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Monthly Archives: June 2022
Should you cleanse or exfoliate first? What to know – Medical News Today
Posted: June 5, 2022 at 2:13 am
Cleansing washes away dirt, makeup, and other skin impurities. Exfoliation removes dead skin cells that can clog pores and lead to acne breakouts. Cleansing first may remove surface-level dirt, allowing for better access to dead skin cells when exfoliating. Individuals can discuss their skin care with a dermatologist for the best advice.
Sun exposure, pollution, stress, fatigue, perspiration, and hormonal factors may cause a persons skin to become blemished, damaged, or prematurely aged.
Cleansing and exfoliating the skin both serve an important purpose in maintaining a healthy, glowing complexion. However, for best results, a person may consider cleansing the skin before exfoliating.
Individuals may remove makeup first with a gentle makeup remover and then choose a cleanser that best suits their skin type, such as oily, dry, or combination.
This article will examine the differences between exfoliation and cleansing, the benefits of each, the order in which a person may consider performing them for best results, and other skin care tips.
There are two types of exfoliation, mechanical and chemical.
Mechanical exfoliation uses an abrasive item, such as a sponge, to scrub away dead skin cells. It can also include washes with a rough textured item or exfoliating beads.
Physical exfoliation causes the quick removal of old skin cells. This results in a temporary disruption of the skin barrier, causing increased transepidermal water loss.
Chemical exfoliation removes dead skin cells by slowly dissolving them with chemicals. Common formulations for these exfoliation products include alpha and beta hydroxy acids.
There are also some newer chemical exfoliants called polyhydroxy acids that include lactobionic acid and gluconolactone. These exfoliants have larger molecule sizes, and individuals may find them more tolerable. However, for those with sensitive skin, experts typically recommend mandelic acid.
Removing dead skin cells can make the skin look more vibrant and renewed. It can also prevent acne flares due to a decrease in skin oil that can clog pores.
Exfoliation can be harsh for some skin types and may sting or burn if the skin is sensitive. Specifically, it may not suit individuals with rosacea, allergies, or older skin, and those with darker skin tones may notice pigment changes.
Because many methods of exfoliation are more abrasive than other daily skin care practices, such as cleansing, washing, and toning, a person does not need to exfoliate every day. For most people, once or twice per week is sufficient.
Cleansing the face helps decrease sebum or oil and old skin cells that can clog pores and lead to bacterial overgrowth. In turn, this can cause acne.
Washing the face does not remove all bacteria some are essential for the skin to remain healthy. However, overwashing the face can strip the skins resistance, decrease lipids, and increase water loss.
Dermatologists recommend using a nonabrasive cleanser that does not contain alcohol. Many cleansers use natural ingredients, such as tea tree oil or aloe vera, that are kind to the skin.
A person should use their fingertips to apply it, as washcloths or sponges can cause irritation. They should not scrub the cleanser into the skin. They can then rinse with lukewarm water and pat the face dry with a towel before applying moisturizer.
An individual should also only cleanse twice a day and after sweating.
The main benefit of exfoliating first is that it washes away dead skin cells during cleansing. Using an exfoliant a few times per week before sleeping and cleansing when waking may make for a gentler skin care routine.
A person should not scrub the face with a washcloth or sponge during cleansing, as this can cause irritation.
An individual should use the fingers to gently apply cleanser to the skin, rub in a circular motion, and then rinse with water.
They should follow exfoliation with a suitable moisturizer for their skin type.
Cleansing the face before exfoliation will allow chemical exfoliants to penetrate deep into the skin and prevent makeup or dirt from pushing deeper, especially if also using mechanical exfoliation. However, a gentle cleanser or exfoliant alone should remove makeup and dirt using both may strip the skin of moisture.
A person can follow these tips for cleansing:
Individuals using retinoids or other prescription medications for their skin should consider speaking with their dermatologist or healthcare professional before exfoliating to avoid over-exfoliation.
Keeping skin healthy requires daily attention.
There are a few skin care tips that dermatologists recommend to provide the best results:
Cleansing and exfoliation are both important steps in a persons skin care routine.
Cleansing washes away impurities and bacteria that can lead to acne or other infections. Exfoliation removes excess oil and dead skin cells that can clog pores and lead to acne breakouts.
There are two types of exfoliation chemical and mechanical. The former uses a chemical compound a person applies to the skin to dissolve dead skin cells while mechanical removes them through gentle scrubbing.
Cleansing the skin before exfoliation allows chemical exfoliants to penetrate the skin and prevents a person from scrubbing makeup and dirt into the skin during exfoliation.
For those who can tolerate exfoliants, cleansing the skin beforehand may aid in the absorption of the chemical exfoliants and could prevent dirt or leftover makeup from entering the epidermis.
A person should use a gentle cleanser that suits their skin type and only cleanse twice each day and after sweating.
Those with allergies should always conduct a patch test before using a new product. However, if a person experiences an allergic reaction, they should consult a doctor or healthcare professional as soon as possible.
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To fight illegal fishing in the Galapagos, Ecuador turns to Canadian satellite and sensing technology – CBC News
Posted: at 2:13 am
From a naval command centre perched on the coast of Ecuador's Galapagos Islands, Capt. Isiais Bodero Mala surveyed incoming satellite feeds tracking fishing vessels circling one of the world's most biodiverse places.
Mala was previously a submarine commander, so conservation monitoring wasn't initially a first-choice assignment for the long-serving mariner.
But with hundreds of fishing boats routinely stalking around the world-famous marine protected area for endangered hammerhead sharks, giant squids and other species, his work here is increasingly vital. Ecuador and other Latin American countries have tasked their security forces with cracking down on the fleets poaching from their waters.
Standing in front of large computer screens with other sailors in crisp white uniforms, Mala recounted a story from a fellow submarine commander who was using sonar to listen to a "massive school of fish" from his battle station while tracking a flotilla of Chinese ships.
"After the fishing fleet had passed, there was complete silence the fish had disappeared," Mala said in an interview.
About one in five fish consumed globally is either caught illegally without proper reporting or regulations to protect the sustainability of fish populations, according to a British study. It's an enterprise worth up to $50 billion USannually, depriving some of the world's poorest coastal communities of crucial nutrition and income, exacerbating declining stocks and threatening endangered species.
June 5 is the United Nations' International Day for the Fight against Illegal, Unreported and UnregulatedFishing (IUU), and officials say the problem is only getting worse globally.
As co-ordinated fishing fleets increasingly prowl the world's oceans often entering the waters of small developing nations governments and conservationists are increasingly turning to space-based technology to push back against the industrial-scale theft of marine resources.
In Ecuador, the government has enlisted help from Canadian tech companies and Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) to tackle the problem.
"There has been a big change on the technology front in recent years," said Sean Wheeler, DFO's chief of international programs. "Before, we were missing the ability to see the whole state of play."
With tens of thousands of industrial fishing boats operating across the world's oceans, pinpointing illicit operators is like searching for a "needle in a haystack," said Mark Carmichael, a senior executive with the Brampton, Ont.-based space technology firm MDA.
Under a $7-million project financed by Ottawa, the company, which is behind the Canadarm on the International Space Station, is providing satellite tracking, remote sensing and the ability to synthesize large amounts of data to Ecuador's navy.
Linking feeds from powerful satellites, including MDA'sRadarsat-2, with vessel ownership data and records of past offences can help security forces zero in on ships carrying out illicit activities, DFO's Wheeler said.
Other organizations, including the Google-backed tracking group Global Fishing Watch, provide Ecuador with artificial intelligence interpreting boat movements, including fishing operations in prohibited areas.
These different pieces of information are uploaded onto a map in one of Ecuador's naval operation centres, allowing security forces to better pick their battles for intercepting suspicious ships.
It's logistically impossible to inspect every ship on the high seas, Wheeler said, so "space-based [satellites] allow countries to better organize the limited resources we all have."
Environmental crimes, including illegal fishing, are the world's third-most lucrative illicit enterprise, according to the global police organization Interpol, just behind drugs and counterfeit goods and ahead of human trafficking.
The prevalence of these crimes has been increasing "drastically" at five per cent annually,Interpol reported, with "huge profits to be made and risk factors relatively low in terms of penalty."
An estimated 11 to 26 million tonnes of fish are illegally captured and unreported annually, according to estimates from an Imperial College London study cited by the United Nations. The tide, however, could be starting to turn.
"There is increasing global momentum to address crimes in the fisheries sector," said Lejda Toci, an officer with the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). "There are some very good initiatives countries have amongst themselves from satellite imagery, mapping the vessels, tracking the vessels and databases of suspicious vessels."
All large commercial ships are supposed to use a tracking tool called an Automatic Identification System (AIS), which reveals locations and voyage information to avoid collisions.
Ships engaged in illegal fishing, however, often shut off their AIS, particularly when they enter a sensitive area like the Galapagos Marine Reserve, said Capt. Mala. A Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) also broadcasts a ship's identity, location and speed, but it only sends out a signal every couple of hours and it, too, can be turned off.
Monitoring AIS or VMS movements is often the first tool used by navies to combat illegal fishing. But when vessels turn off their locators and "go dark," more advanced tech tools need to be unsheathed.
"The only way to find the dark vessels is to do surveillance from space," Carmichael said. To make that happen, MDA is working with Ecuador to pursue other signals.
When boats shut off their trackers before sailing into protected areas, some mariners still need to stay in touch with the outside world via satellite phones. Additionally, ships usually keep their onboard radar functioning to avoid collisions. Boat engines also unintentionally emit electromagnetic waves constituting a specific signature.
Some of these signals can be followed by MDA with radio frequency sensing, a military technology now available for civilian use, Carmichael said. MDA satellites can pinpoint radio waves emitted by satellite phones or onboard navigation systems, even if a ship's other location information has been hidden or corrupted.
Another tool, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), picks up radar wave reflections from boats at sea even if their other tracking tools are off, creating an image that is then relayed to authorities. SAR is especially useful for visualizing boats in remote locations or during periods of bad weather when other technologies, such as Very High Resolution satellite imagery, are less effective.
First developed for submarine warfare, Passive Acoustic Systems monitor underwater listening devices to identify a ship's location and the type of fishing gear it's using based on the sound it makes while sailing.
Data from all of these complex systems is combinedwith the help of advanced algorithms, Carmichael said, and provided to Ecuador's naval operations centres. With location information projected on computer screens, intelligence operatives can then dispatch their forces more efficiently.
"We get information from the operations centre. Then we are sent out," said Jorge Lopez, commander of Ecuador's machine-gun-equipped offshore patrol vessel Isla Isabela.
The patrol ship has special image recognition software that can identify endangered sharks his team might find onboard a fishing boat just by their fins.
As a result of this kind of data, Lopez said his forces were able to intervene against nine semi-industrial boats harvesting from waters reserved for small fishermen last year. Caught illegally harvesting, some of those fishermen are still in jail, he added.
According to a recently passed law, fishing vessels operating in Ecuador's waters are supposed to be outfitted with AIS. But the law has yet to be fully implemented. For now, only industrial fishing ships, and artisanal fishing boats allowed to operate within the Galapagos marine reserve, are equipped and monitored, fishermen and officials said.
The rise of AIS and other satellite tracking tech hasn't been met with universal support.
Some small-scale fishermen welcome the new technology as a tool to protect law-abiding harvesters around the Galapagos. It also allows relatives to know their kin are safe at sea.
"The AIS is an excellent idea," said 70-year-old Alberto Granja, a longtime Galapagos resident and retired fisheries worker. The problem, he said, is that buying the gear costs $1,200 US and many of the trackers donated to local fishermen by conservation groups now need to be replaced.
To other fishermen, the technology is little more than red tape one more piece of kit poor workers have to maintain on their boats and a symptom of government overreach.
"There are huge Chinese fleets out there," he said. "There is no control of big boats outside the reserve The Chinese have the technology to detect where the fish are, but we don't."
Chinese fishing incursions into the Galapagos's exclusive economic zone have not been a regular occurrence since a flotilla of more than 300 boats besieged the area in 2020, drawing a public rebuke from Ecuador's government, as well as naval action and international headlines.
Since then, the fleet seems to have kept away from the Galapagos, focusing instead on other parts of South America.
Ecuadorian officials have met with Beijing's representatives on the issue, Capt. Mala said. China's embassy in Ecuador did not respond to requests for comment.
With few enforceable rules on what boats can take from the high seas, there is not much that can be done about the fleet's activities today, conservationists said.
China is still not part of the Port State Measures Agreement, a key UN treaty enabling port inspections crucial to reducing the laundering of illegally caught fish.
While Chinese vessels are thought to be the worst offenders when it comes to large-scale illegal practices including the 2017 actions of the vessel Fu Yuan Yu Leung, caught with some 7,000 sharks aboard, many of them endangered species ships from Ecuador and nearby nations certainly aren't innocent.
Between 2018 and 2020, more than 135 unauthorized Ecuadorian industrial fishing boats were caught operating inside the marine protected area, according to data from the Galapagos National Park.
To try and build a united front for conservation, Ecuador has partnered with neighbours Colombia, Costa Rica and Panama to link several marine protected areas, including the Galapagos, creating an uninterrupted corridor for sharks, turtles, whales and other sea life spanning 500,000 square kilometres. Presidents of the four nations announced plans for the Eastern Tropical Pacific Marine Corridor (CMAR) during the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland, last November.
In January 2022, Ecuadorian President Guillermo Lasso signed a declaration expanding the Galapagos Marine Reserve by 60,000 square kilometres, an area larger than Nova Scotia, bringing the Galapagos marine protected area to 198,000 square kilometres.
Tracking boats at sea is just one part of the equation, said analysts. Navies, especially in cash-strapped countries across the Global South, have limited resources to chase down and board vessels inside their own exclusive economic zones.
Rather than following boats, some tech experts are turning their attention to tracking the fish itself. At some point, illegally caught fish will be sold to consumers, and naming and shaming repeat offenders at the retail level can be a powerful tool.
This, however, is harder than tracking ships. The mixing up of fish from different boats and even fishing areas through the transfer of catch at sea, a process known as transshipment, means tracing the origins of the marine life sold in different products is challenging.
Many seafood traders also mislabel fish shipments, to avoid taxes, regulations or simply increase profits, conservationists said. Moreover, it is not known how much of the illegally caught fish ends up in mixed products, such as fish meal and pet food, for which the origins are often even more difficult to ascertain.
"It's really hard to have traceability for fish and seafood with transshipment," said Nancy De Lemos from the monitoring group Global Fishing Watch. "It's hard to identify which fish comes from a legitimate activity and which does not."
Her organizationis trying to address that by tracking transshipments to identify which vessel was shifting the catch and where the mothership eventually docks. But even if a large ship thought to be engaged in illicit transshipments on the high seas is tracked to port, that information alone often isn't enough to bring criminals to justice.
"It's a sector that's complex and global in nature," said the UNODC's Lejda Toci. Bad actors can use loopholes in national legislation or register in a secretive jurisdiction regardless of where they fish, she added. "These are all aspects that make it particularly susceptible to transnational organized crime and corruption."
More than one third of global fish stocks are being overexploited, according to UN data, and the impacts of illegal fishing are getting worse.
Working at a stall in an open-air Galapagos market, 52-year-old fishmonger Marisa Felipe Suarez is one of the millions of people hurt by the mechanized pilferingof the world's oceans.
Wearing a blue cap and a big smile, she's married to a fisherman and regularly sails the Galapagos's waters herself with a licence for a small catch.
"This is a maritime reserve of international value," she said of the islands, which have enough diversity of life to have inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution.
"There should be help to stop [illegal fishing] from navies all over the world. These big fishing boats come from afar, take everything and then bring the fish back to their countries."
The travel and reporting for this story were funded by a grant from the Global Reporting Centre and Social Sciences Humanities and Research Council.
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Meet the American who invented the donut – Fox News
Posted: at 2:13 am
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Americans have a "hole" lotta love for the donut.
Credit Maine mariner Captain Hanson Crockett Gregory for that. The then-future high-seas hero, in a moment of deliciously divine inspiration as a teenage galley boy, turned a poorly cooked blob of sailors sustenance into the iconic, ring-shaped and deep-fried delicacy we know and love today.
His innovation changed the way people in the U.S., and now much of the world, eat breakfast.
Captain Gregory "was bold and brave and bright," enthused Texas author Pat Miller,who first heard of the culinary innovator amid a boat tour of Boston Harbor.
MEET THE AMERICAN WHO HONORS THE MEMORY OF 200,000 FALLEN WAR HEROES
She chronicled the adventurous life of Gregory (1832-1921) in her 2016 childrens book, "The Hole Story of the Doughnut" (Harper Collins).
U.S. consumers eat more than 10 billion donuts per year, according to the Simmons National Consumer Survey while an incredible 96% of Americans say they enjoy donuts.
Maine sea captain Hanson Gregory inspired a beloved American culinary icon when he invented donut as a teenage galley boy aboard the Ivanhoe on June 22, 1847. (The Crockett Collection at the Camden (Maine) Public Library)
But Gregorys long-lasting contribution to American culinary culture has gone largely unrecognized, save for the epithet upon his humble gravestone in a small, isolated sailors cemetery in Quincy, Mass., overlooking Boston Harbor, where he lived out his final years.
It reads simply: "Capt. Hanson Gregory. Recognized by the National Bakers Assn as the inventor of the doughnut."
Donut lovers celebrate National Donut Day on the first Friday of June June 3, 2022, this year in honor of the Salvation Army members who fed the deep-fried rings of dough to American soldiers in Europe during World War I.
The culinary world should celebrate another milestone later this month as well. The donut turns 175 years old on June 22.
The sea captain is buried in a sailors' cemetery in Quincy, Mass., overlooking Boston Harbor; this gravestone notes his culinary contribution to America. (Kerry J. Byrne/Fox News Digital)
That was the day, in 1847, that teenage sailor Gregory thought of an innovative solution to a problem plaguing the hungry crew of the sailing ship Ivanhoe.
Dough that was deep-fried in cauldrons of lard had been served to sailors on the seas for centuries. Dutch cooks made a notable version called oily cakes.
"When [the cakes] were fried, they were completely fried through. The idea caught on."
Washington Irving grew to become America's first celebrity writer chronicling the life of Dutch settlers in the Hudson River Valley. He's believed to be the first to use the phrase "dough-nuts" to describe the Dutch treat in his 1809 treatise, "A History of New York."
They were not the donuts as we know today.
It was "just a big blob of dough," Miller told Fox News Digital. "The center would remain greasy and partially cooked."
They were so dense, doughy and uncooked that "sailors called them sinkers," she said.
Gregory, just 15 at the time, was struck by an idea to lighten the sinker. He took the lid off a water-tight tin can that was used to store pepper in the ship galley.
"He used it like a cookie cutter. He cut out the center of the oily cakes," she said, while displaying a 19th-century tin spice can, with its sharp-edged lid.
NATIONAL DONUT DAY 2022: WHERE TO FIND FREE DONUT DEALS
"Then, when [the cakes] were fried, they were completely fried through. The idea caught on. It spread around the world because sailors told sailors."
She wrote in her book, "Ships' cooks now served holey cakes" instead of oily cakes.
Hansons mom introduced the innovation to landlubbers, selling them at a friends general store in their native midcoast Maine, Miller said.
"The first holes ever seen by mortal eyes!" Captain Hanson Gregory
"Well, sir, those donuts were the finest ever tasted," an elderly Captain Gregory told The Patriot Ledger of Quincy, Mass., in a 1916 interview, as in his golden years he gained recognition for his invention of years earlier.
Texas author Pat Miller wrote the 2016 children's book, "The Hole Story of The Doughnut," chronicling the life of Captain Hanson Gregory, with illustrations by Vincent X. Kirsch. (HarperCollins Publishers)
"No more indigestion no more sinkers just well-done, fried-through doughnuts."
He proclaimed they were "the first holes ever seen by mortal eyes!"
The influence of the donut on American culture had only just begun.
Boston-area entrepreneur William Rosenberg opened the first Dunkin Donuts in 1950 in Quincy less than a mile as the crow flies from the sailors cemetery where Captain Gregory has laid at rest since 1921.
The proximity of the original donut maker's burial place, and the birth of the nation's largest and most famous donut chain, appears to be nothing more than a quirky coincidence.
The first Dunkin' Donuts, founded in Quincy, Mass., in 1950, remains a roadside attraction today that draws visitors from as far away as Saudi Arabia, said franchisee Victor Carvalho. (Dunkin')
The Carvalho family now owns the original Dunkin location still in the same spot as it was in 1950, open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
It's something of a tourist attraction, drawing donut lovers from as far away as Saudi Arabia, franchisee Victor Carvalho told Fox News Digital.
"We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to Gregory," the family said.
"We feel a sense of pride and responsibility," he said, charged as they are with the ownership of an American culinary landmark. Yet even the Carvalho family, he said, only recently became aware that Gregory was buried a short distance away, across a narrow finger of Boston Harbor called Town River.
Scott Logan is charged with the care of Gregory's grave as the head of the City of Quincy's cemeteries department.
A variety of donuts are shown close up. Dunkin today has 12,600 donut shops in 40 countries, including 8.500 in the U.S. alone.
He grew up playing football, baseball and softball behind Snug Harbor School, just feet from the donut maker's burial place. Yet he only became aware of the donut pioneer in his role as cemetery caretaker.
"Everyone in Quincy knows about Dunkin' Donuts," Logan said. "Nobody knows the guy who invented the donut is buried right here. Nobody ever asks about him."
MEET THE AMERICAN WHO INVENTED LIGHT BEER
The Rosenberg family who founded Dunkin' apparently recognized Gregory's influence in later years. They reportedly paid to have the captains current gravestone erected in 1982, with a ceremony featuring local schoolchildren, after his original burial marker went missing.
Donuts and more donuts including some decorated in a patriotic theme.
"We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to Gregory," the family told UPI at the time.
Dunkin' today boasts 12,600 donut shops in 40 countries, including 8,500 in the U.S. alone. It sells about 2 billion donuts and Munchkin donut holes worldwide each year, the company told Fox News Digital.
Captain Gregory lived a dramatic life of high-seas adventure well after his teenage epiphany.
Gregory's intrepidity earned him honors from Queen Isabella II of Spain herself.
He delivered supplies, lime most notably, from New England to San Francisco in the wake of the California Gold Rush. The journey took him around the dangerous seas of Cape Horn at the tip of South America.
Along the way, Gregory rescued seven Spanish sailors from drowning aboard a sinking ship. His intrepidity earned him honors from Queen Isabella II of Spain herself.
Author Pat Miller displays the type of 19th-century spice can that helped inspire the invention of the donut in 1847. Sailor Hanson Gregory used the lid of the can to cut holes in the middle of the dough balls before frying them, in order to ensure even cooking throughout. (Fox News Digital)
The captain later named one of his daughters in honor of her majesty, according to Miller.
Gregory died in 1921, without full recognition of his trend-setting creation.
His legacy as the inventor of donuts was elevated, however, during "The Great Doughnut Debate" of 1941 at Hotel Astor in New York City, according to a Smithsonian Magazine report in 1975. The captains relative, Fred E. Crockett, spoke in defense of the family.
"Captain Gregory was the unanimous choice of the judges."
Cape Cod attorney Henry A. Ellis sought to debunk the claim of the Crockett/Gregory family, with a tall tale that the donut can be traced to a scuffle between Pilgrims and Native American people in the 1620s, in which a Wampanoag fired an arrow through an Englishman's ball of dough.
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"The issue was never really in doubt," Smithsonian reported.
"Mr. Crocketts presentation included an array of affidavits, letters and other documents. Captain Gregory was the unanimous choice of the judges."
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The industry cemented Gregorys position in 1948, when the National Bakers Association confirmed Captain Gregory as the inventor of the donut his status as an American innovator literally etched in stone overlooking the ocean on which he spent his life.
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Twin-tastic NSA scholars receive scholarships – The Suffolk News-Herald – Suffolk News-Herald
Posted: at 2:11 am
Abby and Emma Conrod both applied for the Howard D. Mast Scholarship figuring, at best, just one of them would receive the $5,000 award.
But the twins, both 18 and having just graduated from Nansemond-Suffolk Academy, had no idea both of them would receive twin, $5,000 scholarships. Scholarship committee Co-Chair Sandy Tucker and committee member and City Councilman Donald Goldberg were on hand the day before graduation to present it to them.
It was a nice surprise, but winning the scholarship also runs in the family. Their brother, Jacob, who graduated from NSA in the class of 2020 and attends the College of William & Mary, earned the same scholarship.
The Mast Scholarship is named for Howard D. Mast, who served as the citys parks and recreation director from 1949 to 1966 and died in 2006. He was known throughout the region as Mr. Tennis and was elected to the Mid-Atlantic Tennis Foundation Hall of Fame in 1995.
The scholarship helps pay for the winners college expenses and goes to either a graduating senior at one of the citys public or private high schools or accredited homeschool program, or a former graduate of one of the citys high schools or accredited homeschool program and enrolled as a full-time student in an accredited U.S. college or university.
The committee considers need, academics, extracurricular activities in school, extracurricular activities in the community and church and character, all things important to Mast.
These two were top dogs, Tucker said. They are outstanding citizens of the community, and its clear that theyre going to be outstanding citizens.
Abby, who will attend Liberty University to study nursing, said that with the rising cost of education, the scholarship will be helpful for her and her family with three siblings soon to be in college.
Its a great blessing and honor because as people know, education nowadays can be expensive, Abby said, so just being able to not have to worry so much about affording my education and to receive this is just a huge blessing, and Im very, very thankful that I can spend more time focusing on things like my studies instead of worrying about paying for my next semester.
Emma will attend the University of Virginia and has not decided on a major, though she is interested in mathematics and education. She echoed her sisters sentiments but also talked about the meaning of the scholarship itself.
Im really honored that I was chosen, and Im glad that they recognized us, Emma said. I dont know what I did right in the application.
She needed encouragement from her mom to talk about herself a little more, going the humble-brag route.
Through the whole winter when I was writing scholarships, my mom was like, You need to be specific and you need to say what youve done. You cant be humble, or whatever, Emma said.
In the essay, she needed to write about her character, hard work and dedication, so she focused on taking part in athletics such as basketball, cross country and lacrosse while at NSA. She also wrote about the schools honor code and being a part of the honor council, trusted to deal with cases among her peers.
Thats a lot to do, Emma said, You have to hold yourself to a much higher standard, I feel, just because everyones watching you for an example.
Abby focused on character traits she has learned in the sports shes played, having run cross country since sixth grade, and rising to varsity in eighth grade.
I talked about how that sport specifically really just taught me how to work hard, Abby said.
At NSA, she took part in four sports in addition to cross country basketball, lacrosse, track and field, and indoor track.
They said navigating the COVID-19 pandemic was a challenge.
The pandemic showed me how much a school like NSA cares for the students, Abby said, and how even when youre going through having to learn virtually and all the trials that come with that, how much energy and time all the teachers continued to put in despite the extra work it meant for them. And so as someone whos been at NSA for 13 years, Im going to miss the community and how much your teachers care for you the most.
Emma said it reminded her of the camaraderie and friendships she developed at NSA. Not being able to see those people in person made it more challenging, and it was harder for things like clubs to meet virtually.
You had to become more creative and you still wanted there to be the school spirit and community, but you obviously couldnt all meet in big groups, so you just had to become more creative, Emma said.
Abby recalled someone from William & Mary coming in to speak with students and telling them that they would never be in a place again that has people who care about their future as much as they did there, and being able to trust in the honor system, enough that her phone was on a bench in the hallway during a recent interview as numerous people moved about while graduation rehearsal was starting.
Thats one thing she said she will miss as she heads off to college.
All the time during free lunch, and on those benches, I just leave my keys, my wallet, my laptop and run to a teachers classroom to ask them a question, Abby said, and never in my wildest dreams would I ever imagine anything would not be there when I came back, which, that will also be different in college, I guess, so I definitely need to change my habits.
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Ekiti governorship election will be rancour-free NSA – ICIR
Posted: at 2:11 am
NATIONAL Security Adviser (NSA) Babagana Monguno has assured that the forthcoming Ekiti State governorship election would be rancour-free.
The off-season election is fixed for June 18, 2022.
The NSA, represented by Sanusi Galadima, gave the assurance on Friday while speaking at the Inter-Agency Consultative Committee on Election Security organized by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
Monguno explained that the security agencies are monitoring developments in the South West state.
He noted that his discussions with the Inspector General of Police, Usman Alkali Baba, shows that everything is going smoothly.
We are very optimistic that the election will be conducted smoothly without any rancour, he said.
Galadima added that the NSA has assured all security personnel that will be involved in the election that they have nothing to worry about.
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In the end, he also directed me to tell other security agencies with ICCES members and all those involved in the Ekiti election and subsequent election of Osun State that they have nothing to fear.
The Federal Government is fully in their support, and all other logistics and other issues concerning the election will be provided.
At the end of the day, he prayed to Almighty God that Ekiti election will be peacefully conducted, devoid of any rancour, Galadima said.
Also speaking at the occasion, the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mahmood Yakubu, said his Commission was on top of logistics for the seamless conduct of both Ekiti and Osun state governorship elections.
Mahmood said INEC would continue to sustain consultations with stakeholders in both states towards the smooth conduct of the elections.
With only 15 days to the Ekiti Governorship election, all the major activities that are supposed to be carried out at this stage have been successfully undertaken. I led a team of INEC National Commissioners to Ekiti State early this week to assess the Commissions preparations for the elections.
We visited our offices in several Local Government Areas, held meetings with our staff, had an audience with the Council of Obas to solicit the support of their Royal Majesties for peaceful elections and met with the security agencies.
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As the Commission is getting ready for the Ekiti State Governorship election, we have also gone far with similar preparations for the Osun State Governorship election holding next month, that is Saturday, July 16, 2022. At the same time, the Commission continues with preparations for the 2023 General Election, Mahmood said.
He, however, warned about the unpalatable security situation in the country which, according to him, remained a threat to the Continuous Voters Registration exercise, which he said has been put on hold in some regions of the country.
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The FBI Tried to Ambush My Source. Now I’m Telling the Whole Story. – The Intercept
Posted: at 2:11 am
FBI agent Grayden Ridd had a confidential message for his informant. An FBI team had been given the green light by the Justice Department to ambush and derail a planned meeting between a reporter and a source, and the informants job was to let the FBI know when and where the meeting would take place.
The reporter whose meeting they planned to target was me.
It was January 2014, and I was an investigative reporter in the Washington bureau of the New York Times focusing on national security. The FBI wanted to stop me from obtaining documents that Id been told would reveal the details of massive spying operations by the National Security Agency. The FBI was convinced that I was in contact with someone they had secretly nicknamed the second Snowden, who was about to give me an archive that they feared could go far beyond what former NSA contractor Edward Snowden had leaked about the agencys spying operations the year before.
The FBIs plan to grab my source at our scheduled meeting was approved by top officials at the FBI and the Justice Department during the Obama administration, according to audio recordings I obtained of several phone conversations between Ridd and his informant. At the time, Eric Holder was U.S. attorney general and James Comey was FBI director.
Right now, they are on board, Ridd said in one phone conversation to plan the ambush operation, referring to top Justice Department and FBI officials. I have to periodically go up to the throne room and recommit them. We actually have a lot of buy-in and a lot of support, but I do need to feed the beast.
The FBI declined to comment and the Justice Department did not respond to requests for comment. Holder did not answer a request for comment left with his office; Comey did not respond to a request for comment conveyed through his lawyer. Ridd did not respond to a request for comment placed with a relative or to a knock at the door ofhis homein Washington, D.C.
The FBIs attempt to identify and catch my source came as the Justice Department was waging a seven-year legal campaign against me in connection with a separate leak investigation. The Obama Justice Department had subpoenaed me and was demanding that I testify in court and reveal the confidential sources I had relied on for a chapter about a botched CIA operation in my 2006 book, State of War. I included the story in my book after the Times killed an article on the same topic under pressure from the White House and the CIA.
The attempt to derail my reporting on the purported NSA leaks came during a critical period in my legal battle with the Justice Department. In January 2014 just as the FBI was planning its ambush operation the U.S. Supreme Court was asked to hear arguments over my subpoena in the leak case involving the mismanaged CIA program. At the time, I was facing the possibility of going to prison for refusing to reveal my sources if the Supreme Court did not rule in my favor. But the Justice Department did not disclose to the Supreme Court that the FBI was simultaneously targeting my reporting on a completely separate story. The Justice Department and the FBI have also never acknowledged to me that they planned to conduct a raid at the scheduled meeting with my source.
The FBIs attempt to catch my source underscores the obsession over leaks to the press that has gripped the U.S. national security community in recent years, under both Republican and Democratic administrations. The FBI, CIA, and other agencies are now willing to take actions that would have been considered far outside the bounds of acceptable policy just a few years ago to prevent stories in the press that will embarrass powerful officials and reveal government wrongdoing.
The Trump administration went to even greater extremes than its predecessor to target the press. In 2017, then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo reportedly considered kidnapping WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who at the time was living in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. Yahoo News reported last September that former President Donald Trump even raised the possibility of assassinating Assange. Pompeo was reportedly obsessed with targeting Assange after a massive leak of CIA hacking tools, known as Vault 7. WikiLeaks published Vault 7 documents in 2017, revealing that the CIA had the ability to hack the computer systems built into a wide range of consumer products, including cars, televisions, and home appliances. In April 2017, Pompeo labeled WikiLeaks a hostile intelligence service.
I have previously been reluctant to write what I know about the FBIs scheme to ambush my source because the story is so complicated and confused that I am still not sure I fully understand it. But Michael Schmidt, my former colleague at the Times, made some elements of the story public when he wrote about the episode in his 2020 book, Donald Trump v. The United States: Inside the Struggle to Stop a President. The CIAs reported discussion of kidnapping or even killing Assange finally convinced me that I should share what I know about how the FBI also tried to target my reporting.
In late 2013, I met a source who was disgusted by the massive scale of the NSAs surveillance operations and wanted to expose the full scope of the agencys global power, which the source claimed went far beyond what Snowden had revealed. He said he was considering providing me with the NSA documents to prove it. Our first meeting was designed to help him decide whether he could trust me enough to give me the documents.
That initial meeting went well. We got along, and we agreed to get together again. The source had scheduled an upcoming trip to Brussels, so we agreed to meet in Belgium. I hoped he might be ready to hand over the documents.
I chose Bruges, a historic Belgian citywhere we would easily blend in among the crowds of foreign tourists. To be honest, I also chose Bruges because I wanted to visit the city; one of my favorite movies was In Bruges, the dark comedy starring Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson. The films plot, about two hitmen waiting for something to happen in the Belgian city, made Bruges seem like an appropriate backdrop for a secret meeting with the source.
After a quick internet search of bars and restaurants, I chose the Caf Rose Red in the citys center as the place for our meeting. It was likely to be packed with tourists.
The source and I would be joined at the meeting by an American lawyer who had originally introduced us. I had known the lawyer for several years. When I first met him, he was in private practice and occasionally handled legal matters for individuals involved in the governments national security apparatus. Later, he split his time between the United States and Europe; he told me that he was sometimes involved in international arms deals.
The lawyer seemed to be an adrenaline junkie, someone who had found a home on the dark side of international intelligence. I considered him primarily a go-between, someone who occasionally introduced me to people involved in national security matters both in the United States and overseas, as well as people involved in more questionable activities, such as arms deals and money laundering. I found his contacts helpful to my reporting; through him, I gained access and insights into the intelligence underworld.
But by the time of the planned meeting in Bruges in 2014, the American lawyer had begun to inform on me and my new source for the FBI, I later learned. I dont know exactly when he began to do so. (Ive tried throughout my career to protect my sources. While the FBI knows who the lawyer is, I will not name him, even though he betrayed me.)
As I prepared to travel to Bruges, I tried to take a few precautions to avoid detection. I planned to fly from Washington to Paris, then pay cash for a train ticket to Bruges. I hoped that would reduce the digital evidence of my travel. I didnt know that my efforts were pointless because the FBI was already closely tracking my movements based on information the American lawyer had fed them.
Just before I was scheduled to leave Washington, I received an anonymous email from an odd address that I had never seen before. The email contained a brief but stunning message. It said not to go to Bruges.
Uncertain who was behind the message, I canceled my travel plans.
Much later, I asked the American lawyer if he knew what had happened and whether he had sent the email. He admitted that he was responsible for the warning.
Eventually, he confessed to me that the FBI had been waiting in Bruges to trap my source. He said that the FBI knew about the meeting because he had told them about it, and that he had also told the FBI that the source wanted to provide me with NSA documents. He admitted that he had been informing on me.
He said that, based on the information he had provided, the FBI had sent a large team to Bruges to try to arrest my source. The FBI told the American lawyer that senior Justice Department officials wanted to grab the source when I was not there, so they asked the lawyer to find a way to try to prevent or at least delay my arrival in Bruges.
Before I got the anonymous email warning me not to come, the lawyer and his FBI handler brainstormed how to keep me from getting to Bruges. In one phone conversation, he told Ridd that he would have his assistant pick me up at the train and then pretend to have car trouble so that I couldnt get to the caf in time.
I will put, without sort of pulling back the curtain, I will put my colleague, who he has a great deal of confidence in, on him for logistical support, and tell him Hey, shell meet up with you, shell help make your arrangements and be your driver, and essentially put her on him to keep tabs on him, the American lawyer told Ridd. She would have strict instructions to essentially queer that whole deal, up to and including having the car break down.
But that wasnt good enough for Ridd, who wanted the American lawyer to stop me from traveling to Europe.
That is a good tool at a tactical level, Ridd responded when the American lawyer suggested having his assistant stage a car breakdown. But that doesnt save us from the wrath of the attorney general and headquarters. If he shows up in country, all hell is going to break loose and so, if at all possible, our primary goal needs to be to dissuade, to talk him out of it. We need for him to not be in Europe for that weekend, and when I say we, I really mean you, because, brother, youre turning out to be the one whos got to do it. The higher powers are going to have a conniption if he is in country or floating around Europe.
Ultimately, the FBIs plans came to nothing. The source I was hoping to meet did not go to Bruges either, so the arrest didnt take place. The FBI team in Bruges waited and waited, according to the lawyer, frustrated and in vain. The plan turned into a debacle, Schmidt wrote in his book. The source never arrived at the caf, and the informant ended up getting drunk while waiting for him. When higher-ups at the bureau learned what had happened, they grew furious that an entire team had been sent to Belgium based on information from a man with little track record as a source who was also known to be double-crossing a reporter on the same matter.
The American lawyer later told me that he had also warned the source not to come to Bruges. I am still not sure about his motivations. I dont know whether he told me not to come because the FBI asked him to stop me or because he wanted to prevent the FBIs operation from succeeding. The American lawyer had introduced me to the source in the first place and had set up our introductory meeting. Why would he go out of his way to do that, only to turn around and set a trap with the FBI?
I never again heard from the source I was trying to meet, and I never obtained a cache of NSA documents from him. In fact, I am not sure whether he really had the documents or ever planned to give them to me.
When the lawyer confessed that he had been informing on me to the FBI, he apparently did not tell me the whole story. In his book, Schmidt reported that the lawyer also told the FBI that he had broken into one of my computers. He gave the FBI a flash drive that he claimed included data from a computer that I owned.
Schmidt wrote that the FBI never opened the flash drive, and that it sat untouched in a safe at the FBIs Washington Field Office. When officials sought approval from Holder to check the drives contents, the then-attorney general denied the request and was furious that it had been put in writing, Schmidt wrote. Schmidt also reported that the FBI cut its ties to the American lawyer, that two FBI agents involved in targeting my source and me were disciplined, and that one of those agents left the bureau. I do not know whether Ridd was one of the agents disciplined or what has happened to him since. The Justice Department briefly considered whether the American lawyer had violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act for gaining access to my computer, according to Schmidt, but the bureau did not tell me about that possibility.
I may never know the truth, but I doubt that the flash drive the American lawyer gave the FBI actually contained any of my data. Schmidt writes that the lawyer told the FBI he could install spyware on my computer and that he had secretly copied a trove of documents from my computer when I invited him to my house in 2014. But I dont think he ever had the access or the skill to successfully hack my devices. My skepticism is based on my own experience with him. Soon after the FBIs attempt to arrest my source, the lawyer also gave me a flash drive, one that he claimed included NSA documents from the source. The flash drive could not be opened; the password he gave me didnt work. I became suspicious of the drive and whether it contained malware, so I turned it over to the New York Times security team for analysis. The security team couldnt find anything; they also talked to the American lawyer and questioned him about the drive.
I strongly suspect that the lawyer purposefully gave me a nonfunctional flash drive and that he probably played some kind of game with the drive he gave to the FBI as well. In his recorded calls with Ridd, the lawyer discussed putting a thumb drive containing secret documents in a microwave to destroy it before giving it to me. I have concluded that the American lawyer loved to play games with everyone, on all sides.
The lawyer told Ridd that he frequently lied to me and my colleagues at the Times. During the course of my career with Jim there have been a number of instances where Ive lent Jim assistance or Ive pointed him in a particular direction, and Im talking in years past, where it was mundane news reporting, the lawyer said. The moments that were important, I betrayed Jim.
In the run-up to the ill-fated operation in Bruges, he continued, the dishonesty had intensified. I, just bluntly Grayden, I lie my ass off every day, OK, when I have to deal with these guys. Everything about my relationship with Jim has become a lie, and it takes just one stick to fall down and then Im afraid that the whole house collapses on top of me, and it is incredible pressure for me.
But the recordings suggest that the lawyer often misled the FBI at the same time that he was informing on and lying to me.
In one conversation, the American lawyer told Ridd that I was planning to arrange with European intelligence services to show them any NSA documents I obtained from the new source. If he gets his hands on documents then presumably those documents are going to be stuck under the nose of people in Brussels and thats going to be a really bad thing, the lawyer said.
That was not true; it was one of several false or misleading statements the American lawyer made to his FBI handler. I wonder if the lawyer told the FBI that he had introduced me to the source, that he had set up our initial meeting, or that he told the source not to come to Bruges.
After he confessed that he had betrayed me, the American lawyer told me that the FBI had also become very suspicious of him, and that he was resisting their efforts to get him to take a polygraph. The recordings of his conversations with Ridd detail his arguments with the FBI over the issue. The lawyer acted offended that the FBI would question his truthfulness and credibility.
If people are not comfortable with the veracity of my reporting, Grayden, it hits me very much the wrong way, the American lawyer told Ridd. Im sorry guys at [FBI headquarters] dont get it but somebody should let them know that Ive been around the block and Im a nice guy, and I have busted my ass for the benefit of the government on this. Either the reporting is good and the facts are good or theyre not, and if theyre not, we should all walk away.
It was a masterful performance.
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Egypt: Exclude security agencies from reviewing releases of jailed critics – Amnesty International
Posted: at 2:11 am
The fate of thousands of arbitrarily detained men and women should not rest in the hands of Egypts security agencies, namely the National Security Agency and General Intelligence, Amnesty International said today following the release of four prisoners held for political reasons, based on recommendations by the recently re-activated Presidential Pardons Committee.
Over the last three days, the Egyptian public prosecution ordered the release of Abdelrahman Tarek (known as Moka), Kholoud Saeed and nine others, who had been arbitrarily detained from as early as 2018, following a statement from the Presidential Pardons Committee earlier this month that they submitted a list of over 1000 political prisoners to security agencies for review.
We welcome the long overdue release of those detained solely for exercising their human rights and the promise to free more. Yet thousands of opponents and critics continue to languish in Egyptian jails, while fresh arrests and prosecutions continue unabated, said Amna Guellali, Amnesty Internationals Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa.
Previous promises to release prisoners held for political reasons amounted to little more than disingenuous attempts to deflect international criticism of Egypts abysmal human rights record. To prove they are committed now, the Egyptian authorities must immediately and unconditionally release anyone detained solely for exercising their human rights, including politicians, journalists, lawyers and human rights defenders.
Amnesty International is calling on the authorities to adopt a rights-based approach and to end mass arbitrary detentions in line with their obligations under international human rights law and demands by independent Egyptian human rights groups.
Exclusions from pardons
On 5 May, following the re-activation of the Presidential Pardons Committee by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, eight Egyptian human rights NGOs called on the authorities to publicly clarify the criteria and timeline used to review prisoners files.
The groups expressed concern that prisoners of conscience and others held for political reasons could be excluded on discriminatory grounds, with security agencies in control of the decision-making process for releases.
Indeed,several committee members said that they would not consider releasing detained Muslim Brotherhood members.Several relatives whosubmitted requests for the committee to review their loved-ones detention told Amnesty International that two committee members demanded to see evidence that detainees did not belong to the Muslim Brotherhood.
Previous promises to release prisoners held for political reasons amounted to little more than disingenuous attempts to deflect international criticism of Egypts abysmal human rights record.
In a statement released on 9 May, Tarek al-Kholi, a member of the Presidential Pardons Committee and an MP, said that members of terrorist groups or those involved in violence would be excluded from pardons. This admission is highly alarming, considering the fact that thousands of individuals have been held in prolonged-pretrial detention in Egypt following baseless accusations of membership in a terrorist group. Among them is Youssef Mansour, a human rights lawyer, arbitrarily detained since 24 March 2022, pending investigations into membership in a terrorist group, solely due to his critical social media posts.
Thousands of others have been imprisoned on violence-related charges following grossly unfair, mass trials by emergency or military courts. On 29 May, an emergency court sentenced 25 political opponents, including politician Mohamed al-Kassas and former presidential candidate Abdel Moneim Aboul Fotouh to 10 and 15 years in prison respectively for trumped-up terrorism-related charges and spreading false news.
Security forces should play no role in reviews
On 6 May, Tarek al-Kholi confirmed that requests for release received by the Presidential Pardons Committee would be sent to security forces for review. Yet security forces, including the National Security Agency (NSA), should not be granted any authority over releases, as they have repeatedly barred the release of prisoners held for political reasons and targeted individuals affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood and other high-profile activists, who played a prominent role in the 25 January Revolution, for particularly punitive and discriminatory treatment in prison. Since December 2014, Anas al-Beltagy, son of imprisoned Muslim Brotherhood figure Mohamed al-Beltagy, has remained in prison despite being acquitted by courts in four separate trials. Each time a judge ordered his release, the NSA has barred it.
According to an article by independent news site Mada Masr, which is blocked in Egypt, a source close to the committee who asked to remain anonymous said security agencies will not allow the release of prominent activist Alaa Abdel-Fattah, a dual Egyptian-British national on a hunger strike for 60 days, who has been unjustly jailed since September 2019, or activist Ahmed Douma, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison in a grossly unfair trial over his participation in anti-government protests.
The releases of those held solely for exercising their human rights must also be unconditional. Amnesty International has learned that several of those released in April were warned by the NSA not to engage in any activism, or else face re-arrest. At least two were instructed to report weekly to the NSA for monitoring.
The Egyptian authorities must also immediately instruct security forces and prosecutors to stop arbitrarily arresting and detaining critics. Since April 2022, authorities have arrested three journalists Mohamed Fawzi, Hala Fahmy and Safaa al-Korbagi and detained them for sharing posts on social media deemed critical by the authorities, on accusations of membership in a terrorist group and/or spreading false news.
To ensure meaningful progress on the scourge of mass arbitrary detention in Egypt, sustained joint action is needed by the international community to privately and publicly press on the Egyptian authorities to release all those arbitrary detained in Egypt regardless of their political affiliation, and to put an end to the crackdown on peaceful dissent, said Amna Guellali.
Background
On 26 April 2022, during an Iftar attended by some opposition figures, President Abdelfattah al-Sisi called for the reactivation of the Presidential Pardons Committee to re-examine individuals detained for political reasons or for failure to pay debts. The move followed the release on the occasion of Eid al-Fitr of around 30 men and women held for political reasons. The committee is composed of two MPs, a former minister and two independents.
The Egyptian authorities have arrested tens of thousands of men and women since the military ousted former president Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, many of whom remain unjustly imprisoned in conditions that violate the absolute prohibition of torture and other ill-treatment.
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US backs Turkey’s continued talks with Sweden & Finland to fix concerns over NATO bid – Republic World
Posted: at 2:11 am
US National Security Advisor (NSA) Jake Sullivan on Monday expressed support for Turkey's continued direct talks with Sweden and Finland to resolve concerns over their applications for membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). During a phone call with his Turkish counterpart Dr Ibrahim Kalin, NSA Sullivan also shared concerns over the ongoing aggression waged by Russia in Ukraine. The leaders further deliberated over respective efforts to enable Ukrainian agricultural exports to reach global markets, US National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said in a statement.
Separately, NSA Sullivan highlighted the importance of refraining from an escalation in Syria to preserve existing ceasefire lines and avoid any further destabilisation. He also urged Dr. Kalin to continue dialogue and diplomacy to"resolve any disagreements" in the eastern Mediterranean Sea.
Abandoning their long-standing military neutrality, Finland and Sweden finally forwarded their membership applications to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) on May 18 despite stern opposition from Turkey and Russia. All 30 members of the international military bloc are needed to approve the bid for Sweden and Finland to join NATO. However, Hungary and Turkey have objected to the membership applications in what can be described as an attempt to gain political concessions driven by their national interests.
During the phone call with NSA Sullivan, Turkey's Dr. Kalin responded to this American counterpart by maintaining that Ankara looked forward to "concrete steps" by both the Nordic nations to eliminate what it refers to as Kurdish "terrorist organisations" in order to gain Turkey's support for ascension to NATO. It is to note, that Turkey has refused the joining, accusing Sweden and Finland of "nuzzling" Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) militants "to their bosom", a claim both Nordic countries have denied. Further, Turkey has also remained at odds withFinland andSweden after theyhalted arms export to Ankara in 2019. Dr. Kalin emphasised that the West-led intergovernmental alliance must "internalise values and principles on security and counter-terrorism," the Turkish presidency said in a statement.
This comes a day after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on May 28 maintained that he intended to block the membership applications unless there are vivid steps to alleviate Ankara's security concerns. "We cannot say yes to countries that support terror joining NATO," he remarked at a presser, as quoted by Hurriyet. He further accused European allies of NATO of committing a "mistake" by supporting Sweden and Finland.
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Waco Walks dives into history of early Waco tourist attraction, culture of Bell’s Hill area – Waco Tribune-Herald
Posted: at 2:10 am
A crowd huddled around Bevil Cohn bright and early Saturday outside Bells Hill Elementary School as she told the story of the man who pioneered the early tourist destination that led Waco to be known as Geyser City, centered partly around what is now the site of the school where the Cohn worked as principal for 33 years.
More than a century before the fame that came from Chip and Joanna Gaines hit renovation show, Fixer Upper, and the Magnolia empire that soon followed, Waco had a run as a famous tourist attraction for something else. It was the subject of a Waco Walks event Cohn led Saturday in the neighborhood.
In 1889, Joseph Daniel Bell, who was previously involved in mining activities, drilled the first in a series of artesian wells that produced hot water until the 1920s. Tales of the waters ability to miraculously cure a range of ailments led people from far and wide to travel to Geyser City, making the small town of Waco prosperous. Bell also supplied the city with water for drinking and other municipal purposes.
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He built 16 wells, including three where Bells Hill Elementary School now stands at Cleveland Avenue and 22nd Street. The water ran at about 104 degrees, it had to be cooled before usage, and shot upward from about 1,830 feet below the surface. It was reported that one of the wells produced about 1.5 million gallons of water a day, according to records in the Texas Collection at Baylor University.
Although the days of Geyser City have come and gone, Bells Hill is a neighborhood still filled with rich culture, interesting people and stories, Cohn said. Se said she wants more people to know more about Bell, who she kindly refers to as My Bell, and his influence on the early days of Waco.
I think my passion at this particular time is the history of Waco and sharing that history with young adults and even the children while I was at Bells Hill, Cohn said.
Wacoan Diane McDaniel said she had been to a few other walks hosted by Waco Walks prior to the pandemic.
I grew up in Waco, but I had never heard about the geyser so I was just interested to learn about it, McDaniel said.
The event Saturday also highlighted some of neighborhoods more-recent history and a few of its notable residents, from a former yo-yo champion to twin sisters Ramona and Winona Diamond, singers who performed as the Diamond Twins.
Paul Holder discussed his familys deep history in the Bells Hill community. The McLennan Community College government professor grew up in Bells Hill, and his parents owned and operated a hamburger restaurant, Stadium Drive-In, out of their garage until 1994. Holder reminisced on the range of people who would visit the drive-in near the former Floyd Casey Stadium, including Baylor University football coaches and players, such as running back Ronnie Bull. Jeff Holder, Pauls son, made the crowd laugh with his tales of his grandpa, who he called Pawpaw.
My Pawpaw would always give me a dollar, every time I hugged him, Jeff Holder said. Even when I was a freshman at Baylor I would come around and hug him.
Cohn said the house that serves as Historic Waco Foundations office on Fourth Street was formerly relocated from Bells Hill, where it was owned by the Hoffman family. A concrete company wanted to destroy the home, but the foundation was able to have it moved, Cohn said. The Hoffman family contained three children, two girls and one boy. The two girls, Fay and Bird, studied dance in New York and came back to Waco to teach classes and they were soon nicknamed the Hoffmanettes, Cohn said.
Anyone that took dance lessons, generations of Wacoans, took them from the Hoffmanettes, Cohn said.
Waco Walks organizer Ashley Bean Thornton said Saturdays walk was only able to cover a portion of the neighborhoods history and a second walk is already in the planning process.
Thornton said the rich history is one of the many things she enjoys about living in Waco.
Any aspect of American history, certainly from the Civil War until now, theres something you can still see in Waco that reflects that, Thornton said. Waco is a small enough place, but a big enough place, that you can really learn about it. I feel like my understanding of American history is so much more enriched from knowing this in-depth information about Waco history. It just puts a familiarity to it that you just dont get from reading about it.
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NBA Finals: Some history on how NBA finals evolved over 4 to 7 games – Mission Local
Posted: at 2:10 am
After the Dubs loss in Game One, here are some notes to help you participate in mass anxiety while maintaining an air of (fake) confidence.
Simply put, the Mission Bay Dubs (aka Golden State Warriors), played Thursday nights fourth quarter like they were San Franciscos Department of Public Works: sloppy, disrespectful, late and let the trash pile up. Dubs fans could do little more than avert their eyes and hold their noses.
A history lesson
In their previous five Finals appearances, the Dubs lost Game One just one time, in 2019 on the road to Toronto. They lost the series in 6.
In that Toronto game, the Dubs (and Draymond Green in particular) did not respect a role player named Pascal Siakam, who scored 32 points. Thursday night they (particularly Green) did not respect role players Al Horford and Derrick White. And wow, did that dynamic duo make them pay, especially in the fourth quarter. Horford and White out-splashed the Splash Brothers making 11 3-point shots ( also called 3 balls and 3s) on 16 attempts.
Despite their record, the Dubs have had Game One problems in the past. In 2015, they benefited from an injury to a key player, Kyrie Irving, late in overtime, which the Dubs won 108-100. They subsequently lost Games 2 and 3, but ultimately survived.
In 2016, the Dubs won Games One and Two, but in both those games, Curry and Thompson were pushed around by a pugnacious Cleveland defense, a pattern that persisted through the 7 game series.
The worst Dubs playoff Game One defeat came at the hands ofthe Oklahoma Thunder in the 2016 Western Conference Finals. After being ahead most of the game, they scored only 14 points in the 4th quarter and lost not unlike their showing on Thursday night.
The Thunder were big, long, and athletic. They played a physical in-your-face defense, though not as good as Boston.
The Dubs won Game Two of that 2016 series at home, then got shellacked twice in Oklahoma City. Down 3-1 in the series, the Dubs easily won Game Five at home. But they had to return to Oklahoma for Game Six.
Entering the fourth quarter, the Thunder led 83-75. Less than a minute into the quarter, Klay Thompson hit a 25-foot 3-point shot and never looked back. He scored 19 of his game-high 41 points in that quarter, leading the Dubs to a tight 106-100 win. Thats when Thompsom was christened Game Six Klay.
Back in what was then the Golden State, the Dubs won and advanced to the Finals.
Stop giving the Celtics wide-open shots when playing defense and put the ball in the basket when playing offense. For all the media coverage and endless chatter, basketball is a fairly simple game; conceived to keep kids busy, not make adults rich.
Including Thursdays loss, the Dubs have only lost five games over the course of these playoffs, never losing two games in a row. At their best, the Finals are roller coaster rides and we have learned, watching the Dubs over these years, what goes down usually goes back up. Enjoy the ride.
William Reutter contributed to this report.
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