Month: December 2021

  • Kim Potter, former police officer who shot Daunte Wright is held guilty of manslaughter

    Kim Potter, former police officer who shot Daunte Wright is held guilty of manslaughter

    The jury of six men and six women heard from 25 witnesses for the prosecution and eight who testified for the defense

    MINNESOTA (TIP): A Minnesota jury, on December 23, reached a guilty verdict on both charges in the case of Kim Potter, a White former police officer who fatally shot Black motorist Daunte Wright during a traffic stop in April. Potter, 49, was convicted of first- and second-degree manslaughter in the death of 20-year-old Wright, who attempted to flee during the stop. Potter, who resigned from the Brooklyn Center police force after the shooting, maintained that she intended to reach for her Taser instead of her gun. Judge Regina Chu ordered Potter to be held without bond and remanded into custody pending sentencing. State guidelines for the more serious charge call for a seven-year sentence. The jury started deliberations Monday after hearing about a week and a half of testimony in the case. Late Tuesday, they asked Judge Regina Chu what they should do if they could not arrive at a verdict. Speaking with the jurors, Chu told them they needed to continue with deliberations with open minds and a willingness to listen to each other’s viewpoints, CBS Minnesota reported. They returned Thursday afternoon to announce the verdict. Potter gave emotional testimony in her own defense, saying she “didn’t want to hurt anybody” and that she was “sorry it happened.” But the state argued that mistakenly firing her gun instead of her Taser was not a defense.

    “This was no little oopsie. This was not putting a wrong date on a check. This was not entering the wrong password somewhere,” said prosecutor Erin Eldridge, an assistant attorney general, in her closing argument. “This was a colossal screw-up. A blunder of epic proportions.” The defense argued that Wright’s attempt to flee officers during the traffic stop was a factor in his death.

    “Within seconds, [Wright] all of a sudden break away. That’s the cause, ladies and gentlemen of the jury,” said Potter’s attorney Earl Gray. “Did they prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she caused this death? No. Daunte Wright caused his own death, unfortunately. But those are the cold, hard facts.” The jury of six men and six women heard from 25 witnesses for the prosecution and eight who testified for the defense. Judge Chu ruled against a defense motion for a mistrial after the state’s rebuttal. The April 11 shooting in Brooklyn Center, a suburb of Minneapolis, occurred during the trial of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer who was convicted of the 2020 murder of George Floyd. Floyd’s death sparked nationwide protests against police brutality and racial injustice. Brooklyn Center saw unrest for days after Wright’s death.

  • UN General Assembly President Abdulla Shahid tests positive for COVID-19

    UN General Assembly President Abdulla Shahid tests positive for COVID-19

    UNITED NATIONS (TIP): President of the United Nations General Assembly Abdulla Shahid on Thursday, December 23, said that he has tested positive for the COVID-19 and is isolating at home with mild symptoms. The 59-year-old Maldivian Minister of Foreign Affairs is fully vaccinated along with a booster jab. “I have tested positive for COVID19 today. I am isolating at home with mild symptoms. I was privileged to have been fully vaccinated including a booster. My prayers are with the millions suffering from Covid and the billions without access to vaccine! I Stand for #VaccineEquity,” Mr. Shahid, the President of the 76th session of the UN General Assembly, said on Twitter. In June, he was overwhelmingly elected as the President of the United Nations General Assembly, garnering 143 votes out of the 191 ballots cast. He presided over the 76th session of the UNGA in September. After his election, Mr. Shahid had said that his “immediate priority” will be recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and working to ensure “vaccine equity” to restore hope from a year characterized by “disease, despair and devastation.” Mr. Shahid had succeeded Turkish diplomat Volkan Bozkir who was UNGA President for the 75th session that came amid the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic. The President of the General Assembly is elected every year by a secret ballot and requires a simple majority vote of the General Assembly.

    (Source: PTI)

  • Another US Senator tests positive for Covid-19

    Another US Senator tests positive for Covid-19

    WASHINGTON, D.C. (TIP): US Sen. Chris Coons, a Democrat from Delaware, announced he has tested positive for Covid-19 and said he has minimal symptoms so far. “In recent weeks I have been tested for COVID-19 regularly, both with rapid tests and PCR tests, and last night I got bad news – I tested positive. I have minimal symptoms so far and am optimistic I will recover well after isolating and following CDC guidelines. Like millions of other families, it seems we’ll also be wrestling with another holiday spent on Zoom and cancelled plans for travel or gathering,” Coons said in a statement released Thursday.

    “As we deal with the sharp rise in Omicron cases here in Delaware and across the country, I urge you to get tested regularly, and get vaccinated and boosted if you haven’t already. We all must continue to do our part to fight this pandemic and keep each other healthy,” he added. Coons is one of several lawmakers to test positive in recent days, including Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Cory Booker of New Jersey as well as Rep. Jason Crow of Colorado shared that they had tested positive for Covid-19 via tweets from their official accounts.

  • Mayor Bill de Blasio announces “scaled back” New Year Eve celebration in Times Square

    Mayor Bill de Blasio announces “scaled back” New Year Eve celebration in Times Square

    I.S. Saluja

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, on December 23, announced plans for a “scaled back” New Year’s Eve celebration in Times Square with fewer revelers and mask requirements, according to a news release from de Blasio’s office. Mayor de Blasio announced details for a scaled back Times Square New Year’s Eve, with additional protections in place to ensure a safe celebration. In addition to requiring proof of full vaccination with valid photo identification and being fully outdoors, attendees will also be required to wear masks. Viewing areas will be filled with fewer people to allow for social distancing.

    Made in consultation with health and medical experts, these additional safety measures will keep revelers safe and healthy as they ring in the New Year. The City, in partnership with Times Square Alliance will continue to monitor the situation and take additional precautions and measures in the coming days if needed.

    The NYE celebration in Times Square typically holds around 58,000 people in viewing areas, but this year the number will be limited to 15,000 people and visitors will not be allowed entry into the area until 3 p.m. ET.

    Additionally, everyone will be required to wear a mask and show photo identification at the fully outdoor event, de Blasio’s office said. As previously announced, all visitors to the Times Square celebration are required to be fully vaccinated if they are older than five. Any unvaccinated minors under the age of five must be accompanied by a vaccinated adult in order to attend, the mayor’s office said.

    “New Yorkers have stepped up tremendously over the past year—we are leading the way on vaccinations, we have reopened safely, and every day we work toward building a recovery for all of us,” said Mayor Bill de Blasio. “There is a lot to celebrate, and these additional safety measures will keep the fully vaccinated crowd safe and healthy as we ring in the New Year.” “New York is the best place in the world to celebrate New Year’s Eve and now it will be one of the safest against COVID as well,” said Mayor-elect Eric Adams. “The Mayor has made the right move to take precautionary measures as we learn to live with COVID and fight the Omicron variant—and New Yorkers and visitors alike can now enjoy Times Square and the rest of our city as we ring in 2022.”

    “This year’s holiday season may not be the one we had hoped for, but we can still have a happy holiday season,” said Health Commissioner Dr. Dave A. Chokshi. “All New Yorkers should get vaccinated and boosted as soon as possible. Wear a quality face mask and stay home if you’re feeling sick, no matter how mild your symptoms.”

    “We applaud the leadership of Mayor de Blasio in finding a way to welcome revelers into Times Square on New Year’s Eve in an even safer way than we originally planned,” said Tom Harris, President of the Times Square Alliance.  “This year revelers will be fully vaccinated, masked, and we will have reduced occupancy in the viewing areas. We understand that everyone will not be able to be here but welcome them to experience New Year’s Eve in Times Square from our live webcast, on one of the networks or on the VNYE app.”

    Normally hosting approximately 58,000 people in viewing areas, this year’s celebration will host approximately 15,000 people, and visitors won’t be allowed entry until 3:00 PM, much later than past years. The health and safety of every guest is the priority of Times Square New Year’s Eve 2022.

    Vaccination Policy for Times Square New Year’s Eve

    The Times Square New Year’s Eve organizers will require full vaccinations for all in-person revelers. “Fully vaccinated” means that on the date of December 31, 2021, a reveler is at least 14 days after their second dose of a two dose COVID-19 vaccine OR at least 14 days after their single dose of an approved single dose COVID-19 vaccine. Attendees who are age 5 or over must present proof of COVID-19 vaccination to enter the event. Proof of vaccination must include a Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or World Health Organization (WHO) approved COVID-19 vaccine. These are Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca/Oxford, Sinopharm or Sinovac.

    Unvaccinated minors under the age of 5 must be accompanied by a vaccinated adult to enter the event. The vaccinated adult must present proof of a Food and Drug Administration or World Health Organization approved COVID-19 vaccine. These are Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca/Oxford, Sinopharm or Sinovac. Face coverings are required for unvaccinated minors who are medically able to tolerate a face-covering.

    Persons who are unable to get vaccinated because of a disability will be required to present proof of a negative COVID PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) test taken within 72 hours prior to the event

    A number of broadcast networks will be airing elements of the Times Square celebration.

    Info for the Times Square New Year’s Eve television broadcast pool feed is available at https://www.timessquarenyc.org/times-square-new-years-eve/media-press/new-years-eve-pool-feed-information

    (Based on a press release)

     

  • MAYOR-ELECT ADAMS ANNOUNCES APPOINTMENTS FOR COMMISSIONERS OF HRA, OMB, DOF, AND DCAS, COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF ETHNIC AND COMMUNITY MEDIA

    MAYOR-ELECT ADAMS ANNOUNCES APPOINTMENTS FOR COMMISSIONERS OF HRA, OMB, DOF, AND DCAS, COMMUNICATIONS DIRECTOR AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF ETHNIC AND COMMUNITY MEDIA

    NEW YORK CITY (TIP): Mayor-elect Adams announced, December 23, a slate of appointments for his incoming administration. The appointees – one of whom will head a newly-created Mayor’s Office – reflect Mayor-elect Adams’ stated commitment to building a team that looks like the people it serves and ensuring that he can deliver on his vision for a safer, more prosperous, and more equitable city for all.

    Those appointed include Jacques Jiha, Ph. D,Preston Niblack,Gary Jenkins,Dawn Pinnock,Maxwell Young,José Bayona, and Sherif Soliman.

    Jacques Jiha, Ph.D., will continue to serve as Director of the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Jiha will be responsible for implementing the mayor-elect’s fiscal and budgetary vision, including his plan to mandate efficiency across agencies and ensure taxpayer dollars are being spent wisely. He will also work with the Mayor to develop Expense and Capital Budgets that invest in his strategic priorities and build a robust economic recovery from COVID-19.

    Preston Niblack will serve as Commissioner of the Department of Finance (DOF). As Commissioner, Niblack will be responsible for overseeing the collection of tax revenue, assessing property values, and ensuring the City’s overall fiscal health.

    Gary Jenkins will serve as Commissioner of the Human Resources Administration (HRA). Jenkins will be tasked with managing the city’s social services programs. As a stalwart of the agency, he will be entrusted with ensuring New Yorkers in need can access services reliably and efficiently, providing broad-based economic opportunity, and reducing inequality.

    Dawn Pinnock will serve as Commissioner of the Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS). In that role, she will deepen and expand the agency’s mission of supporting the day-to-day operations of City government and ensuring all municipal employees have the resources they need to carry out their jobs effectively.

    Maxwell Young will serve as Communications Director. Young is the chief public affairs officer at Everytown for Gun Safety, as well as a former senior adviser to Sen. Charles Schumer and chief external affairs officer at the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

    José Bayona will serve as the inaugural Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office of Ethnic and Community Media. The office was established by Local Law 83, which passed the City Council in June 2021. It aims to promote City services and programs through partnerships and campaigns with a diverse array of media outlets that serve people across the five boroughs, particularly those living in immigrant communities and communities with a high proportion of people who do not speak English as a first language.

    Sherif Soliman will serve as the Director of the Mayor’s Office of Policy and Planning. In that role, Soliman will oversee Mayor Adams’ wide-ranging policy portfolio.

    In his announcement, Adams highlighted the talent, commitment, and experience that each appointee will bring to their respective roles. “Our administration is assembling a team of seasoned public servants who are battle-tested and ready to get to work on behalf of the people of this city. Throughout the transition, we have sought out candidates who don’t just have the right credentials, but also possess the emotional intelligence necessary to understand and empathize with the plight of everyday New Yorkers. These appointments announced today will ensure we are ready to meet the challenges this city faces, and I thank all the appointees for answering the call to service,” said Mayor-elect Adams.

    “I am honored that Mayor-elect Adams has appointed me to continue to serve New Yorkers as their Budget Director and has entrusted me to fund the priorities that support his vision for this great city. I remain committed to strong fiscal management as we continue the fight against COVID-19 and push the city towards a robust and vibrant recovery across every community in every borough,” said Budget Director Jacques Jiha.

    “I want to thank the Mayor-elect for putting his faith in me to lead the Department of Finance.  This City, which I’ve been fortunate to service in other capacities for over two decades, has always come back stronger from challenging times. I look forward to hitting the ground running with the talented team at DOF to help advance Mayor Adams’ agenda as the City continues its recovery from COVID-19,” said Preston Niblack, Deputy City Comptroller for Budget.

    “I am humbled and honored to be appointed by Mayor-elect Eric Adams,” said HRA Administrator Gary Jenkins. “From my time working on HRA’s frontlines to most recently serving as HRA Administrator, it has been my mission to continually improve how we support New Yorkers in need. I know how dedicated this Agency and our staff are and how much we’ve accomplished, but I also know how much there is to be done. I look forward to working collaboratively with partners across government to implement the Mayor-elect’s vision — strengthening the social safety net, streamlining service delivery, and maximizing our relationships with State and Federal partners to get the funding New Yorkers need. Together, we will build on the progress we have made to tackle poverty and inequality, prevent homelessness, and ensure New Yorkers know they can depend on their City if hardship hits.”

    “I would like to thank Mayor-elect Eric Adams for the trust he has placed in me and for the opportunity to serve his administration,” said Dawn M. Pinnock, Acting Commissioner of the NYC Department of Citywide Administrative Services. “DCAS plays a vital role in making city government work for all New Yorkers, and our agency will support the mayor-elect’s vision for a city government that is efficient and effective.”

    “New York City is in my bones. I was born in New York, I grew up in New York, and will live in New York my entire life. I believe Mayor Adams is going to be the leader we need to move this city forward, to make it even better for all of its residents, in both good times and bad. It is a thrill to have this opportunity to help him build and share his vision for the future, while working day and night on behalf of all New Yorkers,” said Maxwell Young, incoming Communications Director.

    “The new Mayor’s Office of Ethnic and Community Media, the first one of its kind in our country, is a historic recognition of the hard work of hundreds of ethnic and community media outlets that are the voice of millions of immigrants, working-class and every day New Yorkers living in our communities throughout this city,” said José Bayona, Senior Adviser and incoming Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office of Ethnic and Community Media. “I deeply thank Mayor-elect Eric Adams for the opportunity to lead this newly-created Office in his administration and proudly serve the most diverse city in the world.”

    ​​”As a lifelong New Yorker, I’ve always believed in the virtue of public service and the opportunity it provides to deliver transformative change. It is truly rewarding to be able to craft sound policy that will uplift the lives of so many, but the privilege of doing it from the seat of government in your hometown that is known for being a laboratory for innovative policy takes it to a whole new level,” said Sherif Soliman, incoming Director of the Mayor’s Office of Policy and Planning. “I am deeply grateful to Mayor-elect Adams for the opportunity to continue to serve New Yorkers in his administration and look forward to working alongside him and the talented team that he has assembled to move our City forward.”

    About Jacques Jiha, Ph.D.

    Jacques Jiha, Ph.D., serves as Director of the New York City Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget. In this role, he oversees New York City’s fiscal policy, including the development of the Expense and Capital Budgets, the City’s bond and borrowing program, and the budgets of more than 90 City agencies and entities. OMB is also responsible for evaluating the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of City services and proposals and providing vital information to government officials on the local, national, and world economies. As Budget Director, he will continue to help lead New York City out of the financial crisis brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic through strong fiscal management.

    Previously he served as Commissioner of the Department of Finance, responsible for leading an agency that collects more than $40 billion annually in revenue for the city and assesses over 1.1 million properties with a total combined value of $1.3 trillion. He led the transformation of the Department of Finance into a dynamic, forward-looking, and customer-centric agency, and under his leadership the City reformed and modernized its corporate tax laws, reducing taxes for many small businesses, and introduced many new services for its customers.

    Prior to becoming Commissioner of the Department of Finance, Director Jiha was the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer of Earl G. Graves, Ltd., a multi-media company with properties in print and digital media. Previously, he served as Deputy Comptroller for Pension Investment and Public Finance. As the state’s chief investment officer, he oversaw the New York State Common Retirement Fund, the New York’s College Savings Program and the state’s short-term investment pool. Prior to this, he served as Deputy Comptroller for Nassau County, Deputy Comptroller for Budget and Chief Economist for the New York City Office of the Comptroller, Executive Director of the New York State Legislative Tax Study Commission, and Principal Economist for the New York State Assembly Committee on Ways and Means. A staunch advocate of public service, Director Jiha served on a number of government and not-for-profit boards, including the Ronald McDonald House of New York, the Public Health Solutions and the Dormitory Authority of New York State.

    Director Jiha holds a Ph.D. and a master’s degree in economics from the New School for Social Research and a bachelor’s degree in economics from Fordham University.

    About Gary Jenkins

    Gary Jenkins currently serves as Administrator for HRA. As First Deputy Commissioner of HRA, Jenkins directly oversaw the Homelessness Prevention Administration, Employment Services, the Office of Child Support Services, and the Fair Fares Program. In his more than 30 years with HRA, Jenkins has held positions of leadership in numerous HRA program areas including the Medicaid Program and Temporary Cash Assistance and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).

    Jenkins received a Master’s in Public Administration from Metropolitan College of New York and a Bachelor of Arts from CUNY John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He resides in Brooklyn, New York with his wife and three daughters.

    About Preston Niblack

    Preston Niblack currently serves as Deputy City Comptroller for Budget. As Deputy Comptroller for Budget, Preston Niblack is responsible for overseeing the work of the Budget Bureau including monitoring of New York City’s fiscal and cash position, analyzing and reporting on the City budget, and issuing reports on various budgetary and economic issues.

    Prior to joining the Comptroller’s Office, Mr. Niblack served as Director of the Finance Division for the New York City Council for six years under Speaker Christine Quinn. In this capacity, he oversaw a staff of 30 in their annual budget review, budget approval process, and fiscal analyses of legislation and other proposals. He was also the lead negotiator on the City budget on behalf of the City Council and developed legislative and policy initiatives in budget and tax policy, housing, economic development, and other areas.

    Prior to this role, Mr. Niblack was Deputy Director at the New York City Independent Budget Office for eight years providing fiscal oversight and analysis of the City budget. Most recently, Preston served as Senior Advisor within the New York City Government & Regulatory Division of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, LLP.

    Mr. Niblack has a Ph.D. and MPA in Policy Sciences from the University of Maryland School of Public Policy and a B.A. from Middlebury College.

    About Dawn Pinnock

    As a proud native New Yorker, Dawn M. Pinnock is a transformative leader with more than two decades of experience at some of New York City’s largest municipal agencies. Since November, Pinnock has served as Acting Commissioner for the NYC Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS). Prior to serving as the agency’s Acting Commissioner, she served as Executive Deputy Commissioner, leading the agency’s people-centered divisions, including Administration, Citywide Equity and Inclusion, Citywide Human Capital, and Internal Audit. In this position, she maintained Citywide oversight of services provided to the Human Resources, Equal Employment Opportunity, and Diversity and Inclusion departments serving at every City agency. During her time at DCAS, Pinnock previously served as the Deputy Commissioner for Human Capital, overseeing all aspects of civil service administration and human resources operations.

    During her tenure at DCAS, Acting Commissioner Pinnock led teams that developed the City’s remote work policy, facilitated the City’s return to office, launched mandatory sexual harassment training for over 360,000 City employees, launched the agency’s Race Equity Initiative, and made the City’s civil service process more accessible to current and potential City employees.

    Prior to joining DCAS, Pinnock served as the Vice President of Human Resources at New York City Transit and as the Director of Human Resources at the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). She holds a Master of Science in Urban Policy Analysis and Management from The New School for Social Research and a Bachelor of Business Administration from Baruch College. She is a Certified Human Resource Professional, and a member of both the Association for Talent Development and the Society of Human Resource Management.

    About José Bayona

    José Bayona is a bilingual communication professional with ample experience in government affairs and communications, and the digital, print, and broadcast media industries. Currently, he is a Senior Adviser for mayor-elect Eric Adams and a member of the Transition committee. Before, he served as spokesperson for Mayor Bill de Blasio and held the title of Director of Community and Ethnic Media and Deputy Press Secretary at the Mayor’s Office where he managed communications for 20 City agencies, including the Administration for Children’s Services, Department of Youth & Community Development, NYC 2020 Census Office, Mayor’s Office of Community Affairs, Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, Mayor’s Office of International Affairs, Board of Elections, Democracy NYC, Civic Engagement Commission, Charter Revision Commission, NYC Department of Veteran Services.

    At City Hall, Bayona also supervised the implementation of the Executive Order 47, which required City agencies to spend at least half of their annual print and digital advertising budget on Community and Ethnic media and managed the City’s Community and Ethnic Media directory for advertising purposes, which includes more than 350 outlets citywide.

    Bayona spent most of his journalism years at the NY Daily News where he started as community reporter for the Spanish weekly Hora Hispana. Later, he was a writer for NY1 Noticias and Metro Editor for El Diario before getting into City government as deputy press secretary for the Department of Transportation and press secretary for the Administration for Children’s Services. He has worked with non-profit organizations in creating their communications strategy, and as an adjunct professor for Hofstra University and CUNY’s Baruch College.

    A native from Colombia with Venezuelan roots, Bayona holds an M.A. in Journalism from the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism – Urban and Interactive reporting concentrations – and graduated Cum Laude from the CUNY Baccalaureate Program in Journalism and Political Science at Baruch College. He has lived in Queens since he arrived in New York City 25 years ago looking for a better future.

    About Maxwell Young

    Maxwell Young currently serves as the Chief Public Affairs Officer at Everytown for Gun Safety, bringing deep expertise in communications, public policy, and politics to the work he does. He has been a senior executive at a number of high-profile organizations, including the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, the Rockefeller Foundation and the office of Senate Minority Leader Senator Charles E. Schumer (D-NY). Max spent nearly seven years working for Senator Schumer in a variety of senior positions, including Communications Director and Deputy State Director. In 2014 he left Capitol Hill to help the Rockefeller Foundation build 100 Resilient Cities – a new global organization created to assist cities around the world in developing long term strategies to address the social, economic and physical challenges they face.

    About Sherif Soliman

    Sherif Soliman was appointed commissioner of the New York City Department of Finance by Mayor Bill de Blasio on December 30, 2020, following a career of more than two decades in public service. As Finance Commissioner, Soliman was responsible for leading an agency that collects more than $40 billion annually in revenue for the City and assesses over 1.1 million properties with a total combined value of $1.3 trillion.

    Before his appointment as Finance Commissioner, Soliman served as Chief of Staff for the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Operations, where he oversaw the functions of over 20 agencies and offices. Soliman played a key leadership role in the City’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, overseeing the development and management of the Open Streets and Open Restaurant programs, advising on workforce policies including the transition to work-from- home, and leading negotiations on state legislation to provide death benefits to the survivors of City employees who have died of COVID-19.

    Soliman previously served as Senior Advisor to the First Deputy Mayor, where he oversaw a portfolio including tax policy, labor and pension policy, and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. During his time as Senior Advisor, Soliman managed the New York City Advisory Commission on Property Tax Reform, a role he continued during his tenure as Finance Commissioner and as an ex-officio member of the Commission. Soliman was also the Administration’s lead in securing new revenue for the MTA capital plan, in a value capture agreement with the MTA on the redevelopment of its old headquarters, and in the enactment of State law to mitigate the impact of the cap on the State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction. Soliman also led negotiations on Project Labor Agreements that cover billions of dollars inpublic construction work.

    In the first term of the de Blasio Administration, Soliman served as Director of State Legislative Affairs, where he was the Administration’s s chief representative in Albany and secured the enactment of many priorities, including the nation-leading universal pre-kindergarten program, life-saving Vision Zero initiatives such as speed cameras and lower speed limits, and expanded opportunities for Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises. Soliman also coordinated the passage of corporate tax reform; led efforts to expand tax exemptions for senior and disabled homeowners, enhance the NYC Rent Freeze Program for senior and disabled renters, and create a property tax abatement for homeowners impacted by Hurricane Sandy; and ensured passage of several extensions of the City’s tax and finance authority. Prior to joining the administration, he served as director of communications for the New York City Employees’ Retirement System and chief of staff for Assemblyman Eric Vitaliano, former chair of the Assembly Governmental Employees Committee. Soliman received his bachelor’s degree in Political Science from the State University of New York College at Oneonta. He is a lifelong New Yorker and lives in Manhattan with his wife Hanan Thabet, and children, Lenna and Ziyad.

    (Based on a press release)

  • Karolina Pliskova out of Australian Open with hand injury

    Karolina Pliskova has withdrawn from next month’s Australian Open and two warm-up tournaments because of a right hand injury sustained in training.

    Australian Open officials on Thursday confirmed the world fourth-ranked player’s withdrawal, and said in a tweet: “wishing you a speedy recovery.”

    Pliskova had earlier said on social media “unfortunately I hurt my right hand in practice yesterday and I won’t be able to play in Adelaide, Sydney and Australian Open this year.”

    The 29-year-old Czech Republic player is a two-time Grand Slam finalist. She lost to No. 1-ranked Ash Barty in this year’s Wimbledon title match and in the 2016 U.S. Open final to Angelique Kerber after Pliskova beat Serena Williams in the semifinals.

    Pliskova’s best finish at Melbourne Park was the semifinals in 2019, where she lost to eventual champion Naomi Osaka after beating Williams in the quarterfinals.

    Covid-hit Liverpool bounce back to beat Newcastle 3-1

    Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold scored with a spectacular strike as they overcame the loss of three players to suspected positive COVID-19 tests and conceding an early goal to beat Newcastle United 3-1 in the Premier League on Thursday.

    Liverpool move onto 40 points from 17 games, one behind leaders Manchester City who beat Leeds United 7-0.

    With Virgil Van Dijk, Fabinho and Curtis Jones ruled out for the hosts, Jonjo Shelvey struck the opener for Newcastle against the run of play in the seventh minute, with a swerving, dipping drive past unsighted keeper Allison Becker at Anfield.

    The lead lasted 14 minutes before Diogo Jota fired home the rebound after Martin Dubravka saved his initial header to level, with Newcastle’s players complaining the ball should have been put out of play as Isaac Hayden was down injured in his own box.

  • China’s economy slows in November as property slump deepens

    China’s economy slowed further in November, dragged down by a worsening property market slump and disruptions from repeated Covid outbreaks.

    Growth in fixed-asset investment eased to 5.2% in the first eleven months of the year. Property investment grew 6% in the same period, slowing from 7.2% during the January-October period, as financing rules remained strict and home sales plunged.

    Industrial output rose 3.8% from a year earlier, quickening from 3.5% in October and above the 3.7% projected by economists. Retail sales growth weakened to 3.9%, missing economists’ forecasts of a 4.7% gain. Sales in the restaurant and catering sector dropped 2.7%, as people stayed home amid renewed virus outbreaks.

    The data highlights the downward pressure on the economy from the real-estate sector and the scale of the challenge facing the Chinese government in stabilizing the world’s second-largest economy. While Beijing is expected to make more credit available and signaled some easing of controls on the property market to support “stability,” officials last week maintained the basic stance that “houses are for living in, not speculation.” The economy’s slowdown has prompted Beijing to shift its focus to stabilizing growth, with the central bank easing monetary policy and the Communist Party ordering more fiscal spending in 2022. Earlier on Wednesday the central bank kept the interest rate for one-year loans to banks unchanged and only rolled over about half of the maturing debts, withdrawing liquidity from the economy. However, a recently announced cut to the reserve requirement ratio for banks takes effect from Wednesday, which will increase the amount of money financial institutions have on hand to lend.

  • Leena Nair named CEO of French fashion house Chanel

    French fashion house Chanel named Leena Nair, an executive from Unilever, as its new global CEO on Tuesday, picking a consumer goods veteran to run one of the world’s biggest luxury goods groups. I am humbled and honoured to be appointed the Global Chief Executive Officer of @CHANEL, an iconic and admired company.

    — Leena Nair (@LeenaNairHR) December 14, 2021

    Nair’s career at Unilever spanned 30 years, most recently as the chief of human resources and a member of the company’s executive committee.

    A British national, born in India, Nair is a rare outsider at the helm of the tightly controlled family fashion house, known for its tweed suits, quilted handbags and No. 5 perfume.

    The 52-year-old follows US businesswoman Maureen Chiquet, who came from a fashion background and was CEO of Chanel for nine years until early 2016.

    French billionaire Alain Wertheimer, a 73-year-old who owns Chanel with his brother Gerard Wertheimer and had originally taken on the CEO job on a temporary basis, will move to the role of global executive chairman.

  • Tech giant Apple’s market value closes in on $3 trillion

    Tech giant Apple’s market value closes in on $3 trillion

    Apple Inc’s market value hovered just shy of the $3 trillion mark on Monday, following a stunning run over the past decade that has turned it into the world’s most valuable company. The stock needs to gain 4% from its closing price of $175.74 a share on Monday to reach $182.86 and a record $3 trillion in market value after ending the day down slightly more than 2%. It rose about 11% last week, extending its more than 30% gain for the year as investors remain confident that flush consumers will continue to pay top dollar for iPhones, MacBooks and services such as Apple TV and Apple Music. The iPhone maker’s march from $2 trillion to near $3 trillion in market value took just 16 months, as it led a group of megacap tech companies such as Google-parent Alphabet Inc and Amazon.com Inc that benefited from people and businesses relying heavily on technology during the pandemic.

    In comparison, Apple’s move to $2 trillion from $1 trillion took two years, though its stock rise was more rapid over that period.

    “It’s now one of the more richly valued companies in the market, which shows the dominance of US technology in the world and how confident investors are that it will remain in Apple’s hands,” said Brian Frank, a portfolio manager at Frank Capital who sold his long-standing position in Apple in 2019 as the stock’s valuation rose. “It seems like the stock has priced in every possible good outcome.”

    Among new revenue lines that investors expect are a possible Apple Car, alongside growth in service categories such as apps and TV that still remain well below the 65% of the company’s revenues generated by sales of iPhones, said Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust Company.

    Eclipsing the $3 trillion milestone would add another feather in the cap for Chief Executive Tim Cook, who took over after Steve Jobs resigned in 2011, and oversaw the company’s expansion into new products and markets.

    “Tim Cook has done an amazing job over the past decade, taking Apple’s share price up over 1,400%,” OANDA analyst Edward Moya said.

    Apple shares have returned 22% per year since the 1990s, while the S&P 500 has returned less than 9% annually in the same period.

    If Apple hits the $3 trillion milestone, Microsoft Corp will be the only company in the $2 trillion club, while Alphabet, Amazon and Tesla Inc have crossed $1 trillion.    Source: Reuters

  • RBI brings NBFCs on par with banks in new PCA framework

    RBI brings NBFCs on par with banks in new PCA framework

    To further strengthen the supervision on non-banking entities (NBFCs), the Reserve Bank on Tuesday, Dec 14,  issued revised guidelines on a Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) framework for such companies, excluding government-owned ones, effective from October 1, 2022, on the lines of what it had introduced for banks in 2002.

    The RBI came up with stricter supervisory norms under the PCA framework for banks after their bad loans mounted and balance-sheets bled badly. This involved restricting them from fresh lending, brand opening and, hiring, among others.

    The RBI said the revised PCA framework is also applicable to all deposit-taking non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), all non-deposit taking NBFCs in the middle, upper and top layers, including investment and credit companies, core investment companies, infrastructure debt funds, infrastructure finance companies and microfinance institutions.

    However, it has excluded NBFCs not accepting/not intending to accept public funds, primary dealers and housing finance companies along with government-owned ones.

    Being put under the PCA framework means restrictions on dividend distribution/remittance of profits; promoters/shareholders to infuse equity and reduction in leverage; restrictions on issue of guarantees or taking on other contingent liabilities on behalf of group companies, the RBI said.

    Special supervisory actions will be taken in matters regarding breach in strategy, governance, core capital, credit risk, market risk, HR, and profitability, it added.

    The mandatory curbs also include restrictions on branch expansion, capital expenditure (other than for technological upgrade within board approved limits) and curbs on reduction in variable operating costs. Besides, the central bank can even supersede the Board under the RBI Act, appoint an administrator and send the NBFC to NCLT for insolvency resolution.

                    Source: PTI

  • New ‘super-Jupiter’ breaks the mold on where planets can exist

    New ‘super-Jupiter’ breaks the mold on where planets can exist

    One of the largest planets ever detected orbits at an enormous distance around two stars with a combined mass up to 10 times greater than our sun, an extreme celestial family that shatters assumptions about the type of places where planets can exist.

    The planet, located about 325 light years from Earth, is a gas giant apparently similar in composition to Jupiter but about 11 times more massive, researchers said.

    It belongs to a planetary class called “super-Jupiters” exceeding the mass of our solar system’s largest planet. It orbits a pair of stars gravitationally bound to one another, called a binary system. It has what might be the widest orbit of any known planet – about 100 times wider than Jupiter’s orbit around our sun and about 560 times wider than Earth’s.

    Until now, no planet had been found orbiting a star more than three times the sun’s mass. Stars larger than that emit so much radiation that they were thought to torch the planetary formation process. This discovery dashes that view.

    “Planet formation appears to be an incredibly diverse process. It has surpassed our imagination many times in the past, and will probably keep doing so in the future,” said astronomer Markus Janson of Stockholm University in Sweden, lead author of the research published in the journal Nature.

    Since the discovery in the 1990s of the first planets beyond our solar system – so-called exoplanets – scientists have sought to learn whether or not our solar system represents standard “architecture.””From the trend seen so far, our solar system is not the most common type of planetary system architecture that exists,” said study co-author Gayathri Viswanath, a Stockholm University astronomy doctoral student.

  • Technology helping keep women safe on the streets

    Technology helping keep women safe on the streets

    They might call a friend, share their location on WhatsApp, or have their keys to hand – all strategies to stay secure. Sexual harassment against females has been under the spotlight for most of this year, with women across the UK turning to their own methods to feel better when they are out at night. So could technology play a role in making women feel safer on our streets?

    Since the murders of Sarah Everard and Sabina Nessa, the WalkSafe app has had a surge in popularity, and is now the fastest-growing safety app in the UK.

    Founder Emma Kaye came up with the concept after experiencing harassment, groping and flashing.

    “Our app is really bitter-sweet because, of course, we love that we’re busy. However, we really wish it didn’t have to exist. No-one wants to live in a world where we need a safety app, but sadly there is a place for it,” she said.

    WalkSafe will have a new sat-nav feature coming early next year, which will include a live map where your family and friends will be able to track your journey and chat with you in real time. For now its unique selling point is a map which allows people to plan their safest route home, by looking at recent crime data.

    Ms Kaye said: “Our app encourages people to have precautionary measures to avoid crime, rather than reactionary measures when in an unfortunate situation.

    “We have senior ex-Metropolitan Police detectives and crime analysts comb through this data, and categorise it into areas the user would want to know about. By looking at the crime patterns, users can identify crime hotspots so they can plan safer routes.”

    Since launching in March this year, the app has had more than 560,000 downloads.

    At the University of Bath, researchers are trying to solve the problem of safety products which are difficult to physically activate. They are developing a women’s smartwatch app called Epowar which would automatically send alerts if it senses the user is in distress – by monitoring heart rate and body motion.

    Co-founder, student E-J Roodt, said the idea came to her while jogging in a badly-lit park, and worrying about the risk of an attack.

    “When I saw that smartwatches were being used to detect heart attacks I thought, well, maybe that technology could be applied to women’s safety,” she said.

    Although the sample size is small, the app uses artificial intelligence to recognise distress, and responds if a user is attacked when walking or running alone.

    Ms Roodt said: “It occurred to us that a smartwatch with this app may be a way to alert others if a woman is restrained or struggling.

    “The key is that it would all happen automatically, and an assailant would have little or no time to prevent this – which is not always possible with conventional panic buttons, rape alarms or your mobile phone.”    Source: BBC

  • India to launch deep ocean mission by 2024

    India will send its first-ever manned mission into the deep sea in 2024 after sending crewed missions into space in 2023.  Minister of state for science and technology Jitendra Singh said on Saturday three scientists will be sent at a depth of 5,000 metres (5 kilometres) in the sea to find hidden mineral deposits, according to a report by HT’s sister publication Live Hindustan.

    The mission, which has been called Samudrayan, was launched by the Centre in October this year.

    “With the launch of this Unique Ocean Mission, India joins the elite club of nations such as the USA, Russia, Japan, France and China to have such underwater vehicles for carrying out subsea activities,” Singh said at the launch event in Chennai on October 30.

    Samudrayan has been undertaken by the National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT). It will be a part of the Deep Ocean Mission, which will be implemented at a total budget Rs 4,077 crore for five years.

    The preliminary design of the manned submersible MATSYA 6000 under the Samudrayan project, has already been completed.

    The MATSYA 6000 can carry three people in a titanium alloy personnel sphere of a 2.1-metre diameter enclosed space with an endurance of 12 hours and an additional 96 hours in case of an emergency situation.

    Union minister Singh said in October sea trials of 500 metre rated shallow water version of the manned submersible are expected to take place in the last quarter of 2022, adding, the MATSYA 6000 will be ready for trials by the second quarter of 2024.

    Besides working on the first manned mission to the ocean, India will also launch its maiden human space mission “Gaganyaan” in 2023. With Gaganyaan’s launch, India will be the fourth country after the United States, Russia and China to launch a human space flight mission.

  • Stress can lead to excessive drinking in women: Study

    Stress can lead to excessive drinking in women: Study

    A new study has found that stress alone can drive women to excessive drinking. Men who experienced the same stress only drank to excess when they had already started consuming alcohol. The findings of the study were published in the journal ‘Psychology of Addictive Behaviors’.

    Though rates of alcohol misuse are higher in men than women, women are catching up. Women also have a greater risk than men of developing alcohol-related problems.

    Participants consumed alcoholic beverages in a simulated bar while experiencing stressful and non-stressful situations. Stress led women, but not men, to drink more than intended, a finding that demonstrates the importance of studying sex differences in alcohol consumption.

    “Some people can intend to have one or two alcoholic beverages and stop drinking, but other people just keep going. This impaired control over drinking is one of the earliest indicators of alcohol use disorders, and we know stress contributes to both impaired control over drinking and dysregulated drinking. The role of stress in impaired control over drinking is understudied, especially in women,” said Julie Patock-Peckham, assistant research professor at ASU and lead author on the study.

    The study took place in a research laboratory designed to simulate a bar, complete with a bartender, bar stools and lively conversations. The participants included 105 women and 105 men. They were randomised into different groups, with some either experiencing a stressful situation and others a non-stressful situation.

    Next, half the participants received an alcoholic drink that was equivalent to three cocktails, and the other half received three non-alcoholic drinks. After that, all participants had unrestricted access to alcoholic drinks from the bar for 90 minutes.

    “We know that both genes and the environment play a role in problematic drinking. We can’t do anything about the genes, but we can intervene with the environment. Stress and impaired control over drinking are tightly connected, and because stress is something we can manipulate, we tested whether stressors cause dysregulated drinking,” said Patock-Peckham, who leads the Social Addictions Impulse Lab at ASU.

    The experimental set-up let the research team determine whether stress, the initial drink or the combination of the two caused how much alcohol the participants consumed. The team measured alcohol consumption in the total number of drinks consumed and by using breath blood alcohol content (BAC).

                    Saource: ANI

  • Pfizer jabs protect 70% against hospitalization from omicron

    Pfizer jabs protect 70% against hospitalization from omicron

    A two-dose Pfizer/BioNTech vaccination provides just 33 per cent protection against infection by the omicron variant of the coronavirus, but 70 per cent protection against hospitalisation, according to a large-scale analysis in South Africa.

    The first large-scale analysis of vaccine effectiveness in the region where the new variant was discovered appears to support early indications that omicron is more easily transmissible and that the Pfizer shot isn’t as effective in protecting against infection as it was against the delta variant.

    Omicron poses a higher risk of reinfection. For individuals who have previously had Covid-19, the risk of reinfection with omicron is significantly higher than that of earlier variants.

    Risk of hospitalisation from omicron is lower. Hospital admissions among adults diagnosed with Covid-19 attributed to omicron is 29 per cent lower compared to the Covid-19 wave that South Africa experienced in mid-2020, after adjusting for vaccination status.

    The analysis was based on more than 211,000 positive Covid-19 test results, 41 per cent from adults who had received two doses of the Pfizer vaccine. About 78,000 of these positive Covid-19 test results between November 15 and December 7 were attributed to omicron infections.

    The study was carried out by Discovery Health, South Africa’s largest private health insurer, and the South African Medical Research Council.

    The study has been carried out in the weeks since omicron was first announced in November by scientists in South Africa and Botswana. The researchers emphasized that its findings are preliminary and not peer reviewed.

    The data are gathered from the first three weeks of South Africa’s omicron-driven wave and may change as time passes. South Africa is the first country to experience a surge in Covid-19 driven by the omicron variant.

    South Africa has experienced rapid community spread — concentrated in its most populous province, Gauteng — dominated by the omicron variant.

                    Source: AP

  • Amla: Superfood For Beautiful Skin

    Amla is one of the most ancient fruits now recognized as one of the richest natural sources of vitamin C. The desi superfood can fight off cough, ulcers, constipation, manage diabetes, cholesterol and give you amazing skin and hair. One of the most remarkable and popular qualities of amla is its impact on skin. Eat it Raw: Since the fruit is quite bitter, it can get quite hard to ingest all by its own. However, there are people who do that too. Raw amla is the best way to make most of its nutritious and beauty benefits. To have them raw, wash the Indian gooseberries and cut them in small pieces. You can dip them in honey or sprinkle some chaat masala to make it more palatable. Juice It: The most palatable way to have amla without losing its benefits according to experts is by juicing it. Amla juice is considered to be an effective home remedy to manage diabetes, cholesterol levels, weight loss and is used to treat cold and cough. The health beverage is quite easy-to-prepare. You just have to blend the chopped amla with water. Filter and discard the pulp. If you happen to have amla powder, you just have to mix the powder with water and you are good to go.

    Face Mask: You can combat majority of regular skin and beauty woes with easy DIY amla face packs. For a smooth and radiant skin,  you can mix amla powder, honey and yogurt to make a quick face mask. Leave it on till it dries (approximately 15-20 min) and then rinse it off with cold water.

  • Pakistan is ‘bankrupt’, says former chairman of apex tax authority

    Pakistan is ‘bankrupt’, says former chairman of apex tax authority

    Karachi (TIP): The former chairman of Pakistan’s Federal Board of Revenue Shabbar Zaidi has said the country is “bankrupt” and it is better to recognise the reality than “living in illusion”.

    Zaidi—who was chairman of the apex tax authority from May 10, 2019 to January 6, 2020 — also called for transparency in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project, saying he himself had not yet fully understood what it was.

    Addressing a seminar at Hamdard University here on Wednesday, he said everyone in governance kept on saying that everything is good and the country is running well.

    “They say we have achieved great success and we brought tabdeeli (change), but this is wrong. In my view, the country is, at the moment, bankrupt and not a going concern,” Zaidi said.

    Going concern is an accounting terminology referring to a business that is operating and making a profit.

    “It is better if you decide first that we have reached bankruptcy and we have to move forward compared to saying everything is running well and I will do this and that. These are all things to deceive the people,” Zaidi said.

    Zaidi also called for transparency in the USD 60 billion CPEC project, saying that he himself had not yet fully understood what it was. He lamented about confusion over which projects were part of CPEC.

    The CPEC is a planned network of roads, railways and energy projects linking China’s resource-rich Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region with Pakistan’s strategic Gwadar Port on the Arabian Sea. India has objected to the CPEC as it is being laid through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.

    A video clip of Zaidi’s speech was shared widely on social media. As soon as the video went viral, Zaidi on Thursday claimed that his speech was being “misreported” and only a three-minute portion of it was “cherry-picked”.

    “Yes I said that with this constant current account & fiscal deficit there are issues of bankruptcy & going concern but look at the solution,” he tweeted.

    Zaidi said his statement had been made on a “basis & conviction”. “I only want to say that (the) whole speech is to (be) read and listened (to).” In another tweet later on Thursday, the former FBR head said Pakistan’s total foreign debt stood at over USD 115 billion, while its current account deficit was between USD 5 billion to USD 8 billion.

    “When will we be able to pay that debt? It is better to recognise the reality than living in illusion. We need to have a reality check,” he said. PTI

  • Lankan govt reinstates doctor accused of sterilising over 4K Sinhalese women

    Colombo (TIP): The Sri Lankan government on December 16 reinstated a Muslim doctor, who was sent on compulsory leave for allegedly performing illegal sterilisation on over 4,000 women from the majority Sinhalese Buddhist community with the objective of causing the extinction of the Sinhala race. The health ministry in a statement also announced to pay arrears of Dr Shafi Shihabdeen’s salary for the period he was sent on compulsory leave.

    Shihabdeen, a doctor in Kurunegala government hospital, was arrested in May 2019 and subsequently suspended from his service over allegations that he sterilised over 4,000 women from the majority Sinhalese Buddhist community after performing caesarean deliveries with the objective of causing the extinction of the Sinhala race.

    The 42-year-old doctor was also accused of being a member of the jihadi group, which carried out the deadly Easter attacks in 2019 that killed 270 people, including 11 Indians.

    Nine suicide bombers, belonging to local Islamist extremist group National Thawheed Jamaat (NTJ) linked to ISIS, carried out coordinated blasts that tore through three churches and as many luxury hotels in Sri Lanka on the Easter Sunday in 2019.

    Shihabdeen denied the allegations. He was later granted bail in July 2019.

    A police investigation into the allegations proved negative. In a court hearing, Criminal Investigation Department (CID) officials had said there was not enough evidence to substantiate the allegations against the doctor.

    In January last year, Shihabdeen made a request to the Health Service Committee of the Public Service Commission that he be reinstated. (PTI)

  • Nepali Congress elects PM Deuba as party chief

    Kathmandu (TIP): Nepal’s Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba was re-elected on Wednesday as the president of the ruling Nepali Congress — the country’s largest democratic party — for a consecutive second four year term after defeating his rival Shekhar Koirala in a run-off. Five-time premier Dueba secured 2,733 votes during the second round of elections, defeating Koirala, who secured 1,855 votes, according to the 14th General Convention of the Nepali Congress. Koirala is the nephew of former prime minister Girija Prasad Koirala. — PTI

  • Four men handed death penalty for gang raping college student in Pakistan

    Lahore (TIP):  Four men who were convicted of gang-raping and robbing a 20-year-old college student in Punjab province has been sentenced to death by a Pakistan court. In January this year, the four suspects — Naseer Ahmed, Muhammad Waseem, Umar Hayat and Faqir Hussain — broke into a house at a village in Bahawalpur district, around 400 kms from Lahore, and gang raped the girl, before disappearing with cash and gold ornaments, the prosecution said. After the robbery, the suspects took the girl to a separate room and gang raped her, despite requests from her parents to spare her, the FIR stated. The additional district and sessions judge, Rana Abdul Hakim, on Wednesday pronounced the verdict. A few months ago, in Shujabad, Multan, four armed robbers had ganged raped a newly-wed bride in front of her husband. The police are yet to nab the culprits. —PTI

  • 5 children die as wind lifts jumping castle into air at Australia school

    5 children die as wind lifts jumping castle into air at Australia school

    Sydney (TIP): Five children died and four others were in critical condition on December 16 after falling from a bouncy castle that was lifted 10 metres (33 feet) into the air by a gust of wind at a school on Australia’s island state of Tasmania.

    The school was holding a celebration to mark the end of the school year.

    The children who died included two boys and two girls in year 6, which would make them 10 or 11 years old, said Tasmania police Commissioner Darren Hine. Police later Thursday confirmed a fifth child died in the hospital. Five other children were being treated, including four in critical condition. Hine said an investigation is underway. Images published by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation showed police officers consoling each other as paramedics provided first aid to victims.

    Parents arrived at the school gate to collect their children as helicopters ferried the injured to hospitals. Tasmania state Premier Peter Gutwein called the incident “simply inconceivable… I know this is a strong and caring community that will stand together and support one another.”

    Tasmania police commander Debbie Williams told reporters “several children fell from the jumping castle. It appears they may have fallen from a height of approximately 10 metres.”

    “This is a very tragic event and our thoughts are with the families and the wider school community and also our first responders,” Williams said. — AP

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin pledges to attend Beijing Winter Olympics

    Moscow (TIP): Russian President Vladimir Putin has pledged to attend the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, making him the first major western leader to confirm his attendance at the games, BBC reported. His remarks came in a video call with Chinese President Xi Jinping, who said he looked forward to a “get-together”. It comes as a growing number of countries have joined a diplomatic boycott of games. — IANS

  • 22 die, 16 hospitalised in Istanbul from bootleg alcohol poisoning: Officials

    Ankara (TIP): At least 22 people have died in Istanbul and 16 others have been hospitalised and are in serious condition after drinking bootleg alcohol, the local governor’s office said december 17, as authorities intensified a crackdown on counterfeit drinks across Turkey ahead of New Year’s celebrations. Eleven of the dead, and five of those who had fallen ill were foreign nationals, the Istanbul governor’s office said in a statement. It didn’t elaborate or provide details on the victims’ nationalities. Four suspects have been arrested in connection with the deaths, the statement said.

    On december 15, the state-run Anadolu Agency said 26 people were killed in the past four days from methanol alcohol poisoning in nine Turkish provinces, including Istanbul.

    Authorities have launched a nationwide operation to crackdown on bootleg alcohol production, conducting raids on about 300 locations and seizing thousands of liters of counterfeit alcohol, the report said. At least 85 suspects were detained. Deaths from bootleg alcohol aren’t uncommon in Turkey where people, faced with ever-climbing alcoholic beverage prices, seek to buy cheaper drinks or turn to homemade booze. Rising inflation and the government’s taxes and regulation of alcohol consumption have thrust alcohol prices to all-time highs. — AP

  • China’s #MeToo victims face abuse, payback for going public

    Taipei (TIP): Human resources and upper management wouldn’t deal with her accusation of sexual assault, a former employee of Alibaba said. So she went into the busy cafeteria at the Chinese e-commerce giant’s headquarters and screamed out her plight.

    Now she’s facing online harassment, accusations of lying from the wives of the two men she accused and a defamation lawsuit from an Alibaba vice president who was forced to resign. And, she revealed recently, the company fired her.

    Women in China often face such troubles if they choose to speak publicly about sexual assault. In multiple high-profile cases, particularly during China’s brief #MeToo movement in 2018, victims were sued by the men who allegedly harassed them. Some have been targeted with online harassment and censored from speaking about their cases.

    In the most high-profile case, former Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai disappeared from public view after accusing former high-level official Zhang Gaoli of sexual assault. Her accusation was quickly scrubbed from the internet and discussion of it remains heavily censored. In such a climate, women’s rights activists fear that fewer victims will be willing to speak up.

    “This is helping the wrongdoer, and makes the workplace environment even worse, and it’s an attack on the next woman who wants to stand out,” said #MeToo activist Zhou Xiaoxuan.

    The former Alibaba employee told the Dahe Daily, a provincial Chinese newspaper, that she would not encourage other women to come forward, given her own experience of being attacked online and called a liar.

    But she said in written responses to questions from The Associated Press that she would continue her fight. She is being identified only by her last name, Zhou, because of harassment concerns.

    “I believe, if there’s one case of someone being fired because of upholding their own rights, then there may be more and more such cases, and future victims of sexual assault may have an even more difficult time seeking justice,” she said.

    Zhou accused a fellow Alibaba employee, surnamed Wang, and a client surnamed Zhang of sexual assault during a work trip in July. She said she woke up in her hotel room to find Wang kissing and groping her. She also said Zhang molested her while they were all at dinner. The wives of both men, who were not there, have publicly denied the accusations.

    Police detained both men in August on suspicion of “forcible molestation”, but released Wang after 15 days, the longest one can be held under administrative detention. Prosecutors dropped the investigation into Wang, though Alibaba fired him. Zhang, the client, is in police custody and a criminal case is pending.

    Initially, Zhou thought she would get justice. Alibaba’s CEO Daniel Zhang pledged in a public memo in August to create an anti-sexual harassment policy, and senior leaders vowed to improve management, she said. Two executives Zhou accused of not responding to her allegations resigned. One has since sued her.  (AP)

  • Arson suspected in Japan clinic blaze with 27 people feared dead

    Arson suspected in Japan clinic blaze with 27 people feared dead

    Osaka, Japan (TIP) : Fire swept through a psychiatry clinic in the Japanese city of Osaka on December 17, with 27 people feared dead and police investigating possible arson after media reported a man had spilt a liquid that fuelled the blaze.

    The fire broke out on the fourth floor of an office building in a busy district of the western city at around 10 a.m. (0100 GMT), public broadcaster NHK said.

    “Most of the people who lost their lives could be medical workers or patients at the clinic. This is unbearable,” said Yumiko Inoue, a doctor from a nearby hospital told Reuters, as she looked up at the building’s charred windows from across the street.

    A man who looked to be in his 50s or 60s was seen carrying a bag filled with liquid into the building, where he out it down near a heater and knocked it over, spilling the liquid and starting the fire, Kyodo News reported.

    Other media said the man was believed to be a patient of the clinic, and that he carried a bag leaking liquid into the reception area before the fire started.

    Twenty-four people were confirmed dead, NHK said. An official at Osaka city’s fire department earlier told Reuters that 27 people had suffered from cardiopulmonary arrest, the term used in Japan before a death is officially confirmed. The fire was largely extinguished within 30 minutes, according to NHK, after engulfing a narrow, 20-square metre (215 square foot) room in the clinic. Footage showed smoke pouring out of the windows of the building’s fourth floor and roof.

    CONDOLENCES

    Located in a shopping and entertainment district not far from Osaka’s main train station, the building also houses a beauty salon, a clothing shop and an English-language school, NHK said.

    “When I looked outside I saw orange flames in the fourth-floor window of the building. A woman was waving her hands for help from the sixth floor window,” a 36-year-old woman who works in an office nearby told Kyodo News.

    By evening most of the fire trucks were gone and the clinic’s burned out, broken windows were covered with blue tarpaulin.

    Prime Minister Fumio Kishida offered condolences and said authorities were working to determine the cause.

    The father of a doctor who ran the clinic was unable to reach him by mobile phone, he told the Yomiuri newspaper. “Around noon I heard there was news of a fire on television and was surprised. My wife went to the site but we still don’t know what’s going on. I can’t get through to my son’s phone,” he said. The clinic’s website was not accessible but an internet archive from earlier this year showed it treated patients for issues from depression and panic to sleep apnoea and anaemia. An arson attack at an animation studio in the city of Kyoto in 2019 killed more than 30 people and injured dozens. Reuters