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Entertainment

LeBron James’s Household Picture Shoot For Self-importance Truthful

Can you believe LeBron James and his beautiful family just got their first ever magazine photoshoot? The Los Angeles Laker; his wife Savannah; sons Bronny and Bryce; and daughter Zhuri all posed together for a lavish “photo extravaganza” at their Los Angeles home for Vanity Fair’s October 2022 issue just ahead of LeBron’s 20th NBA season. They all gathered for the fun family event in what Savannah described to the outlet as a “transitional moment” for her and her husband’s three children.

Bronny, the couple’s oldest and current guardian for their high school basketball team in Sierra Canyon, turns 18 next month and “is coming to a place where he can start making decisions about his career and where he wants to go in his life,” according to the statement his statement mother. Vanity Fair reports that LeBron intends for the father-son duo to one day play together in the NBA, a hope the sports media has raved about for years. LeBron and Savannah’s youngest, 7-year-old Zhuri, is also keeping busy with her YouTube lifestyle show called “All Things Zhuri” (and her 205,000 YouTube subscribers). Meanwhile, 15-year-old Bryce, whom Savannah calls “the mystery of the family,” is another potential basketball teen who “could go in any direction.”

LeBron and Savannah have now been together for 20 years, and the high school sweethearts tied the knot in September 2013 before starting their family. Though the James clan has shared many happy moments together over the years, her new profile shows Savannah’s hope in their momentum as they all continue to grow.

“Since LeBron is her dad, it’s just automatic,” she told Vanity Fair of her kids’ celebrity status. “It’s not something we pushed on them or told them they had to do or anything like that. It just happened.” She also said of the family’s “quiet dynamic” at home, “Everything isn’t for everyone,” adding that she wanted her photoshoot to “reflect the bonds that underlie the family’s influence lying” and “showing the world its center of gravity”. “Excuse my language, but we are a crazy family.”

On September 13, LeBron and Savannah celebrated the release of their photoshoot by sharing their stylish photos on Instagram. “There’s also King’s and Queen’s/Royalty in America and I hope I can be one of those who show that on a daily basis🤴🏾👸🏾🤴🏾🤴🏾👸🏾 James Gang at home!!!” the former captioned his post. “I love our family so damn much!!!!! @mrs_savannahrj @bronny @_justbryce @allthingszhuri 🤎🤎🤎🤎 Many thanks to @gigilaub and the entire @vanityfair team for this beautiful route. 🙏🏾 👑 #ThekidsfromAKRON #BlackExcellence✊🏾 .”

In her own post, Savannah wrote, “Wow!! was great, but to see us in this light blows my mind! 🤯 Representation matters🤎.”

Categories
Politics

Pete and Chasten Buttigieg Welcome 2 Kids to Their Household

Pete Buttigieg, the Secretary of Transportation, said Saturday that he and his husband Chasten are now the parents of two children, making him the first openly gay cabinet secretary to become a parent during his tenure.

“We are delighted to have Penelope Rose and Joseph August Buttigieg in our family,” said Mr Buttigieg, 39, in a statement on social media, sharing a photo of his daughter and son for the first time since the announcement last month become parents.

In the picture, the couple, sitting on a hospital bed, are smiling while each cradles a newborn baby. The Buttigieges did not respond to a call asking for comment.

Mr Buttigieg surfaced in national politics when he ran the 2019 presidential election as Mayor of South Bend, Indiana. That year, Mr. Buttigieg and Chasten, 32, moved to Washington after Mr. Buttigieg became Secretary of Transportation, making him the first openly gay cabinet member to be ratified by the Senate. He is also the youngest member of President Biden’s cabinet.

Mr. Buttigieg and Chasten, a former middle school teacher, married in 2018. Since Mr. Buttigieg stepped into the national spotlight, they have tried many times to turn the perception of gay relationships upside down.

“People are used to politics being different, and you’re here to make sure it can be different,” Chasten said in an interview with the New York Times earlier this year.

The couple had been considering adopting in the past few months. Chasten, who penned a memoir about growing up gay in the Midwest in June, recently told USA Today that the couple were in the process of raising a family.

“We have quite a few friends in our circle who have done this, so we’ve just had a lot of conversations with friends trying to figure out what works for us,” he said.

After the couple stated last month they were completing the parenting process, activists said the Buttigieges’ announcement could change assumptions about gay fatherhood.

“As parents, you will now put a national spotlight on LGBTQ families who are often faced with daunting challenges due to outdated guidelines that define families,” said Annise Parker, president of the Victory Institute, an organization that prepares LGBTQ people Run for political office, it said in a statement.

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Entertainment

Sean Penn and Dylan Penn Make ‘Flag Day’ a Household Affair

MALIBU, Calif. — Sure, Sean Penn has two Oscars. But at home, his children Dylan Frances Penn and Hopper Jack Penn wanted to pelt him with tomatoes.

“I tell jokes terribly,” Sean admitted. “They always tell me, ‘You probably should have stopped there.’”

“As you do with your dad,” Dylan added, rolling her eyes affectionately. Despite her father’s failings as a stand-up comic, she trusts him as the director who could kick-start her acting career — if she wants one. “Flag Day,” which premiered in competition at Cannes and is in theaters Aug. 20, stars the two in an adaptation of the journalist Jennifer Vogel’s memoir, “Flim-Flam Man,” about her shaky young adulthood in the orbit of her charismatic con man father, who died following a high-speed police pursuit.

Sean handed Dylan the book when she was a teenager. She passed. Now 30, she took nearly 15 more years to agree to make the film, long enough for her 61-year-old father, Sean, to come around himself to doing double-duty as director and leading man, the first time he’s tried to do both. “I don’t think stereophonically,” Sean said.

He had an easier time convincing his son, Hopper, to sign on to a small role as Vogel’s brother.

“He just asked me to play Nick and that was that,” Hopper said by email.

Sean and Dylan were sitting in their front yard in the shade of an Airstream trailer named Las Vegas, in honor of Sean’s intended elopement to Leila George. (Because of the pandemic, the couple was instead married by a county commissioner over Zoom last summer as Sean’s nonprofit CORE opened a Covid-19 testing site at Dodger Stadium that has since evolved into a fleet of mobile vaccination units.)

Alongside three large dogs continually changing their mind about where to nap, the two talked over each other, and indulgently allowed themselves to be interrupted, as they hashed out their maturing relationship. “I know what the stamps are in her passport — and she knows mine,” Sean said. “And it was thrilling that we were able to transfer it to a movie.” These are edited excerpts from the conversation.

This is a film about finding your own identity apart from your parents. Dylan, you avoided acting. You worked at an ad agency, you helped edit scripts, you delivered pizzas — how were your tips?

DYLAN PENN Terrible.

SEAN PENN That terrified me. All those frat houses around U.C.L.A.

DYLAN I started modeling like six months into being a pizza delivery girl. I would work at night doing pizza deliveries, but during the day, I was doing full hair and makeup for a shoot. So I would show up to these frat houses and they’re like, “Oh, did someone order a stripper?” Nope! Just a pizza. I always thought I would be in the film industry, but I expected to be behind the camera. When I was, like 15, 16, the first time you came to me with this project, I just felt like it was a really silly thing to do.

Acting?

DYLAN Adults dressing up as different people. The real reason that I got into acting in the first place was because I told my parents [her mother is the actor Robin Wright] I wanted to direct eventually, and both of them told me that I should know what it’s like to be an actor before I direct so that I know how to direct an actor.

Was this film always going to be the two of you?

SEAN I was going to be involved in it first as an actor. She didn’t feel ready for it. And then when it came back around, it came to me as a director. So then I was just going to direct it. And then we got into a bind about a month out from shooting, and I had to just jump in and I’m so glad that I did.

DYLAN It was a real shock because we’ve never worked together. The idea of him directing me was already like a big undertaking. The idea of being so vulnerable with your own family in front of 40, 50 crew members is daunting.

SEAN Your dirty laundry is going to be aired on a daily basis. I don’t mean your family history dirty laundry, but I mean that day’s emotional interactions with each other. But on the upside, I’ve never been so excited on any movie set as when I was in a scene with her, or just watching her kill it. In particular, the thing that all actors say, but very few do, is that listening is everything. She listens in a way that I love watching because she doesn’t tell you what she’s thinking. I like putting the camera close on her because she’s not going to wink at you.

What about Sean as a director makes him unique?

DYLAN His vision is so fully realized ahead of time. Even working in a space where, financially, it was a bit of a constraint, there was no limit to making that vision become a reality. A prop, a location, my hair. Literally, the opening where Regina King and I had a scene together. I walked in and he was like, “You would not be wearing mascara.” And I remember being so pissed. It was a fight for 10 minutes to take the mascara off.

SEAN It was a two-and-a-half-hour standoff.

DYLAN I was wrong. But I’m stubborn and it was a fight.

SEAN I will just say on your behalf, a lot of times where she had a different view, more often than not, I came around to thinking that she had the right idea. So I would be very interested in seeing the things that she directs.

Acting dynasties go back to the Barrymores. But it feels like your family is shaping a directing dynasty. Dylan, both of your parents released films in the last year that they directed, and Sean, your father, Leo Penn, was a director.

SEAN I spent a lot of time with him as a kid on sets. TV one-hour dramas. He was much more patient. A gentler sort. But I’m sure that a lot of my general sense of what a director’s job is comes from him.

And he directed you in “Little House on the Prairie”?

SEAN That was summer money as an extra as a kid. I didn’t think I wanted to get involved in film until senior year of high school.

And “Judgment in Berlin” [a 1988 film that featured Sean as a trial witness].

SEAN That was a great experience. We talk about in this story, how much of your parents do you really know? The deceptions in the relationship between John and Jennifer — from John to Jennifer.

Even with a gentle, open, loving man, it took going to Berlin, knowing [that during World War II] he’d flown those low-altitude bombing missions virtually where we were, and walking with him through a square where mothers are pushing strollers. I won’t call it regret by any means, but the humanization of what he’d done from the air had wiped him out.

Getting to know one’s parents makes me think of Dylan’s Instagram post from a couple of years ago of your dad’s first wedding day.

DYLAN It was the first time that I realized, “Oh, my parents are people without me.” And this is like on a deep level, after going through a lot of family therapy. I get asked so much, “Wait, so you’re Madonna’s daughter?” Oh right! He was married to her — they had a life together.

You were 5 when you left Los Angeles and moved to Northern California. Just before, your mother was surprised by people with guns in your driveway. Do you remember that?

DYLAN I remember it vividly. It was me, my mom and my brother in the car. We pulled in around 10 p.m. and these two guys were standing in the driveway. My mom just said, “Don’t get out of the car. Don’t make a sound.” She got out and they pointed a gun at her stomach and she threw the keys in the bushes and yanked us out of the car. That superhero thing that moms take on when their children are in jeopardy.

SEAN And then they took the car.

DYLAN They crashed.

SEAN They finally crashed into a dumpster and took off running. They actually caught the second guy with a heat sensor from the aerial unit. He had gotten into a dumpster himself, but because he’d been running, his body was hot and they were able to see his heat.

DYLAN [This is one] reason my mom has said she didn’t want us growing up in this paparazzi frenzy that L.A. was becoming. Now, it’s beyond what it was in the ’90s.

It’s pretty impossible for anybody not to remark on how much you look like your mom. On the inside, do you see your dad?

DYLAN Oh my God. I feel like we’re both very alpha personalities, but with that, also being introverted in terms of our private life. I think a lot of my strength comes from watching my dad. My mom, as well, but just in different ways. I also think we see things in similar ways and emotionally react similarly, just in terms of, like movies that we watch, that we cry at —

SEAN Everything.

DYLAN It’s like what a lot of people have with their best friends. You both observe the same things.

SEAN Through a similar lens.

DYLAN Yeah, through a similar lens.

Some of these scenes seem like they would have been hard to shoot, really harrowing. You’re recording her as she’s watching you die onscreen.

DYLAN It’s an awful thing to watch. It was the first time that I felt 100 percent like my dad is not there — this is my dad — and I really felt like he was shooting himself in the head. I was crying and I could hear him crying behind the camera.

SEAN Watching you cry over me. [Fake sobbing] It’s so sad to see you lose your father!

You were crying, too?

SEAN She made me cry a lot. She makes me cry a lot. You kind of feel like somebody should call Child Protective Services on you for directing. What are you putting your kid through?

There’s a line in this film: “I think the greatest hope a man can have is to leave something beautiful behind — something he made.” Am I alone in thinking that line had a resonance for you?

SEAN Oh, no. It has resonance for me as you say it. Yes. Listen, I don’t know what else I was doing here. Now with two kids that I feel so proud of who are already accomplishing things out of their own gifts. On a beautiful day, despite a pandemic and everything else, you kind of go, it’s all gravy from here. Knock wood. [Knocks on a palm tree] But no question, I would be lost without ’em.

Categories
Health

Richard Sackler Says Household and Purdue Bear No Accountability for Opioid Disaster

Until the third hour of the testimony before the Federal Insolvency Court by Dr. Richard Sackler, a former president and co-chair of the board of directors of Purdue Pharma, the prescription opioid maker founded by members of the Sackler family, asked a lawyer a chain of questions:

“Do you have any responsibility for the opioid crisis in the United States?”

“No,” replied Dr. Sackler, 76, weak.

“Does the Sackler family have any responsibility for the opioid crisis in the United States?”

Again “No”.

And finally:

“Is Purdue Pharma responsible for the opioid crisis in the US?”

More consequently: “No.”

Dr. Sackler, perhaps the most famous of the Sacklers billionaire, who for nearly 20 years was the family member who played the primary role in launching his signature prescription pain reliever, OxyContin, seldom videoconferenced Wednesday before a judge holding the confirmatory hearing for a plan who would reorganize Purdue and resolve all lawsuits against the company and family members over their role in the opioid epidemic.

It is believed to be the first time Dr. Sackler publicly answered questions about the family’s opioid business. Similar to an expanded testimony presented to Kentucky state attorneys in 2015, Dr. Sackler presented his legal department with a testimony that was largely littered with faint or absent memories, brief statements, and distractions.

His voice was often barely audible, he apologized for his laryngitis, and occasionally appeared to be fiddling with the technology that posed annoying volume challenges and opening documents emailed to him when he testified.

While he did not provide any new insights into what is already known about the roles of Sackler’s family members in the company, his looks were remarkable for what he refused to admit.

Dr. Sackler had been called on for questioning by attorneys for states opposed to the plan, in part because they believe the Sacklers will receive extensive legal protection in return for paying $ 4.5 billion.

In a biting back and forth, Dr. Sackler, he doesn’t know how many Americans died from OxyContin. “In your role as chairman or president of an opioid company, you did not find it necessary to determine how many people died as a result of this product?” Asked Brian Edmunds, an assistant attorney general from Maryland.

“To the best of my knowledge, data is not available,” replied Dr. Sackler.

Dr. Sackler – who trained as an internist but embarked on a career as a pharmaceutical manager for the Stamford, Connecticut-based company originally owned in part by his father, Dr. Raymond Sackler – is known for throwing himself into Purdue’s operation. In a testimony on Wednesday, Dr. Sackler that he and a Purdue sales representative drove calls to doctors to increase sales. The sales force eventually focused on doctors, who tended to prescribe higher doses, said Dr. Sackler. He acknowledged that higher-dose opioids could result in higher profits for the company.

During his tenure, Purdue twice confessed to federal criminal charges related to the marketing and sale of OxyContin and settled with Kentucky.

Lawsuits against the Sacklers and Purdue received numerous emails from Dr. Sackler cited, including one from 2001 cited in a Massachusetts lawsuit. “We must take every possible means against the perpetrators,” he wrote. “You are the culprit and the problem. They are ruthless criminals. “

In 2019, the Sackler family contributed $ 75 million to Oklahoma as part of a larger settlement between the state and Purdue. In this case, as in a civil law settlement between the federal government and the Sacklers in 2020, family members did not admit any wrongdoing.

“I cannot enumerate all the settlements,” said Dr. Sackler. “There were many settlements, both private and public.”

The Maryland, Washington State, and Connecticut lawyers apparently attempted to extract such shards to put them back together, arguing that the Sacklers were deeply involved in Purdue’s business.

The settlement agreement negotiated by Purdue and the Sacklers with states, tribes, local governments and other plaintiffs would not only settle the lawsuits, but would also give the company immunity from future civil claims, a condition customarily accorded to companies emerging from bankruptcy restructuring .

But this plan would also give similar protection to the Sacklers who did not file for bankruptcy. The question of such comprehensive legal protection for the Sacklers has driven many of the remaining objections to the plan.

If Judge Robert Drain’s plan is upheld as expected by the U.S. Southern New York Bankruptcy Court at White Plains, the Sacklers will not be pursued by those who contradict the plan, let alone future litigants for Purdue – related issues.

And that ban isn’t just limited to opioid-related cases. Benjamin Higgins, an attorney for the U.S. Trustee Program, a Department of Justice unit that oversees bankruptcy cases, noted that, for example, Purdue had in recent years introduced a long-acting stimulant to treat symptoms of attention deficit / hyperactivity disorder and that if any lawsuits occurred in the In connection with this drug would be considered, the Sacklers would also be vaccinated against it.

Dr. Sackler said he was not very familiar with the details of the extensive litigation clears that are at the core of Purdue’s bankruptcy plan.

“It’s an extremely dense document,” said Dr. Sackler. “I read a page or two and realized that it would take me a lot of time.”

In accordance with the complex structure of the Sackler payments to a national opioid trust, the contributions are partly financed by the prospective sale of the various pharmaceutical companies of the family members worldwide.

“Will you personally be contributing your own assets to the settlement payments in the next nine or ten years?” Sackler was asked.

“I don’t know,” he replied. “I don’t think that’s decided yet.”

Categories
Politics

Freed Guantánamo Bay Detainee Is Reunited With Household

Former Guantanamo detainee Abdul Latif Nasser was reunited with his family in Casablanca after US troops transferred him to Moroccan state custody, his lawyers said Tuesday.

US troops flown 56-year-old Mr Nasser on Sunday during the first release of a prisoner from prison by the Biden government from Guantánamo Bay. American and Moroccan officials had approved security arrangements for his return in the last few days of the Obama administration, but the deal was put on hold when President Donald J. Trump halted all transfers when he took office.

“He’s excited,” said Bernard E. Harcourt, a New York-based attorney and law professor who represented Mr. Nasser in federal court. He and his co-lawyer Thomas Anthony Durkin telephoned Mr Nasser in his family home in Casablanca and said that the former prisoners of more than 19 years were in a good mood. He was particularly supported by reuniting with extended family members who had gathered for Eid al-Adha, the Muslim holiday known as the Festival of Sacrifice, Harcourt added.

“He said it was great for him to go home when his whole family was around,” said Harcourt.

Mr Nasser’s legal status in his home country was unclear. He was held for a period in a prison near Casablanca on Monday, and Moroccan judicial officials said in a statement that police are investigating him for alleged involvement in terrorism.

The investigation was not unusual. Former Moroccan citizens repatriated from Guantánamo have been detained for days, if not months, and some have been charged with terrorist offenses.

London-based law firm and human rights firm Reprieve said in a statement that Mr. Nasser would not be conducting interviews with news organizations “for the foreseeable future”. He quoted him in the statement as saying that although he was born on March 4th, he considered himself “born again” on July 19th, the day he was released from US military custody.

Categories
World News

‘Resort Rwanda’ Dissident Denied Meals and Medication in Jail, Household Says

NAIROBI, Kenya – Paul Rusesabagina, the prominent dissident who was portrayed in the Oscar-nominated film Hotel Rwanda, is denied food and medicine in a prison in Rwanda where his family claims he is being held for terrorism, lawyers and Foundation, the 66-year-old also complained about poor health.

Mr. Rusesabagina told his family members that the prison officials had informed him that they would block his access to food, water and medicine from Saturday.

His family and lawyers believe the Rwandan authorities’ move was an attempt to pressure him to return to his trial, which he stopped attending in March after saying he was not expecting justice. Mr Rusesabagina, the former hotelier whose efforts to save more than 1200 people during the country’s genocide were depicted in Hotel Rwanda, later became a critic of President Paul Kagame’s government.

The Rwanda correctional facility tweeted later on Saturday that it was treating all inmates “equally” and that Mr Rusesabagina had access to meals and a doctor.

Rusesabagina’s lawyers were due to visit him on Friday but were refused entry to the prison, said senior attorney Kate Gibson. Gibson called the recent developments “worrying” and said the legal team had filed an “urgent filing” with the UN Task Force on Arbitrary Detention to request an investigation into Mr. Rusesabagina’s situation.

“It is hard to imagine direct and willful harm being done to an inmate, especially if they are in poor health,” Gibson told the New York Times.

Mr Rusesabagina was arrested last August and charged with nine criminal offenses, including murder and formation of an armed group accused of carrying out deadly attacks in Rwanda. A Belgian citizen and permanent resident of the United States, he had traveled from his home in San Antonio, Texas to join Constantin Niyomwungere, a pastor he says he invited to his churches in Burundi, neighboring Rwanda would have.

Little did Mr. Rusesabagina know that Mr. Niyomwungere was working as an agent for the Rwandan government and was part of a plan to lure him into the country. After meeting in Dubai, the two boarded a private jet that Mr Rusesabagina thought would fly to Burundi – only to land in Kigali on August 28, where he was unceremoniously arrested.

Rwanda authorities have announced that Mr Rusesabagina is traveling to Burundi to meet rebel groups based there and in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo.

In the days before he was introduced to the press on August 31, Mr. Rusesabagina was hand and foot cuffed, unable to breathe properly or use the toilet, and was held in what he called the “slaughterhouse” where he did the Screams were heard from other inmates, according to an affidavit from one of his Rwandan lawyers, Jean-Félix Rudakemwa.

Murangira B. Thierry, a spokesman for the Rwanda Investigation Bureau, denied the allegations in the affidavit. The office, he said, “is a professional investigative agency that respects human rights.”

Mr Rusesabagina’s lawyers say that not only have they been banned from visiting, but they must first submit to the authorities any documents they wish to share with him. Previously, any notes the attorneys made when they met him had to be reviewed by prison officials before they could be released from prison, Ms. Gibson said.

“Access to lawyers of his choice, to the files against him, to the time and resources to prepare a defense has been denied,” said Ms. Gibson. “The trial of Mr. Rusesabagina has systematically violated his rights as a defendant, to the point that he has decided not to take part anymore. “

Mr. Rusesabagina’s family and lawyers say that his health has deteriorated since he was arrested and that he feared dying from a stroke.

“Of particular concern is the fact that the doctor provided by the Rwandan government has prescribed three bottles of water a day and he doesn’t get them,” said Kitty Kurth, spokeswoman for his foundation, in a statement on Friday.

Mr. Rusesabagina is a cancer survivor, has cardiovascular problems and complains of severe back pain.

“My family is very scared and concerned,” said Mr. Rusesabagina’s daughter, Anaise Kanimba, on Saturday. “We don’t know if his health can take it. We don’t know when to speak to him next time. That is devastating. “

Categories
World News

Roman Protasevich TV Confession Was Coerced, Household Says

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia – President Vladimir V. Putin insisted on Friday that Russia wants to be “neutral” on the events in Belarus in order to distance his country from the uproar over the forced diversion of a passenger plane with a Belarusian dissident on board.

Putin’s comments at Russia’s premier economic conference in St. Petersburg came the day after arrested dissident Roman Protasevich appeared on Belarusian state television with bruises on his wrists. Mr Protasevich confessed to organizing anti-government protests – an interview his family, supporters and Western officials said were conducted under duress.

“Belarus has many problems, domestic ones, and we really want to take a neutral position,” said Putin.

Putin’s reluctance to support Belarusian leader Aleksandr G. Lukashenko, Russia’s closest ally, showed the pressure on Lukashenko’s crackdown and arrest of Mr Protasevich. While Putin fears that Lukashenko’s fall could be a geopolitical loss for Russia, the unpredictable and brutal repression of the Belarusian leader is also becoming a problem for the Kremlin.

On Friday, Western officials condemned the interview with Mr Protasevich, and the European Union continued the previously planned sanctions prohibiting Belarusian airlines from flying over EU territory. Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz attended the St. Petersburg conference by video link with Putin and called the “forced confession” by Protasevich something that “we do not consider to be acceptable in any way”.

For Putin, Belarus is an important ally, perhaps the last post-Soviet country in Europe to steadfastly cling to Moscow. When hundreds of thousands of Belarusians rose against Lukashenko last summer, Putin’s support was crucial in keeping him in power.

But Putin also has a strained relationship with Lukashenko, and he seems keen to prevent the excitement over the diversion from disrupting his summit with President Biden, due to take place on June 16.

When asked if he believed Mr Lukashenko’s allegation that the Ryanair plane that Mr Protasevich flew in was crashed because of a bomb threat, Mr Putin replied: “I do not want to evaluate what happened to that plane. To be honest, I don’t know. “

He also denied that Russia knew in advance of the operation by Belarus to crash the commercial flight carrying Mr Protasevich between the capitals of two EU countries, Greece and Lithuania.

Understand the situation in Belarus

    • Belarus in the spotlight. The emergency landing of an airliner on Sunday is seen by several countries as a state hijacking demanded by their strong President Aleksandr G. Lukashenko.
    • Election results and protest. It came less than a year after Belarusians faced police violence in protesting the results of an election that many Western governments mocked as sham.
    • Forced plane landing. The Ryanair flight from Athens to Vilnius, Lithuania, was diverted to Minsk to arrest 26-year-old journalist Roman Protasevich.
    • Who is Roman Protasevich? In a video released by the government, Mr. Protasevich confessed to participating in organizing “mass riots” last year, but friends say the confession was made under duress.

Despite his lukewarm comments, Putin showed no sign of withdrawing support for Lukashenko, who claims the protests against him have been manipulated by the West. Based on the topics of conversation on Russian state television, Mr Putin compared the protests in Belarus to the siege of the Capitol in Washington on January 6 and criticized the West for condemning the violence of the riot police in Belarus but not the arrests of the Capitol rioters in Belarus The United States.

“Everything is up to the people of Belarus,” said Putin. “Over there it’s all assessed in one light and tone, and then the same thing happens in the States, but everything is assessed differently.”

To underscore the continued support of Russia, the head of the Russian foreign intelligence service SVR met on Thursday with his counterpart in Belarus, who heads an espionage agency called KGB West, ”reported the official Belarusian news agency.

Mr Protasevich, the 26-year-old dissident journalist, is the former editor of NEXTA, an opposition account on the Telegram social network. Just last month he called Lukashenko a “dictator” and compared him to Hitler.

On May 23, Lukashenko climbed into a fighter jet to intercept the Ryanair flight – a move condemned by the international community and leaders across Europe – and after landing in Minsk, security forces kidnapped Mr Protasevich and his girlfriend. He is being held in a KGB prison, said his father and lawyer.

In the interview broadcast on Thursday evening, conducted by the head of a Belarusian state television broadcaster, a tearful Mr. Protasevich appeared worried and exhausted. He said that he “undoubtedly” respected Mr. Lukashenko before complimenting him.

European leaders condemned Mr Protasevich’s interview. A spokesperson for Chancellor Angela Merkel called the confession “totally unworthy and untrustworthy,” and British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said on Twitter that “those involved in the filming, coercion and conducting the interview must be held accountable “.

On Friday, as expected, the European Union officially implemented some of the sanctions its leaders agreed last week. It banned all Belarusian airlines from flying over the block’s airspace and landing at airports on its territory. Individual European countries had already taken similar measures.

“The EU member states will therefore be obliged to refuse aircraft operated by Belarusian airlines to land, take off or fly over their territory,” the EU Council said in a statement.

Mr Protasevich said in the interview that he organized unauthorized mass rallies, a charge punishable by up to three years in prison. He said he chose to do the interview voluntarily and that he was not put on any makeup to hide the traces of torture.

His blatant admission, which some observers likened to Stalin’s show trials in the 1930s, described the Belarusian opposition as worms who lead luxurious lifestyles on those countries’ payrolls in Lithuania and Poland. He also referred to his opposition colleagues as accomplices in his crimes and gave specific names.

Mr Protasevich’s turnaround is not unusual in Mr Lukashenko’s Belarus. Several opposition and media representatives have made similar abrupt turns in their public statements after spending time in Belarusian prisons. Yuri Voskresensky, a former political prisoner, described his own imprisonment as “hell”.

Speaking to TV Rain, an independent Russian television station, Mr Protasevich’s father, Dmitri Protasevich, called the interview “a propaganda video”.

“It is very difficult for him to say these things and I am sure that he was compelled and intimidated,” he said. “He’s been under pressure for more than a week.”

Dmitri Protasevich said Belarusian law enforcement agencies could also put pressure on his son through his girlfriend Sofia Sapega, who is also from the KGB. is being held

“She could be held in the cell next to him,” he said.

Conditions in such prisons are bleak, say former inmates. The Russian citizen Yegor Dudnikov was arrested by Belarusian law enforcement agencies in early May and has been in a KGB prison since then. In a letter to his lawyer, he described that he had been beaten and tortured to force a confession.

Mr Dudnikov, who said he was a technical specialist who helped opposition activists with videos, described being forced to make a statement to the state television station interviewing Mr Protasevich.

“On May 25, they took me to a room where they gave me answers that had already been prepared by the television crew,” he said in a letter to the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta. “They gave me time to memorize them – on May 28th, television people came and made the recording.”

But Mr Putin, speaking at a personal international conference that brought together thousands of delegates despite the ongoing pandemic, said he cared little about Mr Protasevich’s plight.

“I do not know this novel Protasevich and I do not want to know him,” said Putin.

And Belarus was not on the list of topics, Putin said he plans to discuss with Mr Biden when the two meet in Geneva this month. Those issues, Putin said, would include strategic stability and arms control, international conflict, counterterrorism, the pandemic and the environment. Putin said Moscow and Washington needed to improve their relations from today’s “extremely low levels” but maintained his often-voiced view that the United States was solely responsible for the tensions.

“We have no disagreements with the United States,” Putin said. “They only have one difference of opinion: they want to stop our development, they talk about it publicly. Everything else flows out of this position. “

Anton Troianovski reported from St. Petersburg and Ivan Nechepurenko from Moscow. Monika Pronczuk contributed the reporting from Brussels.

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Household of imprisoned journalist Danny Fenster fights for his launch

Frontier Myanmar Managing Editor Danny Fenster can be seen in this handout picture taken in Yangon, Myanmar, in November 2020.

Reuters

The military regime that recently seized power in Myanmar has blocked virtually all attempts to reach Danny Fenster, a US journalist who has been detained there for more than a week without explanation.

His family want him to know that they are doing all they can.

Amid the silence of the Myanmar authorities, Window’s relatives have communicated with US officials, spoken to the media and recently launched a petition and website to raise awareness and press for his immediate and unconditional release.

“He probably has no idea about these efforts that are being made for him,” Bryan Fenster, Danny’s older brother, told CNBC in a telephone interview on Tuesday. “It’s the worst situation imaginable, but we’re incredibly proud of him and he’s a hero to many people.”

“My heart aches for all the families who have ever been through something like this,” said Danny’s mother Rose Fenster, who was also in the conversation. “But as a mom and he’s my son, I just won’t sleep until he’s home safely.”

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Danny Fenster, a 37-year-old Michigan native and executive editor of Frontier Myanmar news magazine, was arrested at Yangon International Airport on May 24 before boarding a plane to Kuala Lumpur.

His family says he was on his way home to Huntington Woods, near Detroit, to surprise them after more than three years of absence. But little else is known about why Danny was arrested and transferred to Insein Prison in Yangon, a supposedly harsh prison with a long history of holding political prisoners.

It is not known whether Fenster will be charged and neither his magazine nor US officials have been able to contact him directly.

“That’s the hardest part,” said Bryan Fenster. “We’re going on day 9 and you still have to answer.”

He said the first time he heard about his brother’s imprisonment, “I remember thinking, ‘Oh my god, where do you even start?”

“I got into combat mode pretty quickly,” said Bryan Fenster. “A quick breath of panic or two, but we’re just getting down to business.”

“I think I stopped breathing,” said Rose Fenster of her own reaction, calling it a “total out-of-body experience” that was “instinctive” and “heartbreaking”.

But she said she found solace in “knowing my son Bryan and other close family members are working on it,” along with the support of the community that “only stopped us.”

That work includes a just launched website instructing visitors to raise awareness by sharing information on social media and signing a petition from MoveOn.org that had more than 20,000 signatures as of Tuesday.

Frontier Myanmar Editor-in-Chief Danny Fenster is pictured in this undated handout received on May 25, 2021. The 37-year-old American is currently in custody in Myanmar.

Reuters

The family also sells T-shirts with the hashtag #BringDannyHome and an appeal to “Protect The Press”. The family said they plan to let Danny Fenster decide where that proceeds will be donated once he is exempt.

They also said that they talk to Fenster’s wife, who is in Myanmar, several times a day.

MP Andy Levin, D-Mich., Told CNBC in an interview that the government had confirmed the transfer of Danny Fenster to Insein, although consular access to him – a requirement under the rules of the Vienna Convention – has still not been granted has been.

Levin, who represents the congressional district where Window’s Family lives, drafted the House of Representatives resolution condemning the February coup in Myanmar. Levin is a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and vice chairman of the Asia, Pacific, Central Asia and Non-Proliferation Subcommittee.

The day after the arrest was announced, Levin listed all 16 members of his state delegation in a letter asking Foreign Minister Antony Blinken to clear windows.

“It’s very, very personal to me,” Levin said, adding that he and Danny and Bryan Fenster attended the same high school.

In a statement on Tuesday, a State Department spokesman told CNBC that Myanmar had been pressing “to release him immediately and will continue to do so until he is safe to return to his family.”

“Free and independent media are essential to building prosperous, resilient, and free societies. The arrest of Daniel and the arrest and use of force by the Burmese military against other journalists constitute an unacceptable attack on freedom of expression in Burma, ”the statement said.

The Myanmar Embassy in Washington did not respond to CNBC’s request to comment on Fenster’s detention.

Fenster is not the only American journalist held in Insein Prison: In March, authorities arrested Nathan Maung from the online news site Kamayut Media, along with his co-founder Hanthar Nyein.

Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that the Myanmar Embassy in Washington did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

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Household meets with Biden, Harris at White Home

Gianna Floyd, daughter of George Floyd, along with other family members and lawyers, raise fists and say his name while facing reporters at the White House following their meeting with President Joe Biden in Washington, U.S., May 25, 2021.

Kevin Lemarque | Reuters

WASHINGTON — Members of George Floyd’s family met with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris at the White House on Tuesday, to mark the first anniversary of Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer.

Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, died on May 25, 2020, after then-Minneapolis cop Derek Chauvin pressed his knee onto Floyd’s neck for more than nine minutes. Floyd was unarmed.

Floyd’s death sparked worldwide calls for racial justice in policing and a reimagining of law enforcement. Following the hourlong meeting, the Floyd family spoke to reporters outside the White House.

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“Being here today is an honor,” said Terrence Floyd, a brother of George Floyd. “To meet with the president and vice president, and for them to show their concern for our family and to give an ear to our concerns and how we feel in this situation. It was a very productive conversation, and we thank everyone for the love.”

In a statement, Biden said the Floyd family “has shown extraordinary courage, especially [George Floyd’s] young daughter Gianna, who I met again today. The day before her father’s funeral a year ago, Jill and I met the family and she told me, ‘Daddy changed the world.’ He has.”

Despite the global response to Floyd’s murder, Congress has yet to pass a bill to reform policing.

Bipartisan negotiators have worked for weeks to tweak the House-passed George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in order to win enough Republican support to get it through the Senate. Negotiators include Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., and Sens. Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Cory Booker, D-N.J., who are expected to continue talks this week.

Floyd family lawyer Ben Crump said members of the family would meet with senators later in the day Tuesday.

A Marine holds the door as Gianna Floyd, the daughter of George Floyd, walks into the White House, Tuesday, May 25, 2021, in Washington.

Evan Vucci | AP

Earlier this year, Biden called on Congress to pass a policing reform bill and send it to his desk before the first anniversary of Floyd’s death. That deadline passed Tuesday, but Biden stressed that he was willing to wait longer to make sure the bill contained genuine accountability measures.

“So he’s going to be patient and make sure it’s the right bill and not a rushed bill,” said Crump.

“We have to act,” said Biden. “We face an inflection point.”

Floyd’s brother Philonise Floyd said that a Congress that voted to protect wildlife could vote to protect Black lives.

“If you can make federal laws to protect the bird that is the bald eagle, you can make federal laws to protect people of color,” he said.

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Biden to host George Floyd household at White Home

Rodney Floyd and Philonise Floyd, brothers of George Floyd, and Brandon Williams, nephew of George Floyd, check in at a security entrance at the Hennepin County Government Center on April 9, 2021 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Brandon Bell | Getty Images News | Getty Images

President Joe Biden will host George Floyd’s family at the White House on Tuesday, an administration official has confirmed to CNBC.

The visit marks the one-year anniversary of Floyd’s death, which triggered international protests against police brutality and racism in the criminal justice system.

Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, died after former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin held his knee on Floyd’s neck for about nine minutes.

Chauvin was found guilty of murder and manslaughter in April. His sentencing date is set for June.

The Floyd family’s visit to the White House comes as lawmakers attempt to create bipartisan legislation on police reform that could pass through both chambers of Congress.

The House passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in March. The police reform bill seeks to ban chokeholds, carotid holds and no-knock warrants as well as end qualified immunity.

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However, lawmakers have struggled to find a compromise that can win enough support in the evenly divided Senate.

Congress is set to miss the president’s deadline to pass the legislation by the anniversary of Floyd’s death. At least 10 Senate Republicans are needed for the bill’s passage due to the chamber’s filibuster rule.

“It would be a contribution to rebuilding trust in communities,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday with respect to the bill’s potential passage. “Obviously, there’s more that needs to be done beyond that; that’s not the only step — far from it.”

A point of contention in the negotiations has been on qualified immunity, which makes it difficult to sue individual officers.

Ten House Democrats are pushing congressional leaders not to scrap the provision seeking to end qualified immunity. But some GOP senators are concerned that ending it would make officers and departments vulnerable to a rash of lawsuits.