in the Philippines.

Read the full story at: Agence France-Presse​

Factual Reads on Coronavirus

Swiss giant Novartis halts COVID-19 hydroxychloroquine study
Swiss pharmaceuticals giant Novartis has decided to halt a clinical trial of hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19, citing problems in recruiting enough patients for the study of the controversial drug.
-- Medical Express, June 20


June 24, 2020 at 05:48AM

Fauci Says He Was Not Asked to Slow US Coronavirus Testing

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Fauci Says He Was Not Asked to Slow US Coronavirus Testing

U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said Tuesday he and other members of the White House Coronavirus Task Force have not been instructed to slow down testing for the virus as President Donald Trump says he has done. 

"As a member of the task force, and my colleagues on the task force, to my knowledge, I know for sure, that to my knowledge, none of us have ever been told to slow down on testing. That is just a fact. In fact, we will be doing more testing," Fauci said at a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on the administration's response to the coronavirus pandemic. 

Fauci's comments came just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump maintained he was serious about remarks he made at a campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Saturday, when he said he asked his administration to slow down testing because more testing would reveal more cases. 

White House officials have since tried walk back his comments, maintaining they were not meant to be taken seriously. 

But when asked Tuesday if comments at the rally were made in jest as he spoke with reporters in Washington, Trump said, "I don't kid. Let me just tell you. Let me make it clear." 

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Robert Redfield, when asked if more people should be tested in the U.S., responded, "All of us have been and continue to be committed to increasing readily timely access to testing. We've made a marked improvement and we still have a ways to go." 

Dr. Robert Redfield, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, testifies before a House Committee on Energy and Commerce on the Trump administration's response to the COVID-19 pandemic on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 23, 2020.

The U.S. leads the world in coronavirus infections, with over 2.3 million of the more than 9.1 million cases worldwide, according to statistics compiled by the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center. The U.S. is also the world leader in confirmed COVID-19 deaths, with more than 120,670. 

The congressional hearing took place as parts of the U.S. grapple with a surge in new confirmed coronavirus cases and hospitalizations. 

Food and Drug Administration chief Dr. Stephen Hahn and Admiral Brett Giroir, head of the U.S. Public Health Service, also testified. 

Fauci is among the health experts saying people should not be focused on a second wave of the virus in the U.S. because the country has not yet emerged from its first wave. 

It's a serious situation, Fauci told lawmakers. "Right now, the next couple of weeks are going to be critical in our ability to address those surges that we are seeing in Florida, Texas, Arizona and in other states." 

FILE - Visitors to Six Flag Fiesta Texas pass through a thermal screening area as they enter the park as a precaution against the coronavirus, June 19, 2020, in San Antonio.

Many states are in the process of loosening restrictions put in place to stop the spread of the virus, despite infection spikes in about half of the 50 U.S. states. 

Texas Governor Greg Abbott said Monday that reimposing restrictions would be a last resort, while saying the virus was spreading at an "unacceptable rate" and declining to impose an order to mandate the use of masks in public. Texas has set daily records for new infections for nearly two weeks as its hospitalization rates climbed. 

Neighboring Louisiana surpassed 3,000 deaths due to COVID-19, and with a rise in cases there as well Governor John Bel Edwards said he would keep in place the current limitations that were set to expire Friday. 

Hospitalization rates have also surged in Georgia, while the number of confirmed cases is rising in more than a dozen states. 


June 24, 2020 at 03:48AM

J.J. Abrams' production company Bad Robot releases 20-page employee guide on practicing anti-racism

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J.J. Abrams' production company Bad Robot releases 20-page employee guide on practicing anti-racism Director J.J. Abrams' production company, Bad Robot, released a 20-page guide to help its employees practice anti-racism.
June 24, 2020 at 04:26AM

Trump Says He'll Issue Executive Order to Protect Monuments

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Trump Says He'll Issue Executive Order to Protect Monuments

President Donald Trump said Tuesday he'll issue an executive order to protect monuments that are coming under new scrutiny as America wrestles with racism during the unrest sparked by the police killing of George Floyd.

Trump has been clear that he opposes the removal of monuments of leaders of the Confederacy or other distasteful aspects of American history.

Commenting as he departed the White House for a trip to Arizona, Trump said, "I will have an executive order very shortly, and all it's really going to do is reinforce what's already there, but in a more uniform way."

Protestors and police face off at Lafayette Park in front of the White House Protestors and police face off at Lafayette Park in front of the White House
Police Halt Attempt to Topple Andrew Jackson Statue Near White House
Police carrying shields confronted protesters with batons, pepper spray and pepper bullets

At a time of nationwide protests over racial injustice and inequality, Trump has aligned himself squarely on the side of those who argue that the pendulum has swung too far in the direction of eliminating reminders of hated aspects of American history.

Trump had tweeted late Monday that those who tried to topple a statue of President Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Park across the street from the White House faced 10 years in prison under the Veterans Memorial Preservation Act.  

"Beware," he tweeted.  

Jackson is one of Trump's favorite presidents.

The federal statute Trump cites subjects anyone who willfully injures or destroys, or attempts to injure or destroy, any structure, plaque, statue or other monument on public property commemorating the service of any person or persons in the armed forces of the United States to fines, up to 10 years imprisonment or both.

 


June 24, 2020 at 02:45AM

President Mutharika Votes in Malawi’s Fresh Presidential Election 

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President Mutharika Votes in Malawi's Fresh Presidential Election 

 Millions of Malawians cast votes Tuesday in the re-run of last year's presidential election.  The fresh election comes after Malawi's Constitutional Court nullified President Peter Mutharika's victory in last year's election, citing massive fraud.  Malawi's Electoral Commission (MEC) says it expects a free and fair election this time, although a few incidents of violence were reported. 

Electoral officials said people started queuing as early five o'clock in the morning Tuesday, waiting for the polling centers to open at six.     

Honasis Mphepo is the commission's presiding officer at Goliati polling station in Thyolo district in southern Malawi.     

"We have a good number of registered voters. Turn up was just very good, and individuals are coming in large number according to how they registered and they are voting,"  he said.

MEC officials said in many parts of the country voters started queeing an hour earlier to cast their votes. (Lameck Masina/VOA)

The election took place as Malawi continues to register a rise in COVID-19 cases.  As of Tuesday, the southern African country had 803 cases with eleven deaths since the first case was confirmed in April.   

But Mphepo said all preventive measures were observed throughout the voting process. 

"We are provided with the hand sanitizer, face masks and also we are observing the distance which is required; one meter apart when they [voters] are coming towards administration clerk," he said.

He said voters were also encouraged to use their own pens for marking the ballots. 

The MEC chairperson, Chifundo Kachale, told a press conference in Blantyre that the voting process was generally peaceful and that 99 percent of the polling stations opened on time.  

President Mutharika was among those who voted in his home village, Goliati, in Thyolo district. 

The president condemned acts of violence reported in some parts of the country.  In at least two locations, opposition backers beat supporters of the ruling party who they suspected of trying to rig the polls.  

Mutharika said the violence would likely make some people afraid of voting. 

"This is very sad that this is happening.  It's obvious the people are afraid of the people who are engaged in these barbaric acts. I condemn it completely,"   he said.  

Voters queueing in Thyolo district in fresh presidential elections. (Lameck Masina/VOA)

Voters who spoke with VOA said they were happy to participate in the fresh elections and that they are eagerly waiting the results.   

The MEC says vote counting starts soon after voting ends and the final results will be announced within eight days, as required by the law.   

 

 

 

 


June 24, 2020 at 02:33AM

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