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Uni withdraws pupil’s provide over racist abuse of England trio

England striker Jadon Sancho (C) is comforted by his teammates after missing a penalty in the UEFA EURO 2020 final between Italy and England at Wembley Stadium in London on July 11, 2021.

Laurence Griffiths | AFP | Getty Images

A university withdrew an offer from a student after racist abuse against English players after the EURO 2020 final.

Video footage from a Snapchat group chat was circulating on Instagram in which a person was heard using racist language to Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Bukayo Saka, who each missed penalties in the shooting at Wembley Stadium.

A spokesman for Nottingham Trent University said: “This allegation does not apply to an NTU student. We do not tolerate any form of discrimination, including racism.

“We dealt with this matter immediately and withdrew an offer from an applicant.”

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Police have arrested five people for racially abusing English players online since the defeat by Italy on Sunday.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on Wednesday that the government plans to extend football bans over online racism, while social media companies face heavy fines if they fail to remove the abuse from their platforms.

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The Pandemic Has a New Epicenter: Indonesia

BEKASI, Indonesia — By the thousands, they sleep in hallways, tents and cars, gasping for air as they wait for beds in overcrowded hospitals that may not have oxygen to give them. Others see hospitals as hopeless, even dangerous, and take their chances at home.

Wherever they lie, as Covid-19 steals their breath away, their families engage in a frantic, daily hunt for scarce supplies of live-giving oxygen.

Indonesia has become the new epicenter of the pandemic, surpassing India and Brazil to become the country with the world’s highest count of new infections. ​ The surge is part of a wave across Southeast Asia, where vaccination rates are low but countries had, until recently contained the virus relatively well​. Vietnam, Malaysia, Myanmar and Thailand are also facing their largest outbreaks yet and have imposed new restrictions, including lockdowns and stay-at-home orders.

In Indonesia, cases and deaths have skyrocketed in the past month as the highly contagious Delta variant sweeps through densely populated Java island, as well as Bali. In some regions, the coronavirus has pushed the medical system past its limits, though hospitals are taking emergency steps to expand capacity.

Bekasi Regional Public Hospital, where some Covid patients have waited days for treatment, has erected large tents on its grounds, with beds for up to 150 people. Nearby in Jakarta, the capital, a long line of people waited for hours outside a small dispensary, hoping to fill their portable tanks with oxygen.

Among them was Nyimas Siti Nadia, 28, who had been searching for oxygen for her aunt’s family, all sick with Covid.

“She is a doctor and she is afraid to go to a hospital because she knows the situation,” Ms. Nyimas said. “There are many instances where patients do not get beds or oxygen. If we go to the hospital, we have to bring our own oxygen.”

On Thursday, Indonesian authorities reported nearly 57,000 new cases, the highest daily total yet — seven times as many as a month earlier. On Friday, they reported a record 1,205 deaths, bringing the country’s official toll from the pandemic to more than 71,000.

But some health experts say those figures vastly understate the spread in Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous nation, because testing has been limited. Dicky Budiman, an Indonesian epidemiologist at Griffith University in Australia, estimates that the true number of cases is three to six times higher.

In India, where the Delta variant was first identified, daily cases peaked at more than 414,000 in May, but have since dropped to about 40,000.

Despite Indonesia’s mushrooming caseload, officials say they have the situation under control.

“If we talk about the worst-case scenario, 60,000 or slightly more, we are pretty OK,” said Luhut Pandjaitan, a senior minister assigned by President Joko Widodo to handle the crisis. “We are hoping that it will not reach 100,000, but even so, we are preparing now for if we ever get there.”

Many Indonesians, however, have been facing their worst-case scenarios for weeks.

Family members describe nightmare scenes of trying to get a hospital to admit their sick relatives. Some hospitals were accepting only patients who brought their own oxygen, they said. At others, patients waited wherever they could find space to lie down.

In Bekasi, a city of 2.5 million that adjoins Jakarta, patients have flocked to the regional public hospital. To accommodate the surge, 10 large tents were set up on the grounds, equipped with beds for as many as 150 people.

Updated 

July 17, 2021, 4:28 p.m. ET

Lisa Wiliana’s husband had been in one of the tents since the previous day, waiting for space in a ward. After nine days of sickness, she said, his oxygen saturation level had dropped to 84, well below the range of 95 to 100 that is considered healthy. The hospital was giving him some oxygen, but she had to arrange to get more.

“We are waiting for an available room because it is full,” she said. “What else can we do? The important thing is to get the oxygen, because he already had trouble breathing. It was scary.”

Even being admitted does not make getting oxygen a certainty. At Dr. Sardjito General Hospital in the city of Yogyakarta, 33 patients died this month after the central oxygen supply ran out. The staff switched to tanks donated by the police, but it was too late for many patients.

Overwhelmed hospitals have added thousands of beds, but on average, 10 percent of their health care workers are in isolation after exposure to the virus, said the secretary general of the Indonesian Hospital Association, Dr. Lia G. Partakusuma. Some hospitals are using five times as much liquid oxygen as normal, and distributors are having difficulty keeping up with the demand, she said.

“Some hospitals have said, ‘If you brought your own oxygen tank, please use it first because we have a limited oxygen supply,’” she said. “But it is not a requirement for them to bring their own oxygen.”

With hospitals so overcrowded, many people choose to stay home — and many die there. Lapor Covid, a nonprofit group that is tracking deaths from the disease, reports that at least 40 Covid patients a day are now dying at home.

Mr. Joko, the president, has stopped short of a nationwide lockdown but ordered restrictions in Java and Bali, including closing places of worship, schools, shopping malls and sports facilities, reducing public transit capacity and limiting restaurants to takeout. The restrictions are set to expire on Tuesday, but officials are weighing whether to extend them.

Only about 15 percent of Indonesia’s 270 million people have received a dose of a coronavirus vaccine, and just 6 percent are fully inoculated. Indonesia has relied heavily on the vaccine made by Sinovac Biotech, a Chinese company, which has proved less effective than other shots. At least 20 Indonesian doctors who were fully vaccinated with Sinovac have died from the virus.

This week, the United States donated 4.5 million doses of the Moderna vaccine to Indonesia. Officials said the first priority would be to give booster shots to nearly 1.5 million health workers.

Dr. Budiman, the Indonesian epidemiologist in Australia, predicted more than a year ago that Indonesia would become a pandemic epicenter because of its dense population and weak health care system. He has urged more testing, contact tracing and isolation of infected individuals.

Indonesia’s health minister, Budi Gunadi Sadikin, said Friday that the country had increased testing to about 230,000 people a day, from about 30,000 in December. His target is 400,000 a day.

But Dr. Budiman contends that testing is still woefully limited, noting that in recent days, the share of tests that came up positive had risen to more than 30 percent. Health experts say a high rate is a sign of too little testing.

“For more than a year, our test positivity rate has almost never been below 10 percent, which means we are missing many cases and we cannot identify the majority of infections and the clusters,” he said.

Outside the small CV Rintis Usaha Bersama oxygen shop in South Jakarta, more than 100 customers lined up in the street with their oxygen tanks and waited hours for the chance to refill them.

Alif Akhirul Ramadan, 27, said he was getting oxygen for his grandmother, 77, who was being cared for by family members at home. He said that her condition had suddenly worsened and that her tank was running low.

“Now it has to be refilled,” said Mr. Alif, who has had Covid twice. “There is no backup at home. That is why we need to refill it quickly.”

Fira Abdurrachman reported from Bekasi, Richard C. Paddock from New York and Muktita Suhartono from Chonburi Province, Thailand.

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How the U.S. turned the world’s new bitcoin mining hub

Well before China decided to kick out all of its bitcoin miners, they were already leaving in droves, and new data from Cambridge University shows they were likely headed to the United States.

The U.S. has fast become the new darling of the bitcoin mining world. It is the second-biggest mining destination on the planet, accounting for nearly 17% of all the world’s bitcoin miners as of April 2021. That’s a 151% increase from September 2020. 

“For the last 18 months, we’ve had a serious growth of mining infrastructure in the U.S.,” said Darin Feinstein, founder of Blockcap and Core Scientific. “We’ve noticed a massive uptick in mining operations looking to relocate to North America, mostly in the U.S.”

This dataset doesn’t include the mass mining exodus out of China, which led to half the world’s miners dropping offline, and experts tell CNBC that the U.S. share of the mining market is likely even bigger than the numbers indicate.

According to the newly-released Cambridge data, just before the Chinese mining ban began, the country accounted for 46% of the world’s total hashrate, an industry term used to describe the collective computing power of the bitcoin network. That’s a sharp decline from 75.5% in September 2019, and the percentage is likely much lower given the exodus underway now. 

“500,000 formerly Chinese miner rigs are looking for homes in the U.S,” said Marathon Digital’s Fred Thiel. “If they are deployed, it would mean North America would have closer to 40% of global hashrate by the end of 2022.”

The new mining mecca

America’s rising dominance is a simple case of luck meeting preparation. The U.S. has quietly been building up its hosting capacity for years.

Before bitcoin miners actually started coming to America, companies across the country made a gamble that eventually, if adequate infrastructure were in place, they would set up shop in the U.S. 

That gamble appears to be paying off.

When bitcoin crashed in late 2017 and the wider market entered a multi-year crypto winter, there wasn’t much demand for big bitcoin farms. U.S. mining operators saw their opening and jumped at the chance to deploy cheap money to build up the mining ecosystem in the States. 

“The large, publicly traded miners were able to raise capital to go make big purchases,” said Mike Colyer, CEO of digital currency company Foundry, which helped bring over $300 million of mining equipment into North America.

Companies like North American crypto mining operator Core Scientific kept building out hosting space all through the crypto winter, so that they had the capacity to plug in new gear, according to Colyer. 

“A majority of the new equipment manufactured from May 2020 through December 2020 was shipped to the U.S. and Canada,” he said.

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Alex Brammer of Luxor Mining, a cryptocurrency pool built for advanced miners, points out that maturing capital markets and financial instruments around the mining industry also played a big role in the industry’s quick ascent in the U.S. Brammer says that many of these American operators were able to start rapidly expanding once they secured financing by leveraging a multi-year track record of profitability and existing capital as collateral.

Covid also played a role.

Though the global pandemic shut down large swaths of the economy, the ensuing stimulus payments that proved a boon for U.S. mining companies.

“All the money printing during the pandemic meant that more capital needed to be deployed,” explained bitcoin mining engineer Brandon Arvanaghi. 

“People were looking for places to park their cash. The appetite for large-scale investments had never been bigger. A lot of that likely found its way into bitcoin mining operations in places outside of China,” continued Arvanaghi.

Making it in America

The seeds of the U.S. migration started back in early 2020, according to Colyer. Prior to Beijing’s sudden crackdown, China’s mining dominance had already begun to slip. 

Part of the appeal is that the U.S. ticks a lot of the boxes for these migrant miners.

“If you’re looking to relocate hundreds of millions of dollars of miners out of China, you want to make sure you have geographic, political, and jurisdictional stability. You also want to make sure there are private property right protections for the assets that you are relocating,” said Feinstein.

It also helps that the U.S. is also home to some of the cheapest sources of energy on the planet, many of which tend to be renewable. Because miners at scale compete in a low-margin industry, where their only variable cost is typically energy, they are incentivized to migrate to the world’s cheapest sources of power.

Thiel expects most new miners relocating to North America to be powered by renewables, or gas that is offset by renewable energy credits.

While Castle Island Ventures founding partner, Nic Carter, points out that U.S. mining isn’t wholly renewable, he does say that miners here are much better about selecting renewables and buying offsets. 

“The migration is definitely a net positive overall,” he said. “Hashrate moving to the U.S., Canada, and Russia will mean much lower carbon intensity.”

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In Pakistan, Textbooks That includes Malala Eliminated From Bookstores

KARACHI, Pakistan – Provincial police in Pakistan this week raided bookstores and confiscated copies of an elementary school social studies textbook containing a picture of education activist Malala Yousafzai, a polarizing figure in the country.

The picture of Ms. Yousafzai, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014, appeared in a chapter on national heroes with Pakistan’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

The world’s youngest Nobel Prize winner, Malala, as the 24-year-old is widely known, is celebrated worldwide as a courageous figure of her activism, despite being shot in the head by a Taliban rifle in Pakistan’s Swat Valley as a schoolgirl in 2012.

Her biography “I am Malala”, which she wrote together with the experienced British foreign correspondent Christina Lamb, was an international bestseller. The following year, 2014, she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

But in her own country she is the subject of heated debate.

“For many in Pakistan, Malala symbolizes everything they think they hate the West,” said Nida Kirmani, professor of sociology at Lahore University of Management Sciences in Pakistan. “For others, it is a symbol of women’s rights and resistance to Islamist forces,” she added.

“For these reasons she has become a divisive figure.”

Critics say the seizures show a desire to repress critical thinking and a growing intolerance of opinions that contradict conservative Islamic beliefs and cultural norms.

In 2012, Taliban militants attempted to assassinate Ms. Yousafzai on a bus returning from school after the BBC website published an article about her experience under her rule. She moved to the UK and graduated from Oxford University last year.

Last month, in an interview with UK Vogue magazine about where her young life could lead, Ms. Yousafzai questioned the need for marriage, which sparked a backlash in Pakistan. “I still don’t understand why people have to get married,” she said, according to the article. “If you want someone in your life, why do you have to sign marriage papers, why can’t it just be a partnership?”

In May, her tweet enraged that “violence in Jerusalem – especially against children – is unbearable,” a number of Pakistanis who neither mention the Palestinians nor condemn Israel.

Police and officials from the Punjab Curriculum and Textbook Board, a provincial agency, began raiding stores across the city on Monday to confiscate copies of the book. The board did not want to say how many stores were searched or how many books were confiscated.

On Monday, Ms. Yousafzai’s birthday, celebrated as Malala Day by some in Pakistan, authorities confiscated the entire inventory of textbooks from the Oxford University Press publishing office in Lahore, saying the company had not received a certificate of objection, or NOC, from the government.

“No NOC means breaking the law,” Punjab Provincial Education Minister Murad Raas said in a tweet.

Oxford University press office staff in Lahore declined an interview request.

On Tuesday, the All Pakistan Private Schools Federation, an organization that claims to represent 150,000 schools, launched a documentary entitled “I Am Not Malala” to express their controversial views on Islam, marriage and their pursuit of a Western agenda to highlight.

“Parents do not want their children to follow in Malala’s footsteps, even if she continues to win awards,” said Kashif Mirza, president of the association. “Malala has fallen into the trap of the West and is now working on a Western agenda against Pakistan and Islam.”

The same association previously ran a campaign against Ms. Yousafzai demanding that the government ban her memoirs for what they claimed was offensive to Islam and the “ideology of Pakistan”.

In recent years, as the influence of the Pakistani Taliban and other militant Islamist groups has increased, textbooks and other teaching materials have been scrutinized.

Riaz Shaikh, an academic based in the eastern city of Karachi who was involved in the development of textbooks in Sindh Province, said that in the textbooks Ms. Yousafzai, Mr. Salam, and Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani Christian child activist, who was involved in the campaign against abusive child labor and was murdered at the age of 11. Islamist groups then targeted the textbook authors with death threats.

Dr. Bernadette L. Dean, Dr. Shaikh’s colleague in the group and a well-known educator fled Pakistan in 2015 out of fear for her life.

“Unfortunately, Pakistani society has evolved into hatred, conspiracy theories and politicization of religion,” said Dr. Shaikh. “For this reason, a significant part of the Pakistani population regards Malala and other heroes as their villains.”

Last year, Punjab’s Curriculum and Textbooks Committee banned 100 textbooks in a single day for calling content “anti-Pakistani” and “blasphemous”. One of the banned children was a math textbook for children that had pictures of pigs – pork is forbidden in Islam – to help explain a math problem.

Last year the provincial parliament recommended banning three groundbreaking books on Islam, including “The First Muslim” and “After the Prophet” by British author Lesley Hazleton, and accused them of blasphemy.

Leading human rights groups and liberal politicians have called for the Punjab Provincial Council to withdraw the order to confiscate the textbook containing Ms. Yousafzai’s photos.

The Pakistani Human Rights Commission, an independent civil oversight agency, said Tuesday the raids “marked a new low in the state’s attempts to control information and manipulate public discourse.”

On Wednesday a member of the Pakistani parliament, Sherry Rehman, defended Ms. Yousafzai on the floor of parliament.

“If you can’t see Benazir Bhutto and Malala Yousafzai as your heroes, then only God can help you,” she said, referring to the former prime minister who was killed in a 2007 suicide bombing in Rawalpindi. “Malala faced extremists and got a bullet in return.”

Zia ur-Rehman reported from Karachi, Pakistan, and Emily Schmall from New Delhi.

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Apple removes Fakespot from App Retailer after Amazon complains

The Amazon Shopping App in the Google Play Store on an Android smartphone.

Christoph Dernbach | Image Alliance | Getty Images

Apple removed Fakespot, a popular app for detecting fake product reviews, from its app store after Amazon complained that the app contained misleading information and potential security risks.

The Fakespot app analyzes the credibility of the reviews of an Amazon offer and rates them with grades A to F. Then buyers receive recommendations for products with high customer satisfaction.

Amazon said it reported Fakespot to Apple for investigation after worrying that a redesigned version of the app was confusing consumers by displaying the Amazon website in the app with Fakespot code and content overlaid on top of it. Amazon said it doesn’t allow applications to do this. An Amazon spokesperson claimed, “The app in question provides customers with misleading information about our sellers and their products, harms our sellers’ businesses and creates potential security risks.”

On Friday afternoon, after a review by Apple, the app was no longer available in the App Store.

Misleading or fake user reviews have proven to be a major problem for online retailers, including Amazon. The company recently stepped up its efforts to detect and remove fake reviews. The third-party marketplace, made up of millions of sellers, accounts for more than half of the company’s total revenue, but has become fertile ground for fake reviews, counterfeiting, and unsafe products. Regulators in the US and abroad have taken steps to curb fake reviews on and off Amazon.

As fake reviews spread the internet, third-party apps and websites have sprung up to help shoppers spot them, like Fakespot, ReviewMeta, and ReconBob.

Amazon has reported the well-known Fakespot detector app to Apple for investigation, which led to its removal from the App Store.

Amazon

Apple said in a statement that on June 8th, Amazon launched a dispute with the Fakespot app over intellectual property rights. Apple said it provided steps to Fakespot to keep their app in the store and gave them “plenty of time” to resolve the issue. It then reached out to Fakespot on June 29, weeks before the app was removed from the App Store.

An Apple spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to questions about which App Store guidelines were violated by Fakespot.

But Amazon pointed out two subsections of Apple’s App Store guidelines to CNBC that Fakespot may have violated. A policy states that apps must ensure that they are allowed to use, access, monetize access to, or display content from third parties. Another guideline is that apps shouldn’t contain incorrect information and functionality.

Amazon also claims that Fakespot’s coding technique enables the app to collect and track information from customers. The company made similar claims last January against Honey, a browser extension that allows users to find coupons while shopping online, and warned users that it could be a “security risk”.

Fakespot: “You showed zero evidence”

In an interview, Saoud Khalifah, founder and CEO of Fakespot said he denied Amazon’s claims that the app posed security risks and said that while Fakespot collects some user data, it does not sell it to third parties.

Khalifah added that many apps use the same coding technique called “wrapping” to include a web browser view, such as coupon providers. He said many apps and websites also collect and track user information, including Amazon.

“We don’t steal user information, we’ve never done that before,” said Khalifah. “They showed zero evidence and Apple responded with zero evidence.”

Fakespot released a new version of its app at the end of May. Amazon reported the app to Apple in mid-June, Khalifah said.

Khalifah said he was upset that Apple Fakespot failed to adequately warn that the app would be removed from the App Store or that issues with the app could be fixed.

“Imagine you go to a tenant and say you have to take all your belongings with you, you have to leave immediately. That’s how I feel right now, to be completely honest with you, ”he added.

The Fakespot app will still be available in the Google Play Store for Android devices from Friday evening.

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Haitian Ex-Intelligence Officer Gave Order to Kill President, Colombia Says

Colombian officials on Friday identified a former Haitian intelligence official as the man who ordered two former Colombian soldiers to kill Haiti’s president, Jovanel Moïse, this month.

The ex-intelligence official, Joseph Felix Badio, had first told two Colombian soldiers that they would be “arresting” the president, Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas, the head of Colombia’s national police, said at a news conference.

But a few days before the operation, he said, the plan changed. Mr. Badio told the former soldiers, Duberney Capador and Germán Alejandro Rivera Garcia, that “what they had to do was assassinate the president of Haiti,” General Vargas said.

Colombian officials did not describe the source of the information. Earlier this week Colombian intelligence and foreign ministry officials told The New York Times that they had not been able to interview the Colombian suspects.

Haitian police have issued a “wanted” notice for Mr. Badio’s arrest, accusing him of murder. The Haitian police also accuse him of organizing logistics, procuring vehicles and coordinating the operation of the assassination squad.

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Dow jumps above 35,000 as retail gross sales prime expectations

U.S. stock indexes rose on Friday as the latest retail sales data topped economists’ expectations.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained about 28 points, or 0.08%, jumping above 35,000. The index closed just short of that level on Monday. The S&P 500 added around 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite ticked roughly 0.2% higher.

Retail and food service sales rose 0.6% in June, while economists surveyed by the Dow Jones had expected a 0.4% decline. Excluding autos, those sales jumped 1.3%, beating economists’ estimate of a 0.4% gain.

The retail sales data came after initial jobless claims numbers released Thursday totaled 360,000 for the week ending July 10, its lowest level since March 14, 2020.

“The unexpected rise in retail sales combined with yesterday’s pandemic-era low of jobless claims are two more strong proof points that we are edging closer to a full economic recovery,” said Mike Loewengart, managing director of investment strategy for E*TRADE Capital Management.

Live Nation’s stock rose after Goldman said the stock can rally nearly 40% as concerts return.

Shares of Carnival and Royal Caribbean each edged higher after Canada announced it would allow cruise ships to resume operations in its waters starting Nov. 1, sooner than planned. Previously, the Canadian government extended its cruise ban until the end of February 2022.

The moves in recovery-related stocks came even amid concerns about ultra-infectious variants of the coronavirus. Los Angeles County announced Thursday it would restore an indoor mask mandate, including for fully-vaccinated people, due to a rapid and sustained increase in Covid-19 cases.

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Investors also digested strong earnings results from the first major week of second-quarter reports. Though some of the nation’s largest companies posted healthy profits and revenues amid the economic recovery, the reaction in the stock market has so far been muted.

Morgan Stanley’s second-quarter earnings report, for example, topped analysts’ expectations Thursday, yet its shares closed just 0.18% higher.

For 18 S&P 500 companies that beat analyst estimates for second-quarter earnings this week, the average earnings-per-share result was 18% higher than expected. But those companies saw their shares fall 0.58% on average after reporting.

The soft moves in reaction to corporate earnings have contributed to a lackluster week for the S&P 500, which dipped 0.2% on the week as of Thursday’s close.

Much of the market’s upward pressure over the last week has come from a handful of mega-cap internet and communications stocks. Apple, Netflix, Google-parent Alphabet and Microsoft are all up this week.

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Tons of Lacking and Scores Useless as Raging Floods Strike Western Europe

BERLIN – After a day of frantic rescue efforts and orders to evacuate cities that were quickly filling with water released from violent storms, German authorities said late Thursday that after confirming numerous deaths, they were unable, at least 1,300 people to explain.

That staggering number was announced after rapidly flowing water from swollen rivers poured through towns and villages in two western German states, where news outlets said more than 80 people had died and other fatalities were expected in the hardest-hit regions.

With communication severely hampered, the authorities hoped the missing people would be safe, if out of reach. But the storms and floods have already proven deadly.

At least 11 other people are believed to have died in Belgium, according to the authorities, who also ordered residents of downtown Liege to evacuate when the Meuse, which flows through the center, overflowed.

The storms and the resulting floods have also struck the neighboring countries of Switzerland, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, as a slowly moving weather system threatened to bring even more rain to the flooded region overnight and until Friday.

The devastation caused by the storm came just days after the European Union announced an ambitious plan to move away from fossil fuels over the next nine years in order to make the 27-country bloc climate-neutral by 2050. Early on, politicians drew parallels between floods and the effects of climate change.

But the immediate focus on Thursday remained the rescue effort, with hundreds of firefighters, rescue workers and soldiers working to rescue people from the upper floors and roofs of their homes, filling sandbags to contain rising waters and looking for missing people.

One of the hardest hit regions was the German district of Ahrweiler, where flash floods flooded the village of Schuld, washed away six houses and left several more shortly before the collapse. At least 50 people died in the Ahrweiler district, the police said.

With so many missing, the district authority said late Thursday that the death toll is expected to rise. “In view of the complexity of the amount of damage, a final assessment of the situation is currently not possible,” it said in a press release.

“We do not have exact death numbers, but we can say that we have many people who fell victim to this flood,” said Armin Laschet, the governor of North Rhine-Westphalia, one of the most severely affected federal states in Germany.

“Many people lost everything they owned after the mud flowed into their homes,” said Laschet, who will replace Angela Merkel as Chancellor in the federal elections on September 26th.

The floods in North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate were among the worst in decades, after days of continuous rain sank more water than the soil and sewer system could absorb.

Police asked people to upload pictures of the floods to help them find it.

The police in North Rhine-Westphalia reported at least 30 deaths, with at least 15 people being known in the Euskirchen district south of Düsseldorf. Many others were still saved, although some villages remained inaccessible.

Ms. Merkel, who was visiting Washington on Thursday, expressed her condolences to the missing and thanked the thousands of helpers. She has promised the federal government to support the affected regions.

“Whatever is possible, we will do wherever we can,” she said, adding that Germany had received offers of help from its European partners.

Hundreds of firefighters worked all night to evacuate the stranded people. In Altena, North Rhine-Westphalia, two firefighters were killed while rescuing people, the police said.

“The water still flows knee-high through the streets, parked cars are thrown to the side, garbage and rubble pile up on the sides,” said Alexander Bange, the district spokesman for the Märkisches Land North Rhine-Westphalia news agency DPA

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“It’s really very depressing here,” he said.

Dozens of communities remained without electricity, while some villages were completely cut off, the police said. Telephone and cellular networks were also down, making it difficult for the authorities to track down the missing persons.

Belgium and the Netherlands also saw significant flooding when the weather system took hold in the region. According to the public broadcaster RTBF, at least two people were killed in the floods in the province of Liège in Belgium.

As the Meuse continued to reach dangerous proportions, the regional authorities asked the people of the city to evacuate and, if this was not possible, to take shelter on the upper floors of the buildings. All shops were closed and tourists were advised to leave.

The Belgian Defense Force said it was using helicopters and personnel to help with rescue and salvage work, while reports say the river is expected to rise several meters and endanger a dam.

In the Netherlands, according to the Dutch news agency NU.nl, soldiers were sent to the province of Limburg for evacuation, where at least one nursing home had to be evacuated.

Intense rain in Switzerland caused the country’s weather service to warn on Thursday that the floods would worsen in the coming days. On Lake Biel, Lake Thun and Lake Lucerne there is a high risk of flooding and the potential for landslides has been pointed out.

The chairman of Friends of the Earth Germany in North Rhine-Westphalia combined the severe flooding in the region with a failed policy of the state legislature. The effects of climate change are one of the issues that were hotly debated in Germany ahead of the September elections, in which the Greens are running for second place behind the conservative Christian Democrats led by Mr Laschet.

“The catastrophic consequences of the heavy rainfalls of the last few days are mostly homemade,” said Holger Sticht, who heads the regional chapter and made lawmakers and industry responsible for building in floodplains and forests. “We urgently need to change course.”

Megan Specia contributed to the coverage.

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Elon Musk admits Tesla’s Cybertruck might flop

Tesla CEO Elon Musk unveils the Cybertruck at the TeslaDesign Studio in Hawthorne, California. The cracked window glass occurred during a demonstration of the strength of the glass.

Robert Hanashiro | USA TODAY | Reuters

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, said in an exchange with fans on Twitter on Thursday that there is “always a chance” that his company’s upcoming cybertruck will “flop”. Nonetheless, Musk plans to keep the “production design” of the Cybertruck almost exactly the same as his show car – a giant metal trapeze.

But he also said that he “doesn’t care” about the risk of the Cybertruck flopping because he personally loves the design.

He wrote, “To be honest, there is always some chance that Cybertruck will flop because it’s so different from anything. I don’t care. I love it so much, even when others don’t. See other trucks looks like copies of the same thing, but Cybertruck looks like it was made from the future by aliens. “

The launch event of the Cybertruck 2019 caused a stir because of the unusual design of the vehicle and because Musk asked Tesla design manager Franz von Holzhausen to try and smash the vehicle’s windows, which he did. Von Holzhausen threw a metal ball against one of the windows and surprised Musk when the glass broke even though it stayed in place.

Despite the start-up snafu and the uncertainty of when Tesla can begin delivering the Cybertruck, the $ 100 orders went off. Musk boasted that the company saw 250,000 within about a week of the Cybertruck’s debut.

In September, at Tesla’s annual shareholders meeting and Battery Day, Musk announced that Tesla had received so many Cybertruck orders that the company stopped counting. “The orders are gigantic,” he said, “… well over half a million orders. I think maybe six hundred thousand – it’s a lot, really.

That was before competitors unveiled their plans for more traditional battery-powered trucks like the Ford F-150 Lightning and the GMC Hummer EV.

Musk also said Thursday that Tesla has no plans to put door handles on the Cybertruck without indicating whether such a vehicle could meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards in the United States. He also reminded fans that Tesla decided to add everything from a four-wheel steering system to the handsome Cybertruck that should allow it to move diagonally in a straight line and get in and out of tight spaces.

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He wrote: “Ultimately we left the production design almost exactly like the show car. Just a few tweaks here and there to make it a little better. No door handles. The car recognizes you and opens the door. It’s amazing all of that steer four wheels. ” nimble handling & tight corners! “

The all-wheel steering, if it comes through as promised, would make the Cybertruck more directly competitive with the GMC Hummer EV, which already had a “crab mode” feature.

Musk didn’t comment on the Tesla Cyberquad, an ATV product that was supposed to accompany the cybertruck.

In the company’s investor presentation in the first quarter, Tesla described the Cybertruck as “in development”. The company is expected to release a progress update and second quarter results on July 26th.

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World News

Peter de Vries, Dutch Crime Reporter, Dies After Being Shot

AMSTERDAM — A Dutch crime reporter who was shot in the head in a brazen attack in central Amsterdam last week as he was leaving a television studio, died of his wounds on Thursday, his family said in a statement. The reporter, Peter R. de Vries, was 64.

“Peter has fought until the end, but has been unable to win this battle,” the statement, carried by the Dutch broadcast news service RTL Nieuws, said. “We are indescribably proud of him and at the same time inconsolable.”

Mr. de Vries, a well-known public figure in the Netherlands, was shot on the evening of July 6 by an unknown assailant. The attack led to broad condemnation in the country, where drug related crime and shootings have steadily increased over the last decade. European leaders have condemned the shooting, which raised questions about protections for journalists.

The police arrested two men last week in connection with the attack after stopping them in a car on a nearby highway. The police identified the suspects as a 35-year-old Polish citizen and a 21-year-old from Rotterdam. The police have said they believe the younger man was the gunman

Both suspects appeared in court in Amsterdam on Friday and they remain in custody.

Ferd Grapperhaus, the Dutch justice minister, called Mr. de Vries a “brave man” and said his death was “nothing less than a direct attack on our society.”

Mr. de Vries, who had hosted a televised crime show for nearly two decades and has long been known in the Netherlands for solving cold cases, had said he regularly received death threats.

The television show on which Mr. de Vries appeared before he was shot last week did not air last Friday, after threats from criminals who said they wanted to target the studio using automatic weapons or a rocket launcher, according to Dutch news media. The show has resumed its daily episodes, but will be recorded elsewhere, the network reported.

Mr. de Vries began his journalism career in 1978 at De Telegraaf, a popular Dutch newspaper. A decade later, he published a book on the kidnapping of the beer magnate Freddy Heineken. He covered many high-profile cases, including the 2005 disappearance of an Alabama teenager, Natalee Holloway, in Aruba, a Caribbean island that is part of the Netherlands; and a decades-long investigation into the rape and murder of an 11-year-old boy, Nicky Verstappen.

His television show, “Peter R. de Vries, Crime Reporter,” which began in 1995 and aired for 17 years, was his real breakthrough.

Most recently, Mr. de Vries had set up a foundation in the hopes of solving the 1993 disappearance of Tanja Groen, a young woman who vanished on her way home from a party. On Tuesday, Dutch public television aired a special program where viewers donated hundreds of thousands of euros to the cause.

Mr. de Vries, who was also the director of a law office, had been an adviser over the past year to a key witness in a trial over killings said to have been ordered by a criminal organization. The main defendant in the case, Ridouan Taghi, who is accused of leading the organization, was arrested in Dubai in 2019.

Derk Wiersum, a lawyer for the same key witness in that trial, was killed in Amsterdam in 2019. The witness’s brother was shot dead in 2018.

Amsterdam and other Dutch cities have been the scene of several shootings over the past decade in which criminals have targeted either each other or those interfering in their crimes. The nearby port of Rotterdam is one of the key gateways for importing cocaine into Europe, and the country is a leader in the illegal production of amphetamines and crystal meth.