12.05.2021

Sunday, December 5th, 2021 

Venezuelan intelligence officials announce the death of Hernán Darío Hernández, the leader of a FARC dissidents group, after an ambush carried out by an armed commando of the Venezuelan Armed Forces. Hernández was responsible for the 2003 El Nogal Club bombing that left 36 casualties and over 200 injured individuals. (El Tiempo) 

Due to alleged incorrect intelligence inputs, soldiers of Indian armed forces open fire on a group of miners returning home after work in Nagaland, mistaking them to be militants. Thirteen people and one soldier are killed; the soldier and seven miners in the subsequent confrontation with angry locals. (BBC News) 

The death toll from yesterday’s Semeru volcano eruption in East Java, Indonesia, rises to 14, while 56 other people are injured. (BBC News) 

Chaz Mostert and Lee Holdsworth win the 2021 Bathurst 1000 in Bathurst, NSW, Australia. (ABC News Australia) 

Biden and Putin Ukraine call set for Tuesday U.S. President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin will discuss the increasingly dire situation in Ukraine during a video call Tuesday. Whitehouse spokesperson Jen Psaki said Biden plans to “underscore U.S. concerns with Russian military activities on the border with Ukraine and reaffirm the United States’ support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.” Some 94,000 Russian troops have massed on the Ukrainian border. Intelligence estimates suggest an invasion could begin as early as next month. REUTERS 

CNN fires Chris Cuomo for helping brother handle sexual misconduct allegations CNN announced Saturday that anchor Chris Cuomo had been fired after evidence emerged that he used his position and contacts to help his older brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), weather accusations of sexual misconduct. The former governor resigned in October after an investigation concluded that he had groped or otherwise harassed 11 women who worked for him. CNN called the younger Cuomo’s behavior “a breach of journalistic ethics” and announced that they have hired a law firm to examine his behavior in greater depth. REUTERS 

Pope meets with migrants in Greece after being heckled by Orthodox priest A Greek Orthodox priest heckled Pope Francis during his Saturday visit to Athens, shouting “Pope, you are a heretic!” before being led away by police. The elderly priest fell to the ground as police grabbed him, but he seemed uninjured. Francis “appeared not to notice.” The Roman pontiff then proceeded to a meeting with Ieronymos, the Greek Orthodox bishop of Athens, who welcomed Francis with “honor and fraternity.” Sunday, Francis met with migrants on the Greek island of Lesbos. He warned politicians against “instilling fear of the other” and using migrants for “political propaganda.” Pope Francis is expected to return to the Vatican Monday. BBC 

Congressman criticized after posting Christmas photo with guns Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) has drawn criticism after posting a photo of himself and his family smiling in front of a Christmas tree while holding guns only four days after a school shooter killed four people in Michigan. Massie captioned the photo, which he tweeted Saturday, with the words “Merry Christmas! ps. Santa, please bring ammo.” Massie is well-known for his libertarian views. Manuel Oliver, the father of one of the victims in the 2018 Parkland school shooting, called the photo “very nasty.” Rep. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) posted a tweet calling Massie an “insensitive asshole.” CNN 

Iran nuclear talks hit stalemate over sanctions The United States’ hesitancy to lift all sanctions on Iran is the greatest obstacle to reviving the 2015 nuclear agreement, a senior Iranian official said Sunday. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action — which was signed by Iran, Germany, the U.S., Russia, China, Britain, and France — reduced sanctions against Iran in return for restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program. Former President Trump pulled out of the deal and re-imposed sanctions in 2015. Talks broke off Friday and are expected to resume Monday. Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has urged the U.S. and other nations to take a hard line against Iran, saying that Iran “must begin to pay a price for its violations.” REUTERS 

Tighter U.S. travel restrictions start Monday as cases spike again The U.S. is averaging more than 100,000 new COVID-19 cases per day for the first time in two months. As of Saturday, 1,651 Americans are dying of COVID every day, according to the seven-day average. Starting Monday, international travelers will need to provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test taken within one day of departure, the Biden administration announced Thursday. Under the previous policy, the test could be taken up to three days prior to departure. The new Omicron variant has been detected in at least 16 states. CNN 

Meta to add ‘Split Payments’ feature to Facebook messenger  Facebook Messenger, a messaging app with more than 1.3 billion monthly users worldwide, will add a new “Split Payments” feature, parent company Meta (formerly Facebook) announced Friday. It was already possible for users to send each other money through the app, a service also offered by apps like Venmo and Cash App. The app Splitwise offers expense-splitting but relies on third party services to actually transfer funds. Messenger’s new feature will integrate both functions and, according to the announcement, enable the user to “split a bill evenly or modify the contribution amount for each individual — with or without yourself included.” GIZMODO 

Saturday, December 4th, 2021 

Rio de Janeiro mayor Eduardo Paes cancels the city’s New Year’s Eve celebrations on Copacabana Beach due to the worldwide spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. (Sky News) 

Twenty-three people drown after the bus they are travelling in plunges into the Enziu River in Mwingi, Kenya. (BBC News) 

The Pakistani Minister of Finance announces that the country has received a $3 billion (11.3B SAR, ₨.530B) one-year loan from Saudi Arabia. (Reuters) 

An improvised explosive device is discovered in the personal vehicle of a Turkish police officer who was to be part of the security detail for a rally in Siirt featuring Turkish President Recep Erdoğan. The bomb was discovered before the officer had left for the rally, and was defused by bomb squads. (Bloomberg) 

The End Sunday 

Alec Baldwin says ‘someone is responsible’ for the ‘Rust’ shooting, but ‘it’s not me’ ABC on Thursday night aired its primetime interview with Alec Baldwin, who discussed in detail the fatal shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of his film Rust. The actor claimed he never pulled the trigger on the prop gun, telling George Stephanopoulos he cocked the gun while they were blocking a scene and it unexpectedly went off after he let go of the hammer. But Baldwin said that when Hutchins fell, he thought she might have fainted or had a heart attack and never considered there could have been a live round in the gun “until probably 45 minutes to an hour later.” Baldwin called for answers about how the live round got on set. “Someone is responsible for what happened, and I can’t say who that is, but I know it’s not me,” he said. “Honest to God, if I felt that I was responsible, I might have killed myself.” Baldwin also said he can’t imagine making another movie that involves guns and suggested he could stop acting entirely. “I couldn’t give a s— about my career anymore,” he said.  ABC NEWS 

George Clooney passed on making $35 million in 1 day Wouldn’t it be nice to be so rich you can be presented with the opportunity to make $35 million in a day and decide, “Nah, I’m good”? George Clooney did just that, revealing in an interview with The Guardian he was once offered a $35 million payday “for one day’s work for an airline commercial.” But he discussed the offer with his wife, Amal Clooney, and ended up turning it down. “I talked to Amal about it and we decided it’s not worth it,” Clooney explained. “It was [associated with] a country that, although it’s an ally, is questionable at times, and so I thought: ‘Well, if it takes a minute’s sleep away from me, it’s not worth it.’” If only he was that discerning after reading the script of Batman & Robin.  THE GUARDIAN 

One person is killed and 41 others are injured as the Semeru volcano erupts in East Java, Indonesia. (BBC News) 

Twenty-three people drown after the bus they are travelling in plunges into the Enziu River, Mwingi, Kenya. (BBC News) 

South Korea reports a record 5,352 new cases and 70 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 467,907 and the nationwide death toll to 3,809. (Yonhap News Agency) 

The Pakistani Minister of Finance announces the country has received a $3 billion (11.3m SAR₨.530B) one-year loan from Saudi Arabia. (Reuters) 

Gambians go to the polls to elect their president. Approximately 960,000 people are eligible to vote. (BBC News) 

A group of four former Serbian state security officers, including Radomir Marković, are found guilty of the murder of Slavko Ćuruvija. Two have been sentenced to 20 years in prison, while Marković and the remaining officer will serve a 30-year sentence. (Balkan Insight) 

Biden weighs options as Russia masses troops on Ukrainian border President Joe Biden is working on a plan to counter an increasingly likely Russian invasion of Ukraine, Biden said Friday. Biden did not provide details, but experts predict his response could include increased economic sanctions against Russia as well as military aid to Ukraine. 94,000 Russian troops have massed on the Ukrainian border. Newly released U.S. intelligence documents suggest that the invasion could come as early as January 2022 and involve 175,000 troops. Russian Vladimir Putin has demanded signed assurances that NATO will not admit Ukraine as a member. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the U.S. will not provide any such guarantee. REUTERS 

Parents of suspected Michigan school shooter arrested after manhunt James and Jennifer Crumbley, parents of Michigan school shooting suspect Ethan Crumbley, have been arrested in Detroit, police announced Saturday morning. Law enforcement considered the two fugitives after they failed to appear at their arraignment Friday, but the couple’s lawyer insisted they had left town for their own safety and always intended to turn themselves in. Oakland county prosecutor Karen McDonald levied charges against the parents Friday. Officials have said that James purchased the gun used in the shooting, which was reportedly described as Ethan’s Christmas present, and that both parents ignored warnings from a teacher about their son’s mental state. CNN 

Le Pen, Orban, and other European populist leaders gather in Warsaw Europe’s most prominent right-wing populist figures met in Warsaw Saturday to discuss concerns about the European Union. Jaroslaw Kaczynski, Poland’s deputy prime minister and leader of the governing Law and Justice party, hosted the summit. Other attendees included Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, and Santiago Abascal, the leader of Spain’s Vox party. Le Pen tweeted that the leaders are united by their desire for “a Europe of nations to give back to the peoples of Europe their freedom and their sovereignty.” The European Commission has accused the governments of Poland and Hungary of implementing anti-democratic policies and is withholding funds from the two Central European nations. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Omicron reaches Maryland, other U.S. states Three confirmed cases of the Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus have been detected in Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan (R) announced Friday. Two of the three cases were detected in people from the same household, one of whom recently returned from South Africa. The third case occurred in a vaccinated individual with no ties to the other two. None of these individuals, all of whom live in the Baltimore metro area, has been hospitalized. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) announced Wednesday that the first Omicron case in the U.S. had been confirmed in California. Cases have also been confirmed in New York Colorado, Minnesota, and Hawaii. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Gambians vote in first presidential election since former dictator’s exile Voters in the small African nation of Gambia head to the polls Saturday to elect a new president. This presidential election is the country’s first since former dictator Yahya Jammeh went into exile in 2017. Jammeh took power in a 1994 coup. His long presidency was characterized by human rights abuses and widespread corruption. Current President Adama Barrow defeated Jammeh in the 2016 election, but Jammeh initially disputed the results in an attempt to remain in power. He fled to Equatorial Guinea only after neighboring countries threatened military intervention to oust him. Barrow is running for reelection against five other candidates. One, Mama Kandeh, is supported by a political faction that remains loyal to Jammeh. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

China: democratic countries are ‘doomed to fail’ China’s government criticized American democracy Saturday ahead of an upcoming “Summit for Democracy” to be hosted by President Joe Biden. The summit, scheduled for next week, will be attended by over 100 nations, including Taiwan. The government of the People’s Republic of China regards Taiwan as a rebel province. Tian Peiyan, deputy director of the Chinese Communist Party’s Policy Research Office, released a report warning of “excessive democracy,” which he said “brings not happiness but disaster to voters.” Citing American political polarization, Tian said that the U.S. system is “doomed to fail” and suggested that a more authoritarian style of government is necessary in large, multi-ethnic countries like the U.S. and China. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Macron to become first major western leader to meet with MBS since Khashoggi murder French President Emmanuel Macron arrived in Saudi Arabia Saturday to meet with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman. Macron is the first major western head of state to meet with Salman since the 2018 murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, in which the prince has been implicated. Critics allege that the meeting serves to legitimize thuggish behavior by the Saudi regime. Macron has defended the visit, arguing that France needs Saudi Arabia as an ally to counter Iran’s increasing influence in the region. REUTERS 

Volcano erupts in Indonesia A volcano has erupted on the Indonesian island of Java. Indonesians living near Mount Semeru are fleeing the area, and local media outlets report ash blotting out the sun and blanketing entire villages. Airlines have been warned that the ash cloud could be up to 50,000 feet high. No fatalities have yet been confirmed. Mt. Semeru is over 12,000 feet high and is named for the dwelling place of the Hindu gods. It has erupted at least 62 times since 1818. BBC 

Hawaii expecting blizzard with up to 12 inches of snow The National Weather Service issued a warning Friday informing residents of Hawaii’s Big Island to brace for up to 12 inches of snow. The advisory went into effect at 6 p.m. local time Friday and will remain in effect until 6 a.m. local time Sunday. The Weather Service has warned of “blizzard conditions” with winds of up to 100 miles per hour and is urging residents to refrain from traveling. Snow will be concentrated around the summits of the island’s mountains, but the storm is also expected to drop up to 40 inches of rain on other parts of the island. It has been more than three-and-a-half years since Hawaii’s last blizzard warning. CNN 

Friday, December 3rd, 2021 

Militants attack a bus carrying civilians in Bankass, Mali, killing the driver, before setting it on fire and killing 31 passengers. The majority of the victims are women who were on their way to work at the local market. (BBC) 

Seven Peshmerga fighters and three civilians are killed by Islamic State gunmen in a village in Makhmour, Erbil Governorate, Kurdistan Region, Iraq. (Al Jazeera) 

Germany surpasses six million cases of COVID-19. (Urdu Point) 

Taoiseach Micheál Martin announces that due to fears of the Omicron variant, from December 7 until January 9, nightclubs will be closed and restaurants and bars will only be allowed to offer table service for groups of no more than six people. Additionally, indoor services can only operate at 50% capacity and families can only have visitors from three other households. (Sky News) 

Europe surpasses 75 million cases of COVID-19. (Reuters) 

Mexico reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a 51-year-old man who travelled from South Africa. (Anadolu Agency) 

South Africa surpasses three million cases of COVID-19. (CNN) 

French president Emmanuel Macron meets UAE crown prince Mohammed bin Zayed at Expo 2020 in Dubai. The two men sign a major arms deal between the two nations. (The National News) 

The parents of Ethan Crumbley, James and Jennifer Crumbley, accused of terrorism and murder in the shooting deaths and injuries at Ethan’s school, are charged with manslaughter for their role in the incident. They are caught after fleeing the police. (CNN) 

Police in Bosnia and Herzegovina arrest seven suspected war criminals in Bijeljina and Sokolac due to their reported massacre of 22 civilians during the Bosnian Genocide. (CTV News) 

Portuguese Minister of Internal Administration Eduardo Cabrita resigns after a series of scandals, including an incident where his official car was involved in a car accident that killed a highway worker. (AP) 

Magnus Carlsen defeats challenger Ian Nepomniachtchi in Game 6 of the 2021 World Chess Championship in a marathon 136 move game. It is the first decisive result in a regulation World Chess Championship game in more than 5 years and is also the longest game in World Chess Championship history. (The Guardian) 

The End Saturday 

Didi Global delisting in New York Chinese ride-hailing company Didi Global said Thursday it planned to delist its shares in the United States and secure a listing in Hong Kong, instead. The decision came five months after the company’s debut on the New York Stock Exchange, which raised about $4.4 billion. Chinese authorities had reacted with surprise to the IPO and announced a data-security review. Chinese regulators ordered Didi to remove some of its apps and blocked new users from Didi’s China operations. Didi’s move to delist in New York, which came as Beijing finished its cybersecurity review, was widely seen as part of ongoing efforts by China and the U.S. to weaken ties between the world’s two largest economies. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Congress approves deal to avert a government shutdown Congress on Thursday approved a stopgap funding deal to prevent a partial government shutdown before a Friday deadline. House Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) unveiled the measure hours before House Democrats pushed it through with just one Republican vote. She said it would keep federal agencies funded through Feb. 18, with “virtually no changes to existing funding or policy.” After the House vote, the Senate quickly passed the measure 69-28, despite an effort by conservative Republicans to block it unless funding for President Biden’s vaccine mandates was removed. The White House urged Congress to use the time the bill would provide to “engage in robust bipartisan negotiations” on a long-term solution to avoid bouncing from one fleeting fix to another. REUTERS 

November jobs report expected to show strong hiring Wall Street expects the Labor Department’s monthly employment report to show strong hiring in November, potentially adding pressure on the Federal Reserve to speed up plans to unwind its recovery-boosting bond purchases. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal predicted that U.S. nonfarm employers added 573,000 jobs in November, up from 531,000 in October. Experts cited several reasons for a pickup in hiring, including a leveling off of Delta variant coronavirus infections and the expiration of extra unemployment benefits, which could nudge some people back into the job market. Companies also have been raising wages to recruit people to fill open positions. Economists expected the unemployment rate to fall to 4.5 percent from 4.6 percent. MARKETWATCH 

Germany announces national lockdown for the unvaccinated  Germany on Thursday said it was imposing a nationwide lockdown for people who have not been vaccinated against the coronavirus. Under the policies, the unvaccinated can’t enter non-essential businesses but can go to essential ones, such as supermarkets and pharmacies, outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel and her successor, Olaf Scholz, announced. Unvaccinated people also are forbidden to meet with more than two people from another household. The government also will limit crowds at large events, such as soccer matches, and shut down bars and restaurants in areas with high infection rates. “The fourth wave must be broken and this has not yet been achieved,” Merkel said. CNN 

Biden announces measures to fight Omicron variant President Biden on Thursday announced plans to fight the spread of the new Omicron coronavirus variant in the United States, focusing on campaigns to get more people vaccinated and provide booster shots for those eligible for them. Biden said new “family mobile vaccination clinics” would offer shots and boosters to all eligible members of a family. The Biden administration also is imposing tougher COVID-19 testing requirements for international travelers and making at-home COVID testing free for more Americans. Biden said at the National Institutes of Health that the moves would help keep people safe while allowing schools and businesses to remain open. “We’re going to fight this variant with science and speed, not chaos and confusion,” he said. THE WASHINGTON POST 

More states confirm their first Omicron cases A Minnesota resident has tested positive for the Omicron coronavirus variant, marking the second case of the strain confirmed in the United States, authorities said Thursday. The second person infected was a fully vaccinated man who was recently in New York City for the Anime NYC 2021 convention. The event, which drew 53,000 people, was held at the Javits Center from Nov. 19 to Nov. 21. The patient developed mild symptoms on Nov. 22 and got tested two days later. His symptoms have since cleared up. By the end of Thursday, Omicron cases had been confirmed in five states, with five infections in New York. “We should assume there is community spread of the variant in our city,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said. The first U.S. case was confirmed a day earlier in California. REUTERS 

U.S., allies sanction Belarus over migrant crisis, human rights  The United States and allies on Thursday imposed new sanctions on Belarus over the country’s role in creating a migrant crisis on its border with Poland and continuing human rights violations by authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko’s regime. The U.S., United Kingdom, European Union, and Canada targeted numerous Belarusian entities and individuals to increase pressure on Lukashenko. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has accused Lukashenko of using “innocent migrants as a political weapon, as an effort at destabilization,” by luring them to the borders of Poland and other neighboring countries with promises of easy passage into Western Europe. The sanctions came as tensions with Russia, Lukashenko’s most powerful supporter, rose over its massing of troops on its Ukraine border. CNN 

Trump-allied lawyers ordered to pay Michigan and Detroit election lawsuit costs U.S. District Judge Linda Parker on Thursday ordered Sidney Powell, Lin Wood, and seven other lawyers allied with former President Donald Trump to pay Detroit and Michigan a total of $175,000 for abusing the court system with a baseless lawsuit claiming election fraud and seeking to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss in the state. The lawyers have a month to pay the sanctions, which will cover what the city and state spent fighting the lawsuits. Michigan is seeking the disbarment of four of the lawyers, including Powell, best known for vowing to “release the Kraken,” a mythical sea creature, to destroy Biden’s victory. Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said the sanctions show there are “consequences to filing meritless lawsuits.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

GoFundMe removes crowdfunding campaigns for man convicted in Arbery murder GoFundMe said Thursday it had shut down crowdfunding campaigns for William “Roddie” Bryan, who was convicted along with father and son Gregory and Travis McMichael, for murdering Ahmaud Arbery in southeast Georgia. The three men, all of them white, were convicted last week of chasing down Arbery, who was Black, as he ran through their neighborhood. Travis McMichael fatally shot Arbery with a shotgun as Bryan captured the killing on video. “GoFundMe prohibits raising money for the legal defense of a violent crime,” a spokesperson for GoFundMe said, adding that the company had removed three campaigns for Bryan before they raised any money. Defense attorney Kevin Gough said Bryan will lose his constitutional right to counsel if he can’t raise money for an appeal. NBC NEWS 

Missouri commissioned, then buried, report finding mask mandates save lives Missouri’s health department found in an analysis that mask mandates prevented coronavirus infections and saved lives, but the state did not release the data publicly, The New York Times reported Thursday after nonprofit news organizations acquired the analysis through a public records request. The Missouri Independent reported Wednesday that the health department’s analysis found lower infection and death rates in the four areas of Missouri with mask mandates — St. Louis, St. Louis County, Kansas City, and Jackson County — from the end of April until the end of October, the peak of Missouri’s Delta wave. “Masked” areas had 15.8 new COVID-19 cases per day for every 100,000 residents. Areas without mask mandates had 21.7 daily new cases per 100,000 residents. Areas with mandates also had fewer deaths. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Germany announces national lockdown for the unvaccinated Germany on Thursday said it was imposing a nationwide lockdown for people who have not been vaccinated against the coronavirus. The unvaccinated are banned from entering non-essential businesses but can go to essential ones, such as supermarkets and pharmacies, outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel and her successor, Olaf Scholz, announced. Unvaccinated people also are forbidden to meet with more than two people from another household. Crowds at large events, such as soccer matches, will be limited, and bars and restaurants in areas with high infection rates will have to shut down. “The fourth wave must be broken and this has not yet been achieved,” Merkel said.  CNN 

Alec Baldwin says he didn’t pull trigger in movie set shooting Actor Alec Baldwin told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos in an interview that aired Thursday that he “didn’t pull the trigger” of the gun he was holding on the set of the movie Rust when it fired a live round, killing the film’s cinematographer, Halyna Hutchins, and wounding director Joel Souza. “I would never point a gun at anyone and pull the trigger at them, never,” Baldwin said. “Someone put a live bullet in a gun, a bullet that wasn’t even supposed to be on the property,” he said. Baldwin was holding an antique revolver rehearsing a scene for the Western in October at the Bonanza Creek Ranch near Santa Fe, New Mexico, when the gun went off. On Tuesday, the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office issued a new search warrant indicating that investigators might have determined where the live round came from. ABC NEWS 

Thursday, December 2nd, 2021 

(NY)

Ten oil workers are killed and another is injured during an attack on a bus in Deir ez-Zor, Syria. (Reuters) 

Finland reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a person who travelled from Sweden. (Reuters) 

Greece reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a man who travelled from South Africa to Crete. (Ekathimerini) 

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency approves GSK and Vir Biotechnology’s sotrovimab antibody treatment, after a clinical trial found that the treatment reduced the risk of hospital admission and death by 79% in vulnerable adults if administered within five days of symptoms developing. (The Guardian) 

Minnesota reports their first case of the Omicron variant in a person who traveled from New York City(KSTP-TV) 

Morocco buys six Bayraktar TB2 drones from Baykar amid rising tensions between Morocco and Algeria. (Morocco World News) 

A group of four former Serbian state security officers, including Radomir Marković, are found guilty of the murder of Slavko Ćuruvija. Two have been sentenced to 20 years in prison, while Marković and the remaining officer will serve a 30-year sentence. (Balkan Insight) 

Alan Tudge stands down as Minister for Education and Youth after Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced an investigation into domestic abuse allegations against Tudge from a former staffer who claimed that the two were involved in an extramarital affair. (The Guardian) 

Major League Baseball implements a lockout after the collective bargaining agreement they had with the Major League Baseball Players Association expired yesterday. This is the league’s first labor stoppage since the players’ strike of 1994 and 1995(ESPN) 

In basketball, the Memphis Grizzlies defeat the Oklahoma City Thunder 152–79, making it the largest blowout in the history of the National Basketball Association(ESPN) 

Conservatives push to block funding bill over COVID mandates as shutdown looms The threat of a government shutdown increased this week as conservative Republicans pushed party leaders to block a funding bill over President Biden’s vaccine and testing mandates. “We’re opposed to the mandate,” said Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.). Democrats and many Republicans had hoped that talks were headed toward a deal to keep the government funded when the current spending measure expires Friday. Lawmakers were working toward a new stopgap bill that would keep federal agencies financed until late January or later. “We won’t shut down,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said Tuesday. But on Wednesday an increasing number of conservatives, including the House Freedom Caucus, urged McConnell to “deny timely passage” of any deal that includes funding of vaccine and testing mandates. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Susan Arnold to become Disney chair when Bob Iger leaves Dec. 31 Walt Disney Co. announced Wednesday that Susan Arnold, a former Carlyle Group and Proctor & Gamble executive, will take over as chair of the entertainment giant’s board of directors when Bob Iger leaves the post on Dec. 31. The company said in a filing with the Security and Exchange Commission that Iger, who has held a senior role at the company since 1996, informed the board Wednesday that he would step down as chair as he leaves his role as CEO at the end of the year. Arnold has served on Disney’s board for 14 years. “Having most recently served as independent lead director, Susan is the perfect choice for chairman of the board, and I am confident the company is well-positioned for continued success under her guidance and leadership,” Iger said in a statement.VARIETY 

1st U.S. Omicron coronavirus case confirmed in California California officials on Wednesday confirmed the United States’ first case of the Omicron coronavirus variant, which the World Health Organization has identified as a “variant of concern.” “The individual was a traveler who returned from South Africa on Nov. 22,” the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a news release. “The individual, who was fully vaccinated and had mild symptoms that are improving, is self-quarantining and has been since testing positive.” The San Francisco health department and California’s state health department urged in a joint statement for people to “remain vigilant” but said the case was “not a cause for panic.” Speaking at the White House, the nation’s top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci urged Americans to “get boosted now. We may not need a variant-specific boost.” NPR 

Supreme Court’s conservatives signal support for Mississippi abortion law The Supreme Court’s newly bolstered conservative majority showed signs of willingness to uphold Mississippi’s restrictive abortion law as the high court heard arguments in the case Wednesday. The Mississippi law bars most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Upholding it would go against decades of court precedents, which have guaranteed women the right to terminate pregnancies up to the point of fetal viability at 22 to 24 weeks. Chief Justice John Roberts, widely considered the most moderate conservative in the 6-3 majority, said the Mississippi law isn’t a “dramatic departure” from the viability cut-off. Liberal justices said the high court’s credibility would be irreparably damaged if it tosses out decades of precedent so swiftly after conservatives gained a larger majority. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker declines to seek re-election Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker (R), a popular moderate Republican and critic of former President Donald Trump, announced Wednesday he will not seek re-election in 2022. Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito also declined to run for re-election or for Baker’s job. “After several months of discussion with our families, we have decided not to seek re-election in 2022,” Baker and Polito wrote in a statement. “This was an extremely difficult decision for us. We love the work, and we especially respect and admire the people of this wonderful Commonwealth. Serving as Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts has been the most challenging and fulfilling jobs we’ve ever had.” The news left the gubernatorial contest wide open. POLITICO 

House Jan. 6 panel backs holding former DOJ official in contempt The House committee investigating the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol attack voted unanimously Wednesday to hold former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark in criminal contempt for refusing to comply with a subpoena to testify. Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) said Clark can avoid a House vote on the contempt resolution, which would leave it to the Justice Department to decide whether to file charges, by appearing before the committee to assert his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and declining to answer the committee’s questions, one by one. If prosecuted, Clark would become the second aide to former President Donald Trump, after former Trump strategist Steve Bannon, to face charges for refusing to cooperate in the inquiry into the insurrection by a mob of Trump’s supporters. USA TODAY 

4 injured when WWII bomb explodes in Munich Four people were injured in Munich, Germany, on Wednesday when a buried World War II bomb exploded at a site being drilled to build a train tunnel. The Munich fire brigade said one of the victims sustained serious injuries. British and U.S. warplanes dropped 1.5 million tons of bombs on Germany during the war, but about 15 percent of the bombs failed to explode. Three-quarters of a century after the war, more than 2,000 tons of live bombs and other munitions are discovered every year in Germany. Some of the explosives are buried as much as 20 feet underground. Police said there was no danger at the site of the explosion outside of an area that has been cordoned off. REUTERS 

Meghan Markle scores win in media battle Meghan Markle is celebrating a big win in her legal battle against a U.K. tabloid. After a judge ruled earlier this year that the Mail on Sunday interfered with the Duchess of Sussex’s “reasonable expectation” of privacy when publishing portions of a letter that she wrote to her father in 2018, a court has now dismissed an appeal brought by the tabloid’s publisher, Associated Newspapers. The contents of the letter were “personal, private and not matters of legitimate public interest,” the court ruled. The publisher argued Meghan’s letter was actually “crafted with readership by the public in mind.” But Meghan maintained she never wanted the letter to become public, and she celebrated the court’s decision, hoping “we are now collectively brave enough to reshape a tabloid industry that conditions people to be cruel, and profits from the lies and pain that they create.”  CNN 

Britney Spears celebrates her post-conservatorship 40th birthday Britney Spears’ birthday wish may have come early a few weeks ago when her conservatorship finally ended, but the pop star officially turned 40 on Thursday, and a source told Entertainment Tonight she “feels like this is the first year in a very long time that she actually has a reason to celebrate.” Spears’ fiancé, Sam Asghari, shared videos of the two flying on a private plane, with Asghari singing her happy birthday and presenting her with a B-shaped cake. “Baby, this is hot,” Spears tells him. It wasn’t clear where the plane was headed, though Spears, who previously declared she would celebrate her birthday for two months, said she was thankful to be “able to go out of the country.” Asghari’s Instagram story also showed them watching a dazzling fireworks show on the beach, and even though we haven’t heard about the two of them getting married just yet, he wrote, “Happy 1st birthday to my wife.” All in all, it certainly sounds like a more enjoyable 40th birthday than Kendall Roy’s.  ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 

The End

12.01.2021

Wednesday, December 1st, 2021 

Clashes occur between the Taliban and Iran on the Afghanistan–Iran border after Iranian farmers crossed the border. (Bloomberg) 

Armed criminals break into a prison in Tula, Hidalgo, with vehicles, detonating several car bombs. Nine inmates are freed, including a local drug lord. Two law enforcement officers are injured. (The Guardian) 

At least 29 people, mostly schoolchildren, drown after an overloaded boat capsizes in BagwaiKano StateNigeria(BBC News) 

South Korea reports its first five cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a fully vaccinated couple who travelled from Nigeria and later tested positive, along with two of their family members and a friend. (The Straits Times) 

Italy reports 103 deaths of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, making it the deadliest toll since June 8. (Il Sole 24ore) 

The United States reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a person who travelled from South Africa to California(CNN) 

Mexican health regulator COFEPRIS approves the emergency use of Eli Lilly and Co‘s injectable combination of bamlanivimab and etesevimab to treat mild to moderate COVID-19 cases in people over the age of 12 years who weigh at least 40 kg (88 lb). (Reuters) 

Micronesian president David W. Panuelo condemns the outcome of the climate summit, stating that industrialized nations must increase their commitments in order to help countries switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy(Reuters) 

Former Attorney-General of Australia Christian Porter announces he will resign from politics in the wake of sexual assault allegations published earlier in the year, and controversy surrounding his reliance on a blind trust in a legal battle against the Australian Broadcasting Corporation over their reporting of the allegations. (The Guardian) 

The End Friday 

2021 Wednesday, December 1st, 2021 

The Philippines launches is campaign to vaccinate 9 million people in three days in order to achieve 70% vaccination target and to prevent the spread of the Omicron variant. (The Straits Times) 

BioNTech says that it is developing a vaccine to combat the Omicron variant. (Reuters) 

Cardinal Miguel Ángel Ayuso Guixot, the president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue began a six-day journey to Russia on November 23. Guixot met with Orthodox, Muslim, civil leaders. The parties discussed religious liberty and other human rights of minorities. (Catholic World News) 

Jack Dorsey resigns as the CEO of Twitter and is succeeded by Chief technology officer Parag Agrawal(CNBC) 

Researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico discover two new antibiotic molecules inside the venom of a scorpion from the Diplocentrus genus, which may hold the properties to stop several different kinds of harmful bacteria and tumour cells. (The Yucatan Times) 

Saudi Arabia reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a citizen who travelled from a North African country. (Al Arabiya English)

Micronesian President David W. Panuelo condemns the outcome of the climate summit. Panuelo indicated that industrialized nations need to increase commitments to help countries switch from fossil fuel to renewable energy(Reuters) 

Barbados declares Rihanna national hero We have some breaking news out of Barbados: Queen Elizabeth II is out, and Rihanna is in. Barbados officially became a republic on Tuesday, booting Queen Elizabeth II as head of state, and in a ceremony, Prime Minister Mia Mottley went ahead and declared Rihanna a national hero. The “Diamonds” singer was born in Saint Michael, and she grew up in Bridgetown. “May you continue to shine like a diamond and continue to bring honor to your nation by your words, by your actions, and to do credit wherever you shall go,” Mottley said during a ceremony that Rihanna attended. She became just the 11th person to ever be declared a national hero of Barbados, and the second woman. Plus, The Hollywood Reporter notes this means she can now start officially using the title “Right Honorable,” which we’re going to assume is being added to her Spotify page as we speak. Is this the first step toward Prime Minister Rihanna? Long may she reign.  THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTERENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY 

Aaron Carter and fiancée break up a week after son’s birth It’s been quite a week in the world of Aaron Carter. Carter revealed in a series of tweets that he and his fiancée, Melanie Martin, have split up after just welcoming their first child together last Monday. The “I Want Candy” singer said this was because of “a very big lie,” claiming he found out his estranged sister had been “talking to my fiancé behind my back,” which “ruined everything.” Angel Carter received a restraining order against her brother Aaron in 2019, while his brother Nick Carter alleged Aaron confessed “he harbors thoughts and intentions of killing my pregnant wife and unborn child.” On Twitter, Aaron Carter alleged “Melanie has been lying to me the whole time communicating with my twin sister and the family members who tried to put me in prison and who tried to get a conservatorship on me in court,” also claiming Martin “told me she’s moving to Vegas and I’ll never see my kid again.” TMZPEOPLE 

Bradley Cooper was held at knifepoint on the subway in 2019 The star of Nightmare Alley had his own nightmare on the New York City subway a few years ago. Bradley Cooper revealed on Dax Shepard’s Armchair Expert podcast that in October 2019, he was on the New York City subway and “got held up at knifepoint” while on his way to pick up his daughter. The Oscar-nominated actor recalled seeing someone walk up to him and initially assuming they wanted to take a photo, only to look down and see a knife. “[I] jumped over the turnstile, hid around the white tiled foyer entrance to the subway, took my phone out,” Cooper said. “He jumped over, running away, and I took a photo of him, and then I chased him up the stairs.” Cooper reflected that he had become “way, way too comfortable in this city,” adding, “My guard was down.”  PAGE SIX 

Jerome Powell says Fed considering speeding up taper stimulus efforts Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told members of the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday that the central bank might speed up plans to taper its bond-buying program, which is boosting the economic recovery, as it tries to counter accelerating inflation. The remarks came as the Fed tries to contend with both a strong recovery that is driving up prices for food and shelter, and the threat that another virus surge fueled by the newly discovered Omicron variant could prevent millions of people from returning to work and prevent disrupted supply chains from unclogging. Powell said it was too soon for anyone to know how the new coronavirus variant will damage the economy. He said it will take about a month to answer many questions, but “we’ll know something … within a week or 10 days.” BLOOMBERGTHE NEW YORK TIMES 

FDA panel narrowly recommends Merck COVID treatment A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee voted Tuesday to recommend authorization of Merck’s antiviral pill to fight severe COVID-19. The unexpectedly narrow 13-to-10 vote reflected concerns about the drug’s limited effectiveness and possible reproductive harm. The FDA is not obligated to follow the recommendations of the panel of outside experts, who backed authorizing the pill for patients at high risk of severe illness. If regulators authorize the drug’s use, it could be available to patients within weeks, as public health officials rush to prepare for the spread of the newly discovered Omicron variant of the coronavirus. In the coming weeks, the FDA will decide whether to authorize a similar pill developed by Pfizer that is believed to be more effective. THE NEW YORK TIMESSTAT NEWS 

Thanksgiving weekend shopping traffic falls slightly About 180 million Americans shopped in stores or online between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday, down from 186 million last year and 190 million in 2019, the National Retail Federation said Tuesday. One reason for the decline was that many people started their holiday shopping early to avoid missing out on popular items due to supply disruptions caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Many shoppers were lured out as early as October by retailers that launched holiday promotions early. Retail analysts said it was too early to tell whether the Omicron strain of the coronavirus would affect the holiday shopping season. South Africa announced the detection of the fast-spreading new variant just before Black Friday. THE WASHINGTON POST 

U.S. moving to impose tighter COVID testing requirements on travelers The U.S. is preparing to tighten coronavirus testing requirements for all air travelers entering the country as part of the Biden administration’s response to the new Omicron coronavirus variant, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday. Currently, vaccinated air travelers need to show a negative COVID test administered within three days of departure toward the U.S., while unvaccinated travelers must show a negative test within one day of arrival. Under a new rule expected to be announced by President Biden as soon as Thursday, all travelers, including U.S. citizens, will be required to show a negative test performed within one day of departure. Nearly all foreign nationals currently have to show that they have been fully vaccinated to enter the United States. REUTERSTHE WASHINGTON POST 

U.S. authorities expand search for Omicron variant U.S. public health officials are “actively looking” for the first cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant in the United States, Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, said at a White House news conference on Tuesday. Walensky said authorities at major international airports in New York, Atlanta, Newark, and San Francisco would expand the search for the new variant. Scientists are rushing to find out more about the strain’s transmissibility and severity, but Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, said U.S. officials believe there is “good reason” to think existing vaccines will provide “some degree of protection.” A federal judge on Tuesday blocked President Biden’s vaccine mandate for health care workers from taking effect next week. 

THE NEW YORK TIMES 

3 killed in Michigan school shooting A young attacker opened fire in Oxford High School in suburban Detroit on Tuesday, killing three people and injuring eight others, two of them critically, local authorities said. The students who died were Hana St. Juliana, 14, Madisyn Baldwin, 17, and Tate Myre, 16. Officers took a suspect — a 15-year-old sophomore — into custody. The suspect was not injured. Investigators recovered a semi-automatic pistol at the scene, Oakland County Undersheriff Michael McCabe said at a news conference. “Deputies confronted him, he had the weapon on him, and deputies took him into custody,” McCabe said. “The whole thing lasted five minutes.” Students were evacuated from the school and taken to a nearby store, where authorities reunited them with family members. THE DETROIT NEWS 

Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows cooperating with Jan. 6 committee Mark Meadows, who was then-President Donald Trump’s White House chief of staff during the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, is cooperating with the House select committee investigating the insurrection by a mob of Trump’s supporters, committee chair Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said Tuesday. Committee members previously said some Trump advisers were voluntarily cooperating with the committee, but Meadows is the first high-ranking Trump ally identified as one of the people complying with requests for information. The committee subpoenaed Meadows at the end of September. On Monday, the committee announced it would move to hold top Trump Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark in criminal contempt for refusing to cooperate. Former Trump strategist Stephen Bannon has already been indicted for refusing to comply with a subpoena. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Japan, France become latest countries to detect Omicron variant Japan and France reported their first cases of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus on Tuesday, and the Netherlands said it had detected the variant in patient samples from as early as Nov. 19. That changes what is known about the timeline and trajectory of the variant’s spread, because the first Dutch cases have now been traced to the days before South African authorities sounded the alarm and told the World Health Organization about the existence of the highly mutated version of the virus. The new developments confirmed fears about the likelihood that Omicron will spread quickly like the Delta variant, which still accounts for nearly all of the COVID-19 cases in the United States. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Jury selection starts in ex-officer’s trial for fatally shooting Daunte Wright Jury selection began Tuesday in the manslaughter trial of former Minnesota police officer Kimberly Potter for the fatal shooting of Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, during an April traffic stop. Potter shot Wright once in the chest after she yelled “Taser!” three times. She has said she thought she had drawn her stun gun but had pulled out her service weapon instead. When told by defense attorney Paul Engh that Potter would testify, one prospective juror added to the panel she “would evaluate [Potter’s testimony] like any other witness.” The woman, a retired public school teacher, said she was aware that Wright had a criminal record, but added, “I know that the victim is not on trial.” MINNEAPOLIS STAR-TRIBUNE 

Appeals court upholds California ban on large-capacity ammunition clips A federal appeals court on Tuesday upheld California’s ban on large-scale ammunition magazines. The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 7-4 that the state law does not significantly limit the right to self-defense. The court noted that there is no evidence that anyone has ever been unable to defend their home because they didn’t have large-capacity gun clips, but they have been used in three-quarters of mass shootings resulting in 10 or more deaths over the last 50 years. The decision was considered likely to pave the way for the court to approve the state’s ban on assault-style semi-automatic rifles. Judge Susan Graber, a Clinton appointee, wrote for the court that the ammunition restriction “reasonably supports California’s effort to reduce the devastating damage wrought by mass shootings.” LOS ANGELES TIMES 

Honduras ruling party concedes defeat in presidential election Tegucigalpa Mayor Nasry Asufra, the presidential candidate for Honduras’ ruling conservative National Party, conceded defeat in Sunday’s election to leftist opposition candidate Xiomara Castro on Tuesday. “I congratulate her for her victory and as president-elect, I hope that God illuminates and guides her so that her administration does the best for the benefit of all of us Hondurans,” Asufra said. With 52 percent of the votes tallied, Castro leads Asufra 53 percent to 34 percent. Asufra’s concession was a relief to Hondurans bracing for a repeat of 2017’s marred election, in which President Juan Orlando Hernández was declared the winner amid protests that left 23 people dead. His National Party has held power since a 2009 coup deposed Castro’s husband, Manuel Zelaya. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

CNN suspends Chris Cuomo over help in brother’s sexual harassment scandal CNN suspended star host Chris Cuomo “indefinitely” on Tuesday, a day after the New York Attorney General’s office released text messages showing that he went further than previously acknowledged to help his brother, then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, fight sexual misconduct allegations. The Washington Post reported in May that Chris Cuomo had participated in conference calls with his brother’s staff. He admitted that the report was true, acknowledged he had broken company rules, and pledged not to do it again. CNN stood by him, and “understood his need to put family first,” a company spokesperson said, but the documents indicated “a greater level of involvement” than the network had previously known. The spokesperson said the suspension would remain in effect “pending further evaluation.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

FDA panel narrowly recommends Merck COVID treatment A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee voted Tuesday to recommend authorization of Merck’s antiviral pill to fight severe COVID-19. The unexpectedly narrow 13-to-10 vote reflected concerns about the drug’s limited effectiveness and possible reproductive harm. The FDA is not obligated to follow the recommendations of the panel of outside experts, who backed authorizing the pill for patients at high risk of severe illness. If regulators authorize the drug’s use, it could be available to patients within weeks, as public health officials rush to prepare for the spread of the newly discovered Omicron variant of the coronavirus. In coming weeks, the FDA will decide whether to authorize a similar pill developed by Pfizer that is believed to be more effective. THE NEW YORK TIMESSTAT NEWS 

Dr. Oz is officially running for Senate in Pennsylvania Celebrity TV doctor Mehmet Oz announced in the Washington Examiner on Tuesday that he is running for Senate in Pennsylvania to “help fix the problems and to help us heal.” The confirmation comes after a report from the Washington Free Beacon that he was hiring staff and eying a run as a Republican, seeking the seat that will be vacated following the retirement of Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.). In his announcement, Oz, a cardiothoracic surgeon and host of The Dr. Oz Show, criticized government policies during the COVID-19 pandemic, slamming “the arrogant, closed-minded people in charge [who] closed our parks, shuttered our schools, shut down our businesses, and took away our freedom.” Oz first rose to fame as a health expert on The Oprah Winfrey Show and has been criticized throughout his career for allegedly “promoting quack treatments and cures in the interest of personal financial gain.” THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER 

2021  Tuesday,  November 30th, 2021 

Uganda launches airstrikes against Allied Democratic Forces and Islamic State – Central Africa Province positions in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo(ABC News) 

England begins to implement mandatory mask wearing in shops, banks, post offices and hairdressers, as well as on public transport as part of targeted measures to reduce the spread of the Omicron variant. (The Guardian) 

Nottingham reports its second case of the Omicron variant in a student who attends the University of Nottingham(BBC News) 

The government announces that anyone over the age of 60 who is not vaccinated will face a monthly fine of 100 beginning on January 6. (Kathimerini) 

Japan closes its border to all newly arrived foreigners and requires its citizens to quarantine on arrival from countries where cases of the Omicron variant have been detected due to fears of the variant. (Bloomberg News) 

Brazil reports its first “preliminary” cases of the Omicron variant in two people who travelled from South Africa(Barron’s) 

BioNTech CEO Uğur Şahin and Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla both say that their vaccine is likely to be effective against severe disease resulting from the Omicron variant. (Reuters) 

Three students are killed and eight others are injured in a mass shooting at a high school in Oxford, MichiganUnited States(Detroit Free Press) 

Bong Go withdraws his candidacy from the presidential election, stating that he is waiting for “a sign from God”. (GMA Network) 

Dame Sandra Mason is inaugurated as the first President of Barbados, as the country becomes the 34th Commonwealth republic(The Guardian) 

The ruling centreright National Party concedes victory to leftist Xiomara Castro, marking a return for the left to power after Castro’s husband Manuel Zelaya was overthrown in a 2009 coup(Reuters) 

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James tests positive for COVID-19 and will miss the team’s matchup against the Sacramento Kings(CNBC) 

The End Wednesday 

Tuesday,  November 30th, 2021 

Uganda launches airstrikes against Allied Democratic Forces and Islamic State – Central Africa Province positions in eastern Congo. (ABC News) 

Japan closes its border to all newly arrived foreigners and quarantines its citizens on arrival from countries where the Omicron variant has been found due to the fears of the variant. (Bloomberg News) 

England begins to implement mandatory mask wearing in shops, banks, post offices, hairdressers, and public transport as part of targeted measures to prevent the spread of the Omicron variant. (The Guardian) 

Lindsay Lohan is getting married She said yes! Lindsay Lohan revealed Sunday she’s getting married, sharing photos of herself on Instagram wearing her engagement ring with fiancé Bader Shammas. “My love. My life. My family. My future,” she wrote. The Mean Girls star has been dating Shammas, who works as assistant vice president at Credit Suisse, for two years. She was previously engaged to Egor Tarabasov, a Russian millionaire, but they broke up before the wedding, with Lohan alleging abuse. “The truth is, I wanted to make things work, but now I’m not sure that I can,” she said in 2016. Lohan’s engagement comes as she’s set to make her triumphant return to acting by starring in an upcoming Netflix Christmas romantic comedy. Prepare for the Lohanaissance.  PEOPLE 

Prince Charles denies book’s claim he asked about skin tone of Harry and Meghan’s kids More than eight months after Meghan Markle dropped the bombshell allegation that there were “concerns” in the royal family about “how dark” her baby’s skin would be, a new book claims to have more information. Author Christopher Andersen’s book Brothers and Wives: Inside the Private Lives of William, Kate, Harry, and Meghan claims that after Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s engagement was announced in 2017, Prince Charles asked his wife, Camilla, “I wonder what the children will look like?” According to the book, Camilla, who was “somewhat taken aback,” replied “Well, absolutely gorgeous, I’m certain.” Charles allegedly responded, “I mean, what do you think their children’s complexion might be?” A spokesperson for Charles denied the account, calling it “fiction and not worth further comment.” On the Today show, Andersen stood by the reporting while insisting Charles made the remarks in a “very kind of benign way” and that they were then “turned into something very toxic.” Meghan and Harry have never identified who made the comments referenced in the Oprah interview, but Andersen told Today he believes Meghan was referring to Charles’ remarks.  VANITY FAIR 

The Gucci family is really upset about ‘House of Gucci’ The Gucci family’s review of House of Gucci is in! Spoiler alert: they’re not happy. The heirs of Aldo Gucci, who’s played by Al Pacino in the Ridley Scott movie, slammed the film in a statement, claiming its depiction of the family is inaccurate. “The production of the film did not bother to consult the heirs before describing Aldo Gucci — president of the company for 30 years — and the members of the Gucci family as thugs, ignorant and insensitive to the world around them, attributing to the protagonists, events, a tone and an attitude that never belonged to them,” they said. The family also took issue with Patrizia Reggiani, played by Lady Gaga, being portrayed “as a victim trying to survive in a male and male chauvinist corporate culture,” claiming Gucci has always been an “inclusive company.” Scott previously dismissed criticism claiming he was “stealing the identity of a family to make a profit,” shooting back that the case is “part of the public domain.” 

VARIETY 

Twitter announces Jack Dorsey’s resignation as CEO Twitter announced Monday that CEO Jack Dorsey is stepping down and will be replaced by the social media company’s chief technology officer, Parag Agrawal, effective immediately. Dorsey, 45, has been serving as chief executive of both Twitter and his digital payments company Square. He will remain on Twitter’s board until his term expires at the 2022 stockholders’ meeting, the company said. Salesforce President and COO Bret Taylor will replace former Google executive Patrick Pichette as chairman of the board. Dorsey didn’t reveal why he was resigning, but said he had “decided to leave Twitter because I believe the company is ready to move on from its founders.” Twitter shares fell by 2.7 percent on Monday. CNBC 

Federal labor official calls for new union vote at Amazon warehouse A National Labor Relations Board official, Lisa Y. Henderson, has ordered a second union vote at the Amazon warehouse in Bessemer, Alabama, after determining that Amazon improperly pressured workers during the initial vote in the spring. Henderson, the NLRB’s Atlanta region director, accused Amazon of “flagrant disregard” for making the union election free and fair, saying its placement of a U.S. Postal Service mailbox in front of the warehouse “essentially hijacked the process and gave a strong impression” the company controlled ballot counting. Amazon, which staunchly opposes unionization, noted that the factory’s workers voted more than 2-to-1 against joining the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union. “It’s disappointing that the NLRB has now decided that those votes shouldn’t count,” Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel said. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Stock futures fall as concerns over Omicron variant continue U.S. stock futures fell early Tuesday after Monday’s rebound as concerns continued about the new Omicron coronavirus variant. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 were down by 1.3 percent and 1.1 percent, respectively, at 6:30 a.m. ET. Futures for the tech-heavy Nasdaq were down by 0.6 percent. The main U.S. indexes made big gains on Monday, bouncing back from Friday’s plunge, after President Biden said a new economic lockdown was off the table. Futures fell Tuesday after Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel told the Financial Times that existing vaccines would probably be less effective against the Omicron variant. CNBC 

Eurozone inflation rises to 4.9 percent, highest on record Inflation hit 4.9 percent across the Eurozone in November, the highest since records began in 1997, according to figures released Tuesday by Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency. The figure, up from 4.1 percent in October, was higher than the 4.5 percent expected by economists surveyed by Reuters. The surge in consumer prices in the 19 countries that use the European common currency came largely because of a spike in energy costs. Increasing demand and supply-chain bottlenecks due to the recovery from the coronavirus recession also pushed up consumer prices. The data raised questions about how quickly the European Central Bank will tighten its monetary policy as inflation rises but pandemic concerns continue. CNBC 

U.K. competition regulator tells Meta to sell Giphy British antitrust regulators on Tuesday told Meta to sell Giphy over concerns that the social media giant’s recent purchase of the GIF-sharing platform would hurt competition. The U.K. Competition and Markets Authority said Meta’s control of Giphy — a search tool for short, looping videos and animations — had already knocked one potential rival out of the advertising market, and concluded that the regulator’s “competition concerns can only be addressed by Facebook selling Giphy in its entirety to an approved buyer.” Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, said it disagreed with the decision and was considering “all options, including appeal.” “Both consumers and Giphy are better off with the support of our infrastructure, talent, and resources,” a Meta spokesperson said. CNN 

Biden says Omicron variant cause for concern, not panic President Biden addressed the spread of the newly discovered Omicron variant of the coronavirus, saying the highly contagious strain was a “cause for concern, not a cause for panic.” “Sooner or later we’re going to see cases of this new variant here in the United States. We’ll have to face this new threat just as we face those who have come before it,” Biden said at the White House. Public health officials are still trying to assess how highly transmissible the Omicron variant is, and whether it can penetrate the protections offered by vaccines. Biden said that on Thursday he would unveil a “detailed strategy outlining how we’re going to fight Covid this winter. Not with shutdowns or lockdowns, but with more widespread vaccinations, boosters, testing, and more.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

CDC strengthens recommendation for COVID-19 booster shots The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday recommended that all adults get COVID-19 vaccine booster shots due to the rising risk of infection posed by the new Omicron variant of the coronavirus. The CDC strengthened the language of its guidance, which previously said young adults “may” get the booster, and said that all adults “should” get the additional shot. “Everyone ages 18 and older should get a booster shot either when they are six months after their initial Pfizer or Moderna series or two months after their initial J&J vaccine,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in a statement. Early data from South Africa, where the new variant was first detected, suggest it is highly transmissible, and scientists are “urgently examining” the effectiveness of existing vaccines against it. CNN 

Defense secretary orders new investigation into Syria airstrike Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin III on Monday ordered an investigation by a top general into a U.S. airstrike in Syria that killed dozens of women and children. Gen. Michael X. Garrett, the four-star head of the Army’s Forces Command, will look into the strike as well as the handling of an earlier investigation by top military officials and the Defense Department’s inspector general, the Pentagon said. The strike reportedly was conducted by a classified Special Operations unit called Task Force 9. Pentagon chief spokesperson John Kirby said Austin decided to call for the investigation after discussions with Gen. Kenneth McKenzie Jr., the commander of Central Command. Kirby added that the inquiry would determine “whether accountability measures would be appropriate.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Twitter announces Jack Dorsey’s resignation as CEO Twitter announced Monday that CEO Jack Dorsey is stepping down and will be replaced by the social media company’s chief technology officer, Parag Agrawal, effective immediately. Dorsey, 45, has been serving as chief executive of both Twitter and his digital payments company Square. He will remain on Twitter’s board until his term expires at the 2022 stockholders’ meeting, the company said. Salesforce President and COO Bret Taylor will replace former Google executive Patrick Pichette as chairman of the board. Dorsey didn’t reveal why he was resigning, but said he had “decided to leave Twitter because I believe the company is ready to move on from its founders.” Twitter shares fell by 2.7 percent on Monday. CNBC 

Opposition candidate takes big lead in early Honduras presidential vote count Early vote counts showed opposition candidate Xiomara Castro with a commanding lead in Honduras’ presidential election. Initial results shortly after the Sunday balloting indicated that Castro had 53 percent of the vote, ahead of Nasry Asfura of the incumbent National Party, who had 34 percent. The National Party has refused to concede. The final result isn’t expected for days. Castro defied the Central American country’s electoral council’s call for no candidate to declare victory, telling supporters that she would start forming a national reconciliation government on Monday. “We have turned back authoritarianism,” said Castro, the wife of Manuel Zelaya, a leftist former president deposed in a 2009 coup. “Out with corruption, out with drug trafficking, out with organized crime.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Prosecutors ask Supreme Court to reinstate Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction Pennsylvania prosecutors on Monday asked the Supreme Court to restore Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction, which was overturned five months ago. Cosby was convicted on charges of sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, but he was released in June after the conviction was overturned by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, citing a promise made by a previous prosecutor that Cosby would never be charged when he gave damaging testimony in an accuser’s civil suit in 2006. His legal team argued this should have prevented any charges from being brought against him. Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele wrote in the petition that the decision would have “far-reaching negative consequences,” and he asked the U.S. Supreme Court to “right what we believe is a grievous wrong.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Swedish lawmakers re-elect nation’s 1st female prime minister Swedish lawmakers narrowly re-elected Magdalena Andersson to be the country’s prime minister. Anderson, 54, served as Sweden’s first female prime minister for seven hours before resigning last week after her Green Party coalition partner dropped out of the two-party minority government over a budget defeat in parliament. The showdown occurred when the government rejected its own spending plan in favor of one presented by the opposition, which includes the right-wing populist Sweden Democrats. Only 101 members of the 349-member Swedish parliament voted yes to Andersson, while 173 voted no and 75 abstained. Under the country’s constitution, Andersson won the job because a majority did not vote against her.  NPR 

Barbados drops allegiance to queen and becomes world’s newest republic Barbados became the world’s newest republic on Tuesday, swearing in its first president and dropping its formal allegiance to Queen Elizabeth II. Prince Charles and Rihanna were among the dignitaries who attended the overnight ceremony in Bridgetown, the Caribbean nation’s capital, and fireworks lit up the sky and a steel drum orchestra played as the clock struck midnight and Barbados shed yet another layer of its colonial past. Barbados became a republic on the 55th anniversary of its independence from Britain. It will remain part of the Commonwealth, but its head of state is now Sandra Mason, governor general since 2018; the Barbados parliament elected Mason president last month, and she will now help run the island nation with Prime Minister Mia Mottley.  BBC NEWS 

Pioneering Black golfer Lee Elder dies at 87 Lee Elder, the first Black golfer to compete in the Masters Tournament at Augusta National, has died at age 87. No cause of death was immediately announced, but Elder had been experiencing respiratory difficulties. Elder learned to play while working as a caddie in rural Dallas, and dominated the United Golf Association tour for Black players before the PGA was integrated. He earned his PGA Tour card in 1967, winning four tournaments. A group of politicians unsuccessfully urged Augusta National to invite Elder to play in the Masters, but two years later he qualified. “When I first qualified for the Tour, in 1967, I said I wanted to get that one thing that had not been accomplished out of the way,” Elder once told Golfweek. “The Masters was the one tournament that hadn’t been integrated.” GOLFWEEK 

Monday,  November 29th, 2021 

Turkey offers to mediate between Ukraine and Russia over the conflict between the two nations. (Reuters) 

Miss Universe France 2021, Clémence Botino, a contestant at the Miss Universe contest in EilatIsrael, tests positive for COVID-19(L’Independant) 

BioNTech says that it is developing a vaccine to combat the Omicron variant. (Reuters) 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan reveals his intentions to rebuild his country’s ties with Egypt and Israel(TRT World) 

While votes are still being counted, both Xiomara Castro and Nasry Asfura declare that their respective tickets have won the presidential election. (Al Jazeera) 

Magdalena Andersson is re-elected as Prime Minister of Sweden by the Riksdag after she resigned last week. (Euronews) 

Jack Dorsey resigns as the CEO of Twitter and is succeeded by Chief technology officer Parag Agrawal(CNBC) 

Researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico discover two new antibiotic molecules inside the venom of a scorpion from the Diplocentrus genus, which may hold the properties to stop several different kinds of harmful bacteria and tumour cells. (The Yucatan Times) 

The End Tuesday 

Monday,  November 29th, 2021 

Turkey offers to mediate between Ukraine and Russia over the conflict between the two nations. (WSAU) 

Argentina donates 780,000 doses of the Oxford–AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to countries which have detected cases of the Omicron variantAngolaKenya and Barbados(LMDiario) 

Portugal reports the first 13 cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant at Lisbon soccer team Belenenses SAD(Reuters) 

BioNTech says that it is developing a vaccine to combat the Omicron variant. (Reuters) 

While votes are still being counted, both Xiomara Castro and Nasry Asfura declare that their respective tickets have won the presidential election. (Al Jazeera) 

Magdalena Andersson is re-elected as Prime Minister of Sweden by the Riksdag after she resigned last week. (Euronews) 

Recep Tayyip Erdogan reveals his intentions to rebuild ties with Egypt and Israel.(TRT World) 

Jack Dorsey is expected to step down as the CEO of Twitter(CNBC) 

Omicron variant continues to spread as U.S. prepares response 

The Omicron variant of the coronavirus continued to spread on Sunday, with the Netherlands, Austria, and Canada becoming the latest countries to report their first cases of the fast-spreading strain first reported in South Africa. Australia, the U.K., Germany, Belgium, Israel, and Italy also have detected infections with the variant. More countries tightened travel restrictions, with Israel and Japan banning entry to all foreigners. Australia restricted travel from several African countries. Britain resumed mask mandates and PCR tests for visitors. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, said Sunday on ABC’s This Week that the variant would “inevitably” reach the United States, so the country must step up vaccination efforts to be ready. President Biden will update the nation Monday on his administration’s response to the new variantTHE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Moderna says Omicron-variant vaccine could be out in early 2022 Moderna could release a coronavirus vaccine adjusted to fight the Omicron variant by early 2022, the company’s chief medical officer, Paul Burton, said Sunday. It was not immediately clear whether current forms of coronavirus vaccines would provide protection against the new variant, which was first detected in South Africa and has spread to numerous countries around the world. “We should know about the ability of the current vaccine to provide protection in the next couple of weeks, but the remarkable thing about the mRNA vaccines, the Moderna platform, is that we can move very fast,” Burton said on BBC’s Andrew Marr Show. “If we have to make a brand new vaccine I think that’s going to be early 2022 before that’s really going to be available in large quantities.” CNBC 

Ex-Defense Secretary Mark Esper sues Pentagon over memoir redactions 

Former Defense Secretary Mark Esper filed a lawsuit against the Pentagon on Sunday, accusing it of “infringing on my First Amendment rights” by demanding changes in his tell-all memoir about his service under former President Donald Trump. Esper said in the lawsuit that the Defense Department withheld “significant” details from the book, A Sacred Oath, which is due to be published in May. He said agreeing to the 60 pages of requested redactions, including quotes from Trump, would be “a serious injustice to important moments in history that the American people need to know and understand.” Esper, who was fired by Trump in a tweet two days after the 2020 election, needs Pentagon approval to override his secrecy agreements. NEW YORK POSTCNN 

Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex-trafficking trial begins The trial of British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, who is accused of helping the late disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein recruit and sexually abuse underage girls, begins Monday in a Manhattan courtroom. Maxwell, 59, faces six counts related to her alleged involvement in a sex-trafficking scheme to get underage girls to travel and engage in illegal sex acts with Epstein and others. Epstein was found dead in his jail cell more than two years ago as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges. The New York City medical examiner ruled his death a suicide by hanging. Maxwell has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, she faces up to 70 years in prison. THE WASHINGTON POST 

QAnon star Michael Flynn recorded calling QAnon ‘total nonsense’ Michael Flynn, the retired lieutenant general hired then fired and finally pardoned by former President Donald Trump, has publicly embraced the QAnon conspiracy theory, selling QAnon merchandise, recording himself taking a QAnon oath, and making a controversial appearance at a QAnon convention in Dallas in May. But in a phone call recorded and released by former ally Lin Wood on Saturday night, the man purported to be Flynn says he thinks QAnon is “a disinformation campaign that the CIA created,” adding: “I find it total nonsense. And I think it’s a disinformation campaign created by the left.” The Daily Beast writes that “Wood’s publication of the audio comes as part of a growing feud between … figures active in the attempt to overturn the 2020 election.” THE DAILY BEAST 

Former ‘Empire’ star Jussie Smollett’s trial set to start Jury selection is scheduled to start Monday in former Empire star Jussie Smollett’s trial on charges that he made false claims about being targeted in a hate crime three years ago. After he was accused of staging the attack, he was written off the hit Fox television show. Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s office suddenly dropped disorderly conduct charges against Smollett months later. Scrutiny of that decision resulted in the appointment of a special prosecutor to reopen the investigation and look into possible wrongdoing by Foxx’s office. A year later, Smollett was indicted on disorderly conduct charges again for allegedly making false statements to police claiming he was the victim of a racist and anti-gay attack near his apartment.  CHICAGO SUN-TIMES 

France inducts Josephine Baker into its Pantheon France this week will induct American cabaret dancer, civil rights activist, and World War II spy Josephine Baker into its Pantheon. Baker is the first Black woman to receive the honor of a place where France’s heroes are buried. “She embodies, before anything, women’s freedom,” Laurent Kupferman, who wrote the petition that prompted President Emmanuel Macron to approve Baker’s entry into the Pantheon. Baker was born in St. Louis in 1906. She moved to France at age 19 and became an instant success at the Theatre des Champs-Elysees stage, where she appeared topless in a show challenging racist stereotypes about African women, Kupferman said in the petition. In a Tuesday ceremony, soil from France, the U.S., and Monaco, where Baker is buried, will be deposited in the Pantheon monument. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Fashion designer Virgil Abloh dies of cancer at 41 Trailblazing Black fashion designer Virgil Abloh died Sunday in Chicago after battling a rare cancer called cardiac angiosarcoma for two years. He was 41. Abloh was the first Black artistic director of Louis Vuitton men’s wear. The Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton luxury group bought a majority stake in his Off-White brand this year. Before founding his streetwear fashion house in 2013, Abloh left his mark on the music scene as artistic director for Jay-Z and Kanye West’s 2011 album Watch The Throne. He was a frequent collaborator with West since the days they worked together as interns at Fendi in 2009. He also collaborated with companies and artists that included Nike, Levi, Jimmy Choo, Moncler, Dr. Martens, Champion, Rihanna, and Beyoncé. 

ROLLING STONE 

Moderna says Omicron-variant vaccine could be out in early 2022 Moderna could release a coronavirus vaccine adjusted to fight the Omicron variant by early 2022, the company’s chief medical officer, Paul Burton, said Sunday. It was not immediately clear whether current forms of coronavirus vaccines would provide protection against the new variant, which was first detected in South Africa and has spread to numerous countries around the world. “We should know about the ability of the current vaccine to provide protection in the next couple of weeks, but the remarkable thing about the mRNA vaccines, the Moderna platform, is that we can move very fast,” Burton said on BBC’s Andrew Marr Show. “If we have to make a brand new vaccine I think that’s going to be early 2022 before that’s really going to be available in large quantities.” CNBC 

Online Black Friday sales edge down as shoppers return to stores Online sales fell on Black Friday for the first time as shoppers returned to brick-and-mortar stores, according to a holiday shopping report by Adobe Analytics. U.S. online sales totaled $8.9 billion this year, inching down from $9 billion last year. Adobe Analytics said there were several reasons for the decline. Stores started promotions as early as October, shifting some purchases to the weeks before Black Friday. Supply-chain disruptions also played a role. Adobe reported that out-of-stock messages have jumped by 124 percent since January 2020, so many people who tried to buy were unable to find the products they wanted. In-store traffic was up compared to 2020, but remained 28 percent below pre-pandemic levels. THE VERGEFOX BUSINESS 

Nissan announces $17.6 billion investment in EV batteries Nissan said Monday it would invest $17.6 billion in developing a cheaper and more powerful electric-vehicle battery over five years. CEO Makoto Uchida said the Japanese automaker would offer 15 new electric vehicles by 2030 as it aims for 50 percent “electrification” of its lineup, including hybrids and other greener vehicles as well as EVs. Nissan also aims to reduce carbon emissions at its factories. The company is focusing on efforts to become more climate-friendly as it struggles to recover from the scandal of its former Chairman Carlos Ghosn’s arrest in Tokyo in 2018 on financial misconduct charges. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Sunday, November 28th, 2021 

Five Peshmerga fighters are killed and four more are wounded during a shooting and bombing attack by the Islamic State in Diyala(Al Jazeera) 

convoy carrying French troops in Niger opens fire against locals in TéraTillabéri Region, who were protesting against the French presence in the country, killing two people and wounding 18 others. (The Guardian) 

Canada reports its first cases of the Omicron variant in two people in Ontario who recently travelled to Nigeria. (Reuters) 

The Netherlands tightens its partial lockdown restrictions that require non-essential shops, sports facilities, and hospitality and cultural venues to close at 5 p.m., and chemists, supermarkets, and wholesalers to close at 8 p.m., amid a record number of new COVID-19 cases as well as concerns about the Omicron variant. (BBC News) 

The Netherlands reports its first cases of the Omicron variant in 13 people who travelled from South Africa on November 26. (ABC News) 

Australia reports its first cases of the Omicron variant in two people who travelled from Southern Africa and are currently in quarantine in a hotel in New South Wales(ABC News Australia) 

Sixty-seven protesters are arrested in Isfahan during a protest against water shortages. (Deutsche Welle) 

Petr Fiala is designated as Prime Minister of the Czech Republic to form a majority government following the October election(Deutsche Welle) 

Hondurans go to the polls to elect their next President(NPR) 

Kyrgyzstan holds parliamentary elections after the annulment of the results of the October 2020 elections due to protests(Al Jazeera) 

The End Monday 

11.28.2021

Chinatown Boston Black Friday

Sunday, November 28th, 2021 

Five Peshmerga fighters are killed and four more wounded during a shooting and bombing attack by Islamic State. (Al Jazeera) 

A convoy carrying French troops open fire against locals in Téra, Tillabéri Region, who were protesting against their presence in Niger, killing two people and wounding 18 others. (The Guardian) 

Israel closes its borders to all foreigners and requires its citizens to quarantine for three days for fully vaccinated and seven days for the unvaccinated in a bid to curb the spread of the Omicron variant. (France 24) 

The Netherlands tightens its partial lockdown restrictions that force non-essential shops, sports facilities, hospitality and cultural venues to close at 5 p.m. and chemists, supermarkets, and wholesalers to close at 8 p.m. amid a record amount of COVID-19 cases and concerns about the Omicron variant. (BBC News) 

Petr Fiala is designated as Prime Minister of the Czech Republic to form a majority government following the October election. 

Kyrgyzstan holds parliamentary elections after the annulment of the results of the October 2020 elections following the 2020 Kyrgyzstani protests. (Al Jazeera) 

Omicron strain reaches U.K., Germany, Italy, and more The new Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus, labeled a “variant of concern” by the World Health Organization (WHO), has reached the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Hong Kong, and Australia. Public officials in the Czech Republic continue to await lab results. The U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, Israel, and many other nations, as well as the European Union, have announced restrictions on travelers coming from southern African countries. REUTERS 

Hondurans vote for new president as incumbent faces extradition Hondurans vote today for a new president. This election could remove the governing National Party from office for the first time since it took power in a 2009 military coup that removed leftist President Mel Zelaya. Xiomara Castro, Zelaya’s wife, currently leads in the polls. National Party candidate Nasry Asfura is in second place, but his campaign has been marred by allegations that he embezzled millions of dollars during his two terms as mayor of Tegucigalpa, the nation’s capital city. The incumbent, Juan Orlando Hernández, has been accused by U.S. prosecutors of funding his campaigns with drug money and could be extradited to the U.S. if his party loses power. NPR 

Taiwanese air force warns off Chinese incursion Taiwan’s military scrambled fighters and readied missile defenses after 27 Chinese military aircraft entered its air defense zone Sunday. The People’s Liberation Army Air Force launched a wave of similar incursions in early October. This latest provocation included 18 fighters, 6 bombers, and an aerial refueling aircraft. Chinese public opinion and political rhetoric have become increasingly bellicose in recent months, with some observers fearing that the People’s Republic may be laying the groundwork for an invasion of Taiwan, which the PRC government regards as a rebel province. REUTERS

South Africa objects to Omicron travel bans South Africa should not be “punished” for having the medical expertise that enabled its early detection of the COVID-19 Omicron variant, the country’s Ministry of International Relations and Cooperation said in a statement Saturday. South African Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor expressed concerns that travel restrictions targeting South Africa and other southern African countries would negatively impact business and tourism. A World Health Organization spokesperson said Friday that “implementing travel measures is being cautioned against” and that countries should “apply a risk-based and scientific approach.” The European Union has imposed travel bans aimed at slowing the spread of Omicron, as have the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, and a host of other nations.   REUTERS

Swiss hold referendum on COVID restrictions Polls close today in a Swiss referendum on the country’s COVID restrictions. If a majority votes “No,” a law that requires a vaccination certificate or negative test for entry into many public spaces will be repealed. Switzerland is currently experiencing record high infection rates similar to those affecting Germany and Austria. About two thirds of the population has been vaccinated. Switzerland practices a form of semi-direct democracy in which an unusually high number of legislative and constitutional changes are approved or rejected via referendum. Polls suggest that voters will opt to leave COVID restrictions in place. BBC

Wisconsin senators issue bipartisan plea to stop politicizing Waukesha killings Wisconsin Sens. Tammy Baldwin (D) and Ron Johnson (R) issued a joint statement Saturday asking people not to “exploit the tragedy that occurred last Sunday in Waukesha for their own political purposes.” Six people are dead and more than 60 injured after a driver ploughed his SUV into a Christmas parade. Prosecutors have charged Darrell E. Brooks with homicide. The senators’ statement comes after several conservative commentators accused mainstream media of painting the attack as a getaway attempt gone wrong rather than an intentional mass murder and of ignoring posts on Brooks’ Facebook account that parrot Black Hebrew Israelite rhetoric and encourage violence against white people.   THE NEW YORK POST

Israel closes borders and reinstitutes phone tracking to slow Omicron Israel has closed its borders to all non-citizens in an attempt to slow the spread of the new Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus. While several other nations have implemented travel bans targeting southern Africa, Israel is the first country to close its borders entirely. Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett says he plans to keep schools and businesses open and to continue encouraging citizens to receive booster shots. The country’s internal security service will also resume tracking the cell phones of Israelis who are confirmed to be carriers of the new variant, a policy that was first implemented in March 2020 and abandoned a year later. THE WASHINGTON POST 

San Francisco security guard dies after being shot in attempted robbery Security guard Kevin Nishita died Saturday after being shot Wednesday by man attempting to rob the San Francisco TV news crew Nishita had been assigned to protect. The shooting took place in downtown Oakland. The killer remains at large. Oakland Police are offering a reward of $32,500 for information leading to an arrest. A statement from law enforcement warned of “armed roving caravans” carrying out robberies across Oakland and often exchanging gunfire with security guards and police officers in the process. CNN 

Hanukkah and Advent start Sunday Hanukkah begins at sundown this Sunday. The Jewish festival, which lasts for eight days, commemorates the rededication of the Jewish Temple in 164 B.C. following its desecration by the Seleucid King Antiochus IV. One account of the holiday’s origins can be found in the book of Second Maccabees. Sunday is also the beginning of Advent for Christians who use the Western calendar. Advent is a 40-day period of spiritual preparation for the Feast of the Nativity — also known as Christmas — which celebrates the birth of Jesus of Nazareth as recorded in the gospels of Matthew and Luke. NJ.COMNATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER 

Saturday, November 27th, 2021 

The World Trade Organization postpones its four-day Ministerial Conference, which was scheduled to be held on November 29 in Geneva, Switzerland, amid the emergence of the new Omicron variant that was declared a “Variant of Concern” by the WHO. (France 24) 

Three people are killed in the United Kingdom as Storm Arwen hits the British Isles. Widespread damage and travel disruptions are reported in Scotland and North East England, with 100,000 people losing power. (BBC News) 

Belgium imposes new anti-COVID-19 measures that close nightclubs, discos and dance halls, require businesses in the hospitality sector to close at 11 p.m., ban organised private parties, and limit the number of people at tables at bars and restaurants to six people unless they are from the same household, amid a fourth wave of the pandemic. (The Brussels Times) 

The Czech Republic reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a woman in Liberec who had been in Namibia. She had passed through South Africa and Dubai on her flight to the Czech Republic. (Deutsche Welle) 

Germany reports its first cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in two people in Bavaria who entered the country at Munich Airport on November 24. (Deutsche Welle) 

Italy reports its first case of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in a person who travelled from Mozambique. (Times of Malta) 

The United Kingdom reports its first cases of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in two people who travelled from southern Africa to Chelmsford and Nottingham. (BBC News) 

WHO classifies COVID Omicron variant as ‘variant of concern’ The World Health Organization on Friday officially classified a new strain of the coronavirus first found in southern Africa as a global “variant of concern,” following initial detection reports that sent markets into a tailspin. Preliminary evidence suggests the newly-named Omicron variant presents a higher risk of reinfection, and may also be more transmissible than other strains, the WHO said. Strains are only labeled as “variants of concern” when they have higher rates of transmissibility or virulence or higher levels of resistance to vaccines and other treatments. THE WALL STREET JOURNALCNBC 

Biden to restrict travel from 8 African countries Staring Monday, President Biden will begin restricting travel to the U.S. from South Africa and seven other countries. The news arrived mere moments after the World Health Organization classified the new Omicron COVID variant, which was first detected in southern Africa, as a “variant of concern.” Biden is acting on the advice of White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In addition to South Africa, the U.S. will restrict travel from Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique, and Malawi. CNN 

New migrant caravan forms in Mexico A new caravan, comprising about 1,000 Central American and Haitian migrants, formed in southern Mexico Friday and began walking toward the U.S. border. Many of these migrants told reporters that they are setting out for the U.S. after Mexican authorities failed to present them with the refugee or humanitarian visas they have been requesting. The journey to the U.S. border from the town of Tapachula, the caravan’s starting point in the Mexican state of Chiapas near the Guatemalan border, is over 1,000 miles. REUTERS 

New York governor declares state of emergency amid Omicron fears New York Governor Kathy Hochul (D), who took office in August following the resignation of former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D), has declared a state of emergency in New York following a winter spike in COVID cases and the WHO’s designation of the new Omicron variant as a “variant of concern.” The emergency allows the state’s Health Department to place limits on nonessential and non-urgent care until at least Jan. 15. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Planes from South Africa may have brought Omicron to Amsterdam At least 15 COVID-19 cases have been confirmed after two planes from South Africa carrying over 600 passengers landed in Amsterdam Friday. It remains unclear whether any of those cases are instances of the new Omicron variant. Infected passengers will be required to quarantine at a hotel for at least five days. The Dutch government re-imposed a partial lockdown earlier this month, sparking riots, and had already planned to tighten those restrictions starting this weekend. Under the new policy, most businesses will have to close at 5 p.m. and remain closed until 5 a.m. THE WASHINGTON POST

Black Friday spending continues to rise, but shoppers aren’t packing stores like they used to  This year’s Black Friday spending could exceed last year’s by 6.2 percent, according to one industry analyst, but the Golden Age of stampeding shoppers is likely behind us. Increasingly, Americans prefer to shop online, especially after last year, when COVID-19 restrictions on brick-and-mortar retailers didn’t stop spending from increasing by over 8 percent. Retailers have also moved away from massive one-day sales toward spreading deals across the entire holiday season. Labor shortages, expensive gasoline, and supply-chain issues also led to higher prices and put a damper on in-person shopping this Black Friday. THE NEW YORK TIMES

Top House Dems blast Boebert for anti-Muslim comments In a statement issued Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and other members of Democratic House leadership characterized comments made by Congresswoman Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) as “Islamophobic” and “deeply offensive and concerning.” The statement also urged House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and other members of House Republican leadership “to take real action to confront racism.” In a video posted last Saturday, Boebert joked about Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) being mistaken for a terrorist and referred to Omar as a member of the “jihad squad.” Omar was born in Somalia and is a Muslim. CNN 

Dow drops 900 points on Black Friday The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 905.04 points, or 2.5 percent, Friday following news of the new Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus. It was the biggest one-day percentage drop since October 2020, as well as the worst Black Friday performance on record. Airline stocks, oil prices, and government bonds all saw significant losses. Meanwhile, companies that benefit from lockdowns, including Netflix and DoorDash, saw stock prices increase. “COVID,” one investor said, “is back on the table.” THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Stephen Sondheim, composer and lyricist, dies at 91 Stephen Sondheim, the iconic Broadway composer and lyricist behind legendary stage hits like West Side StorySweeney Todd, and Into the Woods, died early Friday at his home in Connecticut. He was 91. Sondheim’s death was announced by his lawyer and friend, F. Richard Pappas, who said he wasn’t sure of the cause but noted Sondheim “had not been known to be ill and that the death was sudden.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Friday,  November 26th, 2021 

Australian Federal Police take control of the Solomon Islands capital of Honiara following three days of civil unrest. A night time curfew begins at 7 pm local time while rioting and looting continues in the Chinatown suburb of the city. (Reuters) 

Three people are found dead at a burnt-out store in the Chinatown suburb in Honiara. (Al Jazeera) 

Stocks and oil prices decline sharply amid growing concerns over the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant.  (CNBC) 

A passenger bus crashes on a highway in San José del Rincón, Mexico, killing 19 people and injuring 32 others. (ABC News) 

The Czech Republic reports a record 27,717 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (The Washington Post) 

France imposes mandatory mask wearing in all indoor venues and outdoor Christmas markets, even when a Health Pass is required for an event, due to an increase in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. (Euronews) 

Germany reports a record for the third consecutive day of 76,414 new cases of COVID-19. (Anadolu Agency) 

The World Health Organization names the Lineage B.1.1.529 variant as “Omicron” and designates it as a “variant of concern” due to the variant’s large number of mutations and an increased risk of reinfection. (The Hill) 

Canada, the EU, Israel, Japan, Morocco, the Philippines, Singapore, Turkey, the UAE, the UK, and the U.S. ban flights from South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Malawi, and Eswatini due to the Omicron variant. (CNN) 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accuses Russia of plotting a coup against him and says that Ukrainian tycoon Rinat Akhmetov was being enlisted to help plan the coup. Zelensky says that his country “is prepared for any scenario” as tensions rise. (The Washington Post) 

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko makes a public appearance at the Belarus–Poland border for the first time since the migrant crisis began. Lukashenko gave a speech to migrants, telling them that they were free to either return home or head west, saying, “If you want to go westwards, we won’t detain you, choke you, beat you. It’s up to you. Go through. Go”. (Reuters) 

Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi and French President Emmanuel Macron sign a treaty that strengthens the ties between the two countries “in areas including defence, migration, the economy, culture and trade”. (Euractiv) (ANSA) 

Three people are killed and four others injured during a mass shooting in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. (NBC News) 

Countries tighten travel restrictions after COVID variant found in South Africa Dozens of countries including the U.K., Singapore, and Japan have begun restricting travel to and from South Africa, as news of a fast-spreading, possibly more contagious COVID-19 variant emerges. The European Union, for example, has proposed stopping flights arriving from the southern African region across the whole 27-nation bloc. Top South African health officials announced the discovery of the variant on Thursday, and are still trying to determine its origins; other cases have been discovered in Botswana and Hong Kong. Known as B.1.1.52, the new strain is said to be “the most heavily mutated version yet,” and one that could possibly render the current roster of vaccines less effective. Experts from the World Health Organization are scheduled to meet later Friday to discuss the new variant and whether or not to classify it as one of concern.  THE WASHINGTON POST

Retailers gear up for Black Friday shopping Despite knotted supply chains and bare shelves, roughly 2 out of 3 Americans plan to shop over Thanksgiving weekend, including 108 million who plan to buy online or in-store on Black Friday, per the National Retail Federation. According to the International Council of Shopping Centers, the number of consumers expected to drop by a mall or shopping center this long weekend is predicted to double from 38 to 76 percent. To prepare, retailers are gearing up for traffic not just in-store but online as well, as they contend with consumer habits changed by the pandemic. On average, Americans are expected to spend $648 on gifts this holiday season, which is about 2 percent less than in 2019; still, however, overall holiday sales are expected to rise as much as 10.5 percent from 2020.  THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Stock futures plunge after COVID variant news The Dow futures market plunged 817 points, or 2.3 percent, Friday following news of another COVID-19 variant discovered in South Africa. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures experienced similar but proportionately smaller drops, while Asian and European indexes fell at slightly higher rates than the Dow. U.S. and global oil prices also slid, down 6.8 percent to around $73 a barrel and 6 percent to around $77, respectively. U.S. markets were closed on Thursday for Thanksgiving and have a short session Friday. CNBC

U.S. lawmakers have surprise visit with Taiwanese president A bipartisan group of five members of the House of Representatives arrived in Taiwan Thursday and met with the Taiwanese president Friday, defying China’s call to nix their visit. “We strongly urge the congresswoman immediately cancel the planned visit to Taiwan, and not to support and embolden separatist forces of ‘Taiwan independence,’ lest it cause huge damage to the China-U.S. relations and the peace and stability of Taiwan Straits,” read a letter from Beijing reportedly received by the office of Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), one of the five, after news of the meeting broke. The U.S. doesn’t officially recognize Taiwan’s independence but functionally treats it as a distinct country, which includes selling Taiwan weapons. NPR

Iran demands sanction relief ahead of new nuclear talks Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, Ali Bagheri Kani, said in comments published Friday Tehran wants all sanctions lifted plus a guarantee that a future U.S. administration will not scrap a new or renewed nuclear deal, like former President Donald Trump did in 2018 with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. Speaking with The Independent, Bagheri Kani said the Biden administration’s continuation of Trump’s policy of “maximum pressure” has caused “political bewilderment,” precluding diplomatic progress. Iran’s foreign minister, Hossein Amirabdollahian, made comments to a similar effect in a call with the European Union’s foreign policy chief on Friday. New nuclear talks begin in Vienna on Monday. REUTERS 

Siberian coal mine collapse kills dozens At least 51 people, including several rescue workers, have died after a Siberian coal mine caught fire and collapsed on Thursday. Most of about 300 people working in the mine were able to evacuate, but some were trapped in a distant underground area. One surviving rescue worker was discovered Friday after being presumed dead, but no more survivors are expected to be found due to high levels of methane and carbon monoxide in the mine. Work at this mine reportedly had been repeatedly suspended over safety issues, and the Russian Investigative Committee in the Kemerovo region has announced it will conduct a criminal investigation. NBC 

Arbery’s mother gives thanks for ‘justice for Ahmaud’ The three men on trial for the murder of Ahmaud Arbery were all found guilty on Wednesday. Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, died in 2020 when Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan — all white — chased, confronted, and fatally shot Arbery while he was on a run. “This is the second Thanksgiving we’ve had without Ahmaud,” Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said in a statement on Thursday. “But at the same time I’m thankful. This is the first Thanksgiving we are saying we got justice for Ahmaud.” USA TODAY

Famous ‘Afghan Girl’ from magazine cover granted refuge in Italy The green-eyed Afghan girl featured on a famous cover of National Geographic magazine in 1985 was on Thursday granted refugee status in Italy, per an Italian government statement. Sharbat Gula was just 12-years-old when her image was featured on the iconic cover; she is now in her late forties, having been found living in Pakistan. According to the office of Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, she has arrived in Rome. On Friday, the foreign ministers of India, Russia, and China released a joint statement expressing concern over the worsening humanitarian situation in Afghanistan, as well as the proliferation of drug trafficking in the country, calling for “immediate and unhindered humanitarian assistance.” They also pledged to do more to combat the region’s drug problem, and asked the Taliban to respect U.N. influence in the country. CNN

Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade sees triumphant return The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was back in all its glory Thursday morning, after a limited, pandemic-altered celebration last year. The route stretched once again across 2.5 miles of Manhattan streets, as spectators — who were not allowed in 2020 — waved to performers from the sidelines. Costumed handlers returned to walk giant balloons, and high school and college marching bands from all over the country, prohibited last year to cut down on travel, were back in full swing. Still, there were safety precautions — workers and volunteers were required to wear masks and be vaccinated against COVID-19. Spectators were encouraged to wear masks, as well. During the broadcast, President Biden called NBC’s Al Roker to declare that “after two years, we’re back. America is back,” he said. “There’s nothing we’re unable to overcome.” NBC 4 NEW YORK 

Thursday, November 25th, 2021  – Thanskgiving

A car bombing targeting a UN convoy explodes outside a school in Mogadishu, killing eight people and injuring 17 others. Jihadist group al-Shabaab claims responsibility for the attack. (Al Jazeera) 

Royal Danish Navy frigate HDMS Esbern Snare opens fire and kills four pirates in the Gulf of Guinea after being fired upon. Four other pirates are detained and taken aboard by Frogman Corps. The incident took place 25 to 30 nautical miles south of the territorial boundary of Nigeria. (Reuters) 

At least 35 people are killed during an eight-day fight over a dispute about camel looting between herders in Jebel Moon, Darfur, Sudan. Sixteen villages and thousands of homes are also set on fire. (Al Jazeera) 

A fire inside a coal mine in Kemerovo Oblast, Russia, traps 285 miners underground. Forty-six miners are killed and 49 others are being treated for smoke inhalation in hospital. Five rescuers later die while searching for trapped miners, bringing the total death toll to 51. (DW) 

The government declares a 30-day state of emergency and imposes new measures that will require bars and restaurants to close at 10 p.m., bans alcohol consumption at bars and restaurants, restricts the number of people at gatherings and events and bans Christmas markets. These measures will take effect tomorrow. (Radio Prague International) 

South African scientists detect a new COVID-19 variant named Lineage B.1.1.529 that poses a “major threat” to efforts to reduce the spread of the virus, and blames the variant for the exponential rise of new cases in the country. (Deutsche Welle) 

The latest quinquennial National Family Health Survey in India finds that the population’s total fertility rate has dropped to a point below the key replacement rate for the first time in the nation’s history. (The Washington Post) 

Israel bans entry of travellers from South Africa, Lesotho, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Namibia and Eswatini and discourages its citizens from travelling to those countries due to the emergence of the Lineage B.1.1.529 variant. (Reuters) 

Turkey and the United Arab Emirates sign several investment accords during a high-level visit to Ankara by Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, including a $10 billion investment fund to support the Turkish health and energy sectors. The Turkish and Emirati central banks also sign a cooperation agreement. (Reuters) 

Rioters demanding the resignation of Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare set fire to buildings in Honiara’s Chinatown neighborhood. Protesters have been defying a 36-hour lockdown imposed following unrest yesterday. (The Guardian) 

Australia announces that it will deploy federal police and Australian Defence Force personnel to Honiara to aid with riot control and to secure infrastructure sites following a formal request for help from Prime Minister Sogavare. (SBS News) 

Four Muslim men are charged with blasphemy, after arguing with an Imam who refused to make a funeral announcement for a Christian man in the village of Khodi Khushal Singh, Punjab, Pakistan. (Al Jazeera) 

The Parliament of Romania votes the investiture of Prime Minister Nicolae Ciucă’s grand coalition cabinet, thereby ending nearly the political crisis. (Politico) 

(Wednesday) 

British foreign secretary Liz Truss warns Russia that any attack on Ukraine would be a “grave mistake”, and that the UK is working closely with its NATO allies to provide support to Ukraine. (Reuters) 

Ukraine launches a “special operation” on the Belarusian border involving troops from the National Guard, police, and the armed forces, including anti-tank and airborne units, amid fears of a migrant crisis and also due to a Russian military build-up on its borders. (RFE/RL) 

Gunmen open fire at a school in Ekondo-Titi, Southwest Region, Cameroon, killing three children and a teacher. (AFP via Barron’s) 

Israel carries out airstrikes in Homs, Syria, killing two civilians and injuring six soldiers and another civilian. (Al Jazeera) 

Twenty-seven people drown after a dinghy carrying migrants sinks in the English Channel near Calais, France. (BBC News) 

The Italian government signs a decree that will ban people who are not vaccinated or who have not recovered from COVID-19 from entering indoor venues (not including workplaces) from December 6 until January 15 and will also extend the vaccine mandate to teachers, police, and the military beginning on December 15. It also imposes the use of the “green pass” to all types of public transport, including for people with negative COVID-19 tests. (Reuters) 

The Slovak government declares a 90-day state of emergency and will impose a two-week lockdown for the entire country beginning tomorrow, which will close all non-essential shops and restaurants and limit a person’s movement to specific reasons only as the country reports a record 10,315 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours. (Politico.eu) 

It is announced that Merck & Co.’s antiviral drug molnupiravir will be available to Philippine patients after the Food and Drug Administration issued a compassionate special permit for the drug and an agreement was signed between the Office of the Vice President of the Philippines and a local health care provider. (Philippine Daily Inquirer) 

Health Canada grants full approval for the Janssen COVID-19 vaccine, making Canada the first country to fully approve the single-dose vaccine. (The Hill) 

In response to the ruling of the European Court of Human Rights in Xero Flor w Polsce sp. z o.o. v. Poland, which found that the business was denied the right to fair trial because a judge of the Tribunal was appointed illegally, the Supreme Court of Poland declares that it is not a court within the meaning of Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights and rules that the ECHR did not have the right to control the validity of appointments of the Tribunal’s judges. (Reuters) 

The three men who killed Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia, United States, in February 2020 are found guilty of murder and aggravated assault. (BBC News) 

Protesters take to the streets in Honiara, Solomon Islands, calling for the resignation of incumbent prime minister Manasseh Sogavare. A building within the Parliament complex is set on fire as protesters engage in looting and arson while law enforcement personnel fire tear gas into crowds. (RNZ) 

Two allies of Russian opposition leader and activist Alexei Navalny leave Russia, becoming the latest people to do so after many of Navalny’s allies left the country in September. The two people are identified as a woman who helped Navalny represent his organization and a lawyer who said that he was under pressure. (Reuters) 

Australia designates the Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah and the neo-Nazi paramilitary group The Base as terrorist organisations. (The Guardian) 

Sweden’s Riksdag votes for Social Democrat leader Magdalena Andersson to become the first female prime minister of Sweden. However, Andersson resigned several hours later, after the Green Party quit the coalition. The Greens quit the coalition after the opposition budget was approved by the Riksdag. (Radio Sweden) 

The Social Democratic Party of Germany, the Free Democratic Party of Germany, and Alliance 90/The Greens agree to a “traffic light coalition” to form the next government with Olaf Scholz of the SPD as the next Chancellor, succeeding Angela Merkel. The government will be formally elected by the Bundestag in early December. (Politico) 

(Tuesday) 

Ukraine warns of “combat preparedness” of separatist forces in eastern Ukraine as the Russian military presence on the border increases, warning of a potential new conflict. The separatists began mobilization of reservists yesterday. (Reuters) 

Artefacts from the Battle of Magdala taken in 1868 are returned to Ethiopia by the United Kingdom. (WION) 

The Turkish lira falls to an all-time low of 13.44 to the U.S. dollar. The crash was primarily caused by president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s defense of the Central Bank’s continued interest rate cuts amid soaring inflation. (CNBC) 

Forty-six people are killed and seven more are injured when a bus carrying North Macedonian tourists returning from Istanbul crashes and catches fire near Bosnek, Pernik Province, Bulgaria. (The New York Times) 

Two people are killed and 16 others are injured by an explosion at an EDePro rocket engine plant near Belgrade, Serbia. (7 News) 

Swissmedic approves the extension of booster doses of the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to people over the age of 16 years as well as high-risk people over the age of 12 years. (The Times of India) 

The Swiss government signs a deal to reserve 8,640 doses of Merck & Co.’s antiviral drug molnupiravir beginning in January. (Reuters) 

An 8-year-old boy, injured during the attack in Waukesha, Wisconsin, dies, bringing the death toll to six. Several of the sixty-two injured still remain in critical condition. (CNN) 

The suspect, 39-year-old Darrell Brooks, has been charged with six counts of first-degree intentional homicide, and the bail set at $5 million. (France 24) 

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres arrives in Colombia to commemorate the fifth year of the signing of the peace deal between the government of Colombia and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. (MercoPress) 

The Biden administration announces the delisting of the former FARC rebel group from the United States Department of State list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations where it had been listed since 1997. (Reuters) 

A U.S. federal jury finds the organizers of 2017’s Unite the Right rally, which includes white supremacists Richard B. Spencer, Jason Kessler, and Christopher Cantwell, liable for the violence that occurred and are ordered to pay US$26 million to nine individuals that suffered “physical and emotional damages”. However, the jury was deadlocked on whether to convict on two federal conspiracy charges. (DW) 

The End Sunday