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Politics

Lukoil Chairman Ravil Maganov is the eighth Russian vitality govt to die all of the sudden this yr

Russian President Vladimir Putin stands next to first executive vice president of oil producer Lukoil Ravil Maganov after awarding him with the Order of Alexander Nevsky during an awards ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia November 21, 2019.

Mikhail Klimentyev | Kremlin | Sputnik | via Reuters

WASHINGTON – The death of Ravil Maganov, chairman of Russian oil giant Lukoil, on Thursday in a Moscow hospital appears to be the eighth time this year that a Russian energy executive has died suddenly and under unusual circumstances.

Maganov died after falling from a window at the capital’s Central Clinical Hospital, according to Russia’s state-sponsored Interfax news agency. The circumstances of Maganov’s death were confirmed by Reuters, citing two anonymous sources. The oil company and its CEO had criticized the war in Ukraine and expressed their disapproval in a March 3 statement.

But Lukoil, the company Maganov helped build, said in a press statement the 67-year-old “died after a serious illness”. The Russian embassy in Washington did not respond to a request from CNBC for official comment.

The circumstances surrounding Maganov’s sudden death have attracted international attention, in part because seven other senior Russian energy executives have died untimely since January, according to reports from Russian and international news outlets.

Below is a list of these cases in chronological order.

  • In late January, Leonid Shulman, a top executive at Russian natural gas giant Gazprom, was found dead in the bathroom of a cottage in the village of Leninsky. The Russian media group RBC reported on his death but gave no cause.
  • On February 25, another Gazprom executive, Alexander Tyulakov, was found dead in the same village as Shulman, this time in a garage. According to Russian media outlet Novaya Gazeta, investigators found a note near Tyulakov’s body.
  • On February 28, three days after Tyulakov’s death, a Russian oil and gas billionaire living in England, Mikhail Watford, was found hanged in the garage of his country house. Investigators at the time reportedly said Watford’s death was “unexplained” but did not appear suspicious.
  • On April 18, a former vice president of Gazprombank, Vladislav Avayev, was found dead in his apartment in Moscow along with his wife and daughter, who also died. Authorities were treating the case as a murder-suicide, Radio Free Europe reported at the time. Gazprombank is Russia’s third largest bank and has close ties to the energy sector.
  • On April 19, a former deputy chairman of Novatek, Russia’s largest liquefied natural gas producer, was found dead in a holiday home in Spain. Like Avayev in Moscow, Sergei Protosenya was found with his wife and daughter, who were also deceased. And like Avayev said, police investigating the scene believed it was a homicide-suicide, a theory that Avayev’s surviving son has publicly denied.
  • In May, the body of billionaire and former Lukoil manager Alexander Subbotin was discovered in the basement of a country house in the Moscow region. The room where Subbotin died was allegedly used for “Jamaican voodoo rituals,” the Russian state media company TASS reported, citing local authorities.
  • In July, Yury Voronov, the CEO and founder of a shipping company servicing Gazprom’s Arctic projects, was found dead from an apparent gunshot wound in a swimming pool at his home in Leninsky, the same elite St. Petersburg condominium where Shulman and Tyulakov died earlier in the year.

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World News

Algerian Troopers Die Combating Wildfires, President Says

ALGIERS, Algeria – At least 25 Algerian soldiers were killed to save residents from forest fires that devastate mountain forests and villages east of the capital, the president said Tuesday evening as the civilian death toll rose to at least 17 from the fires.

President Abdelmadjid Tebboune tweeted that the soldiers had saved 100 people from the fires in two areas of Kabyle, the region where the Berbers of the North African nation live. Eleven other soldiers were burned while fighting the fires, four of them seriously, the Ministry of Defense said.

Prime Minister Aïmene Benabderrahmane later said on state television that 17 civilians lost their lives, bringing the total death toll to 42. He didn’t make any details.

The Kabyle region, about 60 miles east of Algeria’s capital, Algiers, is littered with inaccessible villages. Some villagers fled, others tried to hold back the flames themselves with buckets, branches and rudimentary tools. There are no water dumping planes in the region.

The prime minister told state television that initial reports from security services showed that the fires in Kabyle were “highly synchronized”, adding that this “leads one to believe that it is criminal activity”. Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud, who had traveled to Kabyle, also blamed arson for the fires.

No details were immediately released to explain the high death toll in the military.

Dozens of fires broke out in Kabyle and elsewhere on Monday, and the Algerian authorities sent the army to help citizens fight the fires and evacuate. A 92-year-old woman who lives in the Kabyle mountain village of Ait Saada said the scene on Monday night looked like “the end of the world”.

“We were scared,” Fatima Aoudia told The Associated Press. “The entire hill has been turned into a huge flame.”

Climate scientists say there is little doubt that the burning of coal, oil and natural gas causes climate change to cause extreme events such as heat waves, droughts, forest fires, floods and storms. Worsening drought and heat, both related to climate change, are leading to forest fires in the American west and Russia’s northern region of Siberia. Extreme heat is also fueling the massive fires in Greece and Turkey.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Journey or Die’ Evaluation: Killing for Love

The long take that opens “Ride or Die” could be reminiscent of the steadicam take in “Goodfellas”, if not the unsettling mood it evokes. On a clear evening in Tokyo, Rei (Kiko Mizuhara) enters an underground club and buys a stranger a shot of tequila. The excitement rises when Rei and the man retreat to his apartment and start having sex. Finally, the tension breaks – not with the orgasm, but with the gruesome murder, when Rei slits the man’s throat.

Based on a Japanese manga series, “Ride or Die” (on Netflix) follows the complicated relationship between two women: Rei, a reserved doctor, and her long-time crush, Nanae (Honami Sato). We learn that the stranger at the bar was Nanae’s husband, a wealthy businessman who physically abused her. When Nanae asked Rei to kill him, Rei was obliged out of love.

The rest of this long, often enigmatic film unfolds as a fleeting road movie. After the murder, Rei and Nanae flee to the country. They visit Nanae’s orphanage and protect themselves from the rain in a train depot. Despite the ferocious efforts Rei goes to for Nanae, the duo did not speak in a decade prior to the murder. Your outlier also serves as a reunion trip.

Director Ryuichi Hiroki carefully steps out of the couple’s flourishing alliance. Meals are times of laughter and bonding, while occasional recaps of the women’s prep school days provide a delicate backstory of their union. The film gracefully captures the rhythm of intimacy as it deepens faster in stolen time.

But even if they develop a relationship, the women themselves remain ciphers. We are asked to accept that Rei committed murder out of romantic enthusiasm, but her victim is too great to empathize with. Nanae’s feelings are dark too – what she wants out of their time together seems to change on a whim. This blurring of character never becomes clearer and makes “Ride or Die” an experience as frustrating as it is sentimental.

drive or die
Not rated. In Japanese with subtitles. Running time: 2 hours 22 minutes. Watch on Netflix.

Categories
World News

U.S. attempting to contact Aung San Suu Kyi after civilians die in navy custody

Myanmar State Councilor Aung San Suu Kyi will watch her hearing on the Rohingya genocide case at the United Nations International Court of Justice on December 11, 2019 in the Peace Palace of The Hague on the second day of her hearing on the Rohingya genocide case.

Koen Van Weel | AFP | Getty Images

The US is still working to contact Aung San Suu Kyi and other civilian inmates in Myanmar, the State Department said Friday after two officials from its National League for Democracy party died in military custody last week.

Suu Kyi was Myanmar’s state advisor, the civilian head of government, before she was ousted from power and arrested by the military in a coup on February 1. Her NLD party won an all-out victory in the general election last year that led the military to accuse fraud and oust them from power.

“We have a pending request to contact the State Council, which is of course unjustly arrested by the military at the moment,” State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters during a press conference on Friday.

“We have continuously inquired about their health and safety, as well as the health and safety of all detained leaders and civil society actors, and are working through appropriate channels to contact the detainees,” Price said.

The US has tried to contact Suu Kyi since the coup in February but has been turned away by the military, which has increasingly used violence against protesters in recent weeks.

There are growing concerns about the well-being of Suu Kyi and other detainees after two members of her party died last week after security forces arrested them. Suu Kyi was last seen at a court hearing on March 1st. It is unclear where she is being held. There were reports held at their home before they were taken to an undisclosed location.

More than 70 Burmese civilians have been killed and more than 2,000 people have been arrested, charged or convicted by the military regime since the coup. This is based on data compiled by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners.

Last week the US Department of Commerce imposed export controls on the Myanmar Defense and Interior Departments and two military-affiliated companies. Washington has threatened further sanctions against the military regime if it does not stop operations.

The US has also urged China to use its leverage over Myanmar to bring the democratically elected government back to power. Beijing blocked a UN Security Council resolution in February condemning the coup. However, China backed a Security Council statement this week condemning the violence against demonstrators and expressing support for the democratic transition in Myanmar.

The president’s statement on Wednesday is a step under a resolution but still becomes part of the United Nations’ permanent record. The UN Security Council can impose sanctions, but such a measure would likely fail against the Chinese and Russian opposition.

US and Chinese officials meet in Anchorage, Alaska on March 18 to discuss a wide range of topics. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken told Congress this week that future meetings with Chinese officials would only take place if concrete progress was made on issues affecting Washington.

“There are currently no plans for a number of follow-up contracts. These commitments, if they are to follow, must really be based on the thesis that we are seeing tangible progress and tangible results with China on issues of concern for us,” said Blinken.

Categories
Politics

Republican Rep. Ron Wright of Texas is first sitting member of Congress to die of Covid

Elected Ron Wright, R-Texas Rep. Participates in a welcome meeting for new members at the Capitol Visitor Center on November 15, 2018.

Tom Williams | CQ Appeal, Inc. | Getty Images

Texas Republican MP Ron Wright died weeks after contracting Covid-19, his office said Monday. He was 67 years old.

Wright, who took office in 2019, died on Sunday. He had undergone treatment for lung cancer after it was diagnosed in 2018.

He and his wife Susan were hospitalized in Dallas for two weeks before the Congressman died fighting the disease. The congressman, whose Arlington district was a part, announced that he tested positive for Covid-19 on Jan. 21.

“As friends, family and many of his constituents will know, Ron kept his quick wit and optimism to the end,” said Wright’s office. “Despite years of painful, sometimes debilitating cancer treatment, Ron never lacked the desire to get up and go to work, motivate those around him, or give fatherly advice.”

Wright is the first seated member of Congress to die after contracting Covid. Luke Letlow, a Louisiana Republican who was elected to the House of Representatives in November, died of complications from Covid-19 a month later before taking office.

According to GovTrack, at least 71 officials and senators have been diagnosed with Covid. Nationwide, more than 27 million people have contracted the disease and killed more than 463,000 Americans.

Texas will eventually hold a special election to elect Wright’s successor in the Texas 6th Ward, which is in Tarrant County outside of Dallas.

Wright’s death means Democrats now have an 11-seat advantage in the house. There are four vacancies in the 435-person home, including Letlow’s 5th Ward in Louisiana.

Wright’s final vote was against the charges against former President Donald Trump for provoking the January 6 uprising in the U.S. Capitol, the House employee said. He also voted to object to the election count in Pennsylvania and Arizona last month.

Categories
Health

‘It’s Numbing’: 9 Retired Nuns in Michigan Die of Covid-19

The religious sisters, who were retired at the Dominican Life Center in Michigan, followed strict rules to avoid a coronavirus outbreak: they were kept in isolation, visitors were banned, and masks were required from everyone on campus.

But months after it was held in check, it found its way in.

On Friday, the Adrian Dominican Sisters said nine sisters died from complications from Covid-19 on the Adrian campus, about 75 miles southwest of Detroit, in January.

“It’s numbing,” said Sister Patricia Siemen, head of the order. “We had six women die in 48 hours.”

The death of the sisters in Michigan contributed to a well-known trend in the spread of the virus as it destroys religious communities by infecting retired, aging populations of sisters and nuns who had tacitly dedicated their lives to others.

Now some of these sisters have come out into the open as details of their names, ages, and lifetimes are highlighted as part of the national discourse about Americans lost to the coronavirus.

“It’s a moment of reckoning with the place they now have in our culture,” said Kathleen Holscher, a professor who holds the Endowed Chair of Roman Catholic Studies at the University of New Mexico. “Fifty or 60 years ago you were the face of American Catholicism, in schools and in hospitals.”

Some of the women who died on the Adrian Dominican Sisters campus were nurses or teachers. Others had devoted decades of their lives to worship.

“Americans are being reminded that they are older and are still there,” said Dr. Holscher. “But now they live in these communal situations and take care of each other.”

Accounting for deaths in the nation’s religious communities began in the first half of 2020 as the country took note of the fatal transmission of the virus and the lives associated with it.

Last April, May and June 13 Felician sisters died of Covid-19 at the presentation of the Convent of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Michigan. They pursued teaching, pastoral care and prayer service.

In a suburb of Milwaukee, at least five sisters died at the Convent of Our Lady of the Angels as of April last year. They worked in parishes, schools and universities, taught English and music, and served the elderly and the poor.

In December, eight Roman Catholic sisters, educators, music teachers and social activists died of Covid-19-related diseases in a Wisconsin old people’s home in Notre Dame by Elm Grove, near Milwaukee.

“Nuns were the real grassroots workers in the Church,” said Jack Downey, professor of Catholic studies at the University of Rochester. “It is really the nuns that people interact with on a daily basis. You made Catholic life in the United States possible. “

Updated

Jan. 29, 2021, 4:46 p.m. ET

“This is how communities of nuns that go this way become particularly tragic,” he added.

While deaths have increased, losses have placed a focus on the future of these communities in a country where its population is not only shrinking but aging rapidly.

Michael Pasquier, a professor of religious studies and history at Louisiana State University, said interest in institutional religious life had waned since the 1960s, an era of cultural change that brought more women into the workplace. There are now about 40,000 Roman Catholic nuns or sisters in the country – mostly in the mid to late 1970s and older – compared to about 160,000 in the 1970s, he said.

The death toll from the virus, he said, “reminds us all that the makeup and face of Catholic sisters today are old.”

The losses have underscored the virus’ tendency to hunt down older adults, people with underlying medical conditions, and places where people are in close contact, such as nursing homes, which are particularly hard hit by the pandemic.

Dr. Holscher said the “poignant or tragic” part of the nuns’ deaths was that, unlike nursing homes, women forego a traditional family structure when entering religious life.

“They have no children, spouses or close family members,” she said. “And they signed up to take care of each other.”

Many of the aging religious orders took precautions in early 2020 to protect their communities. At Elm Grove, the nuns followed federal guidelines on masks and social distancing, as well as staggered meal times in the communal dining room.

The Dominican sisters imposed similar restrictions, including weekly tests for staff and sisters, cancellation of meals and personal prayers, and permission for the sisters to leave for medical appointments only.

“We worked so hard to keep it in check because when it gets into a building like a nursing home you are really pretty helpless,” said Sister Siemen. “The residents are already so vulnerable.”

However, on Jan. 14, the order announced that there had been an outbreak of nurses and workers at the Dominican Life Center, a qualified care center that had had a Covid-19 unit in place for months and not in use.

The first positive test took place on December 20th and several sisters died within weeks, some within days of each other.

Sister Jeannine Therese McGorray, 86, died on January 11 and Sister Esther Ortega, 86, died on January 14. Sister Dorothea Gramlich, 81, died on January 21.

Three sisters died on January 22nd: Sister Ann Rena Shinkey, 87; Sister Mary Lisa Rieman, 79; and Sister Charlotte Francis Moser, 86. The next day, Sister Mary Irene Wischmeyer, 94, and Sister Margaret Ann Swallow, 97, died. The last death was this week: Sister Helen Laier, 88, died Tuesday.

Sister Siemen said that the Order is used to mourning their sisters due to its aging population, but this series of losses has given them a sense of “solidarity with the hundreds of thousands of families who have lost loved ones to Covid. ”

Even so, she said that her faith helps them get through.

“There is obviously grief,” said Sister Siemen, “but as women of faith we know that going through this door of death is not the last for us.”

Categories
Business

FDA Points Sportmix Recall After 28 Canines Die

A pet food company is recalling various types of its Sportmix-branded dry dog ​​and cat food after 28 dogs died and eight more became ill, possibly due to ingestion of deadly amounts of a toxin produced by mold.

Midwestern Pet Foods Inc. of Evansville, Indiana, announced Wednesday the voluntary recall of some of its Sports Mix products, which are sold online and in retail stores nationwide, after tests showed that aflatoxin toxin levels exceeded acceptable levels.

Aflatoxin is made by the mold Aspergillus flavus, which can grow on corn and grains that are used as ingredients in pet foods, according to the FDA. In high concentrations, the toxin can cause pets to get sick or die, or cause liver damage with no symptoms, the department said. The toxin could still be present even if no mold was visible.

“Pets are very susceptible to aflatoxin poisoning because, unlike people who have varied diets, pets generally eat the same food continuously for extended periods of time,” said the FDA. “When a pet’s food contains aflatoxin, the toxin can build up in the pet’s system if they continue to eat the same food.”

Midwestern Pet Foods responded to a request for comment Thursday, referring to the company’s recall announcement that had been shared by the FDA

No illnesses in cats or humans had been reported as of Wednesday. The FDA said it is “doing follow-up work at the manufacturing facility” where the food is made and warned that the number of cases and the scope of the recall could increase. Veterinarians have been asked to report new cases, especially those confirmed by diagnostic tests.

The recall includes Sportmix Energy Plus in 50- and 44-pound bags; Sports Mix Premium High Energy in 50- and 44-pound bags; and Sportmix Original Cat in 31- and 15-pound bags. Retailers have been advised not to sell or donate the affected pet foods, which have an expiration date of March 2-3, 2022.

Pets with aflatoxin poisoning may have symptoms such as sluggishness, loss of appetite, vomiting, diarrhea, or jaundice – a yellow color in their eyes, gums, or skin due to liver damage. People whose pets have eaten the recalled food should stop feeding them and see a veterinarian, especially if their pets have symptoms of the disease, the FDA said.

The FDA also suggested using bleach to disinfect bowls, scoops, and storage containers for pet food when the recalled food was eaten.

There is no evidence that pet owners handling aflatoxin are at risk of poisoning. However, the FDA suggested washing your hands after handling your pet’s food.