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World News

Ford poaches high tech govt Doug Subject who helped lead Apple’s top-secret automobile mission

Ford Motor Co. displays a new 2021 Ford F-150 pickup truck at the Rouge Complex in Dearborn, Michigan, September 17, 2020.

Rebecca Cook | Reuters

DETROIT – Ford Motor has hired former Tesla and Apple executive Doug Field to lead its emerging technology efforts, a key focus for the automaker under its new Ford+ turnaround plan.

Field, who led development of Tesla’s Model 3, most recently served as vice president of special projects at Apple, which reportedly included the tech giant’s Titan car project.

The hire is a major new addition for Ford, while a big hit to Apple and its secret car project, which the company has yet to confirm exists.

“I think any time you lose a well-respected, experienced executive who, as best we can tell, was really directing the automotive efforts at Apple, it’s a blow to any company,” Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi, who covers the iPhone maker, said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell.” 

Ford on Tuesday said Field will serve in the new position of chief advanced technology and embedded systems officer. He will lead Ford’s vehicle controls, enterprise connectivity, features, integration and validation, architecture and platform, driver assistance technology and digital engineering tools.

“His talent and commitment to innovation that improves customers’ lives will be invaluable as we build out our Ford+ plan to deliver awesome products, always-on customer relationships and ever-improving user experiences,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said in a statement. “We are thrilled Doug chose to join Ford and help write the next amazing chapter of this great company.” 

Field, who will report to Farley, actually began his professional career at Ford in 1987, according to his LinkedIn profile. He then held positions at Johnson & Johnson, Deka Research & Development and Segway before starting at Apple in 2008. After more than five years with the tech giant, he moved to Tesla before returning to Apple in 2018.

– CNBC’s Kevin Stankiewicz contributed to this report

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Politics

anti-Taliban resistance vows to carry out in Panjshir valley

Taliban members are patrolling after entering the Panjshir Valley, the only province the group failed to capture during its raid in Afghanistan on September 6, 2021 last month.

Sayed Khodaiberdi Sadat | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

The status of the Panjshir Valley in eastern Afghanistan remained unclear on Tuesday after the Taliban declared that the militants had captured the country’s last blocked province, despite Taliban resistance fighters vowing to continue fighting.

If the claims to victory are true, it means that all of Afghanistan is now under the control of the Taliban, who in July and early August, through a series of staggering battlefield wins and Afghan military surrenders, took the country of nearly 40 million people when the US withdrew its troops.

It would also mark an unprecedented and deeply symbolic defeat for a province known for its previously undefeated fighters who successfully withstood both Taliban and Soviet invasions and were important allies of the United States over the past few decades

The fighting continued late Tuesday, according to a member of the National Resistance Front speaking to CNBC from Panjshir on condition of anonymity due to security risks. The NRF is a multi-ethnic group of tribes, militias and the Afghan military who oppose the Taliban.

The Afghan resistance movement and anti-Taliban uprisings are taking part in military training in the Abdullah Khil area of ​​Dara district in Panjshir province on August 24, 2021.

Ahmad Sahel Arman | AFP | Getty Images

Although the Taliban invaded the historically important valley, there is no evidence that they took control of it, says Kamal Alam, a non-resident senior fellow of the Atlantic Council who was at Panjshir just last month.

“The Taliban have claimed they have taken Panjshir before without evidence. This time one thing is clear: you have definitely entered Panjshir, ”Alam told CNBC on Tuesday. “Taking it whole is another thing that has yet to be proven. You have only taken parts of it at a minimal level so far, that’s for sure.”

First the Soviets, then the Taliban: a legacy of resistance

Alam is senior advisor to the Massoud Foundation, an organization promoting the legacy of Ahmad Shah Massoud, the anti-Taliban resistance leader who was murdered days before the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Massoud’s son Ahmad is the leader of the National Resistance Front. He is also CEO of the Massoud Foundation.

In a prepared statement posted on social media on Monday, Ahmad Massoud pledged to keep fighting, trying to convince others to do the same: “In no way will military pressure on us and our territory diminish our resolve, our struggle continue, ”he said.

“Wherever you are … we appeal to you to stand up in resistance for the dignity, integrity and freedom of our country. We, the NRF, will stand by your side.”

Afghan men wave to negotiate on the 23rd instead of taking the fight away from them.

Ahmad Sahel Arman | AFP | Getty Images

Mountainous Panjshir was a cave of anti-Soviet resistance in the 1980s and later remained as one of the few parts of Afghanistan that the Taliban could not take.

This resistance was led almost entirely by Ahmad Shah Massoud, who came to be known as the “Lion of Panjshir”. Ahmad Shah Massoud worked with CIA paramilitary forces in the 1990s to mobilize and train local tribes to fight the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Now Ahmad’s son Shah Massoud, 32-year-old Sandhurst Military Academy and King’s College London-trained Ahmad, has pledged to carry on his father’s legacy and to resist the Taliban.

Ahmad Massoud, son of the murdered anti-Soviet resistance hero Ahmad Shah Massoud, waves when he is on May 5.

Facebook Facebook logo Sign up on Facebook to connect with Mohammad Ismail Reuters

Ahmad Massoud has criticized the Taliban for failing to comply with a resolution by the Afghan Ulema Council or high-ranking religious scholars calling for a cessation of hostilities. The NRF supported the dissolution.

“We considered it final and inviolable and waited for the other side’s response. But the Taliban revealed their true nature by rejecting the resolution’s demand,” said Ahmad Massoud with their continued offensive in the Panjshir.

Taliban victory would be “great psychological defeat”

The implications and significance of losing the Panjshir to the Taliban would be enormous, Alam said. “Not just for Afghanistan, but for the whole world – 9/11, the end of the Cold War and the folklore of the guerrilla war collide in Panjshir.”

Over the past two and a half decades, “every attempt to invade the northeast has been defeated by the Taliban, not just Panjshir,” Alam said. “However, it will be an enormous psychological and tactical defeat if God were to forbid Panjshir now, with a strategic change also for the future of Central Asia.”

Emily Winterbotham, director of the Terrorism and Conflict Group at the Royal United Services Institute in London, shared this opinion.

“If the Taliban’s victory over the small province of Panjshir is confirmed, it will be deeply symbolic,” said Winterbotham. “It ends, at least for the time being, the last resistance against the Taliban, an achievement that the regime did not achieve for the first time in the 1990s.”

It would also show how much stronger the Taliban are compared to 20 years ago. The Taliban have not only grown in size and support or acceptance in parts of the country; they also now have billions of dollars’ worth of US weapons and two decades of experience fighting Western military forces.

While the Taliban have stated that they want to build a more inclusive and forgiving leadership than in the past, the behavior of their militants in recent weeks tells a different story. Taliban members killed and beaten civilians, including demonstrators, including women and children.

“There is growing concern that the Taliban will harshly retaliate for resistance against the Taliban,” said Winterbotham. “How the Taliban react is an indicator of how much the group has actually changed.”

Categories
Entertainment

Jean-Paul Belmondo, Magnetic Star of the French New Wave, Dies at 88

Jean-Paul Belmondo, the rugged actor whose disdainful eyes, boxer’s nose, sensual lips and cynical outlook made him the idolized personification of youthful alienation in the French New Wave, most notably in his classic performance as an existential killer in Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless,” died on Monday at his home in Paris. He was 88.

His death was confirmed by the office of his lawyer, Michel Godest. No cause was given.

Like Humphrey Bogart, Marlon Brando and James Dean — three American actors to whom he was frequently compared — Mr. Belmondo established his reputation playing tough, unsentimental, even antisocial characters who were cut adrift from bourgeois society. Later, as one of France’s leading stars, he took more crowd-pleasing roles, but without entirely surrendering his magnetic brashness.

Like Bogart, Mr. Belmondo brought craggy features and sometimes seething anger to the screen, a realistic counterpoint to more conventionally handsome romantic stars. Like Dean, he became one of the most widely imitated pop culture figures of his era. And like Brando, he was often dismissive of pretentiousness and self-importance among filmmakers.

“No actor since James Dean has inspired quite such intense identification,” Eugene Archer wrote in The New York Times in 1965. “Dean evoked the rebellious adolescent impulse, as fierce as it was gratuitous, a violent outgrowth of the frustrations of the modern world. Belmondo is a later manifestation of youthful rejection — and more disturbing. His disengagement from a society his parents made is total. He accepts corruption with a cynical smile, not even bothering to struggle. He is out entirely for himself, to get whatever he can, while he can. The Belmondo type is capable of anything.”

His leading role in “À bout de souffle” — released in the United States in 1961 as “Breathless” — was instantly recognized as trendsetting; subsequent imitators only cemented its importance. Mr. Belmondo’s mop of unruly hair, the way he peered at the world through a twisting web of cigarette smoke, and the way he obsessively massaged his thick, feminine lips with his thumb were so vivid and evocative that they quickly became global signposts of rebellion.

Mr. Belmondo was 26 and Mr. Godard was 28 when “Breathless” was being made. The film was based on an idea by François Truffaut, another icon of the nouvelle vague, and began shooting in Paris without a script. Mr. Godard used a hand-held camera — except in the street scenes, when he would sometimes mount the camera on a borrowed wheelchair — and let everyone improvise. The resulting film was rough and ill-shaped, but it had a sense of emotional honesty and verisimilitude that made it electric. Many mainstream critics seemed unsure what to make of it.

Bosley Crowther wrote in The Times: “It goes at its unattractive subject in an eccentric photographed style that sharply conveys the nervous tempo and the emotional erraticalness of the story it tells. And through the American actress, Jean Seberg, and a hypnotically ugly new young man by the name of Jean-Paul Belmondo, it projects two downright fearsome characters.”

Many critics found Mr. Belmondo’s amoral antihero a little too strong. But others found in the role a raw truthfulness and a thematic boldness at odds with the bulk of what was coming out of Hollywood studios.

Mr. Belmondo followed up “Breathless” with a series of celebrated turns for other New Wave directors and was soon widely seen as the movement’s leading interpreter — although in later years he told interviewers that some of the most intellectually ambitious efforts he had been involved in had bored him.

When he starred as a steelworker opposite Jeanne Moreau in Peter Brooks’ “Moderato Cantabile” (1960), he said the script, by the French novelist Marguerite Duras, was too intellectual for his taste. He frequently expressed ambivalence about working for esoteric directors like Mr. Brooks, Alain Resnais and Michelangelo Antonioni.

In other roles Mr. Belmondo was a Hungarian who gets romantically involved with a Provençal family in Claude Chabrol’s “À double tour” (1959) and a young country priest in “Léon Morin, Priest” (1962). He also helped his co-star, Sophia Loren, win an Academy Award in Vittorio De Sica’s “Two Women” (1961), a drama set during World War II in which he played a young Communist intellectual in mountainous central Italy.

By the mid ’60s, though, he was chafing at playing the young antihero in film after film.

“Lots of times, I’d be out with a chick and some kid would want to give me a bad time,” Mr. Belmondo told an interviewer. “I used to fight it out with them. It’s the same now. Everyone wants to say he’s flattened Belmondo.”

The turning point for him came in Philippe De Broca’s “That Man From Rio,” a 1964 over-the-top spy thriller that played like a parody of James Bond. Audiences loved it, and they loved Mr. Belmondo in it. More important, Mr. Belmondo loved doing it. Although some critics who revered the more difficult work of the French New Wave derided Mr. Belmondo as a sell out, he told interviewers that this film remained his favorite.

Later in his career Mr. Belmondo professed an unpretentious modesty, shrugging off his success, but at his box-office height in the 1960s, he was anything but modest. In an interview with the film critic Rex Reed in 1966, he all but sneered at American fans who were lining up to see his movies.

“I do not blame them,” he said, puffing on a cigar and stretching out his long legs underneath a table at Harry’s Bar in Venice. “I am worth standing in line to see.”

By this time there were rumors that despite having been married since 1955 to Elodie Constantin, a former ballerina, Mr. Belmondo was involved with other women. When Mr. Reed asked him about this, he shrugged that off, too.

“Listen, I am only 32 years old,” he said. “I’m not dead. And please remember, I am French. I am happily married this year, but next year? Who knows?”

A year later the marriage had ended in divorce. Mr. Belmondo had three children with Ms. Constantin. The eldest, Patricia, died in a fire in 1994, but their younger daughter, Florence, and a son, Paul, survive him.

The divorce was rumored to have resulted from a romance by Mr. Belmondo with one of his co-stars, Ursula Andress. He and Ms. Andress did have a long-term public relationship after the divorce. He was later romantically involved with another actress, Laura Antonelli. But not until 2002, when he was 70 years old, did he marry again, to 24-year-old Nathalie Tardivel. That marriage ended in divorce six years later. They had a daughter, Stella, who also survives him.

Jean-Paul Belmondo was born on April 9, 1933, in the middle-class Parisian suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine. His family moved to the city’s Left Bank when he was a boy, and he grew up in the neighborhoods around Montparnasse and Saint-Germain-des-Prés. His father, Paul Belmondo, who was born in Algiers to a family of Italian origin, was a highly regarded sculptor. He later told interviewers that his son had been a tempestuous boy who had gotten into frequent scraps and did poorly in school.

The boy’s mother, Madeline Rainaud-Richard, pushed him to do better, but he resisted, Mr. Belmondo later recalled. Finally, he dropped out of school altogether as a teenager. At 16, he became an enthusiastic amateur boxer (although his famous smashed nose came not from an organized bout but from a playground dust-up), giving it up only when he turned to acting.

“I stopped when the face I saw in the mirror began to change,” he said.

For several years, until he was 20, his parents paid for acting lessons at a private conservatory. After a six-month military tour in Algeria, he returned to Paris in 1953 and was accepted into the Conservatoire National d’Art Dramatique, where he studied for three years. The school, a conservative one, didn’t know what to do with the insolent young man who sauntered onto the stage in a Molière play with his hands in his pockets.

When, at his graduation, in 1956, Mr. Belmondo was awarded only an honorable mention by his teachers, the other students hoisted him on their shoulders and carried him from the theater as he flashed an obscene gesture at the judges.

For all his flamboyance and occasional fistfights, Mr. Belmondo was said to be a consummate professional on the set. Although in later years he continued to work now and then with the great directors of the New Wave — most notably with Truffaut in “Mississippi Mermaid” (1969) — most of his energies went into mainstream favorites. Many of his films after the mid-1960s were made by his own production company.

More and more Mr. Belmondo became known for popular adventures, usually comic thrillers. And he became famous for elaborate stunts in which he took great pride in performing himself. He hung from skyscrapers, leapt across speeding trains, drove cars off hillsides. Co-stars said he seemed all but fearless. While shooting one scene in South America, he was warned that a river, into which he was about to plunge for a scene, was filled with poisonous snakes and piranha. Mr. Belmondo grabbed a chunk of corned beef and slung it into the murky water. When nothing happened, he jumped in and filmed the scene.

He said he had decided, “What the hell, if they’re not going to chew on that, they’re not going to eat me.”

Finally, an injury during the filming of “Hold-Up” in 1985, when he was 52, forced him to leave the stunts to the stunt men.

Throughout, the Belmondo cult endured, though more in France than around the world. His French fans knew him by his nickname, Bébel (pronounced bay-BELL).

No matter the scene, no matter the co-stars, whatever mayhem was breaking out onscreen, Mr. Belmondo was always able to affect a calm, cool remove, as though he was more amused than aroused by the activity swirling around him. He brought a touch of comedy to his action roles and a hint of danger to his comic roles; one could well imagine him playing the reluctant, wisecracking hero in American action series of the 1980s like “Die Hard.”

Mr. Belmondo never made the transition to Hollywood, largely because he didn’t want to. “Why complicate my life?” he said. “I am too stupid to learn the language and it would only be a disaster.”

In 1989 he was awarded the Cesar Award for best actor, the French equivalent of the Oscar, for his performance in Claude Lelouch’s “Itinéraire d’un enfant gâté,” playing a middle-aged industrialist who fakes his death and then sails the world.

By this time he had slowed his frenetic pace, making only nine movies in the 1980s, compared to 41 in 1960s and 16 in the 1970s. He cut back even more in the ’90s, when he made only six films, but this was due in part to a belated career shift. Mr. Belmondo had not appeared in a live production since 1959 when he returned to the theater in 1987. Particularly well-regarded was his sold-out run as “Cyrano de Bergerac” in Paris in 1990.

A stroke in 2001, however, forced him to stop working. Not until eight years later was he back before the cameras, shooting “Un homme et son chien” (“A Man and His Dog).” Released in 2009, it tells the story of an older gentleman who, accompanied by his loyal dog, suddenly finds himself without a home.

Late in life, when he was a little thicker and much grayer, Mr. Belmondo liked to affect some of the self-effacing modesty that was noticeably absent when he was at his peak in the 1960s.

When an interviewers asked him to explain his enduring popularity, especially with women, Mr. Belmondo responded with his usual casual shrug.

“Hell, everyone knows that an ugly guy with a good line gets the chicks,” he said.

Aurelien Breeden contributed reporting.

Categories
Politics

Biden’s Electrical Automotive Plans Hinge on Having Sufficient Chargers

Startups, automakers, and other companies have been slowly building chargers for years, mostly in California and other coastal states, where most electric cars are sold. These companies use different strategies to make money and auto experts say it is not clear which one will be successful. The most station company, ChargePoint, sells chargers to individuals, workplaces, businesses, condominiums and apartment buildings, and companies with electric vehicle fleets. It charges subscription fees for software that manages the chargers. Tesla offers charging mainly to get people to buy their cars. And others make money selling electricity to drivers.

The switch to electric cars

Once the poor cousin of the hip business of building sleek electric cars, the charging industry has been swept away by its own gold rush. According to PitchBook, venture capital firms poured nearly $ 1 billion in fees last year, more than in the previous five years combined. In 2021, venture capital investments will total more than $ 550 million so far.

On Wall Street, according to Dealogic, a research firm, publicly traded-purpose businesses or SPACs have closed deals to buy eight charging companies out of 26 deals in electric vehicles and related businesses. The deals typically involve an infusion of hundreds of millions of dollars from large investors like BlackRock.

“It’s early days and people are trying to figure out what the potential is,” said Gabe Daoud Jr., managing director and analyst at Cowen, an investment bank.

These companies could benefit from the infrastructure bill, but it’s not clear how the Biden administration will distribute money for charging stations.

Another unanswered question is who will be the Exxon Mobil of the electric car age. It could be automakers.

Tesla, which makes about two-thirds of the electric cars sold in the US, has built thousands of chargers that it made available to early customers for free. The company could open its network to vehicles from other automakers by the end of the year, its CEO Elon Musk said in July.

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World News

Taliban Crush Protest as Ladies March for Rights

KABUL, Afghanistan – Despite threats of violent strikes and retaliatory attacks, hundreds of women marched through the streets of Kabul Tuesday morning, urging the Taliban to respect their rights and making it clear that they would not easily give up on their accomplishments – the last two Decades.

But as the crowd grew and hundreds of men joined the women, demonstrators were beaten with rifle butts and sticks, according to witnesses. Then shots rang out. The crowd dispersed and for the second time in less than a week the Taliban used force to crush a peaceful demonstration.

Even as the Taliban continued to fight to destroy the armed opposition in the country, taking control of the troubled Panjshir Valley on Monday and announcing a new government that they promised would involve everyone, the demonstration broke up on Monday Tuesday another indication that they would stifle peaceful dissent with a heavy hand.

It was also a remarkable feat by women who were brutally subjugated the last time the Taliban were in charge. Those who have taken to the streets in the past few days fear the group has not changed.

The protests came as the Taliban were consolidating their military hold in the country. They announced their intention to integrate members of the former Afghan army into the country’s new security forces and wanted to provide further details on this process at a press conference on Tuesday afternoon.

While the Taliban have a near monopoly of violence, the demonstrations underscored the challenges ex-insurgents face in trying to win the hearts and minds of a generation of Afghans who have never lived under Taliban rule, especially in urban areas .

In the midst of a worsening humanitarian crisis, the Taliban are facing an uphill battle for legitimacy, not only domestically but also abroad. Basic services like electricity are threatened while the country is plagued by food and cash shortages.

And thousands of Afghans are still desperately trying to flee the country as the United States evacuates dozens of its citizens.

At a news conference in Doha, Qatar, Foreign Secretary Antony J. Blinken said Tuesday that US officials were “working around the clock” to ensure that charter flights with Americans can safely leave Afghanistan.

Mr Blinken, who appeared with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and her Qatari counterparts, said Taliban leaders had recently reaffirmed their commitment to allowing American citizens and others with valid travel documents to travel freely.

But the Taliban have objected to charter flights that combine people with and without valid travel documents, Blinken said.

He added that he was not aware of any “hostage-like” situation at Mazar-e-Sharif airport, where some stakeholders and members of Congress say the Taliban are blocking charter flights. Mr Blinken added that he believes there are around 100 American citizens remaining in Afghanistan, including “a relatively small number” who want to leave Mazar-e-Sharif.

Updated

9/2/2021, 5:49 p.m. ET

For the vast majority of Afghans, there is no escape. Just uncertainty.

But the fact that women have been prominently involved in many of the recent protests has underscored their willingness to stand up for their rights in the face of rifle butts, tear gas and retaliation.

In the two decades before the Taliban came to power, women were active in Afghanistan, holding political offices, joining the military and the police, playing in orchestras and taking part in the Olympic Games.

Many Afghan women, who have benefited from education and freedom of expression over the past twenty years, fear a return to the past when women were banned from leaving the home without a male guardian and were publicly flogged when they opposed violate morality, for example by not covering their skin.

Since taking power last month, the Taliban have tried to call themselves more moderate, inviting women to join the government and saying that women can work and girls can get an education.

But the group has not yet codified new laws or given details of their government plans. Initial signs from across the country were not promising, including the Taliban’s warning to stay home until the Taliban militants’ grassroots learned not to harm them.

Understanding the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan

Map 1 of 6

Who are the Taliban? The Taliban emerged in 1994 amid the unrest following the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan in 1989. They used brutal public punishments, including flogging, amputation and mass executions, to enforce their rules. Here is more about their genesis and track record as rulers.

Who are the Taliban leaders? These are the top leaders of the Taliban, men who for years have been on the run, in hiding, in prison and dodged American drones. Little is known about them or how they plan to rule, including whether they will be as tolerant as they say they are. A spokesman told the Times that the group wanted to forget their past but had some restrictions.

Tuesday’s protests marked the second women’s demonstration in less than a week in the country’s capital, and it was also the second to be violently suppressed.

Rezai, 26, one of the coordinators and organizers of the recent protest, only gave her first name out of fear of retaliation. She said the demonstration was organized in close coordination with the national resistance forces.

“We invited people who use social media platforms,” ​​she said. “And there were more people than we expected. We expect more rallies tonight because the people don’t want terror and destruction. The Taliban have achieved no accomplishments since they came to power other than killing people and spreading terror. So it was a completely self-motivated protest, and we just coordinated and invited people to participate. “

When they marched on Tuesday morning, they carried a banner with a single word: “Freedom”.

The women sang the same word as they walked while the Taliban watched closely. They were joined by men, many of whom condemned Pakistan for its support for the Taliban and meddling in Afghan affairs.

“We are not defending our right to a job or a position in which we will work, we are defending the blood of our youth, we are defending our country, our country,” said one woman, according to a video posted on social media.

Witnesses reported Taliban fighters beat protesters with clubs and rifle butts. Tolo TV, a leading Afghan broadcaster, said one of its cameramen covering the protests was briefly arrested by the Taliban.

As a Times photographer approached the demonstration on a street outside the presidential palace known as Arg, a convoy of at least a dozen Taliban pickups raced toward it.

As soon as the Taliban fighters got off their trucks, they started firing – mostly into the air, it seemed. There were no immediate reports of serious injury or death.

The people – there seemed to be several hundred – ran off.

The big meeting was over. A short time later, when some of the male demonstrators gathered in a small group and began shouting slogans for the resistance, the Taliban chased them away.

After the crowd broke up, Jamila, 23, said it was a peaceful demonstration.

“People just took to the streets and protested,” she said. However, she feared that the Taliban’s tactics to disperse the crowd could lead to bloodshed.

Michael Crowley, Sahak Sami, Walid Arian and Farnaz Fassihi contributed to the coverage.

Categories
Politics

Biden provides New York to areas eligible for catastrophe funds after Ida devastation

A man looks at a car in the flood after what was left of Ida on Sept.

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President Joe Biden has added New York to the list of the greatest disaster areas following the devastation of Hurricane Ida last week.

The move, announced on Monday, releases federal disaster funding to help the storm-hit areas, which cut a swath of the northeast from September 1-3, dropping an average of 3.1 inches an hour and causing dozens of deaths.

In a similar announcement on Sunday, Biden also declared New Jersey a disaster area. Ida is said to have caused at least 27 deaths there and four people are still missing.

The president is expected to tour Manville, NJ and Queens on Tuesday to witness Ida’s damage and various restoration efforts.

One of the strongest hurricanes to ever hit the US, Ida struck Louisiana earlier this week before moving north and wreaking havoc in several states.

According to PowerOutage.us, a tracking site, nearly 530,000 Louisians were still without power as of Monday morning.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul estimates Ida caused more than $ 50 million in damage to the state.

Biden’s move will enable it to support the Bronx, Kings, Queens, Richmond and Westchester counties, the White House said. The evaluations are also ongoing in other areas and counties.

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Categories
Entertainment

Transferring Over: A Powerhouse of Black Dance Is Retiring (Principally)

Are they Black?

No. White. I had to school them.

Does Kim run the school also?

Well, the school is not part of the company. The first 10 years the company was housed in the school, but when we purchased the building, we reversed the roles. The school pays rent to the company. I kept the school for profit so I would be guaranteed an income as a single parent.

You know, the String Theory School wants to build a new location, a charter school, and call it the Joan Myers Brown School of the Arts.

Wait, they’re naming a school after you?

Yes, and they want me to develop a curriculum, so I put Ali [Willingham, artistic director of Danco3] there because he teaches the way I like people to teach — know the craft, break down the movement, demand growth and not show off. Our youth are caught up in getting the applause and not learning the craft, so when I find the ones that really want to learn, they have someplace for classes and performing opportunities.

The Black Lives Matter movement isn’t new to you, is it?

I experienced that in 1962, 1988 and 1995. Every time white folks in charge throw money out there and say, “Y’all got to help Black people,” they help us, but when the money’s gone, they’re gone. Have you noticed how every ad in Dance Magazine has a Black person? It’s like they are saying, “Look, I got one!”

Did you envision I.A.B.D. conferences as a home base for the Black dance community?

You know, the first few conferences we were a mess, but we were happy to be together. Cleo [Parker Robinson] is from Denver; Jeraldyne [Blunden] was Dayton; Lula [Washington], Los Angeles; and Ann [Williams], from Dallas. And each time we learned something about our own organizations, about others doing the same thing, and how we can help each other. Mikki Shepard pulled us together, and people said we set the plate for DanceUSA. I was on the board of DanceUSA then. I said, “I got to get away from here and start my own thing because this ain’t helping Black people at all.”

The younger members want to ignore the things we learned, and their opinions are valid, but I say experience teaches you something. I.A.B.D. was a gathering to bring us together and share stuff, now it’s a full-fledged service organization.

Categories
World News

China’s exports in August beat expectations

SINGAPORE – Asia Pacific stocks were mixed in trading on Tuesday as data showed China’s August trading data was above expectations.

The Shanghai composite in mainland China gained 0.77%, while the Shenzhen share rose 0.398%.

China’s exports rose 25.6% yoy in August, customs data on Tuesday showed – above analysts’ expectations in a Reuters poll of 17.1%.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index gained 0.61%.

The stocks of retailers listed in the city surged after Bloomberg reported that Hong Kong will allow quarantine-free entry to mainland visitors from September 15. Chow Sang Sang rose 3.8% while Giordano International rose 2.6% and Sa Sa International rose 5.26%.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.86% while the Topix index rose 1%, with the country’s stocks continuing to climb after two consecutive days of trading with solid gains. This comes as investor sentiment is bolstered by the prospect of further stimulus reportedly being called for by Prime Minister candidate Fumio Kishida.

Elsewhere, the South Korean Kospi lost 0.7% while the S & P / ASX 200 in Australia lost 0.24%.

MSCI’s broadest index for Asia Pacific stocks outside of Japan was below the flatline.

Elsewhere, the South Korean Kospi lost 0.7% while the S & P / ASX 200 in Australia lost 0.24%.

MSCI’s broadest index for Asia Pacific stocks outside of Japan was below the flatline.

RBA rate decision

The Reserve Bank of Australia announced on Tuesday that it would stick to its cash rate target.

In a statement, Australia’s Central Bank Governor Philip Lowe also said the RBA will buy bonds at a price of A $ 4 billion (about $ 2.98 billion) a week until at least February 2022.

In August, when the plan was announced to reduce bond purchases from A $ 5 billion to A $ 4 billion in early September, Lowe had announced that the new weekly bond purchases would last at least until mid-November.

Following that announcement, the Australian dollar changed hands at $ 0.7449 from an earlier low of $ 0.7431.

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Markets in the US were closed on Monday for a public holiday.

Currencies and oil

The US dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus a basket of its peers, came in at 92.126, still off the 92.4 level it hit last week.

The Japanese yen was trading at 109.78 the dollar, stronger than the 110.1 levels seen against the greenback last week.

Oil prices were mixed on the afternoon of Asian trading hours, with the international benchmark Brent crude oil futures rising 0.47% to $ 72.56 a barrel. U.S. crude oil futures declined 0.19% to $ 69.16 a barrel.

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Politics

Alphonso David Fired as Human Rights Marketing campaign President Over Cuomo Ties

Alphonso David, the president of the human rights campaign, the country’s largest LGBTQ organization, was fired by the group’s board on Monday night for a report revealing that he had advised former Governor Andrew M. Cuomo on dealing with allegations of sexual harassment.

David, the first black president of the group, was dismissed “for an important reason” in separate votes by the boards of the human rights campaign and its affiliated foundation after the two boards held a joint meeting. After two abstentions on the Board of Trustees, the votes were unanimous.

The removal of Mr David is the latest fallout from the report by Letitia James, the New York State attorney general, describing Mr Cuomo’s allegations of sexual harassment and the efforts of his staff to take revenge against the former governor’s accusers. Mr. Cuomo resigned in August after the report made 11 allegations and described a toxic work environment.

Mr David, who had worked as an attorney in Mr Cuomo’s office, was identified in the James report as being involved in efforts to undermine Mr Cuomo’s first accuser, Lindsey Boylan. Although Mr. David no longer worked there, he had a memo containing confidential information about Ms. Boylan’s career. He shared the memo with Mr. Cuomo’s advisors, who hoped to provide details to reporters. Mr David has claimed that as a lawyer he has an obligation to do so.

Mr David also proposed changes to a letter slandering Ms. Boylan that circulated among Mr Cuomo and his aides, saying that he would collect signatures from former aides for it. However, he refused to sign it himself and later said that he did not know the extent of the allegations against Mr Cuomo. He called for Mr Cuomo’s resignation after the report was made public.

A person familiar with deliberations on the human rights campaign board said that when the allegations came to light, Mr. David never told the organization that he was providing advice to Mr. Cuomo. The person said that Mr. David did not consult the group’s attorney or tell them that he would be interviewed by Ms. James’ office.

In a statement, board co-chairs Morgan Cox and Jodie Patterson said they had decided to end David’s role “with immediate effect for violating his contract with the human rights campaign.”

The statement also touched on a public dispute that unfolded between Mr. David and the board over the weekend after Mr. David said he had been told that a review of his actions had been completed without any wrongdoing being found.

“Yesterday and today, Mr. David issued a statement containing significant untruths about the investigation and his status with the organization,” said Mr. Cox and Ms. Patterson. “At HRC we are fighting to bring full equality and liberation to LGBTQ + people everywhere. This also includes fighting on behalf of all victims of sexual harassment and assault. “

The review was carried out by members of the HRC Executive Committee. They determined that Mr. David had a conflict of interest in advising Mr. Cuomo’s office and that his efforts are damaging the organization’s reputation. Joni Madison, the group’s chief operating officer, becomes interim president while David’s successor is sought.

Mr. David is not the only liberal ally of Mr. Cuomo involved in the James report. Recently, prominent attorney Roberta A. Kaplan, a co-founder of the Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund, whose mission is to fight for victims of sexual harassment, resigned after the James report revealed that she was with Tina Tchen, the executive director, spoke of Time’s Up, a letter written about Ms. Boylan by Mr. Cuomo’s staff. Despite denying the charge of advising Mr. Cuomo’s team on defamation of a victim, both Ms. Kaplan and Ms. Tchen recently resigned from their roles.

Mr David had been a Cuomo adviser for nine years when the human rights campaign hired him in June 2019. Announcing the appointment of Mr David, the group highlighted his work with the former governor on important advances in LGBTQ rights, including marriage equality and a ban on conversion therapy.

Divisions between Mr David’s supporters and those who believed he had crossed a line in helping Mr Cuomo tackle allegations of sexual harassment became even more apparent Sunday after Mr David posted his statement on Twitter. Along with stating that the review was completed without a finding of misconduct, he said that the co-chairs of the board “have now asked to consider resigning, not because of misconduct but because they believe that the incident was a ‘distraction’ to the organization. “

He said their plan was to “calmly resolve the matter this holiday weekend,” adding, “I have the support of too many of our employees, board members and stakeholders to go quietly into the night. I’m not resigning. “

“The idea that this is a distraction is just wrong,” said David. “I was not distracted, nor were my HRC colleagues who fight for human rights. The distraction would require my resignation without submitting the results of the review. “

Human rights campaign officials then released a statement to their own staff saying that the review had not been carried out and that Mr David misrepresented the information he was given about the results.

“We were very surprised and disappointed by the inaccuracies in his portrayal of events,” the two CEOs told their employees in an email. “This investigation will soon be completed,” the statement said, and the organization “will then have more to say.” The chief executives initially supported Mr. David in staying in his position, but when some staff asked if he should resign, they hired the Sidley Austin law firm to review his conduct.

The person familiar with the board’s decision said there was no written report of this review and that there never would be. Rather, there were oral presentations to the board of directors. Mr. David is said to have given the board of directors names in addition to the 10 hours he spent giving names for the interviews.

The CEO’s statement released late Monday showed that there were not just isolated calls for Mr David to step down, but hundreds of them, with staff, board members and allies wanting the group to separate from him.

“This is a painful moment in our movement,” they wrote. “While the board’s decision is not the result we ever imagined or hoped for with regard to Mr David’s tenure at HRC, his actions have placed us in an untenable position by violating the core values, guidelines and mission of Violate HRC. ”They said they were“ grateful for his guidance over the past two years, ”especially on initiatives related to the trans community.

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Politics

Interpreter describes household’s escape from Taliban in Kabul

Antifullah Ahmadzai, an Afghan national, takes a selfie inside of a U.S. military cargo aircraft before an evacuation flight from Kabul.

Courtesy: Antifullah Ahmadzai

WASHINGTON – One month ago, Atifullah Ahmadzai boarded a flight from Connecticut to Kabul, eager to hold his wife and five young children again.

The purpose of this trip was nearly a decade in the making as Ahmadzai, a former interpreter for the U.S. military, was carrying the final documents needed for his family to complete a coveted special immigrant visa.

While in Kabul, Ahmadzai planned on saying goodbye to friends and extended family members before bringing his wife and children to America, where he had spent the last two years preparing for their new life.

Ten days into his plans, after the rest of Afghanistan had already fallen during the U.S. military’s withdrawal, the Taliban seized the presidential palace in Kabul.

The swift collapse of the Afghan national government forced Ahmadzai and thousands of others to flood the gates of Hamid Karzai International Airport, where Western forces were conducting evacuation flights out of the country.

The story of Ahmadzai and his family is emblematic of the desperation and fear felt by thousands of Afghans as U.S. and coalition forces withdrew the last of their troops from Afghanistan after a nearly 20-year occupation.

Over the course of 17 days leading up to Aug. 31, the U.S. and coalition partners airlifted more than 116,000 people out of Afghanistan on cargo aircraft. The Pentagon said it dedicated more than 5,000 U.S. service members and 200 aircraft to the colossal evacuation mission.

Meanwhile, governments around the world opened their borders to at-risk Afghan nationals arriving on evacuation flights.

“I wasn’t expecting that everything was going to change immediately,” Ahmadzai told CNBC.

“The Taliban made a checkpoint 800 feet away from my house, where they would question you about your job,” he said, adding that he was too afraid to disclose his previous role in the Afghan military.

Taliban forces stand guard in front of Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, September 2, 2021.

Stringer | Reuters

At one checkpoint, Ahmadzai said his cell phone was searched by Taliban insurgents looking for anything that would confirm his ties to the previous government or to the United States.

“They were also knocking on people’s doors and asking about their jobs,” he said. “The homes of those who worked for the government or with the U.S. military were marked during the day and at night the Taliban came back to those houses to kill.” Fear of targeted killings by the Taliban fueled many Afghans’ desire to get out of the country.

A rallying cry on Facebook

Desperate for a way out, Ahmadzai sent a text message to a U.S. Army officer he translated for during America’s longest war.

“He addresses me as his brother,” said the officer, Mike Kuszpa, now a teacher in Connecticut, when asked about Ahmadzai’s initial message.

“He wrote to me and said, ‘Brother, my family and I are out here and the Taliban has been looking for interpreters. Who knows what’s gonna happen, they may kill me and my family,'” Kuszpa told CNBC.

A 2004 photo of Antifullah Ahmadzai (left) and Mike Kuszpa (right) in Afghanistan.

Courtesy of Mike Kuszpa

“I was grasping at straws. I didn’t know anybody, so I posted to a neighborhood message board on Facebook asking if anybody had Department of State connections that could help my interpreter and his family get on an evacuation flight,” he said.

The post to the 109-member “Westville Dads” Facebook group triggered a flurry of phone calls, Facebook messages, encrypted text messages and emails to a network that spanned from academia to intelligence analysts to lawmakers to diplomats.

“I got in touch with a former student of mine who is a foreign service officer about getting his documents in the system so that he wouldn’t be turned away at the airport,” said Matt Schmidt, national security and political science professor at the University of New Haven, who reached out to at least 16 people in a bid to help Ahmadzai.

“I counseled Atif to wait for a phone call from State to go to the airport,” Schmidt said using a shortened version of Ahmadzai’s first name, Atifullah. “Mike was uneasy about waiting and told Atif to go to the airport. It was the right call.”

A struggle to flee

Across the globe, Western forces intensified emergency humanitarian evacuations amid a backdrop of security threats and the Biden administration’s self-imposed Aug. 31 withdrawal deadline.

“At one point I started getting news alerts about gunfire at the airport while I was messaging with Atif. It was surreal,” said Schmidt, who breathlessly waited for updates from Ahmadzai.

In Kabul, Ahmadzai and his family were struggling to get out.

“It was difficult to get to the airport. I tried for three straight days but was not able to reach the gates,” Ahmadzai told CNBC, explaining that he had to sidestep Taliban checkpoints each time he and his family returned home after a full day of waiting at the airport.

“On the fourth day, I received a text message advising me to go through another gate. When I arrived, there were more than 1,000 people already gathered,” Ahmadzai said. He said there was occasional gunfire in the crowd.

“My family was very scared and shocked,” Ahmadzai said. “My wife asked me if we could go back because she was afraid for our children, but I told her we have to try and leave because it was better than dying at the hands of the Taliban.”

After more than three hours of waiting at the gate, Ahmadzai was able to get close enough to the U.S. Marines guarding the entry point to show them his green card and visa.

“I then showed them the paperwork for my children and wife,” he said. The Marines were able to verify his information, he said, because two days prior it was entered into the State Department’s system thanks to the network of mobilized dads on Facebook.

Ahmadzai’s next message to his friends coordinating his evacuation came from the interior gates of the airport.

Antifullah Ahmadzai, a former Afghan interpreter for the U.S. military, stands with his children and U.S. Marines at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan.

“When he sent that pic of him and his kids safe in the airport with the soldiers flanking him, I broke down in tears,” Schmidt said.

“As a dad, I couldn’t imagine the fate that awaited them if they didn’t get out,” Schmidt continued. “We were just dads reaching across the globe to help a fellow dad. That bound us all together, more than culture or religion. We knew what it meant to need to protect your family.”

A fateful departure

Ahmadzai, his wife and their children, who range from age 2 to 12, boarded a C-17 cargo military aircraft and flew to Qatar, which is about 1,200 miles from Kabul. They spent two nights and three days in the Persian Gulf country.

“Qatar camp was good, but as soon as we got there my second son was feeling very sick and he vomited more than 15 times as he was not familiar with this kind of situation. A medic came and gave him an IV quickly and after that, he was able to start eating and drinking again,” Ahmadzai said.

Antifullah Ahmadzai, an Afghan national, takes a selfie inside of a holding bay from an unspecified location in Qatar.

Courtesy: Antifullah Ahmadzai

After Qatar, the family was flown to Ramstein Air Base in Germany, where they spent the night. The next day they boarded a flight to the United States and arrived at Dulles International Airport in Virginia.

Ahmadzai said he and his family were tested for Covid-19 and completed biometric health screenings before leaving the airport in Dulles. He was vaccinated against Covid earlier this year. The Pentagon has previously said that all Afghan nationals relocating to the United States who want the coronavirus vaccine will be able to receive one.

“I never expected to come back to the States alive,” said Ahmadzai, who spoke to CNBC over the course of a week from Qatar, Germany and the United States. He said he was “thankful that the United States helped us in a very critical situation.”

“There was no option, no flights and no way for me and my family to escape the Taliban,” he said.

When asked about his children, Ahmadzai said they were “doing great and happy.”

“The kids are quite different now. They think they are in a different world and are trying to learn a new language and way of life.”

Ahmadzai and his family recently left a U.S. military installation in Virginia, where they finished their special immigrant visa paperwork. He is returning to Connecticut with his family.

Kuszpa, the Army officer, said there are plans for an outdoor barbecue to welcome Ahmadzai’s family to the community.

“Now he’s here and a part of our family,” said Schmidt, the professor. “His kids will play with ours.”