FASLANE, Scotland (Reuters) – Sterling tumbled to a 28-month low on Monday as Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the Brexit divorce was dead and warned that unless the European Union renegotiated, Britain would leave on Oct. 31 without a deal.

Many investors say a no-deal Brexit would send shock waves through the world economy, tip Britain’s economy into a recession, roil financial markets and weaken London’s position as the pre-eminent international financial center.

The pound, which was trading at $1.50 on the day of the 2016 referendum, dropped more than a cent to $1.2242 GBP=D3 on no-deal fears, the lowest level since March 16 2017. Sterling has fallen more than two cents since Johnson was named leader.

Johnson’s bet is that the threat of a disruptive no-deal Brexit will persuade the EU’s biggest powers – Germany and France – to agree to revise the Withdrawal Agreement that Theresa May agreed but failed three times to push through the British parliament.

“The Withdrawal Agreement is dead, it’s got to go. But there is scope to do a new deal,” Johnson told reporters in Faslane, Britain’s nuclear submarine base on the Clyde in Scotland.

“We are going to go ahead and come out of the EU on October 31.”

When asked about his remark during the campaign for the party leadership that the odds on a no-deal Brexit were a million to one, he said: “Provided there is sufficient goodwill and common sense on the part of our partners, that is exactly where I would put the odds.”

Johnson also said that the Irish border backstop – designed to prevent the return of a hard border between Ireland and the United Kingdom’s province of Northern Ireland – was “no good, it’s dead, it’s got to go.”

Under the backstop, the United Kingdom would remain in a customs union with the EU “unless and until” alternative arrangements are found to avoid a hard border.

The 27 other EU members, though, say publicly and privately that the divorce settlement – including the backstop – is not up for barter. Many EU diplomats say they believe an election in Britain is highly likely.

If Johnson goes for a no-deal Brexit, some British lawmakers will attempt to stop him, possibly collapsing his government. If they try to thwart Brexit, an election becomes much more likely.

TURBO-CHARGE

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said London was “turbo-charging” no deal preparations and cast the bloc as “stubborn” but denied he was threatening a bloc whose $15.9 trillion economy is nearly six times that of the United Kingdom’s.

Hedge funds increased their net short sterling positions – bets that the pound will fall – to the highest level in nearly a year. The yield on Britain’s benchmark 10-year gilt GB10YT=RR fell to the lowest in almost three years as investors sought a safe haven.

Britain’s FTSE .FTSE 100 rose to its highest in nearly a year on Monday, partly on merger optimism though exporters stocks benefited from a weaker pound.

In a sign investors are scrambling for protection against currency swings around the time of the Oct. 31 exit, three-month implied volatility surged to a four-month high.

STATE OF THE UNION

Differences over Brexit have strained the bonds that tie the United Kingdom. While the country voted 52-48 to leave in 2016, Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to stay in the EU while Wales and England vote to leave.

The question of the unification of Ireland and British-ruled Northern Ireland will inevitably arise if Britain leaves the European Union without a divorce deal on Oct. 31, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said.

He also suggested that a so-called hard Brexit could undermine Scotland’s place in the United Kingdom.

Johnson made his first visit to Scotland as prime minister on Monday, visiting HMS Victorious – one of Britain’s four Vanguard-class nuclear submarines which carry Trident ballistic missiles.

His promise to deliver Brexit, with or without a deal, has put him at odds with some in his party who oppose a “no deal” exit – including its Scottish leader Ruth Davidson.

“She is right to think that we should be going for a deal, not no deal,” Johnson said. “If our partners won’t move, won’t take out the backstop, won’t even begin to change that Withdrawal Agreement, they won’t compromise at all then of course we have got to get ready for no-deal.”

Gordon Brown, a Scot and a former prime minister, said this month that Johnson might be the last UK prime minister as he could be on a collision course with Scottish nationalists.

Slideshow (9 Images)

Johnson, who was due to meet Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, rejected a fresh referendum on Scottish independence after Scots voted 55%-45% to remain in the United Kingdom in 2014.

“This was a once-in-a-lifetime, once-in-a-generation thing, everybody was told that,” he said. “It was on that basis that they cast their votes and I think it would be totally wrong now to break that promise to the people of Scotland and the UK and have another referendum.”

Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Additional reporting by Andrew MacAskill and Kylie MacLellan; Editing by Jon Boyle

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-brexit/britain-warns-eu-change-your-stubborn-position-or-face-no-deal-brexit-idUSKCN1UO0Q4

A small community in the Canadian province of Manitoba has been swarmed by authorities after a possible sighting of two young men suspected in the killings of three people – including the slayings of an American woman and her Australian boyfriend.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Monday that “all efforts are being made” to find out if the suspects are in York Landing, Manitoba after receiving a tip that two individuals matching the description of Kam McLeod, 19, and 18-year-old Bryer Schmegelsky were in the area.

“Situation is ongoing,” the RCMP Manitoba tweeted. “All possible RCMP resources continue to be used in the area of York Landing to safely apprehend two individuals matching the description of the suspects.”

Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky are now considered suspects in the killings of three people across British Columbia.
(Royal Canadian Mounted Police)

A law enforcement source told Fox News that authorities received a “strong” lead the pair may be in or near the community, which is about 56 miles from Gillam, another town in Manitoba near the location where a vehicle that had been used by the suspects was found burned last week. The weather conditions in the region are poor at the moment, with heavy wind and rain reported.

“We believe, based on their description and behavior, that it’s them,” a law enforcement source told Fox News.

POSSIBLE SIGHTING OF CANADA MURDER SUSPECTS REPORTED IN MANITOBA AS POLICE SWARM AREA

The RCMP said that the safety of the community remains “our priority.”

“We remind residents to stay inside & check all doors & windows to ensure they are closed & locked,” officials said.

Chief Leroy Constant with York Factory First Nation said RCMP would be conducting a search for the pair “in our community of York Landing” after a “possible sighting” around a landfill on Sunday night.

“Everyone please remain indoors with your doors locked,” Constant said on Facebook. “And all vehicles should be parked.”

Earlier Sunday, RCMP tweeted that officers had spent the day searching cottages, cabins, waterways and along the rail line in Gillam for any signs of the suspects. They added the search of remote areas was being conducted both on the ground and in the air.

The tweet also noted “The terrain is immense & varied w/lakes, ponds, muskeg etc.”

(Royal Canadian Mounted Police)

More than 100 empty homes were searched in Gillam, with officers also scouring large abandoned buildings, including the Gillam-area Keewatinohk Converter Station Camp — which has more than 600 rooms, according to the RCMP.

CANADA MURDER SUSPECTS MAY HAVE ELUDED COPS WITH ‘SOMEONE WHO IS NOT POLICE FRIENDLY,’ SOURCE SAYS

On Friday, police confirmed a resident of Cold Lake, Alberta, had helped the suspects get their Toyota Rav-4 unstuck from a local trail on July 21. Authorities said the suspects “continued on their way after a short, unremarkable interaction.”

McLeod and Schmegelsky are being sought in connection with the deaths of American Chynna Deese, 24, her Australian boyfriend, Lucas Fowler, 23, and, separately, Leonard Dyck, 64, of Vancouver, British Columbia.

Authorities found Deese and Fowler’s bodies July 15 along the side of the Alaska Highway near Liard Hot Springs, B.C. Both had been shot to death

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

McLeod and Schmegelsky have been charged with second-degree murder in the death of Dyck, whose body was discovered five days after the remains of Deese and Fowler were found.

The teens were originally considered missing but were later named as suspects in the murders on Tuesday. On Thursday, the RCMP said the suspects had been spotted in the area of Gillam, which is more than 2,000 miles from where the three victims were found.

Fox News’ Talia Kaplan, Jacqui Heinrich, and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/canada-murder-suspect-search-focuses-on-york-landing-manitoba-for-individuals-matching-the-description-police-say

CLOSE

Three people are dead and 15 wounded after a shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival. Police shot and killed on gunman.
USA TODAY

A shooting at the Garlic Festival in Gilroy, California injured 15 people and killed 3 more, bringing a horrific end to the popular annual event attended by thousands.

A 6-year-old boy was one among those killed, his father said.

“My son had his whole life to live and he was only 6,” the father of Stephen Romero told NBC Bay Area. “That’s all I can say.”

The wounded were taken to multiple hospitals, and their conditions ranged from fair to critical, with some in surgery Sunday night. At least five were treated and released.

Gilroy police said at a press conference that officers engaged the shooter in less than a minute, though the scene was still considered active and nearby areas were kept on lockdown into the night.

California shooting rampage: 6 year-old Stephen Romero among victims

As news of the shooting broke, videos emerged on social media in which the sound of gunshots could be heard. 

“It’s a nightmare you don’t want to live,” said Gilroy Police Chief Scot Smithee at a press conference. 

Who is the suspect?

Police shot and killed one gunman, who was wielding “some kind of rifle,” shortly after he began firing. 

“It appears it was somewhat random, the way he shot at people,” Smithee said. He did not provide any additional details about the gunman.

Witnesses indicated there may have been a second suspect involved, but police are still investigating and have no identifying information on him, Smithee said. 

“We have teams working to try to track down and identify leads regarding the second suspect,” he said.

How many people were hurt?

Smithee said that at least 15 people had been injured at the shooting. Their ages, names and injuries are unknown.

Stephen Romero, age 6, is among the three who were killed. The suspect also died.

The injured were taken to several different local hospitals and their conditions ranged from fair to critical.

Where did the shooting happen?

The Gilroy Garlic Festival, located in northern California, has been an annual event for 41 years. The three-day festival featuring food, cooking competitions and music regularly attracts thousands of attendees to the town, known for its garlic production.

Sunday was the final day of this year’s event.

More than 80,000 people attended last year’s event, according to the festival’s website. 

Was there security?

People attending the festival must pass through metal detectors and security before getting into the park. 

The suspect entered the festival by cutting through a fence, officials said.

Before the shooting: Gilroy and its garlic festival created powerful memories

“The city of Gilroy is an incredible community, and we have incredible people here,” Smithee said. “It takes literally thousands of our residents that volunteer their time to come put this on for people, and to raise funds for all of our community-based organizations and charities and whatnot, and you can’t say that about a lot of communities.” 

What have witnesses said?

San Jose resident Angela Escarcega said her family has been going to the festival for over 10 years. After running from the gunfire with her son in her arms and meeting with the rest of her family at the reunification center at Gavilan College, they said now they don’t want to go anymore. 

“My little one,” she said of her 9-year-old son. “He’s ready to go home.”

Evenny Reyes, a 13-year-old Gilroy resident, told the Mercury News that she had spent the day with her friends and relatives at the festival when chaos erupted.

“We were just leaving and we saw a guy with a bandana wrapped around his leg because he got shot. And there were people on the ground, crying,” Reyes said. “There was a little kid hurt on the ground. People were throwing tables and cutting fences to get out.”

Gilroy resident Luis Godoy said he was with friends and family, including his infant son, at the festival when they heard gunshots and took cover.

“It was a little scary. We saw a mob of people just kind of running away from where the shooting was happening,” he said.

Godoy said he and his family live close by and attend the festival every year. 

“Thank god we made it out safe and we came home,” he said.

What’s the response?

“Gilroy is an amazing community, a tightly knit community. We are a family,” said the festival’s executive director, Bryan Bowe. “It’s a sad, horribly upsetting situation that this happened on the last day of the festival.”

California Governor Gavin Newsom quickly thanked law enforcement for handling the ongoing incident. 

“This is nothing short of horrific,” Newsom tweeted. “Tonight, CA stands with the Gilroy community. My office is monitoring the situation closely.” 

President Donald Trump responded to the shooting on Twitter, telling attendees to “[b]e careful and safe” and saying that law enforcement was on the scene.

California senator and Democratic presidential hopeful Kamala Harris also voiced her thoughts on Twitter, calling the shooting part of a “gun violence epidemic that we cannot tolerate.” 

Gilroy police have asked direct witnesses to contact the department with additional information by calling (408) 846-0583.

Contributing: John Bacon, Kristin Lam, USA TODAY; Chelcey Adami, Kate Cimini and Eduardo Cuevas, Salinas Californian; Associated Press.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/07/29/gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-what-we-know/1854727001/

Dan Bongino urged President Trump not to relent in his criticism of the way Democrats have run America’s inner cities, including Baltimore, where he formerly worked as a federal agent.

The Fox News contributor and former New York City police officer said he was motivated to run for political office in Maryland in 2012 and 2014 because of the conditions he observed on the streets of Baltimore.

“I would say to the president and anyone else right now: don’t you dare run away from this argument. This argument is long overdue,” he said on “Fox & Friends” Monday.

CUMMINGS SAYS THERE IS ‘NO DOUBT’ TRUMP IS RACIST FOLLOWING CONTROVERSY OVER TWEETS

AOC ACCUSES CONGRESS OF USING WOMEN, MINORITIES AS ‘BARGAINING CHIPS’ WHO HAVE BEEN ‘AUCTIONED OFF’ FOR DECADES

Trump was heavily criticized over the weekend after he branded Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., a “brutal bully” for his treatment of Border Patrol officials at committee hearings — and described Cummings’ district as “far worse and more dangerous” than the southern border.

“Cumming[s’] District is a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess. If he spent more time in Baltimore, maybe he could help clean up this very dangerous & filthy place,” Trump tweeted, before calling for an investigation into why Baltimore received so much federal funding.

Cummings, the chairman of the House Oversight Committee, responded Sunday by declaring he has “no doubt” that Trump is racist.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Bongino, who also served as a U.S. Secret Service agent, pushed back on Cummings’ sentiments, saying the people of Baltimore are “good people who have been let down” by liberal policies.

“Liberals have destroyed and decimated these cities. … There is nothing wrong with the people of Baltimore. These are people looking for safety and prosperity. Thank God the president brought the heat to these Democrat politicians who have destroyed these cities. When is the accountability gonna start?” he asked.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/dan-bongino-fox-friends-trump-baltimore-criticism

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats repeatedly found his warnings about the threat posed by Russia suppressed by the White House, The New York Times reported Sunday amid his resignation from the post.

According to The Times, Coats has often found himself at odds with President Donald Trump over Russia, a situation that worsened in recent months.

Coats saw Russia as an adversary to the US, The Times wrote, and pushed for closer cooperation with European countries to counter it, but the White House did not agree.

Several times Coats saw his language on the Kremlin’s activities watered down by the White House, according to The Times.

A secret report by Coats on Russia’s attempt to interfere in the 2018 midterms by spreading disinformation was reportedly altered by the White House. A public statement on Coats’ conclusions contained less critical language than the original, The Times said.

A former senior intelligence official told The Washington Post that Coats felt marginalized on national security issues by the president and had come to see his departure as inevitable.

According to reports, Trump had been discussing replacing Coats for months.

Trump has long faced scrutiny for his warm comments on Russia and his changing positions on whether Russia interfered to help him secure his 2016 election victory.

Robert Mueller concluded in the special counsel’s Russia investigation that there was insufficient evidence to charge the president or his aides with criminally conspiring with Russia in 2016.

Trump in a tweet Sunday announced that Coats would step down in mid-August and nominated Rep. John Ratcliffe of Texas as his replacement.

In his tweet, he thanked Coats for his service but offered him no praise.

“The intelligence community is stronger than ever and increasingly well prepared to meet new challenges and opportunities,” Coats wrote in his resignation letter, citing the recent appointment of an official charged with countering foreign election interference.

During his time as director of national intelligence, Coats had publicly contradicted Trump on the president’s claims regarding Russia and North Korea.

In a statement released after Trump’s summit in Helsinki with Russian President Vladimir Putin in July 2018, Coats rebutted the president’s apparent acceptance of Putin’s claim that Russia had not interfered in the 2016 election.

At a national security conference in Colorado last year, Coats reacted with incredulity when told Trump had invited Putin to the White House at the summit.

“That’s going to be special,” he remarked.

And in testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee in January, Coats contradicted Trump’s claims that North Korea no longer posed a threat because of his summits with its leader, Kim Jong Un.

Coats told lawmakers that North Korea “was unlikely to give up” its nuclear weapons. He also contradicted Trump’s claim that Iran was seeking to gear up its nuclear program.

In contrast to Coats, Ratcliffe is a Trump loyalist who has backed Trump’s claims that Mueller ‘s investigation into Russian election interference was a partisan plot to unseat Trump.

In an interview with Fox News on Sunday, he said the special counsel’s report and its conclusions “weren’t from Robert Mueller” but rather “were written by what a lot of people believe was Hillary Clinton’s de facto legal team.”

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/dni-dan-coats-quit-white-house-suppressed-russia-warnings-nyt-2019-7

Beijing (CNN)The Chinese government has accused pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong of committing “evil and criminal acts” that have seriously damaged the semi-autonomous city’s “reputation” and “stability.”

    ‘);$vidEndSlate.removeClass(‘video__end-slate–inactive’).addClass(‘video__end-slate–active’);}};CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === true) ? true : false;var configObj = {thumb: ‘none’,video: ‘world/2019/07/27/hong-kong-police-clash-protesters-subway-station-coren-sot-vpx.cnn’,width: ‘100%’,height: ‘100%’,section: ‘domestic’,profile: ‘expansion’,network: ‘cnn’,markupId: ‘body-text_6’,theoplayer: {allowNativeFullscreen: true},adsection: ‘const-article-inpage’,frameWidth: ‘100%’,frameHeight: ‘100%’,posterImageOverride: {“mini”:{“width”:220,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-small-169.jpg”,”height”:124},”xsmall”:{“width”:307,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-medium-plus-169.jpg”,”height”:173},”small”:{“width”:460,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”http://www.noticiasdodia.onlinenewsbusiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-large-169.jpg”,”height”:259},”medium”:{“width”:780,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-exlarge-169.jpg”,”height”:438},”large”:{“width”:1100,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-super-169.jpg”,”height”:619},”full16x9″:{“width”:1600,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-full-169.jpg”,”height”:900},”mini1x1″:{“width”:120,”type”:”jpg”,”uri”:”//cdn.cnn.com/cnnnext/dam/assets/190727104406-anna-coren-hong-kong-small-11.jpg”,”height”:120}}},autoStartVideo = false,isVideoReplayClicked = false,callbackObj,containerEl,currentVideoCollection = [],currentVideoCollectionId = ”,isLivePlayer = false,mediaMetadataCallbacks,mobilePinnedView = null,moveToNextTimeout,mutePlayerEnabled = false,nextVideoId = ”,nextVideoUrl = ”,turnOnFlashMessaging = false,videoPinner,videoEndSlateImpl;if (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === false) {autoStartVideo = false;if (autoStartVideo === true) {if (turnOnFlashMessaging === true) {autoStartVideo = false;containerEl = jQuery(document.getElementById(configObj.markupId));CNN.VideoPlayer.showFlashSlate(containerEl);} else {CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = true;}}}configObj.autostart = CNN.Features.enableAutoplayBlock ? false : autoStartVideo;CNN.VideoPlayer.setPlayerProperties(configObj.markupId, autoStartVideo, isLivePlayer, isVideoReplayClicked, mutePlayerEnabled);CNN.VideoPlayer.setFirstVideoInCollection(currentVideoCollection, configObj.markupId);videoEndSlateImpl = new CNN.VideoEndSlate(‘body-text_6’);function findNextVideo(currentVideoId) {var i,vidObj;if (currentVideoId && jQuery.isArray(currentVideoCollection) && currentVideoCollection.length > 0) {for (i = 0; i 0) {videoEndSlateImpl.showEndSlateForContainer();if (mobilePinnedView) {mobilePinnedView.disable();}}}}callbackObj = {onPlayerReady: function (containerId) {var playerInstance,containerClassId = ‘#’ + containerId;CNN.VideoPlayer.handleInitialExpandableVideoState(containerId);CNN.VideoPlayer.handleAdOnCVPVisibilityChange(containerId, CNN.pageVis.isDocumentVisible());if (CNN.Features.enableMobileWebFloatingPlayer &&Modernizr &&(Modernizr.phone || Modernizr.mobile || Modernizr.tablet) &&CNN.VideoPlayer.getLibraryName(containerId) === ‘fave’ &&jQuery(containerClassId).parents(‘.js-pg-rail-tall__head’).length > 0 &&CNN.contentModel.pageType === ‘article’) {playerInstance = FAVE.player.getInstance(containerId);mobilePinnedView = new CNN.MobilePinnedView({element: jQuery(containerClassId),enabled: false,transition: CNN.MobileWebFloatingPlayer.transition,onPin: function () {playerInstance.hideUI();},onUnpin: function () {playerInstance.showUI();},onPlayerClick: function () {if (mobilePinnedView) {playerInstance.enterFullscreen();playerInstance.showUI();}},onDismiss: function() {CNN.Videx.mobile.pinnedPlayer.disable();playerInstance.pause();}});/* Storing pinned view on CNN.Videx.mobile.pinnedPlayer So that all players can see the single pinned player */CNN.Videx = CNN.Videx || {};CNN.Videx.mobile = CNN.Videx.mobile || {};CNN.Videx.mobile.pinnedPlayer = mobilePinnedView;}if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (jQuery(containerClassId).parents(‘.js-pg-rail-tall__head’).length) {videoPinner = new CNN.VideoPinner(containerClassId);videoPinner.init();} else {CNN.VideoPlayer.hideThumbnail(containerId);}}},onContentEntryLoad: function(containerId, playerId, contentid, isQueue) {CNN.VideoPlayer.showSpinner(containerId);},onContentPause: function (containerId, playerId, videoId, paused) {if (mobilePinnedView) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleMobilePinnedPlayerStates(containerId, paused);}},onContentMetadata: function (containerId, playerId, metadata, contentId, duration, width, height) {var endSlateLen = jQuery(document.getElementById(containerId)).parent().find(‘.js-video__end-slate’).eq(0).length;CNN.VideoSourceUtils.updateSource(containerId, metadata);if (endSlateLen > 0) {videoEndSlateImpl.fetchAndShowRecommendedVideos(metadata);}},onAdPlay: function (containerId, cvpId, token, mode, id, duration, blockId, adType) {/* Dismissing the pinnedPlayer if another video players plays an Ad */CNN.VideoPlayer.dismissMobilePinnedPlayer(containerId);clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);videoPinner.animateDown();}}},onAdPause: function (containerId, playerId, token, mode, id, duration, blockId, adType, instance, isAdPause) {if (mobilePinnedView) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleMobilePinnedPlayerStates(containerId, isAdPause);}},onTrackingFullscreen: function (containerId, PlayerId, dataObj) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleFullscreenChange(containerId, dataObj);if (mobilePinnedView &&typeof dataObj === ‘object’ &&FAVE.Utils.os === ‘iOS’ && !dataObj.fullscreen) {jQuery(document).scrollTop(mobilePinnedView.getScrollPosition());playerInstance.hideUI();}},onContentPlay: function (containerId, cvpId, event) {var playerInstance,prevVideoId;if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘restoreEpicAds’);}clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);videoPinner.animateDown();}}},onContentReplayRequest: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(true);var $endSlate = jQuery(document.getElementById(containerId)).parent().find(‘.js-video__end-slate’).eq(0);if ($endSlate.length > 0) {$endSlate.removeClass(‘video__end-slate–active’).addClass(‘video__end-slate–inactive’);}}}},onContentBegin: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (mobilePinnedView) {mobilePinnedView.enable();}/* Dismissing the pinnedPlayer if another video players plays a video. */CNN.VideoPlayer.dismissMobilePinnedPlayer(containerId);CNN.VideoPlayer.mutePlayer(containerId);if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘removeEpicAds’);}CNN.VideoPlayer.hideSpinner(containerId);clearTimeout(moveToNextTimeout);CNN.VideoSourceUtils.clearSource(containerId);jQuery(document).triggerVideoContentStarted();},onContentComplete: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (CNN.companion && typeof CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout === ‘function’) {CNN.companion.updateCompanionLayout(‘restoreFreewheel’);}navigateToNextVideo(contentId, containerId);},onContentEnd: function (containerId, cvpId, contentId) {if (Modernizr && !Modernizr.phone && !Modernizr.mobile && !Modernizr.tablet) {if (typeof videoPinner !== ‘undefined’ && videoPinner !== null) {videoPinner.setIsPlaying(false);}}},onCVPVisibilityChange: function (containerId, cvpId, visible) {CNN.VideoPlayer.handleAdOnCVPVisibilityChange(containerId, visible);}};if (typeof configObj.context !== ‘string’ || configObj.context.length 0) {configObj.adsection = window.ssid;}CNN.autoPlayVideoExist = (CNN.autoPlayVideoExist === true) ? true : false;CNN.VideoPlayer.getLibrary(configObj, callbackObj, isLivePlayer);});CNN.INJECTOR.scriptComplete(‘videodemanddust’);

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/29/asia/china-hong-kong-protests-intl-hnk/index.html

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., co-sponsored Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ “Medicare for All” bill, along with several other 2020 candidates, when it was released in 2017. Her plan has some key differences from Sanders’, including a larger role for private insurance and a higher threshold for taxing household income.

Alex Wong/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., co-sponsored Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ “Medicare for All” bill, along with several other 2020 candidates, when it was released in 2017. Her plan has some key differences from Sanders’, including a larger role for private insurance and a higher threshold for taxing household income.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

California Sen. Kamala Harris has released a health care plan just in time for the second Democratic debate, offering a role for private insurance in a “Medicare for All” system and outlining new taxes to pay for it.

The plan comes after months of questions about whether she supports scrapping private insurance — and as former Vice President Joe Biden appears to be gearing up to attack her at the upcoming debate on her support for Medicare for All.

To review, Bernie Sanders’ single-payer health plan is called “Medicare for All,” and Kamala Harris is a co-sponsor on that plan (along with several other presidential candidates, including New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand and Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren). His plan would cover all Americans with a government-administered health care plan.

While Harris has co-sponsored Sanders’ plan, she has also diverged from Sanders’ vision on the campaign trail, most notably on the role of private insurance.

Here are how some key elements of the Harris proposal match up.

Private insurance: Under Harris’ plan, private insurance would have a bigger role than under Sanders’ plan. Harris envisions a system like the current Medicare system, in which people can either purchase government-administrated Medicare plans or buy Medicare plans from private companies — an option known as Medicare Advantage.

That’s a big difference from Sanders’ plan, under which any insurance that duplicates the coverage provided by his Medicare for All system would be banned. As his version of Medicare for All is very expansive (covering dental and vision, for example, in addition to more basic medical care), that would mean a tiny role for private insurance.

Harris says there would still be room for employer-sponsored coverage under her plan. After a 10-year transition period (more on that below), employers could still offer insurance, according to her campaign. They would, however, have to get those plans certified as Medicare plans through the government to meet certain standards, including cost and quality of coverage.

New taxes: One key revenue-raiser Sanders has proposed for Medicare for All is what his plan calls a 4% “premium” on household income over $29,000. Harris’ plan would impose that tax only on households earning more than $100,000, and would also raise even that threshold for households in “high-cost areas.”

To add to that revenue, Harris proposes taxes on financial transactions such as stock and bond trades.

Transition time: Bernie Sanders’ plan calls for a four-year transition to his single-payer system. Harris would have a 10-year transition, and both would allow a public option, where Americans below age 65 could buy into the government’s Medicare program in the first year.

This comes with costs and benefits. On the one hand, it’s a more extended time to make a big transition in how America does health care; on the other hand, a 10-year phase-in window necessarily means counting on the transition to continue smoothly under the next president — whichever party he or she might come from.

Details: Sanders already has legislation introduced on Capitol Hill, whereas Harris has released a broad outline of her plan. Key details — for example, more exact information on what that 10-year transition would look like — still don’t exist.

Questions left to answer

One area that will most definitely get plenty of scrutiny is costs, both in the aggregate and individually. Among the unanswered questions in Harris’ plan: How much will the plan ultimately cost, and will those tax hikes cover it? And would this bring American health costs down overall? Harris says it would, but her initial plan did not offer detailed figures to explain how.

On top of that, individuals are going to want to know whether their total health care costs — counting any premiums and taxes — under this plan would be greater or less than their current health care costs. And health care providers are similarly going to wonder how much they will be paid through the plan — one of the biggest questions surrounding Sanders’ Medicare for All plan.

And then there are the political questions that Harris’ plan raises: Were she the nominee, would her plan — not exactly a single-payer plan — satisfy single-payer purists? Would it be too big of a change for people who favor a more moderate approach? And, of course, could it pass Congress?

Setting up the next debate

The new Harris plan at least partially answers one question that has been looming over her campaign for months: How much of a role should private insurance have? In January, in response to a question at a CNN town hall about private insurance, she said she wanted to “eliminate all of that.” But then she later said she would favor some form of “supplemental” private insurance.

Similarly, in the last Democratic debate, she raised her hand to a question about whether she would support the elimination of private insurance, but then later said she thought the question referred to her own personal insurance.

This plan also places Harris in the spectrum of policy reforms that Democratic candidates have put forward. Her plan is less drastic (and with a less drastic timeline) than Sanders’ plan, but could mean much bigger changes than, for example, a public option plan like those that Biden, South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg and former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke favor.

It also tees up a debate with Biden over how to pay for her plan. He had indirectly swiped at Harris over the idea of implementing Medicare for All without raising taxes on the middle class: “Come on! What is this, is this a fantasy world here?”

In their last debate matchup, Harris attacked Biden harshly over his past opposition to federally mandated busing. The two will share the stage again on Wednesday night, the second night of this week’s debate. Biden has promised he’s “not going to be as polite” this time.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/29/746051105/kamala-harris-releases-medicare-for-all-plan-with-a-role-for-private-insurers

Herders bury animal carcasses in 2010 in Mongolia’s Dundgovi province. A decade ago, an extreme winter — known in Mongolia as a dzud — claimed the lives of 22% of the nation’s livestock and sped up migration from rural areas to urban centers.

Jargal Byambasuren/Reuters


hide caption

toggle caption

Jargal Byambasuren/Reuters

Herders bury animal carcasses in 2010 in Mongolia’s Dundgovi province. A decade ago, an extreme winter — known in Mongolia as a dzud — claimed the lives of 22% of the nation’s livestock and sped up migration from rural areas to urban centers.

Jargal Byambasuren/Reuters

On a frigid morning in January 2000, Oyutan Gonchig rose at first light to check on his animals. A blanket of snow — over a foot deep — had fallen in the night. He shoveled himself out of his ger, a felt-covered tent traditionally used by semi-nomadic herders. The temperature was minus 10 degrees Fahrenheit, the kind of cold that freezes your eyelashes and stiffens your joints.

Stepping over the threshold and into this blindingly white world, he noticed it was eerily quiet outside.

“Everything was covered by snow. There was no way to distinguish the sheep trails,” he remembers. “There were corpses.”

A dozen dead animals — his animals, sheep and goats he had raised from birth — had collapsed in the snow. Those still alive were struggling to find grass beneath the snowdrifts, piled high by the biting wind. He felt horrified, and helpless.

“Some of the surviving animals were trying to find something to eat but couldn’t,” he recalls. “It was very difficult to see this.”

Oyutan Gonchig, 35, is part of a herding family and grew up racing horses. In 2000, a dzud claimed his livestock. Oyutan and many others left the countryside and moved to Mongolia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar, shortly thereafter. “No one wanted to stay in the countryside, because it was just impossible to make a living,” he says.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Oyutan Gonchig, 35, is part of a herding family and grew up racing horses. In 2000, a dzud claimed his livestock. Oyutan and many others left the countryside and moved to Mongolia’s capital, Ulaanbaatar, shortly thereafter. “No one wanted to stay in the countryside, because it was just impossible to make a living,” he says.

Claire Harbage/NPR

A stunningly cold, snowy winter changed Oyutan’s life forever. Several animals died every few days from starvation, illness and exposure to the elements. By May, he had lost 100 head of livestock — and his entire livelihood.

The cause was a phenomenon that Mongolians recognize with a specific word. They call it a dzud — the deterioration of winter weather conditions leading to a mass death of livestock from lack of food and/or water. Dzud winters vary, characterized by harsh cold, too much snow or not enough, ice and other factors.

There are five types of dzuds, and Oyutan’s animals were claimed by the deadliest — a tsagaan dzud, meaning “white death.” That’s when snow covers the pastureland, blocking animals’ access to food.

Like tens of thousands of other Mongolian herders, Oyutan was never able to recoup his losses. He was forced to forge a different life for himself.

Mongolia weathered consecutive dzuds around the turn of the century (three between 1999 and 2002) and again during the 2009-2010 winter, all against the backdrop of a devastating drought linked to climate change. The 2009-2010 dzud alone killed 22% of the nation’s livestock.

Loading…

Don’t see the graphic above? Click here.

It was a catastrophic era for a country with a tradition of nomadic pastoralism dating back thousands of years. Herders make a living by selling animal products — including meat, wool and cashmere. Without their animals, they become cash strapped and cannot pay for basic needs.

Dzuds, unique to Mongolia, are homegrown natural disasters born out of the country’s unusual environment: landlocked, semiarid and prone to swings in temperature and precipitation. Historically, dzuds occurred once or twice a decade. Four dzuds in a single decade overwhelmed Mongolia’s government. It lacked the resources to adequately respond to this magnitude of natural disaster.

When the dzud struck in 2000, the question for Oyutan and many others became “Is this way of life even sustainable anymore?” For many, the answer has been no.

“Many moved. The winter and snow was too hard. No one wanted to stay in the countryside, because it was just impossible to make a living,” he said.

Oyutan lives with his family in Ulaanbaatar’s ger district, an unplanned area on the capital city’s outskirts where low-income migrants have settled. He escorts two of his daughters to school, wary of distracted drivers.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Oyutan lives with his family in Ulaanbaatar’s ger district, an unplanned area on the capital city’s outskirts where low-income migrants have settled. He escorts two of his daughters to school, wary of distracted drivers.

Claire Harbage/NPR

To be clear, the economics of herding were already in question at the time. A decade prior, communist-run Mongolia had rapidly transitioned to a market economy. Agricultural collectives known as negdels were dissolved, leaving herders without a safety net when they needed emergency fodder, veterinary care and other resources. Risk was no longer assumed by the state but by the individual. Dzuds sent herding households — already on the brink — spiraling over the edge.

Loading…

Don’t see the graphic above? Click here.

In 2002, Oyutan and his mother quit herding for good. They left their home province of Dornod in the steppes of eastern Mongolia for Ulaanbaatar, the capital, about 500 miles away. They were among approximately 40,000 people who migrated to the city that year.

Oyutan still lives in a ger in an unplanned area on the northern edge of Ulaanbaatar that has absorbed many of the city’s newer arrivals.

Oyutan helps his daughter Muguntuul Oyutan, 11, get ready for school, while his 70-year-old mother, Tserenkhand Damba, breaks out her sewing machine.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Oyutan helps his daughter Muguntuul Oyutan, 11, get ready for school, while his 70-year-old mother, Tserenkhand Damba, breaks out her sewing machine.

Claire Harbage/NPR

He’s a taxi driver now, married with four children. “Four beautiful daughters!” his mother, 70-year-old Tserenkhand Damba, says with a grin. She breaks out her Soviet-style sewing machine, and two of her granddaughters clamor for attention.

On the walls hang cross-stitched images of flowers and trees, sewn with meticulous care by their mother, Tsevelmaa Ganbat, 31. The family hasn’t seen her in months. After struggling to find a job in Ulaanbaatar, she left last October to work in Japan at an ice cream factory and sends home her earnings to help support the family.

Loading…

Don’t see the graphic above? Click here.

Leaving Mongolia for work is not uncommon. South Korea has the largest population of Mongolians abroad, followed by Russia and the Czech Republic, according to 2013 data from a UNICEF report. Remittance inflows — money sent by migrants — accounted for 2.6% of Mongolia’s GDP in 2017, according to the World Bank.

However, the most dramatic shifts have been internal, as households move from rural areas to urban centers. Ulaanbaatar is now home to nearly half of all people in Mongolia.

Oyutan’s 8-year-old daughter, Mungunsaran Oyutan, is comforted by her grandmother, Tserenkhand Damba. The girl misses her mother, who took a factory job in Japan after struggling to find work in Ulaanbaatar.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Oyutan’s 8-year-old daughter, Mungunsaran Oyutan, is comforted by her grandmother, Tserenkhand Damba. The girl misses her mother, who took a factory job in Japan after struggling to find work in Ulaanbaatar.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Even though Oyutan has forged a new life for himself, he misses the fresh air of the countryside. He visits relatives in Dornod as often as possible, bringing his daughters along as he trains racehorses. But he has been disturbed by environmental changes he has seen.

Bodies of water from his childhood, like the river where he used to swim, have dried up.

“In old times, it was not like that,” he says. “Everything was very balanced. We had good rivers and creeks. Now, herders have to rely on water wells. People say it’s because of global warming.”

“Climate change is very complicated”

Dzuds are complex phenomena, and it’s hard to pinpoint exactly what causes them. But scientists do know this: Greenhouse gas emissions have rendered Mongolia a drier, hotter place than it was 80 years ago, when data collection began.

A lone sheep stands among carcasses in Dundgovi in 2010. A dzud ravaged the province that winter and destroyed the livelihoods of thousands of Mongolians. Many herders left to try to find other opportunities in cities.

Sheila Zhao/AFP/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

Sheila Zhao/AFP/Getty Images

A lone sheep stands among carcasses in Dundgovi in 2010. A dzud ravaged the province that winter and destroyed the livelihoods of thousands of Mongolians. Many herders left to try to find other opportunities in cities.

Sheila Zhao/AFP/Getty Images

According to Mongolia’s Information and Research Institute of Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment, the country’s annual mean temperature has increased 2.2 degrees Celsius (nearly 4 degrees Fahrenheit) since 1940. In that same period, precipitation has decreased by 10%.

“We are an inland country, so we don’t have an ocean. The exchange of moisture between the atmosphere and the biosphere are very important for us,” says Gomboluudev Purevjav, head of climate research at the institute. If rangeland is degraded, he says, transpiration — the process that carries moisture and nutrients from a plant’s roots — will be reduced.

A drier Mongolia is a death knell for animals. Drought weakens livestock, making a dzud winter all the more deadly.

Dzuds are caused by multiple factors — some climate related and others human made. Drought is a major culprit. Overgrazing is another.

During decades of communist control in the 20th century, livestock was managed by the Mongolian state. Tightly regulated collectives imposed pasture use in rotation. The state supplied a guaranteed market and capped individual livestock ownership.

In 1990, Mongolia rapidly transitioned to a free market democracy. The livestock count exploded. In the communist era, from 1924 to 1992, it was 23 million. Today, the National Statistics Office of Mongolia puts the livestock count above 66 million.

Sheep and goats especially are chewing up the pastureland. Mining, deforestation and urbanization also degrade the environment.

With all these factors in play, dzuds — as well as mass livestock loss — have become a new norm in a warming nation.

Climate change and overgrazing have contributed to a degradation of Mongolia’s pastureland. The national livestock count is above 66 million, a record high. The result: More animals are subsisting on less land.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Climate change and overgrazing have contributed to a degradation of Mongolia’s pastureland. The national livestock count is above 66 million, a record high. The result: More animals are subsisting on less land.

Claire Harbage/NPR

“Climate change is very complicated,” Gomboluudev says. “One factor is global greenhouse gas emissions. The other one is local anthropogenic activity, like the livestock number and mining activities and cutting forest. These combined together create dzud. About 50-50.”

He predicts that a nationwide dzud — affecting the majority of Mongolian herders — will strike every four to five years in the future. Not all dzuds will be severe, but all will lead to loss. In a 2017 dzud, 700,000 animals perished in western and central Mongolia — a relatively low number.

“Of course, there are many uncertainties. But this is our projection based on global climate models,” Gomboluudev says.

“It is a disaster”

Herders rely on horses and motorbikes for transportation across Mongolia’s steppe. Mongolian horses are small and stocky, about the size of domesticated ponies.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Herders rely on horses and motorbikes for transportation across Mongolia’s steppe. Mongolian horses are small and stocky, about the size of domesticated ponies.

Claire Harbage/NPR

“There is a tragedy of the commons happening in Mongolia,” says Tungalag Ulambayar, a dzud researcher and Mongolia country director for the Zoological Society of London. “The primary role of institutions is to restrict people’s actions. You can’t do whatever you want. You have to obey traffic laws. The same issue applies to rangeland management.”

During the 2009-2010 dzud, Tungalag oversaw a disaster response team for the United Nations Development Programme. At first, she says, her colleagues in Geneva were wary of characterizing dzuds as natural disasters.

” ‘Shelters weren’t destroyed. No one died. So it’s not a disaster,’ they said. And we said, ‘No, it is a disaster. Someone is losing total livelihood, and that causes huge psychological trauma to human well-being.’ “

Tungalag’s team went door to door in three of the most devastated provinces, Khovd in western Mongolia and Övörkhangai and Dundgovi in central Mongolia.

Over half of Mongolia’s population identifies as Buddhist. Herders in Arkhangai province who were affected by the 2009-2010 dzud sought spiritual counsel at a temple in the district of Tsenkher.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Over half of Mongolia’s population identifies as Buddhist. Herders in Arkhangai province who were affected by the 2009-2010 dzud sought spiritual counsel at a temple in the district of Tsenkher.

Claire Harbage/NPR

“The men were quiet. But some women were crying when they saw so many people from the government come,” says Tungalag. They were crying tears of relief.

In another province, Arkhangai, about 300 miles west of Ulaanbaatar, the 2009-2010 dzud killed over a quarter of all livestock. The loss wasn’t purely financial — it was social and spiritual too, undermining an ancient way of life in small, close-knit communities.

Banzragch Purevsuren, a 50-year-old Buddhist monk, operates a temple in the Tsenkher district of Arkhangai. Herders came to the temple in distress.

“Some turned to drinking. And there were two cases in this area of suicide,” he says. “During the dzud, herders had nothing to do.”

Buddhist monk Banzragch Purevsuren comforted herders affected by the 2009-2010 dzud by reading from Buddhist texts. He joined government officials in making home visits. “Herders are hardworking,” he says. “They can survive.”

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Buddhist monk Banzragch Purevsuren comforted herders affected by the 2009-2010 dzud by reading from Buddhist texts. He joined government officials in making home visits. “Herders are hardworking,” he says. “They can survive.”

Claire Harbage/NPR

Banzragch joined government officials in making house visits to assess loss and provide financial support. He chanted from Buddhist texts, choosing scriptures to strengthen resolve.

Mongolia has not experienced a dzud on a national scale since 2010. To avoid that magnitude of disaster, communities are training herders in winter preparedness — the importance of preparing extra fodder, culling weak animals in autumn and purchasing livestock insurance.

The sun sets on Baatarsuren Damdinbazar’s pasture. The 45-year-old herder took a break from watching televised wrestling to feed dough to his goats and sheep.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

The sun sets on Baatarsuren Damdinbazar’s pasture. The 45-year-old herder took a break from watching televised wrestling to feed dough to his goats and sheep.

Claire Harbage/NPR

“We want herders to focus on the quality of their animals — not the quantity,” says Gurvantamir Jamts, 47, the mayor of Arkhangai’s capital, Tsetserleg.

Additionally, pasture user groups have emerged to pool resources within herding communities. By growing fodder together and rotating grazing schedules, the goal is to manage pasture more sustainably, while cutting costs to the individual herder.

“We don’t have to be afraid”

Nergui Davaajav, 44, keeps 1,200 animals in his herd. Parking his motorbike in their midst, he watches his goats and sheep through a monocular to ensure they don’t stray too far into the woods.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Nergui Davaajav, 44, keeps 1,200 animals in his herd. Parking his motorbike in their midst, he watches his goats and sheep through a monocular to ensure they don’t stray too far into the woods.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Perched on a motorbike on the Mongolian steppe, nomadic herder Nergui Davaajav, 44, tracks his livestock through a monocular.

A thousand sheep and goats graze in the distance, their black, white and brown bodies sprinkled on a hill of yellowed grass. Wild wolves prowl nearby. Nergui calls to the herd with a high-pitched yelp — a signal to move to safety.

Slowly, and then all at once, the herd shifts downhill. Nergui puts the monocular down, satisfied. His parents were herders in an age before televised weather forecasts. They examined the direction of the wind or the shape of the moon.

Nergui and Tumurchudur “Tumee” Galsanjamts, 43, met in a hospital after Nergui had fallen off a horse and broken his leg. Tumurchudur was visiting another patient. They married in 1997.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Nergui and Tumurchudur “Tumee” Galsanjamts, 43, met in a hospital after Nergui had fallen off a horse and broken his leg. Tumurchudur was visiting another patient. They married in 1997.

Claire Harbage/NPR

“My father taught me how to be a good person,” Nergui says, removing his traditional dark green deel overcoat. He wears a back brace; his brow is speckled with sweat.

When Nergui and his wife, Tumurchudur “Tumee” Galsanjamts, 43, were married in 1997, they nearly quit herding for an urban lifestyle. In 2000, they relocated to Ulaanbaatar, where they drove taxis and trucks. Nergui’s father encouraged them to return home. In a fateful phone call, he said, “Do not sell your animals, because driving is not your job. Herding animals is valuable.”

Nergui and Tumurchudur moved back to the countryside soon after. With 1,200 head of livestock, they embody a traditional lifestyle that Mongolians cherish — but practice less and less.

Around the Mongolian Lunar New Year, officials and the state-funded Mongolian National Broadcaster honor the best herders in the country. In February, Nergui was awarded that distinction by the Arkhangai government.

The ceremony lasted hours. Thirty guests feasted on roasted lamb to the thrums of horsehead fiddle music, while Nergui sat in the middle of the ger, beaming. He was showered with plaques and speeches, all praising his worth ethic.

Wearing a deel, a traditional Mongolian overcoat, Nergui feeds his sheep and goats, whose hooves kick up dust in the fading light.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

Wearing a deel, a traditional Mongolian overcoat, Nergui feeds his sheep and goats, whose hooves kick up dust in the fading light.

Claire Harbage/NPR

Preparing for a bad winter has become a regular part of his summer routine.

“If we prepare hay fodder, we can overcome such natural disasters. We don’t have to be afraid,” Nergui explains during a pause in the festivities.

Essentially, he builds a food reserve — a buffer of hay for a bad winter to supplement what nature cannot provide. Many of his peers do the same. But Nergui makes it clear that those of his father’s generation rarely went to these lengths. Back then, the grass grew tall and lush, reaching their knees.

Newborn lambs rest in a pen, where they can stay warm and well-fed. Nergui says the snow this winter was troublesome but did not significantly affect the herd.

Emily Kwong/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Emily Kwong/NPR

Newborn lambs rest in a pen, where they can stay warm and well-fed. Nergui says the snow this winter was troublesome but did not significantly affect the herd.

Emily Kwong/NPR

Snow did come this past winter, but it wasn’t a dzud by any stretch. Nergui and Tumurchudur worked sleepless nights from late March into April, tending to their pregnant livestock, which were giving birth to hundreds of animals. At the time of NPR’s springtime visit to Nergui and Tumurchudur, 100 sheep and goats had been born. They were anticipating another 300.

The newborns were divided into pen sections by age, appearing like a field of cotton balls with patches of black and brown. Some were curled up sleeping, while others bleated for their mothers.

Nergui moved quietly among the flock. They followed like a cashmere-clad entourage as he helped the newborns stand and fed the adults by hand, touching each one. The work couldn’t be more personal, both in moments of loss and in moments of life.

During the spring birthing season, students often return from schools in cities to assist their parents in the countryside. Fifteen-year-old Otgonchimeg Myagmar carries a newborn kid at her family’s herding plot.

Claire Harbage/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Claire Harbage/NPR

During the spring birthing season, students often return from schools in cities to assist their parents in the countryside. Fifteen-year-old Otgonchimeg Myagmar carries a newborn kid at her family’s herding plot.

Claire Harbage/NPR

This is part of a series by Emily Kwong (@emilykwong1234), who spent nine weeks reporting in Mongolia as NPR’s Above the Fray fellow. Additional reporting and translations were provided by Bolormaa Riimaadai, Ganbat Namjilsangarav and Jaya Purevsuren. The fellowship is sponsored by the John Alexander Project, which supports foreign reporting in undercovered parts of the world. Follow the fellowship on Instagram (@thejohnaproject) and Twitter (@thejohnaproject).

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/07/29/737990796/the-deadly-winters-that-have-transformed-life-for-herders-in-mongolia

At least one gunman opened fire Sunday at Northern California’s Gilroy Garlic Festival, killing at least three and injuring 15, before being fatally shot by police stationed nearby who responded in less than a minute after the initial shot was fired, a police official said.

The shooting rampage began at 5:41 p.m. on the north side of the festival, Chief of Police Scot Smithee said at a press conference late Sunday.

Smithee said the gunman gained access to the festival by cutting through a fence near a creek area. He said some witnesses reported a second suspect, but police could not immediately confirm those reports.

A manhunt was underway to find a possible second suspect. It was not immediately clear if there were two shooters.

NBC Bay Area reported that a 6-year-old boy, Steven Romero, was among the victims.

“He had his whole life to live,” Alberto Romero, the boy’s father, said. “He was only six.”

Ryan Wallace, a witness, told the channel that he watched the gunman—who was almost dressed like a police officer—raise his gun up and started to “spray rounds.” The gunman walked through the crowd, he said.

“He wanted to get stuff done,” he said. “It was horrifying.”

“It’s sort of a nightmare that you hope to never have to live in reality, but we find ourselves in the circumstances where we have to live it today,” Smithee said.

2020 DEMS RESPOND TO SHOOTING

Personal videos posted to Twitter appeared to show large crowds evacuating the festival. Many witnesses said the shots sounded like fireworks and there was confusion. The first shots were fired near an amphitheater, one witness said.

WITNESSES RECALL CHAOTIC SCENE

One witness told KTVU that he heard what he believed was 30 rounds. Some witnesses said the gunman was in army fatigues.

The San Francisco Field Division of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives was responding to the scene, officials said. Smithee said dozens of officers are at the scene investigating.

The band Tin Man was just starting an encore when shots rang out.

Singer Jack van Breen said he saw a man wearing a green shirt and grayish handkerchief around his neck fire into the food area with what looked like an assault rifle. Van Breen and other members of the band dove under the stage. Van Breen says he heard someone shout: “Why are you doing this? “and the reply: “because I’m really angry. “

His bandmate Vlad Malinovsky from Walnut Creek, California, said he heard a lot of shots and then it stopped. Later, law enforcement came by and told the band members and others hiding with them to come out with their hands up.

Todd Jones, a sound engineer, told the newspaper that he was at the front of the festival’s Vineyard stage when he heard what sounded like a firework. “But then it started to increase, more rapidly, which sounded more like gunfire, and at that point people realized what was happening,” Jones said.

GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Natalie Martinez, a Gilroy Resident, told the Mercury News that she had gone to get food and separated from her two daughters. “I ran to find the girls . and we basically ran into each other. I thought, We’re open prey. It was awful.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/4-dead-including-gunman-in-shooting-at-gilroy-garlic-festival-15-injured

The shooting took place during the Gilroy Garlic Festival, an annual three-day event held at Christmas Hill Park. Gilroy, a city of about 60,000 people, is a major producer of garlic and is home to agricultural workers and people who commute to technology jobs.

Marie Blankley, the mayor pro tempore, called the shooting “heartbreaking and tragic” and Gov. Gavin Newsom said on Twitter that it was “nothing short of horrific.”

Videos posted on social media showed attendees running past white tents in a grassy field, apparently fleeing the sound of gunshots. People had been told to gather at Gavilan College, a community college on the outskirts of the city.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/28/us/gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-california.html

House and Senate leaders in both parties reacted with dismay Sunday to news that Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats was stepping down.

Democrats condemned Trump’s pick to replace him, with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi saying Coats’ resignation “is bad news for the security of America.”

Across the Capitol, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he was “very sorry to learn” Coats would be leaving the job.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer flatly rejected Trump’s plan to nominate Republican Texas Rep. John Ratcliffe to replace Coats.

“It’s clear that Rep. Ratcliffe was selected because he exhibited blind loyalty to President Trump with his demagogic questioning of former special counsel Robert Mueller,” Schumer said Sunday. “If Senate Republicans elevate such a partisan player to a position that requires intelligence expertise and non-partisanship, it would be a big mistake.”

Coats, a former Indiana senator himself, is highly respected by senators on both sides of the aisle. McConnell lamented his departure, he said, at a time of growing international tension.

“Under Director Coats’ leadership, our agencies have gotten a better handle on the malign behavior of Russia, China, and other adversaries such as Iran and North Korea,” McConnell said. “Director Coats pushed for greater coordination in how the community approaches some of its hardest, most sensitive collection targets.”

Pelosi said Coats “was respected by those on both sides of the aisle as an American patriot,” adding, “DNI Coats’ successor must put patriotism before politics, and remember that his oath is to protect the Constitution and the American people, not the President.”

Ratcliffe, 53, is a relative newcomer to Congress. He was elected in 2014 after serving as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Texas. He serves on the Homeland Security and Judiciary committees.

Republican North Carolina Rep. Mark Walker praised Trump’s pick, saying, “I can think of no one better for the Director of National Intelligence position than John Ratcliffe. The only thing stronger than his credentials is his character.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/congress/coats-departure-rattles-hill-leaders-democrats-condemn-replacement

“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, “It means just what I choose it to mean – nothing more nor less.”

“The question is,” said Alice, “Whether you can make words mean so many different things.”

– Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass

It appears that via “Local Rule 57.6” and “pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e)” that Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee may be trying to impeach President Trump.

Or they may not.

TRUMP RAMPS UP ATTACKS ON CUMMINGS 

The clauses stated above are among the first lines in a petition the committee filed late last week in federal court “FOR AN ORDER AUTHORIZING THE RELEASE OF CERTAIN GRAND JURY MATERIALS.” Those documents pertain to the Mueller Report. They could help lawmakers set the stage for impeachment.

So are Congressional Democrats trying to impeach the President or not?

“An impeachment inquiry is not an official thing,” said one Judiciary Committee counsel.

Instead, lawmakers on the committee say the court filing is just part of a Democratic inquest “to determine if they should recommend articles of impeachment.”

Perhaps Congressional Democrats are attempting to hold paradoxical postures. Impeaching Mr. Trump. But not really. It’s like the duality of superposition in quantum mechanics. Things which simultaneously occupy two linear states.

Is this possible?

Could the St. Louis Cardinals also be the Chicago White Sox? Is chocolate ice cream also Jamoca caramel fudge? Was Dick York also Dick Sargent playing Darren on Bewitched?

Democrats on the Judiciary Committee tried to straighten this all out for reporters at a puzzling press conference Friday. But they may have inadvertently muddied it for everyone.

TRUMP ADMIN LOOKS TO CLOSE FOOD STAMP LOOPHOLES

“Too much has been made of the phrase ‘impeachment inquiry,’” protested House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler (D-NY). “We are doing what our court filing says we are doing. What I said we are doing.”

Nadler added that the objective of the exercise was to determine “whether to recommend articles of impeachment.”

Huh?

“Impeachment isn’t a binary thing that you either are or you aren’t,” said Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon (D-PA). “We’re engaging in an investigation to see if we should recommend articles of impeachment.”

“We are now crossing a threshold,” said Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-TX). “We are now officially entering into an examination of whether or not to recommend articles of impeachment.”

If Democrats can’t make clear what they’re doing on impeachment, Congressional Republicans are more than happy to explain things for them.

“Democrats want to convince their base they’re still wedded to impeachment even after this week’s hearing,” said Rep. Doug Collins (R-GA), the top Republican on the Judiciary panel.

In other words, Republicans are more than happy to deem this gambit as impeachment. Apply the duck test. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck….

The public doesn’t have the time to parse the language of “Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e).” If voters keep hearing that Democrats are pursuing “impeachment,” well then, they’ll perceive this as impeachment.

“From my personal standpoint, I think we are in an impeachment investigation,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD).

Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) noted that there is no written roadmap to handle impeachment. Swalwell observed that the House took divergent approaches with the effort to impeach President Nixon compared to President Clinton.

“When you look at different Congresses and the way they’ve addressed it, they’ve done it in different ways,” said Swalwell.

The articles of impeachment against the President drafted by Rep. Al Green (D-TX) never wound their way through any committee. Green tried to force an immediate vote on the floor two weeks ago. It’s conceivable the House could have impeached Mr. Trump on the spot had the House not blocked Green.

Therein lies the problem for Democrats. All the public hears is “impeachment.” They don’t understand the steps and the nuances. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) really isn’t ready to impeach the President – telling as much to Nadler and other committee chairs following the Mueller hearings last week.

Initially there was but a trickle of Democrats who reoriented themselves into the impeachment camp following Mueller’s less-than-convincing testimony. There are a few more now. But there’s concern that some Democrats are now supporting impeachment because they fear a primary challenge from the left. Announcing one is “for” impeachment helps inoculate Democrats who could find themselves out of alignment with the Democrats’ leftist base.

Rep. Lori Trahan (D-MA) was one of the first House Democrats to come out in favor of impeachment following the Mueller hearings. Trahan served as an aide for former Rep. Marty Meehan (D-MA) during the impeachment of President Clinton in 1998.

“My experience as a staffer during the Clinton impeachment puts a different lens on it. I know how disruptive it will be to the country,” said Trahan.

When asked if she felt she was on an island, Trahan replied “I think there were a lot of people on the island before I made my announcement.”

But Democrats from swing states and swing districts started to declare their support for impeachment, too.

Freshman Rep. Mike Levin (D-CA) is one now pushing impeachment. Levin just flipped a district from red to blue last fall after former Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) retired.

Rep. Annie Kuster (D-NH) announced she was for impeachment last week. Kuster’s from a battleground state. Her district has been a swing district in the past. Freshman Rep. Chris Pappas (D-NH) also added his voice to the impeachment cavalcade. Pappas’s district has been one of the “swingiest” districts in the country, dating back to 2006.

It’s easy to be for impeachment in liberal districts. It’s another matter in “purple” districts. Democrats from the Judiciary Committee are sketchy at best as to whether they are “in” an impeachment investigation – or inquiry – or not. So Republicans will clean up the nebulousness for them. They’ll say that Democrats are conducting an impeachment probe – and moderate Democrats from those swing districts will have to address it.

Moreover, Democrats must define this over the all-important August Congressional recess. The House skated out of town a day early last week, not to return until September 9. Nothing exists in a vacuum. President Trump can fill the space while lawmakers are on their August respite. And the message to fill the August void from Judiciary Committee Democrats? That they were kinda-sorta-maybe trying to impeach the President.

This is not the portrait rank-and-file Democrats need for six weeks. That’s especially the case when polling consistently reveals impeachment to be a losing political proposition for Democrats.

In fact, one attorney on the Judiciary Committee even suggested Democrats appear to mean different things when they say they support or don’t support an impeachment inquiry.

So, this is pretty hazy for Democrats – and not the narrative they need in battleground districts. Reporters will likely spend most of the month asking Democrats where they stand on impeachment. That consumes a lot of oxygen from bread and butter issues on which Democrats would rather focus. Just before the break, Pelosi sent a “Dear Colleague” letter to Democrats, imploring her foot soldiers to “OWN AUGUST.” Pelosi hoped Democrats would focus on paycheck issues, health care and the costs of prescription drugs.

GET THE FOX NEWS APP

But instead, Democrats may burn valuable time clarifying their stances on impeachment.

Are we in an impeachment inquiry or investigation? Let’s go to Humpty Dumpty. When it comes to impeachment, it may just mean what Democrats “choose it to mean.”

And, how the public interprets it.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/when-it-comes-to-impeachment-it-may-just-mean-what-democrats-choose-it-to-mean

President Trump blistered Representative Elijah Cummings on Twitter, calling out the chairman of the House Oversight committee for raising the hue and cry over conditions on the Mexican border, “when actually his Baltimore district is FAR WORSE and more dangerous. His district is considered the Worst in the USA.” Trump went on to describe Cummings’s West Baltimore constituency as “a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess. If he spent more time in Baltimore, maybe he could help clean up this very dangerous & filthy place.”

Predictably, the Left—including most of cable news—rushed to condemn Trump as a racist. Speaker Nancy Pelosi — whose father was once mayor of Baltimore — called Cummings “a beloved leader in Baltimore, and deeply valued colleague. We all reject racist attacks against him and support his steadfast leadership.” Senator Elizabeth Warren tweeted, “Donald Trump’s tweets are ugly and racist.” Beto O’Rourke called him “the most openly racist president we’ve had in modern history.” Senator Bernie Sanders chimed in, too.

The operative rule in politics these days seems to be that any criticism of a non-white politician from anywhere to their right is, by definition, a racist attack. Nothing Trump said pertained in any way to Elijah Cummings’s skin color or ethnicity, only to his failure as a legislator and political leader to do anything to improve his district. The real question is: Is he right?

In May, the New York Times Magazine ran a cover story called, “The Tragedy of Baltimore.” The story details how, in the wake of the 2015 riots—or “uprising” in the view of those who imagine the torching of a neighborhood CVS and the intentional sabotage of the firefighters’ equipment to be revolutionary actions—Baltimore went from bad to horrible: “nothing less than a failure of order and governance the likes of which few American cities have seen in years.”

By any measure of systemic urban collapse, Baltimore is, as Trump said “very dangerous & filthy.” Among the largest 30 American cities, Baltimore has the highest crime rate, and is a close second to Detroit for the highest rate of violent crime. But for murders, Baltimore is second to no other city, with more than 50 homicides per 100,000 people. That puts Charm City in the ranks of Jamaica, Venezuela, and El Salvador in terms of lethality.

“You would think that you were in a Third World country,” said a noted senator during a tour of Representative Cummings’s district in 2015. “There are hundreds of buildings that are uninhabitable.” Was it Ted Cruz or Jeff Sessions who sneered, “residents of Baltimore’s poorest boroughs have lifespans shorter than people living under dictatorship in North Korea. That is a disgrace”? No, it was Democratic candidate for president Bernie Sanders, whose comments about Baltimore were not condemned as sickeningly racist, but contemplated as brave reflections on the failure of America to help its struggling communities.

Hollywood producer David Simon, who has grown spectacularly rich from depicting the misery of the city through TV shows like “Homicide” and “The Wire,” condemned Trump’s comments, saying, “If this empty-suit, race-hating fraud had to actually visit West Baltimore for five minutes and meet any of the American citizens who endure there, he’d wet himself.” But doesn’t that mean Trump was right?

Some have suggested that it’s unfair for the president to blame Elijah Cummings for his district’s woes, since congressmen don’t control local issues like trash pickup or law enforcement. But Cummings is a Democratic powerbroker in Baltimore, which has been run by a succession of failed mayors—one of whom stole gift cards meant for poor children, and another who “sold” thousands of copies of her unreadable book to the public hospital system. Local state’s attorney Marilyn Mosby is credited with bungling the investigation into the death of Freddie Gray. Cummings is an integral part of a corrupt, dysfunctional political machine that is directly responsible for Baltimore’s misery.

Because it doesn’t have to be that way. Cummings’s district has relatively high rates of college education and home values, and many solid employers, including Johns Hopkins and the federal government. The failure to develop the failed parts of the district lies with pols like Elijah Cummings, whose four decades in elected office have been a long story of wasted opportunities and neglect.

Seth Barron is associate editor of City Journal.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/07/28/trump-is-right-about-baltimore-and-the-democrats-know-it/

James Favel, the executive director of Bear Clan Patrol, said the group was asked by the York Factory First Nation to head up to York Landing in northern Manitoba watch out for the community.

Bear Clan Patrol is a non-violent volunteer group originally founded in Winnipeg to provide security to the Indigenous community in 1992.

Favel said seven members headed up to York Landing, a town of around 400 people, and spotted two strange men matching the descriptions of Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky near the dump around 4:15 p.m. local time.

“They come across two men who meet the description of the two wanted suspects,” Favel told Black Press Media by phone.

“They appeared to be scavenging food out of the dump.”

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2019/jul/29/canada-manhunt-police-travel-to-york-landing-after-sighting-of-teen-suspects-live

After killing three people and burning a camper in British Columbia, the two teenagers headed east, the police say. Then the road ran out.

In one of Canada’s most isolated places linked by road, on the edge of the Hudson Bay lowlands in Manitoba, heavily armed officers with dogs, drones, helicopters and an armored vehicle are hunting for the two suspects in bush, swamp and forest.

It is an optimal place to hide — and a difficult place to survive.

The men, Kam McLeod, 19, and Bryer Schmegelsky, 18, are suspected of killing a Vancouver botanist and a young couple who were traveling the country. Now, the police believe, the suspects are somewhere near the remote community of Gillam, Manitoba.

But even the presence of a small army of Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers, who have sealed off the one road in and out of town, has not been enough to ease the fears of people in Gillam, most of whom work at nearby hydroelectric dams.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/28/world/canada/teen-murderers-manhunt-manitoba.html

Mounties in Manitoba have pivoted to York Landing after two B.C. murder suspects were spotted scavenging at a landfill earlier today. 


In an update on Sunday, Manitoba RCMP said they were responding to a tip that Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky were spotted in the community. Despite reports on social media, neither are in custody, RCMP said in a tweet.


“RCMP officers remain in the community of York Landing & continue to investigate the reported sighting of the two suspects,” it said. “All required resources are being used in this ongoing investigation.”


York Landing is around 200 kilometres southwest of Gillam, Man., where RCMP and the military have been focusing their search efforts over the last week. Police closed in on the community after security patrollers saw two men scavenging at the local dump.


Bear Patrol Inc. executive director James Favel said his company had been asked to send staff in to assist communities in the search area when patrollers saw two young men with no weapons or backpacks at the dump. All they had were the clothes they were wearing, according to what the team could see.


When the pair saw the security team, “they bolted,” Favel said. The pair ran for trees and the patrol called police.


“All hell is breaking loose and the town is locked down,” Favel said.


He said the team wasn’t worried as they initially thought the pair might be a work crew. It was the absence of a work truck that made them suspicious, he said.


“The adrenaline hit,” he said.


There is a heavy police presence in the region, RCMP said in a tweet Sunday.


York Factory Cree Nation Chief Leroy Constant of asked residents to stay inside with their doors locked.


“We received word that there was a possible sighting around our community landfill moments ago,” he tweeted Sunday afternoon.


RCMP urged the public not to disclose the locations of its officers by posting photos to social media.



McLeod and Schmegelsky are charged with second-degree murder in the death of 64-year-old Leonard Dyck of Vancouver. Dyck’s body was found at a highway pullout two kilometres from where the teens’ burned-out Dodge pickup truck was found on Highway 37 near Dease Lake on July 19.


The pair are also suspects in the killings of 23-year-old Lucas Fowler of Sydney, Australia, and 24-year-old Chynna Deese of Charlotte, North Carolina. Their bodies were discovered July 15 beside the Alaska Highway, 20 kilometres south of Liard Hot Springs. No charges have yet been announced in that investigation.


RCMP, with the help of police dogs and the military, had spent the last week searching homes, cottages, cabins, abandoned buildings, rail lines, and waterways for the men.


Their efforts were bolstered on Saturday when a Canadian Air Force CC-130H Hercules airplane landed in Gillam along with military personnel.


More to come.


— Jeremy Hainsworth, Matt Prepost, Glacier Media


Source Article from https://www.kamloopsmatters.com/local-news/rcmp-sending-multiple-resources-to-manitoba-village-in-hunt-for-bc-homicide-suspects-1611757

Officers were swarming a community in the Canadian province of Manitoba on Sunday after a possible sighting of the two teens suspected of at least three murders – including the killings of an American woman and her Australian boyfriend, police said.

Chief Leroy Constant with York Factory First Nation said Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) would be conducting a search for Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky “in our community of York Landing” after a “possible sighting” around a landfill on Sunday night.

Police said Sunday the search for Kam McLeod and Bryer Schmegelsky continues.
(Royal Canadian Mounted Police)

About two-and-a-half hours later he added, “Police have deployed multiple resources in the area of York Landing” in an attempt to apprehend the suspects.

Constant said the suspects had not been caught and that RCMP would stay in the area with helicopters, police dogs and emergency response teams “until further notice.”

He said “heavily armored officers” were “conducting ground searches with dogs,” but helicopters and drones were limited because of heavy winds.

“Everyone please remain indoors with your doors locked. And all vehicles should be parked,” Constant advised.

RCMP confirmed its presence in the area tweeting on Sunday evening that multiple police resources were being sent to York Landing “to investigate a tip that the two suspects are possibly in, or near, the community.”

“A heavy police presence can be expected in the area,” the tweet continued.

CANADA MURDER SUSPECTS MAY HAVE ELUDED COPS WITH ‘SOMEONE WHO IS NOT POLICE FRIENDLY,’ SOURCE SAYS

A source close to the investigation told Fox News on Saturday that McLeod and Schmegelsky may have escaped from the Manitoba town where they were last seen “with someone who is not police friendly.”

The source added that the two may have altered their appearances and offered cash to a driver to leave the area of Gillam, a town of approximately 1,200 people in the north of the province. Gillam is about a four-hour drive from York Landing.

Earlier Sunday, Royal Canadian Mounted Police tweeted that officers had spent the day searching cottages, cabins, waterways, and along the rail line in Gillam for any signs of the suspects. They added that the search of remote areas was being conducted both on the ground and in the air.

The tweet went on to say, “The terrain is immense & varied w/lakes, ponds, muskeg etc.”

Police have been asking “anyone who may have inadvertently provided assistance to the suspects to come forward and contact police.”

Earlier Sunday, Royal Canadian Mounted Police said officers were searching cottages, cabins, waterways, and along the rail line for any signs of the suspects.
(Royal Canadian Mounted Police)

On Friday, police confirmed that a resident of Cold Lake, Alberta, had helped the suspects get their Toyota Rav-4 unstuck from a local trail on July 21. Investigators said the suspects “continued on their way after a short, unremarkable interaction.”

McLeod, 19, and Schmegelsky, 18, were wanted in connection with the deaths of American Chynna Deese, 24, her Australian boyfriend Lucas Fowler, 23, and Leonard Dyck, 64, of Vancouver, British Columbia.

23-year-old Australian Lucas Fowler, left, and 24-year-old American girlfriend Chynna Deese posing in an undated photo. The couple turned up dead earlier this month.
(Deese Family via AP, File)

Deese and Fowler’s bodies turned up July 15 along the side of the Alaska Highway near Liard Hot Springs, British Columbia. Both had been shot to death.

BROTHER OF AMERICAN WOMAN MURDERED IN CANADA SPEAKS OUT AMID MANHUNT FOR SUSPECTS

McLeod and Schmegelsky have been charged with second-degree murder in the death of Dyck, whose body was discovered five days after the remains of Deese and Fowler were found.

A possible motive was unclear.

The teens originally were considered missing but were named as suspects in the murders this past Tuesday. On Thursday, the RCMP said the suspects had been spotted in the area of Gillam, over 2,000 miles from where the three bodies were found.

The RCMP said Saturday that officers had started canvassing “every home and building in the Gilliam area.” Assets from the Canadian Armed Forces arrived in Gillam early Saturday to assist with the aerial search, officials added.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Investigators visited more than 250 homes in the Gilliam area, police said on Sunday.

Fox News’ Cristina Corbin, Jacqui Heinrich, Bradford Betz and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/world/canada-murder-suspects-possible-sighting-manitoba-police-swarm-area

BEIJING/WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. and Chinese trade negotiators shift to Shanghai this week for their first in-person talks since a G20 truce last month, a change of scenery for two sides struggling to resolve deep differences on how to end a year-long trade war.

Expectations for progress during the two-day Shanghai meeting are low, so officials and businesses are hoping Washington and Beijing can at least detail commitments for “goodwill” gestures and clear the path for future negotiations.

These include Chinese purchases of U.S. farm commodities and the United States allowing firms to resume some sales to China’s tech giant Huawei Technologies.

President Donald Trump said on Friday that he thinks China may not want to sign a trade deal until after the 2020 election in the hope that they could then negotiate more favorable terms with a different U.S. president.

“I think probably China will say “Let’s wait,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “Let’s wait and see if one of these people who gives the United States away, let’s see if one of them could get elected.”

For more than a year, the world’s two largest economies have slapped billions of dollars of tariffs on each other’s imports, disrupting global supply chains and shaking financial markets in their dispute over China’s “state capitalism” mode of doing business with the world. (See timeline graphic: tmsnrt.rs/2DVZ7mN)

Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed at last month’s G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, to restart trade talks that stalled in May, after Washington accused Beijing of reneging on major portions of a draft agreement — a collapse in the talks that prompted a steep U.S. tariff hike on $200 billion of Chinese goods.

Trump said after the Osaka meeting that he would not impose new tariffs on a final $300 billion of Chinese imports and would ease some U.S. restrictions on Huawei if China agreed to make purchases of U.S. agricultural products.

CHIPS AND COMMODITIES

Since then, China has signaled that it would allow Chinese firms to make some tariff-free purchases of U.S. farm goods. Washington has encouraged companies to apply for waivers to a national security ban on sales to Huawei, and said it would respond to them in the next few weeks.

But going into the talks, neither side has implemented the measures that were intended to show their goodwill. That bodes ill for their chances of resolving core issues in the trade dispute, such as U.S. complaints about Chinese state subsidies, forced technology transfers and intellectual property violations.

U.S. officials have stressed that relief on U.S. sales to Huawei would apply only to products with no implications for national security, and industry watchers expect those waivers will only allow the Chinese technology giant to buy the most commoditized U.S. components.

Reuters reported last week that despite the carrot of a potential exemption from import tariffs, Chinese soybean crushers are unlikely to buy in bulk from the United States any time soon as they grapple with poor margins and longer-term doubts about Sino-U.S. trade relations. Soybeans are the largest U.S. agricultural export to China.

“They are doing this little dance with Huawei and ag purchases,” said one source recently briefed by senior Chinese negotiators.

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow on Friday said he “wouldn’t expect any grand deal,” at the meeting and negotiators would try to “reset the stage” to bring the talks back to where they were before the May blow-up.

“We anticipate, we strongly expect the Chinese to follow through (on) goodwill and just helping the trade balance with large-scale purchases of U.S. agriculture products and services.” Kudlow said on CNBC television.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer will meet with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He for two days of talks in Shanghai starting on Tuesday, both sides said.

“Less politics, more business,” Tu Xinquan, a trade expert at Beijing’s University of International Business and Economics, who closely follows the trade talks, said of the possible reason Shanghai was chosen as the site for talks.

“Each side can take a small step first to build some trust, followed by more actions,” Tu said of the potential goodwill gestures.

‘DO THE DEAL’

A delegation of U.S. company executives traveled to Beijing last week to stress to Chinese officials the urgency of a trade deal, according to three sources who asked to not be named. They cautioned Chinese negotiators in meetings that if a deal is not reached in the coming months the political calendar in China and the impending U.S. presidential election will make reaching an agreement extremely difficult.

“Do the deal. It’s going to be a slog, but if this goes past Dec. 31, it’s not going to happen,” one American executive told Reuters, citing the U.S. 2020 election campaign. Others said the timeline was even shorter.

Two sources briefed by senior-level Chinese negotiators ahead of the talks said China was still demanding that all U.S. tariffs be removed as one of the conditions for a deal. Beijing is opposed to a phased withdrawal of duties, while U.S. trade officials see tariff removal — and the threat of reinstating them — as leverage for enforcing any agreement.

China also is adamant that any purchase agreement for U.S. goods be at a reasonable level, and that the deal is balanced and respects Chinese legal sovereignty.

U.S. negotiators have demanded that China make changes to its laws as assurances for safeguarding U.S. companies’ know-how, an insistence that Beijing has vehemently rejected. If U.S. negotiators want progress in this area, they might be satisfied with directives issued by China’s State Council instead, one of the sources said. One U.S.-based industry source said expectations for any kind of breakthrough during the Shanghai talks were low, and that the main objective was for each side to get clarity on the “goodwill” measures associated with the Osaka summit.

There is little clarity on which negotiating text the two sides will rely on, with Washington wanting to adhere to the pre-May draft, and China wanting to start anew with the copy it sent back to U.S. officials with numerous edits and redactions, precipitating the collapse in talks in May.

Zhang Huanbo, senior researcher at the China Centre for International Economic Exchanges (CCIEE), said he could not verify U.S. officials’ complaints that 90 percent of the deal had been agreed before the May breakdown.

“We can only say there may be an initial draft. There is only zero and 100% – deal or no deal,” Zhang said.

(This story was refiled to correct time elements in paragraphs 10 and 21 to this week not next week)

Reporting by Michael Martina and Kevin Yao in BEIJING, and David Lawder, Steve Holland and Makini Brice in Washington; Editing by Simon Webb and Daniel Wallis

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trade-china/u-s-china-move-trade-talks-to-shanghai-amid-deal-pessimism-idUSKCN1UN0UV

President Trump on Sunday announced that Texas GOP Rep. John Ratcliffe, a staunch White House ally, will replace Dan Coats as director of national intelligence (DNI), following months of speculation and public spats between the president and the intelligence community.

The move prompted immediate outrage from many top Democrats who accused the president of seeking to appoint a blindly loyal yes-man to the key post.

A source close to the matter told Fox News that Coats never saw his 2017 appointment as a long-term proposition. Ratcliffe has been well-versed in the intelligence community after driving key sections of ongoing Republican-led probes into apparent Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) abuses by the FBI and Justice Department, Fox News is told.

“I am pleased to announce that highly respected Congressman John Ratcliffe of Texas will be nominated by me to be the Director of National Intelligence,” Trump tweeted.

“A former U.S. Attorney, John will lead and inspire greatness for the Country he loves,” Trump added. “Dan Coats, the current Director, will be leaving office on August 15th. I would like to thank Dan for his great service to our Country. The Acting Director will be named shortly.”

Coats frequently appeared out of step with Trump during his two-year tenure, and their frayed relationship reflected broader divisions between the president and the government’s intelligence agencies.

For instance, Coats revealed to then-Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigators how Trump, angry over investigations into links between his campaign and Russia, tried unsuccessfully in March 2017 to get him to make a public statement refuting any connection.

“Coats responded that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) has nothing to do with investigations and it was not his role to make a public statement on the Russia investigation,” Mueller’s report said.

And, last year at the Aspen Security Forum, Coats did a double-take when host Andrea Mitchell broke the news on stage that Vladimir Putin was planning a trip to Washington.

Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee this past January. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

“Say that again?” he asked, to laughter in the audience. “OK, that’s going to be special.”

Coats later said he meant no disrespect to Trump and admitted the moment was “awkward.”

“Some press coverage has mischaracterized my intentions in responding to breaking news presented to me during a live interview. My admittedly awkward response was in no way meant to be disrespectful or criticize the actions of the President,” Coats said.

In a statement, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., condemned Ratcliffe’s selection and pointed to the congressman’s performance during last week’s hearings with Mueller.

During his questioning, Ratcliffe told Mueller that he had acted improperly — and trampled on the presumption of innocence — by saying in his report that Trump had not been “exonerated.”

“It’s clear that Rep. Ratcliffe was selected because he exhibited blind loyalty to President Trump with his demagogic questioning of former Special Counsel Robert Mueller,” Schumer said. “If Senate Republicans elevate such a partisan player to a position that requires intelligence expertise and non-partisanship, it would be a big mistake.”

Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chairman Mark Warner, D-Va., meanwhile, praised Coats’ tenure for staying “true” to the intelligence community’s mission and “speaking truth to power.”

CNN national security analyst Shawn Turner, Elizabeth Warren, and diplomat Richard Haass also all praised Coats specifically for “speaking truth to power” — prompting Republican consultant Arthur Schwartz to note that “talking points have been distributed.”

Reaction from Republican lawmakers to Ratcliffe’s selection appeared positive across the board. House Homeland Security Committee Ranking Member Mike Rogers, R-Ala., called Ratcliffe an “excellent pick to be director of national intelligence.”

“His experience on the Homeland Security Committee and as former Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection, & Innovation Subcommittee chairman will serve him well in this new role,” Rogers said. “I thank Director Coats for his leadership and years of public service.”

And, House Oversight Committee Ranking Member Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, said Ratcliffe was a “great pick.”

TRUMP AT WAR WITH HIS OWN INTEL CHIEFS AS DIVIDE DEEPENS

Speculation about Coats’ ouster had been lingering in recent days. Sources told Fox News earlier this month that Trump spoke to two people recently about the job. Among the candidates he was considering at the time were Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Fred Fleitz, who previously served as chief of staff to National Security Adviser John Bolton.

Trump raised the possibility of the job with Fleitz as far back as February and asked if he was interested but did not offer it to him officially. It’s unclear how many other potential candidates may have been in the mix.

Trump regularly and openly sparred with Coats and the intelligence community. “Perhaps Intelligence should go back to school!” he tweeted in January, after Coats and CIA Director Gina Haspel testified about a threat-assessment report that called into question some of Trump’s foreign policy judgments.

DID U.S. INTELLIGENCE TRY TO ENTRAP TRUMP AIDE?

Coats said North Korea would be “unlikely” to give up its nuclear weapons or its ability to produce them because “its leaders ultimately view nuclear weapons as critical to regime survival.” Coats and other officials also contradicted Trump’s positions on Iran, Afghanistan, and the Islamic State terror network.

“The Intelligence people seem to be extremely passive and naive when it comes to the dangers of Iran. They are wrong!” Trump responded. “When I became President Iran was making trouble all over the Middle East, and beyond. Since ending the terrible Iran Nuclear Deal, they are MUCH different, but a source of potential danger and conflict.”

Ratcliffe, by contrast, appeared to be on the same page as the president. He grilled Mueller and Democrats at last week’s congressional hearings, and told Fox News on Sunday that Mueller had effectively destroyed the presumption of innocence by saying Trump had not been “exonerated.”

“By requiring Donald Trump to prove his innocence, they were depriving him of the one thing no one can be deprived of, which is a presumption of innocence,” Ratcliffe said in an interview with Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures.”

Ratcliffe, who won re-election with more than 70 percent of the vote in his district in 2018, echoed that argument in the House Judiciary Committee hearings.

“The special counsel’s job, nowhere does it say that you were to conclusively determine Donald Trump’s innocence or that the special counsel report should determine whether or not to exonerate him,” Ratcliffe told Mueller.

He added: “So, Americans need to know this as they listen to the Democrats and socialists on the other side of the aisle as they do dramatic readings from this report that Volume II of this report was not authorized under the law to be written. It was written to a legal standard that does not exist at the Justice Department and it was written in violation of every DOJ principle about extra prosecutorial commentary,” he continued. “I agree with the chairman this morning when he said Donald Trump is not above the law. He’s not. But he damn sure shouldn’t be below the law, which is where Volume II of this report puts him.”

A Republican former senator from Indiana, Coats was appointed director of national intelligence in March 2017, becoming the fifth person to hold the post since it was created in the wake of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, to oversee and coordinate the nation’s 17 intelligence agencies.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Coats had been among the last of the seasoned foreign policy hands brought in to surround the president after his 2016 victory, of whom the president steadily grew tired as he gained more personal confidence in Oval Office, officials said. That roster included Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and later, national security adviser H.R. McMaster.

Coats developed a reputation inside the administration for sober presentations to the president of intelligence conclusions that occasionally contradicted Trump’s policy aims.

Fox News’ John Roberts, Catherine Herridge, Gillian Turner and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/dan-coats-dni-director-national-intelligence-expected-resign

After a series of vicious attacks on their home by their own president, proud Baltimoreans are standing by their city. But there is something local they would likely be happy to ditch: decrepit “Kushnerville” housing provided by Donald Trump’s own son-in-law, who has been blasted by tenants in the press as a “slumlord.” 

Trump has lashed Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.) in yet another attack on an African-American because of the congressman’s criticism of inhumane treatment of immigrants at the southern border, and slammed Cummings’ Baltimore district as a “disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess.” 

Ironically, Jared Kushner’s many Baltimore area housing projects — which he continues to own even as he works as a senior White House adviser — racked up hundreds of building-code violations creating the kind of conditions that Trump hints at. 

“We expect all landlords to comply with the code requirements that protect the health and safety of their tenants — even if the landlord’s father-in-law is President of the United States,” said a statement at the time by Baltimore County officials.

A scathing investigation in 2017 by ProPublica and co-published by The New York Times — headlined “The Beleaguered Tenants of Kushnerville” — slammed the multiple projects purchased by Kushner Cos. when it was helmed by Jared Kushner and managed by a subsidiary. Kushner Cos. bought up some 15 complexes, almost all of them in the Baltimore area, housing as many as 20,000 people, according to ProPublica. None of the housing complexes are in Cummings’ district but several are close enough to share a ZIP code, Bloomberg reports, and many house African-Americans, 

The investigation examined charges of decrepit conditions and lawsuits filed against tenants when they tried to move out. One court case described a leaking bedroom ceiling, maggots in the living room carpet and raw sewage spewing form the kitchen sink in a complex called “The Cove.” It’s the kind of apartment in which “no human being” would “want to live,” to quote Trump’s comment about Cummings’ Baltimore district. 

Residents argued in lawsuits that rents in the buildings were padded with mysteriously added fees or late fees as part of a ruse to evict them when the money wasn’t paid. Kushner Cos. opted to switch the suit late last year to state court after a federal judge ordered the company to reveal the identity of mysterious company investors. The cases are ongoing.

Because Kushner retained his interest in the complexes, the White House told The Baltimore Sun that he would recuse himself from any policy decisions about federal Section 8 housing subsidies. Many tenants of the Kushner complexes rely on Section 8 to pay their rent, the newspaper noted. 

Though Trump is bashing Cummings over his complaints about treatment of immigrants, he may be trying to undermine the congressman as he seeks records from Kushner. The House Oversight Committee, headed by Cummings, voted Thursday to authorize a subpoena for all work-related texts and emails secretly sent and received on personal accounts by Kushner and wife Ivanka Trump. Both Kushner and the first daughter have admitted using personal accounts for work messages. The president has repeatedly slammed Hillary Clinton for using a personal server for work-related emails. 

Kushner Cos. could not immediately be reached for comment.

Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, listen during a joint press conference with Trump and Saad Hariri, Lebanon’s prime minister, not pictured, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, July 25, 2017. Trump said he’s disappointed with Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from investigations of Russian interference in the 2016 election, and that ‘time will tell’ if the nation’s top law enforcement officer remains in his job. Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, left, talks to Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, before a ceremony in the Rose Garden of the White House to pardon the National Thanksgiving Turkey, Drumstick, in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2017. This years pardoned turkeys, Wishbone and Drumstick, will join last years turkeys at Virginia Techs Gobblers Rest exhibit, where students and veterinarians care for the turkeys, and the public can visit and learn about the universitys teaching, research, and outreach programs in animal and poultry sciences and veterinary medicine. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, left, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, walk on the South Lawn of the White House to board Marine One before departing to Camp David in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, June 1, 2018. Trump said he will meet Kim Jong Un on June 12 in Singapore, after he sat down with a senior adviser to the North Korean leader in the White House to continue the groundwork for the historic meeting. Photographer: Yuri Gripas/Bloomberg via Getty Images

FILE: Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, right, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, board Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, May 19, 2017. New Yorks banking regulator has asked Deutsche Bank AG and a pair of local lenders to provide information about their relationships with Jared Kushner, his family and the Kushner Cos., according to people familiar with the matter. Kushners financial and business ties have been of consistent interest for potential conflicts given his broad portfolio as senior adviser to his father-in-law, President Donald Trump. Our editors select the best archive images on Kushner and his family. Photographer: T.J. Kirkpatrick/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jared Kushner, senior White House adviser, and Ivanka Trump, assistant to U.S. President Donald Trump, arrive for a ‘Be Best’ initiative event in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, May 7, 2018. Melania announced a campaign Monday to raise awareness of children’s issues including social media use and opioid abuse, making a rare solo public appearance in the Rose Garden of the White House to formally launch her official work. Photographer: Yuri Gripas/Bloomberg via Getty Images

WASHINGTON, DC – DECEMBER 05: (AFP- OUT) Former Vice President Joe Biden, fourth from left, and his wife Jill Biden, second from left, speak with Ivanka Trump, the daughter of President Donald Trump, third from left, and her husband, President Donald Trump’s White House Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, third from right, as former Vice President Al Gore, second from right, speak to former President Jimmy Carter, right, and former first lady Rosalynn Carter, bottom center, before a State Funeral for former President George H.W. Bush at the National Cathedral, December 5, 2018 in Washington, DC. President Bush will be buried at his final resting place at the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas. A WWII combat veteran, Bush served as a member of Congress from Texas, ambassador to the United Nations, director of the CIA, vice president and 41st president of the United States. (Photo by Andrew Harnik-Pool/Getty Images)




Source Article from https://www.aol.com/article/news/2019/07/28/something-baltimore-would-like-to-ditch-kushner-homes/23780926/