23:59 hours

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2021 

New Covid-19 cases in Massachusetts have been dropping by 6.5% per week for six weeks since their peak of 1900 cases/day the week of September 12th. Hospitalizations remain flat at about 500 and deaths per day are down to under 10 per day.

Johnson warns ‘It’s 1 minute to midnight’ in climate crisis The COP26 climate talks are getting underway in Glasgow, Scotland, with more than 120 leaders set to speak Monday. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, whose government is hosting the United Nations event, will warn participants in his opening speech: “It’s one minute to midnight, and we need to act now. We have to move from talk and debate and discussion to concerted, real-world action on coal, cars, cash, and trees.” About 25,000 people are participating in COP26, making it one of the biggest international events since the coronavirus pandemic began. It follows a year of extreme weather that fueled a sense of urgency about the need for policy changes to sharply curb greenhouse gas emissions to avoid the most catastrophic effects of climate change. CNN 

105 countries pledge to reverse deforestation, cut methane emissions At least 105 countries on Tuesday pledged to reverse deforestation under an agreement signed at COP26, the United Nations climate conference taking place in Glasgow, Scotland. The signatories include Brazil, home to the Amazon rainforest, as well as Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Together, the nations that joined the pledge control 85 percent of Earth’s forests. Under the deal, the countries agreed to conserve their forests, and accelerate reforestation efforts. They also vowed to increase investments in sustainable forestry and support for Indigenous communities. Politicians praised the agreement, while some activists questioned whether it would lead to concrete improvement. More than 100 countries also pledged to cut emissions of methane, a short-lived but damaging greenhouse gas, by 30 percent this decade. NPRNEW SCIENTIST 

Michael Jackson’s youngest son gives first on-camera interview to push for climate action Michael Jackson’s youngest son, 19-year-old Bigi Jackson, spoke on camera for the first time in order to push world leaders at the COP26 summit to address the problem of climate change. “I do think it’s important that we all know about it,” said Bigi, who was formerly known as Blanket. “I think we have work to do, but our generation knows how important it is.” Bigi Jackson’s interview came just days after Michael Jackson’s eldest son, 24-year-old Prince Jackson, also gave a rare interview to Good Morning Britain. “Because I’m the oldest, my father would always tell me I have to make sure that [my siblings are] taken care of and that I have to be the leader and lead by example,” he said. “But, after his passing, and kind of us being thrown into the ‘real world,’ my siblings, honestly, they picked up the slack that I, unfortunately, left behind.” In his own interview, Bigi confirmed that Prince and their sister, 23-year-old Paris Jackson, want to “make things that people hopefully enjoy, but also can benefit their lives.” ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 

Vanessa Bryant won’t have to undergo psychiatric exam in lawsuit over Kobe Bryant crash photos Vanessa Bryant, the widow of NBA legend Kobe Bryant, won’t have to undergo a psychiatric evaluation in her lawsuit against Los Angeles County. Magistrate Judge Charles F. Eick rejected the county’s request for Bryant to undergo the much-criticized exam to prove she suffered emotional distress as a result of sheriff’s deputies allegedly sharing photos from the site of the helicopter crash that killed her husband, CNN reports. Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gianna, and seven others were killed in a helicopter crash in California in 2020, and in her lawsuit, Vanessa Bryant alleges sheriff’s deputies inappropriately “showed off” photos they took of the victims at the crash site; a photo of Kobe Bryant’s remains was allegedly shown in a bar, according to NBC News. L.A. County requested Bryant undergo a psychiatric evaluation to show the photo leak, rather than the helicopter crash, caused her emotional distress, saying, “Plaintiffs cannot claim that they are suffering from ongoing depression, anxiety, and severe emotional distress and then balk at having to support their claims.” CNN 

Artists behind bisexual Superman comic reportedly needed LAPD protection LAPD officers “were recently dispatched to patrol the homes of” illustrators and production staffers behind a comic that reveals Jon Kent, DC Comic’s new Superman, is bisexual, TMZ reports. Angry fans “inundated the studios” behind the comic to complain about the announcement and make threats, and the studios subsequently called the LAPD, “requesting for patrols to keep an eye out,” the report says. Luckily, TMZ writes that “nothing legitimate came from the threats” and the “situation has since settled down.” DC Comics announced in October that Jon Kent, the son of Clark Kent who has taken over the mantle of Superman from his father, in a new issue of Superman: Son of Kal-El would come out as bisexual and begin a same-sex relationship. Writer Tom Taylor told The New York Times the “idea of replacing Clark Kent with another straight white savior felt like a missed opportunity” and “for so many people having the strongest superhero in comics come out is incredibly powerful.” TMZ 

Prosecutor says Kyle Rittenhouse instigated violence A prosecutor in Kyle Rittenhouse’s murder trial said Tuesday that the Illinois teen instigated the bloodshed at a racial injustice protest last year in Kenosha, Wisconsin, where he killed two people — one with a shot to the back — and wounded another with a semiautomatic assault-style rifle. Rittenhouse was one of many outsiders who were drawn to the chaos “like moths to a flame” after protests broke out over the shooting of a Black man, Jacob Blake, by a white police officer, prosecutor Thomas Binger said. But Rittenhouse, then 17 and now 18, was “the only person who killed anyone.” Rittenhouse’s lawyer said the teen went to Kenosha to protect private property after two nights of rioting. The defense said Rittenhouse fired in self-defense after protesters chased him. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Minneapolis voters reject proposal to replace police department Voters in Minneapolis on Tuesday rejected a proposal to replace the city’s police department with a public safety department combining law enforcement, 911 responders, and mental health professionals. With 96 percent of precincts reporting, more than 56 percent of voters opposed the proposal. The ballot question left the community divided. Activists expressed concern that the defeat would sap momentum for police reform in the wake of the death of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man who died after being forcibly restrained by police. The vote marked the second time police reform has failed in the city since Floyd’s death 17 months ago. A June 2020 push by a majority of City Council members to dismantle the police department never made it onto the ballot. A proposal for national police reform has stalled in Congress.  USA TODAY 

Facebook to shut down facial recognition system Facebook executives said Tuesday the social media giant plans to shut down its facial recognition system this month. Jerome Pesenti, vice president of artificial intelligence at Facebook’s newly named parent company Meta, said in a blog post that the change was sparked by “many concerns about the place of facial recognition technology in society.” The company plans to delete the face scan data of more than one billion users. Facebook introduced the feature in December 2010 to save users time by using software to identify people who appeared in their photos, and suggested tagging them with a simple click. But the facial recognition function fueled privacy concerns and government investigations, as well as a class-action lawsuit. REUTERS 

Microsoft plans metaverse with file-sharing for offices Microsoft on Tuesday unveiled a new version of its Teams chat and conferencing program that will offer a corporate-office version of the metaverse championed by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to let people live, work, and play within in an interconnected virtual world. Microsoft’s foray into the space uses Microsoft software announced earlier this year called Mesh, which lets users share augmented reality and virtual reality experiences. The system, which the software giant hopes to make available in early to mid-2022, will allow customers to chat and share office files as digital avatars directly on the enhanced Teams messaging and conferencing program. The news came shortly after Facebook rebranded itself as “Meta,” and announced it has similarly been working on virtual workplaces and spaces for companies and businesses.  FAST COMPANY 

CDC backs Pfizer vaccine for children ages 5 to 11 A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory panel on Tuesday unanimously recommended granting emergency-use authorization to the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for children ages 5 to 11. The panel of experts reviewed the Food and Drug Administration’s approval, which came last week, and discussed the potential for the rare side effect myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart. Dr. Matthew Oster, a CDC scientist who presented data on the condition at the meeting, said that “getting COVID I think is much riskier to the heart than this vaccine, no matter what age or sex.” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky promptly signed off on the vaccine. About 28 million children 5 to 11 will be eligible to get their first dose, which is roughly one-third the size of teen doses, within days. NPR 

CDC says people with natural coronavirus immunity should still get vaccine The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has quietly released a report showing that both coronavirus infection-induced and vaccine-induced immunity last at least six months, but vaccines offer “higher, more robust, and more consistent” protection against COVID-19, The Washington Post reported Tuesday. The report also noted that no test authorized by the Food and Drug Administration can reliably measure a person’s level of protection. The research led the CDC to conclude that, despite a measure of natural immunity, even people who have already been infected with the coronavirus should get vaccinated. More than 45 million people have had confirmed coronavirus infections in the United States. Tens of millions more are believed to have had undocumented infections. THE WASHINGTON POST 

The World Health Organization approves for emergency use listing (EUL) for the Covaxin manufactured by Indian biotech firm Bharat Biotech. (NDTV) 

Russia reports a record for the second consecutive day of 1,189 deaths from COVID-19, bringing the nationwide death toll to 242,060. (Asian News International) 

Two people are dead as a Russian Antonov An-12 cargo plane carrying seven passengers crash-lands in Siberia. (AFP via NDTV) 

Christian Schmidt, the United Nations’ High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina, issues a report warning that the country is likely to break apart and that there is a very high risk of the renewal of internal armed conflict. (The Guardian) 

A United Nations report accuses all sides of committing war crimes on civilians, including torture, killings, gang rapes and arrests based on ethnicity. The head of the Human Rights office, Michelle Bachelet, especially accused the forces of Ethiopia and Eritrea for most of the human rights violations. (The Guardian) 

Ethiopia declares state of emergency as Tigray fighters advance Ethiopia on Tuesday declared a six-month state of emergency as rebels in the northern Tigray region advanced, and said they would march on the capital, Addis Ababa. Two days earlier, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed urged the public to arm themselves in self-defense against members of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. Authorities in Addis Ababa on Tuesday also issued a call for citizens to register their weapons and be ready to defend their neighborhoods. “Our country is facing a grave danger to its existence, sovereignty, and unity. And we can’t dispel this danger through the usual law enforcement systems and procedures,” Justice Minister Gedion Timothewos said as the government announced the state of emergency. REUTERS 

Around 40 fighters storm the city of Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo, singing songs calling for the liberation of the country and opening fire against security forces, killing two soldiers and a police officer. Six attackers are killed and 36 others arrested. (Reuters) 

The death toll from the collapse of a high-rise building under construction in Ikoyi, Lagos, Nigeria, rises to 22, as the search-and-rescue operations enter their third day. (Al Jazeera) 

Iranian state media reports that the American Navy attempted to capture an Iranian oil tanker; it was boarded, commandeered and then returned by Iranian NEDSA marines in a heliborne operation. (Reuters) 

The Taliban announces a complete ban on the use of foreign currency in transactions, threatening “legal action” against those who defy the ban. (Al Jazeera) 

A bomb explodes at the entrance of the Daoud Khan Military Hospital in Kabul, followed by gunfire and a second explosion. At least 25 people are killed and more than 50 others are wounded. Four of the attackers are killed and a fifth is arrested by the Taliban. (The Guardian) 

Democrats reach deal aiming to lower prescription drug prices Democrats in Congress have reached a deal to include a plan to lower prescription drug prices in President Biden’s $1.75 trillion Build Back Better bill, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) announced Tuesday. The agreement doesn’t go as far as earlier proposals in the domestic spending package. Still, an agreement marks progress after prolonged infighting over the bill. The deal calls for letting Medicare negotiate some drug prices. It also would bar drug companies from raising prices faster than inflation, and limit annual out-of-pocket costs for seniors on Medicare to $2,000. Senate moderates, whose votes Democrats need to pass the bill, rejected earlier proposals, arguing they would have hurt innovation. Schumer said the deal was a “big step” even though “it’s not everything we all wanted.” THE HILL 

Biden administration sues to block Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster merger  The Biden administration on Tuesday filed a lawsuit seeking to block Penguin Random House’s planned purchase of rival Simon & Schuster. The move marked the administration’s first major antitrust action. Penguin Random House runs 300 imprints around the world that publish 15,000 new books annually, far more than its four main U.S. rivals. The proposed $2.18 billion acquisition of Simon & Schuster would make the already dominant company much bigger. The administration said the merger “would likely result in substantial harm to authors of anticipated top-selling books and ultimately, consumers.” Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster issued a joint statement saying the deal would not reduce the number of books published or the amount paid for them. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

U.S. stock indexes set fresh records ahead of Fed decision U.S. stock indexes continued their march into record territory on Tuesday. The S&P 500 rose by 0.4 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial Average also gained 0.4 percent, closing above 36,000 for the first time. The tech-heavy Nasdaq rose by 0.3 percent. All three of the main U.S. averages set record highs. They also set records on Monday, the first trading day of November. Investors remained focused on corporate earnings reports and the Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting, which ends Wednesday. The October jobs report due Friday also could drive markets. “The November [Fed] meeting, October payrolls … and a host of earnings updates sets up a catalyst heavy week of trading ahead,” Goldman Sachs’ Chris Hussey said in a note. U.S. stock index futures were flat early Wednesday ahead of the Fed decision. CNBC 

Zillow to end home-flipping business, cut 2,000 jobs Zillow said Tuesday that it was shutting down its home-flipping business, citing problems in its system for valuing properties for quick purchase and sale. The news came two weeks after the real-estate firm announced that it was halting new home purchases for the rest of 2021 because labor and supply shortages were hampering its ability to flip houses fast and make a profit. The end of Zillow’s tech-enabled iBuying business will result in the cutting of about 2,000 jobs, or 25 percent of the company’s staff. “We’ve determined the unpredictability in forecasting home prices far exceeds what we anticipated and continuing to scale Zillow Offers would result in too much earnings and balance-sheet volatility,” said Rich Barton, Zillow’s co-founder and CEO. CNN 

Kristen Stewart is engaged, wants to get married in an ‘old T-shirt that has a tuxedo printed on it’ Kristen Stewart revealed Tuesday she and her girlfriend, Dylan Meyer, are engaged. The Twilight star made the announcement on The Howard Stern Show: “We’re marrying, we’re totally gonna do it,” she said. “I wanted to be proposed to, so I think I very distinctly carved out what I wanted and she nailed it. It was really cute, she did very well.” Meyer, a screenwriter, was spotted with Stewart in August 2019, and they confirmed their relationship later that year. Stewart said they met on a movie, but didn’t see each other again for years afterward before they reconnected at a friend’s birthday party — at which point she said “all bets were off.” Stewart also revealed in 2019 she was planning to propose and “can’t f—ing wait” to do so, adding, “I think good things happen fast.” Stewart doesn’t “want anyone walking anyone down any aisles,” though, and even plans to wear “the best pair of Levi’s ever” and an “old T-shirt that has a tuxedo printed on it.” ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY 

Hilaria Baldwin drove to Vermont to find Alec Baldwin a place to privately mourn Hilaria Baldwin didn’t initially have a destination in mind when she got in a car with her children and cat and left their Greenwich Village home on Oct. 22. The day before, Rust cinematographer Halyna Hutchins had been killed when Hilaria Baldwin’s husband, actor Alec Baldwin, fired what was supposed to be a prop firearm on the set in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “I didn’t know where I was going, I just drove,” Baldwin told The New York Post. “I just drove around and around and around with my kids.” Hilaria eventually reached the town of Manchester, Vermont, where she said she brought Alec “to mourn Halyna’s death. Alec had a really traumatic thing happen, and I am trying to limit the PTSD.” Hilaria Baldwin shared photos over the weekend of her family celebrating Halloween: “Parenting through this has been an intense experience, to say the least,” she wrote. “Today, we rallied to give them a holiday. Last min costumes … but they were so happy and that warmed my mama heart.” CNN 

Tuesday,  Nov. 2nd, 2021 

In Major League Baseball, the Atlanta Braves defeat the Houston Astros to win the World Series. This marks the Braves’ first World Series title since 1995. (The Guardian) 

Ethiopia declares a six-month state of emergency as the Tigray Defense Forces (TDF) and Oromo Liberation Army gain control over areas outside of Tigray and the TDF announces its intention to advance to the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. Authorities in Addis Ababa, in a separate announcement earlier in the day, tell citizens to register arms and prepare to defend their neighbourhoods. (Reuters) 

The United States bans embassy personnel from traveling outside of Addis Ababa and strongly suggests that U.S. citizens seriously reconsider travel to Ethiopia and that those who are currently in Ethiopia consider making preparations to leave the country. (U.S. Embassy in Ethiopia) 

Five people are dead after a small cargo plane belonging to Optimum Aviation Ltd. crashes shortly after take-off from the airport in Juba, South Sudan. (AP) 

Greece reports a record 6,700 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 754,451. (Ekathimerini) 

Romania reports a record 591 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide death toll to 48,664. (Reuters) 

Seychelles president Wavel Ramkalawan and Malagasy president Andry Rajoelina hold a bilateral meeting in Glasgow to discuss trafficking in the south of Seychelles and maritime security in the Indian Ocean. The two leaders also discuss ways to stop gold smuggling. (AllAfrica) 

2,300 NYC firefighters call in sick as vaccine mandate starts About 2,300 New York City firefighters called in sick on Monday, the day the city’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate took effect for municipal workers, FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro said. On a typical day, 800 to 1,000 department employees are off due to illness. Nigro said those staying home to protest the mandate must return immediately. “If you’re sick, you’re sick, it’s a dangerous job. I get it. If you’re not sick, I want to see you back at work,” Nigro said. “Once the members come to their senses and stop using medical leave improperly, they can help out not only the citizens of the city but their brothers and sisters who are staffing these units.” Mayor Bill de Blasio said about 9,000 city employees out of a 378,000-person workforce have been place on leave without pay for failing to comply with the requirement to get at least their first shot. CNN 

 China locks nearly 34,000 people inside Shanghai Disneyland over 1 COVID case  Chinese authorities temporarily shut down Shanghai Disneyland with nearly 34,000 people trapped inside after a single visitor was found to be COVID-19 positive, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. Shanghai Disneyland, which was Disney’s first park to reopen during the pandemic, tested every person before allowing visitors to leave. Shanghai’s government said everyone tested negative. The reaction to the positive case, which was discovered Sunday, demonstrated China’s “zero-tolerance” approach to the coronavirus nearly two years into the pandemic, even though the country now says it has an 80 percent vaccination rate. Shanghai Disneyland was to remain closed through Tuesday. China said it confirmed 48 domestic cases on Saturday, spread over several provinces. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Shanghai Disney Resort suspends entry into Shanghai Disneyland and Disneytown and asks 33,863 visitors to take a nucleic acid test upon exiting, and another test after 24 hours, after a visitor from Hangzhou tested positive for COVID-19. (NBC News) 

‘Squid Game’-inspired cryptocurrency scam costs investors $3.38 million  The creators of a cryptocurrency inspired by Squid Game cashed out and disappeared, making off with as much as $3.38 million and sending the virtual currency’s value to $0. The cryptocurrency, called $SQUID, launched in late October. Its value jumped to more than $2,800, rising by as much as 310,000 percent in days. It was marketed as a way to play a future online game based on the wildly popular Netflix television series from South Korea, in which people overwhelmed by debt play a deadly game hoping to win a massive cash prize. There were signs that the cryptocurrency, which had nothing to do with Netflix, was a scam. Its website was full of spelling and grammar errors, and people who bought the coins were not allowed to sell. GIZMODO 

Steve Buscemi dresses as his own meme How do you do, fellow trick-or-treaters? For Halloween 2021, Steve Buscemi did what only select people on Earth can: dress as a meme he spawned. The actor handed out candy in costume as his 30 Rock character from the “how do you do, fellow kids” meme, complete with backwards hat and skateboard. The meme, which is used to mock lame attempts at appealing to young people, comes from a 30 Rock gag featuring Buscemi as an obviously adult undercover cop trying to infiltrate a high school. Other celebrity Halloween costumes included Ariana Grande’s insanely elaborate one based on Creature from the Black Lagoon, but we’ve seen enough to declare Buscemi the holiday’s winner. Better luck next year, everyone! VULTURE 

Mariah Carey declares it Christmastime The second the clock struck midnight on Monday, the Christmas season began. Mariah Carey says so. As much of the world headed into a candy-induced coma, Carey shared a video at precisely 12:00 a.m. on Nov. 1, which opens on a shot of three jack-o’-lanterns that spell out the phrase “it’s not time.” But, clearly, it is (Christmas) time. Carey subsequently enters and smashes the “not” pumpkin with a baseball bat before “All I Want For Christmas Is You” immediately starts playing. You heard her, folks! The day Carey officially takes over Santa Claus’ gig Tim Allen style may be fast approaching, though her video does end with a reminder that “we still gotta get through Thanksgiving.” VULTURE 

Are Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson sitting in a tree?  Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson were spotted holding hands on a rollercoaster, but they’re apparently just friends — “right now.” Photos published by People showed the two on a ride at Knott’s Scary Farm, with a source telling the outlet, “They hang in the same circles so they will be together from time to time. It’s just friends hanging out.” Nothing to see here, then, right? Well, Gawker doesn’t appear to be buying it, citing an insider as saying they “spent the night together at a Los Angeles hotel” in an article bluntly titled “Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson are doing it.” Allegedly! Still another insider told Us Weekly, “They are just friends right now, but things could turn romantic.” GAWKER 

Coca-Cola takes control of sports drink maker Bodyarmor for $5.6 billion Coca-Cola announced Monday that it was buying the 85 percent of sports drink maker Bodyarmor that it didn’t already own. Coke will pay $5.6 billion for the remaining stake, making the deal its biggest brand acquisition yet. The beverage giant bought its initial 15 percent stake in Bodyarmor in 2018. That made Coke Bodyarmor’s second largest shareholder. Basketball legend Kobe Bryant, who invested in Bodyarmor in 2013 seven years before his death in a helicopter crash, was the company’s third-largest shareholder. Bryant’s estate will get about $400 million from the sale. The acquisition will boost Coca-Cola’s share of the sports drink market, although rival PepsiCo’s Gatorade still dominates with 70 percent market share. CNBC 

Rivian Automotive IPO plan values EV startup around $60 billion Amazon-backed Rivian Automotive said in an updated regulatory filing on Monday that it is targeting a valuation of more than $53 billion for its U.S. stock debut. Its shares would be expected to sell between $57 and $62, although that could change depending on market conditions. The electric-vehicle startup wants to raise up to $8.4 billion, which would make its IPO the third-largest in the U.S. by funds raised in the last decade. That would value the company around $60 billion. Amazon said in late October it had a 20 percent stake in Rivian. The online retail giant has ordered 100,000 Rivian electric delivery vans to help reduce its carbon footprint. Rivian in September started delivering its first vehicle, an electric pickup called the R1T. REUTERS 

Nineteen people are killed and 43 others are wounded as two explosions and gunfire hit Afghanistan’s biggest military hospital in Kabul. (Al Jazeera) 

Manchin says he can’t yet back $1.75 trillion spending bill   In a setback for President Biden’s agenda, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said Monday that he would not yet commit to backing the $1.75 trillion framework Biden unveiled for his Build Back Better plan. The bill would expand the social safety net and provide $555 billion for clean energy and other measures to fight climate change. Manchin said the proposal had “budget gimmicks” that would cost more than its supporters say. He accused progressives of refusing to compromise, although the bill has been slashed in half from the original $3.5 trillion because he and fellow moderate Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) demanded cuts. Both essentially have wielded veto power, because Democrats need every vote in their caucus to pass the bill in the 50-50 Senate. REUTERS 

Biden unveils new U.S. methane emission rules President Biden and his administration unveiled a series of policies Tuesday to limit methane gas leaks from oil and gas wells and pipelines. Biden is at the United Nations-sponsored COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow, Scotland, where methane emissions are a major agenda item. Methane, a key component of natural gas, is the No. 2 greenhouse gas behind carbon dioxide. It dissipates more quickly than carbon dioxide, but is 80 times more powerful in the first 20 years after reaching the atmosphere. The U.S. and European Union are pushing other countries to sign the Global Methane Pledge to cut emissions 30 percent by 2030. A new Environmental Protection Agency rule to be finalized next month will require oil and gas wells to monitor and capture methane leaks. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Vaccination of U.S. kids ages 5 to 11 set to start Nov. 8 The federal vaccination program for children ages 5 to 11 will be fully operational on Nov. 8, White House coronavirus coordinator Jeff Zients said Monday. The Food and Drug Administration signed off Friday on emergency-use authorization for coronavirus vaccines for kids in that age group, which includes about 28 million children. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s leadership is expected to give the final go-ahead. Public health experts say vaccinating children is crucial to curbing the pandemic and preventing outbreaks in schools. This latest sign of progress came on the day when the global death toll from COVID-19 reached 5 million, even as infection and death rates fall in the United States. 

Stocks hit record highs as Dow touches 36,000 for 1st time Stocks edged up Monday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average briefly breaking 36,000 before inching down but still closing at a record high of 35,913.84. The S&P 500 also closed at a record high after rising by 0.2 percent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq gained 0.6 percent. It too set a closing record. Tesla continued its recent surge, with its shares jumping by nearly 8.5 percent days after the electric-car maker became the first automobile manufacturer with a market capitalization of $1 trillion. Stocks tied to the economic recovery, including Ford and Occidental Petroleum, also rose. “The key story arc driving equities is the strengthening global recovery,” Fundstrat’s Tom Lee wrote in a note to clients. U.S. stock futures were mostly flat early Tuesday. CNBC 

Jury quickly seated in Kyle Rittenhouse homicide trial A jury was chosen and seated in Kyle Rittenhouse’s homicide trial in Kenosha County, Wisconsin, on Monday, after an unusually quick one-day selection process. Rittenhouse, 18, faces six criminal counts over the shooting deaths of two men and the wounding of another during a protest that erupted after the police shooting of a Black man. When Judge Bruce Schroeder asked if any potential jurors hadn’t heard about the case, none raised a hand. Schroeder talked to the jury pool about jurors’ responsibilities and about judicial bias, but when one man said he couldn’t be impartial due to his fervent support for gun rights, Schroeder said: “I don’t want it to get sidetracked into other issues. I don’t care about your opinions on the Second Amendment.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Monday,  Nov. 1st, 2021 

Indonesia becomes the first country in the world to approve the protein-based Novavax COVID-19 vaccine, which will be manufactured by the Serum Institute of India. (The New York Times) 

South Korea begins to implement a “Living with COVID-19” campaign with easing of movement restrictions and lifting operating hour restrictions for businesses as well as requiring proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test from the previous 48 hours in order to enter high-risk venues. This comes as 75% of the South Korean population has been fully vaccinated. (CNA) 

Greece reports a record 5,449 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 747,595. (Greek Reporter) 

The Ukrainian capital Kyiv begins to require vaccine certificates or negative test results in order to enter restaurants, cafes, gyms, entertainment facilities and shopping malls as well as to use public transportation in an attempt to reduce the number of COVID-19 cases. (Reuters) 

The worldwide death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic surpasses five million. The actual death toll is suspected to be higher as some countries may not have reported all deaths. (Al Jazeera) 

French President Emmanuel Macron announces that his government will postpone the imposition of “tighter controls” on British imports initially scheduled for Tuesday midnight as negotiations between France, the UK, and the European Commission over the rights of French fishermen to fish in Jersey’s territorial waters continue. (AFP via Expatica) 

A man is sentenced to death in Iraq for shooting two journalists dead while driving home in Basra in January. The court said that the man committed the murders “with the aim of destabilising security and stability and intimidating people for terrorist purposes”. (Al Jazeera) 

United States federal judge Robert N. Scola Jr. of the Southern District of Florida dismisses seven of eight charges of money laundering against Colombian businessman Alex Saab, who is accused of moving $350 million out of Venezuela into accounts controlled in the U.S. and other countries. (AFP via RFI) 

President Daniel Ortega tightens his grip ahead of upcoming elections. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced that the United States would increase sanctions on Nicaraguan officials, accusing Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo of staging a “sham election” in the second poorest country in the Americas. (Reuters) 

Gary Freedman completes the first electric plane flight across New Zealand’s Cook Strait. (AP) 

The worldwide death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic surpasses 5 million. The toll is suspected to be higher as not all deaths are recorded in some countries. (Al Jazeera) 

G-20 summit closes with climate statement critics call weak World leaders agreed at the Group of 20 summit in Italy that all nations should take meaningful action to prevent global temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. But critics noted that the two-day gathering of the leaders of the world’s 20 biggest economies included few concrete commitments to help reach the target, which was recommended in the landmark 2015 Paris climate accord. Greenpeace said G-20 leaders “failed to meet the moment” ahead of this week’s COP26 climate conference in Glasgow. The final G-20 communique did not include a promise to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050, as climate activists had hoped. Instead, G-20 leaders stressed the importance of reaching that goal around the middle of the century, wording preferred by oil-rich Saudi Arabia and China, the world’s biggest polluter. THE GUARDIAN

South Korea begins to implement “Living with COVID-19” campaign with easing of movement curbs and lifting operating hour restrictions of businesses as well as require a proof of vaccination or negative COVID-19 test over the previous 48 hours to enter high-risk venues. It comes as 75% of its population has been fully vaccinated. (CNA) 

President of Nicaragua Daniel Ortega tightens his grip ahead of elections in upcoming days. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced that the United States would ramp up sanctions on Nicaraguan officials, accusing Ortega and his wife Rosario Murillo of staging a “sham election” in the second poorest country in the Americas. (Reuters) 

Military jurors recommend clemency for tortured Qaeda courier Seven military jurors sent a letter to a Pentagon authority recommending clemency for a terrorist after hearing graphic descriptions of his torture by the CIA. The jurors, all senior military officers, called the treatment described by Majid Khan, a suburban Baltimore high school graduate turned al-Qaeda courier, “a stain on the moral fiber of America.” The letter was signed by seven of the eight members of the sentencing jury brought to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, last week to hear evidence. The jury sentenced Khan to 26 years in prison, but the Pentagon official overseeing the war court makes the final decision. Before deliberations, Khan spent two hours describing the sexual abuse and isolation CIA agents and operatives subjected him to in prisons in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and a third country. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Moderna: FDA needs more time to assess vaccine for teens Moderna said the Food and Drug Administration needs more time to fully assess its coronavirus vaccine’s potential use in children ages 12 to 17. The company said in a statement Sunday that the review might not be done until January 2022, as the FDA considers the potential for rare cases of inflammation of the heart muscle, or myocarditis. Moderna said it would request emergency-use authorization for a smaller dose in children ages 6 to 11 while the review of the dose for older children continues. Moderna said in May that tests showed the vaccine to be 100 percent effective against COVID-19 among 12- to 17-year-olds. Moderna said it was “grateful to the FDA for their diligence.” CNBC 

American Airlines cancels hundreds of flights  American Airlines canceled 634 flights on Sunday, bringing its total cancellations since Friday to more than 1,500. The company blamed bad weather and staffing shortages. As they struggle to rebuild their staffs now that travel is bouncing back, some airlines have faced sporadic service disruptions. American said it expected 1,800 flight attendants to return from leave on Monday, with more coming back to work Dec. 1. Airlines offered buyouts and early retirement in early 2020 to cut costs as the coronavirus pandemic caused a sharp decrease in air travel. Southwest had a similar crunch over a weekend earlier in October, blaming its disruptions on air traffic control problems, bad weather, and limited staff availability in Florida. CNN 

Roblox comes back online after 3-day outage Roblox came back online late Sunday after three days of disruptions for millions of players who use its game and related website. The popular game-creating platform started having problems Thursday night. Roblox said then it was “working hard to get things back to normal,” but the problems persisted. The company tweeted Sunday that it had pinpointed the root cause and had a solution. Service was restored hours later. The company told The Verge the problem was due to an internal issue and not an “external intrusion” by hackers. Roblox also said the outage had nothing to do with a Chipotle promotion involving $1 million worth of free burritos, which some users had noted went live just before the Halloween weekend glitch. THE VERGE

Barclays CEO steps down after inquiry into relationship with Epstein  Barclays said Monday that its CEO, Jes Staley, would step down immediately after an inquiry by British regulators into his relationship with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, who killed himself in prison in 2019 after being accused of sex trafficking of underage girls. Barclays disclosed the investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority. The bank was informed Friday about the regulators’ preliminary conclusions. “In view of those conclusions, and Mr. Staley’s intention to contest them, the board [of Barclays] and Mr. Staley have agreed that he will step down,” Barclays said in its statement on Monday. Staley said he regretted his relationship with Epstein. “Obviously, I thought I knew him well and I didn’t,” he said. CNN

China factory activity contracted in October China’s National Bureau of Statistics reported that the country’s manufacturing activity contracted in October for a second straight month. China’s official manufacturing purchasing managers index fell to 49.2 in October, down from 49.6 in September as materials and power shortages hampered factories. Analysts have warned that the problems could continue, slowing production further. Slowing demand was also a factor, National Bureau of Statistics economist Zhao Qinghe said Sunday. Since September, local governments have forced factories to reduce or pause production as officials tightened power supplies to meet energy consumption targets set by Beijing, which is aiming for a carbon emissions peak by 2030. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Sunday, October 31st, 2021 

Two missiles are launched against a mosque in Marib, Yemen, killing and wounding a total of 29 people. (Al Jazeera) 

Gunmen open fire against security forces in Sourou, Burkina Faso, killing five policemen. Fifteen attackers are killed in a gunfight after the attack. (Reuters) 

One person is killed and 15 others are injured when a Pemex gas pipeline explodes in Puebla, Mexico. The Governor of Puebla, Miguel Barbosa Huerta, blames an illegal tap for the explosion. (The Canberra Times) 

Nine firefighters are killed during a training exercise inside a cave in Altinópolis, São Paulo, Brazil, after the roof of the cave collapsed. (AFP via The Straits Times) 

The United Arab Emirates issues an emergency use authorization of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children aged 5 to 11. (Reuters) 

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki says that she has tested positive for COVID-19 following a meeting with President Joe Biden. She said in a statement that she is experiencing mild symptoms. (CBS News) 

Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok says that he will not step down despite being under house arrest following the military coup. (CNN) 

North Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev announces his resignation following a decisive defeat of his party, the Social Democratic Union, in the local elections. (AP) 

The End

https://theweek.com/foreign-policy/1006600/american-elites-have-gotten-tellingly-quiet-about-afghanistan

halloween 2021 salem

Sunday, October 31st, 2021 

One person is killed and 15 others injured when a Pemex gas pipeline explodes in Puebla, Mexico. The Governor of Puebla, Miguel Barbosa Huerta, blames an illegal tap for the explosion. (The Canberra Times) 

Russia reports a record for the second consecutive day of 40,993 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 8.51 million. (ABC News) 

A man attacks passengers on a train in Chōfu, Tokyo, Japan, with acid and a knife, before setting the train on fire, wounding 17 people. A man is arrested at the scene. (Reuters) 

Japanese citizens head to the polls to elect members of the Lower House. The ruling Liberal Democratic Party faces more opposition than in other elections due to the handling of the COVID-19 pandemic in the country. (The Washington Post) 

G-20 shifts focus to climate change on 2nd day Group of 20 leaders shifted their focus to climate change on Sunday in the second day of their two-day summit, after endorsing a 15 percent global minimum corporate tax at the beginning of the Rome meeting. Thousands of protesters called for stronger government action to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi told fellow leaders “the fight against climate change is the defining challenge of our times.” He said it was crucial to aim for the limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, the low end of the target range set in the Paris Agreement of 2015. Britain’s Prince Charles told leaders they had an “overwhelming responsibility to generations yet unborn” to do more to prevent the most catastrophic effects of climate change.  USA TODAY 

Sudan police use tear gas and gunfire to disperse protesters Security forces shot and killed three people in Sudan during Saturday protests against a military coup, the Central Committee of Sudanese Doctors said. Another 38 people were injured, some of them by gunfire, during the protest in the capital city Khartoum’s twin city of Omdurman. In Khartoum, people in a huge crowd of demonstrators were setting up a stage and discussing holding a sit-in when security forces dispersed the crowd with tear gas and gunfire. Sudanese police denied firing on the crowds during nationwide protests, and said a police officer was wounded by gunfire. The Saturday protests were the biggest yet since the military, led by Gen. Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, arrested Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and members of his cabinet. REUTERS 

University of Florida orders professors not to testify against voting restrictions  The University of Florida said Saturday it is barring three professors from providing expert testimony in a lawsuit that says a new state law restricts voting rights. The university said in a statement that testimony by professors Dan Smith, Michael McDonald, and Sharon Austin as paid experts for the plaintiffs would be “adverse to the university’s interests as a state of Florida institution.” Lawyers for the coalition of civics groups challenging the law said in court papers that the university told the professors their testimony would create a conflict for the school because it would clash with the position of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration. Critics of the Florida law, which reduces drop-box and mail-in voting, say it discriminates against voters of color in violation of the Voting Rights Act. NPR 

U.S., E.U. reach deal easing steel, aluminum tariffs The United States and the European Union on Saturday announced a deal to ease some tariffs on steel and aluminum that were imposed by former President Donald Trump. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said Saturday that the tariffs would remain in place, but the Biden administration will let limited European products into the U.S. tariff-free. In return, the E.U. will drop retaliatory tariffs in return. “We fully expect this agreement will provide relief in the supply chain and drive down cost increases,” Raimondo said. European Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis tweeted confirmation of the agreement, which came during the two-day Group of 20 summit in Italy. White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the deal removes “one of the largest bilateral irritants in the U.S.-E.U. relationship.” THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Kyle Rittenhouse homicide trial starts in Kenosha  Illinois teen Kyle Rittenhouse goes on trial Monday for the 2020 fatal shooting of two people during a protest over the shooting of a Black man by a police officer in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Rittenhouse, then 17, went to Kenosha to join a group of people who said they were helping keep order. Rittenhouse, carrying a military-style semiautomatic rifle, clashed with protesters. He shot and killed two men, and wounded a third. Rittenhouse’s supporters say he was defending himself while taking a stand for law and order. Civil rights activists call him a violent, reckless intruder who targeted people participating in a meaningful protest. The judge made news in pretrial hearings last week when he said prosecutors couldn’t call the people Rittenhouse shot “victims,” but defense lawyers could call them rioters. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Saturday, October 30th, 2021 

A car bomb kills 9 people and wounds 12 others near the airport in Aden. The attack coincided with the arrival of Aden’s former governor at the airport, who is unhurt. (BBC News) 

Three people are killed as the military opens fire at an anti-coup protest in OmdurmanSudan, bringing the total number of protesters killed since the coup to 14. (Al Jazeera) 

The Tigray Defense Forces say that they have captured the strategic city of Dessie and are advancing toward neighboring Kombolcha in Amhara. The government denies these claims, but residents confirm that the Ethiopian National Defense Force have completely withdrawn from Dessie. (Al Jazeera) 

Over 160 buildings, including two churches, in the town of Thantlang, Chin State, Myanmar, have been destroyed by fires resulting from Tatmadaw shelling that occurred the previous day. (AP via Global News) 

In his speech at the G20 summit in Rome, president Alberto Fernández says that huge debts “condemn generations” and that the “current system prioritizes speculation over the development of the peoples”, while also condemning the previous administration of Mauricio Macri for accepting a $46 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. (Hola News) 

Vice President Kamala Harris receives a booster dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine. (Axios) 

Last-ditch talks are held between British and French authorities as local authorities in the ports of Calais and Boulogne warn of a “disaster” if the French government goes ahead with its plan to “clog up” the English Channel and disrupt the trade and sailing of British vessels in French ports. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that the UK could consider “formal action” under trade agreements. (The Guardian) 

The 16th G20 summit begins for the first time in person after the beginning of the pandemic with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping appearing via video link. (BBC News) 

United States Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo announces the removal of tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from the European Union that were imposed during the presidency of Donald Trump. European Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis announces that the bloc will reciprocate the action on U.S. imports, ending a trade war. (AFP via RTHK) 

The Emirati foreign ministry announces that it will recall its diplomats in Lebanon and ban Emirati citizens from traveling to the country “in solidarity with” Saudi Arabia, which recalled its ambassador to Lebanon over “insulting” remarks about the war in Yemen made by Lebanese information minister George Kurdahi. (AFP via Al-Ahram) 

FDA approves Pfizer vaccine for kids ages 5 to 11 The Food and Drug Administration on Friday backed emergency-use authorization for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for U.S. children ages 5 to 11. The decision, which was expected after FDA advisers endorsed the shots, marked one of the final steps toward making the two-shot regimen available to the roughly 28 million American children in this age group. Public health experts have called the move a major milestone in the fight against the pandemic. “Vaccinating younger children against COVID-19 will bring us closer to returning to a sense of normalcy,” FDA acting commissioner Janet Woodcock said in a statement, adding that a review of test data showed the vaccine is safe and effective. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could give final approval at a Nov. 2 meeting. THE WASHINGTON POST 

G-20 leaders back global minimum tax President Biden and other leaders of the Group of 20 major economies endorsed a global minimum corporate tax on Saturday at the start of a two-day summit in Rome. The landmark agreement seeks to prevent major companies such as Apple and Bristol Myers Squibb from moving profits and jobs across borders to avoid taxes. A deal has been in the works for years, but Biden’s Treasury Department made a sustained push to finalize it at the summit. G-20 leaders also hope to take a common stand on ways to honor the 2015 Paris climate agreement ahead of next week’s United Nations climate conference, COP26. On Friday, senior G-20 leaders announced the creation of a global body to coordinate government responses to the next pandemic. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Biden calls submarine deal ‘clumsy,’ makes peace with Macron President Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday held their first face-to-face meeting since a diplomatic clash over a U.S. deal to provide nuclear submarine technology to Australia. That deal resulted in the cancellation of an agreement for Australia to buy conventional subs from France, angering Macron’s government. Biden conceded that his administration had been “clumsy” in its handling of the announcement of the Australia deal. “It was not done with a lot of grace,” Biden said, adding that the U.S. should have informed France, “an extremely, extremely valued partner,” ahead of time. Macron said he was satisfied that the close relationship between the two allies had been repaired. USA TODAY 

Supreme Court declines to block Maine vaccine mandate for health care workers The Supreme Court on Friday declined to block Maine’s coronavirus vaccine mandate for health care workers. The majority gave no reasons for the emergency ruling. The court’s three most conservative justices — Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito Jr., and Neil Gorsuch — issued a dissent, saying the fact that the state’s policy includes no religious exemption meant that “health care workers who have served on the front line of a pandemic for the last 18 months are now being fired and their practices shuttered. All for adhering to their constitutionally protected religious beliefs.” Two other conservatives, Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh, filed a brief concurring opinion, siding with the majority and saying major decisions shouldn’t be made “on a short fuse without benefit of full briefing and oral argument.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Biden administration launches 2nd attempt to end ‘Remain in Mexico’ policy The Biden administration said Friday it was trying for a second time to end former President Donald Trump’s “Remain in Mexico” policy for migrants seeking to cross the southern border into the United States to pursue asylum claims. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas conceded in a memo that the Trump-era policy probably reduced unauthorized migration, but said it did so at “substantial and unjustifiable human costs.” Mayorkas said the Biden administration can reduce migration more humanely with other policies, including fast-tracked immigration hearings, and a proposed rule change permitting asylum officers to decide on applications more quickly. The latest Biden administration move won’t immediately change the court-mandated resumption of the Remain in Mexico policy. CBS NEWS 

Wall Street finishes best month this year with new records  The S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and the Nasdaq all gained on Friday to close Wall Street’s best month this year at record highs. The S&P 500 gained 0.2 percent. The Dow and the tech-heavy Nasdaq rose by around 0.3 percent. Stocks have been getting a boost from a strong earnings season, although Amazon and Apple shares fell Friday by about 2 percent after the two tech giants reported disappointing quarterly results. So far, about half of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported third-quarter results, and more than 80 percent of them have beaten analysts’ expectations, despite disruptions of the global supply chain and other damage from the Delta-variant-driven summer coronavirus surge.  CNBC 

Oklahoma to continue lethal injections after inmate vomits during execution   Oklahoma’s prison system director, Scott Crow, said Friday the state would not change its lethal injection protocols after the first person executed by Oklahoma since 2015 vomited and convulsed after receiving the first drug in the state’s three-drug execution sequence. Reporters who have witnessed previous executions said it was extremely rare for a condemned inmate to vomit during an execution. But Crow said the doctor who monitored John Marion Grant’s execution told him it was “not a completely uncommon occurrence” for a person to vomit when given a sedative like the first drug in Oklahoma’s execution protocol. Before last week, Oklahoma was under a capital punishment moratorium due to mistakes in previous executions.THE  OKLAHOMAN 

Friday,  October 29th, 2021 

An X-class solar flare, the second of the current solar cycle, erupts. An associated coronal mass ejection may graze Earth on October 30 or 31, which could cause bright aurorae and interfere with satellite communications. (Space) 

The Food and Drug Administration authorizes the Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children between the ages of 5 and 11, becoming the first vaccine to be approved for children in the United States. (CNBC) 

Judge slams DOJ for ‘schizophrenic’ prosecution of Jan. 6 rioters Judge Beryl Howell, chief judge of the federal court in Washington, criticized the Justice Department on Thursday for what she called a “muddled” and “almost schizophrenic” approach to prosecuting Capitol rioters. She said prosecutors’ rhetoric calling the riot an “attack on democracy . . . unparalleled in American history” didn’t match their plea offers involving minor charges. “No wonder parts of the public … are confused about whether what happened on Jan. 6 at the Capitol was simply a petty offense of trespassing with some disorderliness, or shocking criminal conduct that represented a grave threat to our democratic norms,” Howell said as she sentenced rioter Jack Griffith to three years of probation on charges often used for people who disrupt congressional hearings. “The rioters were not mere protesters.” THE WASHINGTON POST 

Economic growth slowed in the last quarter amid Delta surge The U.S. economy slowed down in the third quarter, growing at an annualized rate of 2 percent, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones on average had predicted a rate of 2.8 percent. The slowdown came as the coronavirus surge fueled by the Delta variant caused Americans to curb spending, dragging economic growth to its slowest pace yet in the recovery from last year’s pandemic lockdowns. Consumer spending increased at a 1.6 percent pace, down from 12 percent in the second quarter. Spending on long-lasting goods such as appliances and autos plunged by 26.2 percent. Government spending dropped by 4.7 percent as pandemic-era aid expired. “Overall, this is a big disappointment,” wrote Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. CNBC 

Facebook announces rebranding under the name Meta Facebook is changing its corporate name to Meta, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Thursday. The rebranding comes as Facebook contends with a backlash over its handling of misinformation and harmful posts, following whistleblower allegations that the company put profits above user safety. Under the new branding, Facebook and its other apps, such as Instagram and WhatsApp, will keep their names, but all under the Meta umbrella. “It is time for us to adopt a new company brand to encompass everything that we do,” Zuckerberg said. Skeptics said the name change makes it look like Facebook has something to hide. “Zuckerberg and his lieutenants can’t shed the Facebook albatross with a clever brand adjustment,” said Paul Barrett, deputy director of the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. NPRTHE NEW YORK TIMES 

Facebook, Inc., the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, renames itself to Meta Platforms. CEO Mark Zuckerberg says that the rename was done in order to reflect the company’s diversification into other areas, such as virtual reality. (BBC News) 

Taliban-appointed chief of the Central Bank Shah Mehrabi says that gay rights will not be respected in Afghanistan because “That’s against our Sharia law”, but also said that, conversely, women’s rights will be different than that of the 1990s. (Thomson Reuters Foundation) 

Two children are killed during a bomb explosion at a village in Nakaseke, Uganda. The device looked like an exotic “jackfruit” and was given to the children while they were playing. (Al Jazeera) 

The CODECO and the Alliance for the Liberation of the Congo militia groups attack two villages in Ituri Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, killing at least 14 civilians. (AFP via The Punch) 

Three people are killed and several are injured as gunmen open fire at a wedding in Nangarhar. The Taliban are accused of being behind the attack, opening fire while music was being played. The Taliban has however denied the allegation, claiming that the incident was an internal dispute and that two of the attackers have been arrested. (The Guardian) 

Two employees of the Canadian mining company Iamgold are reported missing following an attack on their convoy in Burkina Faso while travelling to Essakane, Mali. (Reuters) 

Tatmadaw forces bombard the town of Thantlang in Chin State, western Myanmar, with artillery shells, destroying dozens of homes, after clashing with local self-defence forces who captured a soldier. (Al Jazeera English) 

The National Institute of Statistics and Geography in Mexico shows that the economy shrank 0.2% in the third-quarter from the three previous months and the GDP also declined during the same period of time, both largely due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on businesses. (Reuters) 

The Senate of Poland approves a plan to construct an estimated €353 million (US$407 million) wall along the country‘s border with Belarus, in response to an influx of migrants. (AFP via Barron’s) 

Moldova and Russian energy firm Gazprom extend their supply contract, following accusations of Russia raising oil prices against Moldova. (AFP via The Moscow Times) 

Saudi Arabia recalls its ambassador to Lebanon and demands for Lebanon to reciprocate the action over “insulting” remarks about the war in Yemen made by Lebanese information minister George Kurdahi. (AFP via RFI) 

U Win Htein, aide to the deposed Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi, is sentenced to 20 years in prison for sedition. Htein became the first politician arrested in the aftermath of the February 2021 coup to be convicted. (Deutsche Welle) 

The European Parliament sues the European Commission for failing to properly enforce the Rule of Law Conditionality Regulation that is linked to the Next Generation EU recovery package, which refuses to fund member states that fail to comply with the European Union‘s rule of law standards. (CNN) 

Biden says ‘historic’ $1.75 trillion spending plan can pass Senate President Biden announced Thursday that he and congressional Democrats have reached a “historic economic framework” for his plan to expand the social safety net and spend $555 billion to fight climate change. Biden described the $1.75 trillion deal hours before leaving for overseas summits, including next week’s United Nations conference on climate change in Scotland, COP26. Biden urged Democrats to pass the scaled-down Build Back Better plan, saying it marked major progress. He said at the White House he believed the framework would pass the 50-50 Senate, where Democrats can’t afford to lose a single vote from their caucus. But Democratic leaders still have to muster enough votes to pass the proposal, which has been scaled down from $3.5 trillion and lacks several things progressives want, including paid family leave. THE ASSOCIATED PRESSREUTERS 

Andrew Cuomo charged with groping former aide New York authorities on Thursday filed a misdemeanor criminal complaint against former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, accusing him of groping a female aide’s breast. The aide, Brittany Commisso, previously accused Cuomo of forcible touching at the Governor’s Mansion last year. The complaint filed in Albany City Court says Cuomo touched Commisso’s breast “for the purposes of degrading and gratifying his sexual desires.” Commisso is one of about a dozen women who have accused Cuomo of sexual harassment or inappropriate touching. Cuomo resigned in August after a state attorney general’s office report concluded that he had sexually harassed several women. Cuomo has denied the allegations, and contested the report’s findings. His personal lawyer, Rita Glavin, said Cuomo “never assaulted anyone,” adding: “This is not professional law enforcement. This is politics.” THE NEW YORK TIMES 

DOJ settles lawsuit by families of Charleston church shooting victims The Justice Department on Thursday agreed to a settlement in lawsuits filed by survivors and relatives of the nine people killed in the 2015 massacre at a historic Black church in Charleston, South Carolina, by white supremacist Dylann Roof. The killer later confessed, saying he hoped to ignite a race war. The families of the people killed during a Bible study at Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church sued after the FBI disclosed that its background-check system failed to prevent Roof from buying the gun he used in the slayings. His criminal record showed a felony conviction that should have blocked the sale, but the sheriff’s office that recorded the arrest didn’t show up in the FBI’s database. The settlement calls for the families of the people killed to receive $63 million, and for the survivors of the shooting spree to get $25 million. NBC NEWS 

Oklahoma resumes executions after 6 years Oklahoma executed John Marion Grant on Thursday for the 1998 murder of prison cafeteria worker Gay Carter. Grant, 60, was the first person put to death in the state in six years. He was convicted in 1999 of fatally stabbing Carter 16 times with a shank. At the time of the killing, Grant was serving a 130-year sentence for multiple armed robberies. Oklahoma had halted executions since botched lethal injections in 2014 and 2015, but last year announced it would end the moratorium using the same three-drug cocktail of the sedative midazolam, the paralytic called vecuronium bromide, and potassium chloride, which stops the heart. On Wednesday, the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals granted stays of execution for Grant and another death row inmate, Julius Jones, but those were lifted by the Supreme Court in a 5-3 decision. Jones’ execution is scheduled for Nov. 18. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Chernobyl plant manager dies at 85 Viktor Bryukhanov, the plant manager who accepted professional responsibility for the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster, died this month in Kyiv, a spokesman for the now-closed plant announced Thursday. He was 85. Bryukhanov denied criminal responsibility, attributing the explosion to design flaws dictated by Moscow and essentially blaming higher ranking officials for the explosion. Still, he was convicted of gross safety violations and served half of his 10-year sentence. He was released when the Soviet Union collapsed, and returned to government work in Ukraine, leading the technical part of its Economic Development and Trade Ministry and retiring in 2015. Bryukhanov was portrayed by Con O’Neill in the award-winning HBO series Chernobyl in 2019. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Thursday, October 28th, 2021 

The new leader of the Islamic State – West Africa Province has been killed during a military operation this month, two weeks after the death of the group’s leader Abu Musab al-Barnawi was announced. (Reuters) 

The Hungarian government announces that it will require face masks to be worn on public transport beginning on November 1 and will also allow companies to impose a vaccine mandate for their employees in order to reduce the spread of COVID-19. Additionally, all non-essential medical appointments will be temporarily suspended. (Euronews) 

Beijing mandates booster doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for key workers, including cooks, security guards and cleaning personnel, becoming the first major Chinese city to publicly mandate booster doses. (Reuters) 

The number of people who received the first dose of COVID-19 vaccine in Taiwan surpasses 70%. (Taipei Times) 

Malaysian gynaecologist John Tang Ing Chinh invents the world’s first unisex condom, that can be used by both males and females, which is made from a medical grade material normally used as a dressing for injuries and wounds. (Reuters via Today) 

At least 300 Olive ridley sea turtles have washed up dead on Mexico‘s Pacific coast, after being tangled in illegal fishing nets in the high seas. The species is listed as vulnerable. (BBC News) 

The British government summons the French ambassador to the UK over the actions by French authorities in the English Channel. (Deutsche Welle) 

The European Union accuses Russia of “weaponizing” gas prices in order to “bully” Moldova after negotiations between the two countries failed following the expiration of a Moldovan contract with Gazprom. The Kremlin denied the accusations. (SwissInfo) 

The National Assembly of People’s Power passes a law aimed at reforming the country‘s judicial system and criminal code, consistent with the 2019 constitution. (Reuters) 

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Biden administration announces strategy to curb drug overdoses  Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra on Wednesday unveiled the Biden administration’s four-part strategy to prevent drug addiction and overdoses. The plan calls for curbing inappropriate opioid prescriptions, expanding medication-based treatment, improving support for recovering addicts, and supporting harm-reduction efforts, such as distributing clean needles and test strips to check street drugs for fentanyl. “We’re changing the way we do this,” Becerra said. “We know what works. We’ve had years of evidence now.” An estimated 840,000 people died of drug overdoses from 1999 to 2019, according to an HHS report released Wednesday. The estimated number of U.S. overdose deaths neared 100,000 per year. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Top general says China hypersonic missile test close to a ‘Sputnik moment’  China’s test of a hypersonic missile designed to be able to evade American nuclear defenses was alarming because it marked a technological leap the U.S. military didn’t see coming, Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday. “I don’t know if it’s quite a Sputnik moment, but I think it’s very close to that,” Milley said, referring to the fear inspired when the Soviet Union launched the first satellite. The comments marked the first official confirmation that the demonstration of the weapon’s capabilities surprised American officials. China conducted two separate tests this summer in a way Beijing knew would be visible to U.S. satellites, although American officials said nothing before Milley discussed the test in a Bloomberg Television interview. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

China’s Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development and Ministry of Emergency Management in a joint statement announce that cities with populations under three million are banned from constructing skyscrapers taller than 250 metres (820 ft), and cities with larger populations are banned from building taller than 500 metres (1,600 ft). They also say that special exemptions need to be sought by cities under three million if they want a building taller than 150 metres (490 ft), or 250 metres (820 ft) for cities larger than that. (BBC News) 

Iran negotiator says Tehran returning to nuclear talks Iran’s new nuclear negotiator, Ali Bagheri Kani, announced via Twitter on Wednesday that the country would return to talks with the United States and other world powers in a bid to revive Tehran’s landmark 2015 nuclear deal. He said the new discussions would start by the end of November. The news came after talks with European Union counterparts in Brussels. “Had a very serious & constructive dialogue with @enriquemora_ on the essential elements for successful negotiations. We agree to start negotiations before the end of November,” he tweeted. Former President Donald Trump withdrew the U.S. from the nuclear deal and reimposed sanctions against Iran. Western powers as well as Tehran-ally Russia have been pressuring Iran’s new hardline president, Ebrahim Raisi, to return to the talks. THE GUARDIAN

Beijing mandates booster doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for key workers, including cooks, security guards and cleaning personnel, becoming the first Chinese major city to publicly mandate boosters. (Reuters) 

Moscow enters its strictest lockdown since June 2020, closing schools, kindergartens, and all non-essential businesses until November 7 due to a spike in COVID-19 cases and deaths. (DW) 

Russia reports a record for the third consecutive day of 1,159 deaths from COVID-19, bringing the nationwide death toll to 235,057. The country also reports a record 40,096 new cases in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 8.39 million. (Anadolu Agency) 

Rémy Daillet, a far-right conspiracy theorist, is charged with leading the planned “Operation Azul”, a plot which involved 12 suspects, accused of plotting a series of attacks against COVID-19 vaccination centres, a masonic lodge, journalists, prominent people and parliament. Former soldiers had been ordered to train recruits for the plot. (BBC News) 

France seizes a British trawler fishing inside its territorial waters without a licence, and fines another vessel amid tensions over post-Brexit fishing rights in the English Channel. The trawler is being held at the Port of Le Havre. The French government also says, from November 2, it will impose extra customs checks on British goods entering France. French Seas Minister Annick Girardin says “It’s not war, but it is a fight”. (Reuters) 

British environment minister George Eustice condemned the French seizure of the vessel calling it “disappointing and disproportionate, and not what we would expect from a close ally and partner” and warned of an “appropriate and calibrated response”. (Financial Post) 

French President Emmanuel Macron tells Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison that Morrison had broken the trust between the two countries and that it was up to Canberra to repair those ties with “tangible actions.”. France had criticized its allies after Australia opted for nuclear-powered submarines to be built with U.S. and British technology instead of a $A90 billion French diesel-electric submarine program. Macron also urged Australia to halt coal mining. (The Canberra Times) 

Police in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh arrest three Kashmiri students for allegedly celebrating Pakistan’s win over India in Sunday’s T20 World Cup cricket game. (BBC News) 

Democrats expected to cut paid family leave from bill  Democrats are likely to drop paid family and medical leave from their social safety net bill, several people familiar with the matter told NBC News and The Washington Post. The party needs every member of its caucus to pass the bill, and centrist Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) has objected to guaranteed paid leave. Many Democratic lawmakers considered this a top priority, and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) said she would continue to push for paid leave in the Build Back Better plan “until the bill is printed.” President Biden initially proposed the bill include 12 weeks, which was then cut down to four weeks amid early negotiations. White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said “from the beginning, we have said the president was open to compromise.” NBC NEWS

‘Journal’ criticized over Trump letter repeating false election claims The Wall Street Journal faced a backlash from voting rights advocates, political analysts, and journalistsincluding some of the Journal‘s own reporters, for printing a letter to the editor from former President Donald Trump repeating debunked claims that the presidential election he lost to President Biden as “rigged.” Trump wrote the letter in response to an editorial about Pennsylvania’s state Supreme Court, in which the Journal‘s conservative editorial board noted, factually, that Biden won Pennsylvania in 2020 by 80,555 ballots. Trump replied: “Well, actually, the election was rigged, which you, unfortunately, still haven’t figured out.” He then went on to repeat numerous false claims about the vote in Pennsylvania. Philadelphia Inquirer national political writer Jonathan Tamari tweeted that Trump’s letter was “full of absolute lies.”  THE WASHINGTON POST

Investigators say lead bullet killed cinematographer Investigators have determined that a lead bullet — fired from a prop gun by actor Alec Baldwin — killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the New Mexico set of the movie Rust. The bullet was one of about 500 rounds of blanks, dummy rounds, and live ammunition found on the set of the Western, Santa Fe County authorities said. Baldwin, who is also a producer on the film, shot Hutchins while rehearsing a scene in which he draws the weapon, a vintage Colt .45 revolver. The only other people known to have handled the gun were production armorer Hannah Gutierrez Reed and first assistant director Dave Halls, who handed Baldwin the weapon and said it was “cold,” or unloaded. He told police that he had checked some but not all of the pistol’s chambers to make sure there were no bullets in it.  LOS ANGELES TIMES

Ethiopian forces carry out another airstrike on Mekelle, the capital of the Tigray Region, targeting a compound of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front. A Tigrayan spokesman denies that the airstrike hit the compound and instead says that six civilians were killed, including three children. (Yahoo! News) 

FDA orders more warnings to patients on breast-implant risks The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday announced new safety requirements for breast implants. The new FDA order requires manufacturers and cosmetic surgeons to warn patients about possible complications. The FDA will mandate warning labels on the boxes informing patients of the risk of rupture, systemic illnesses, and a type of cancer. “This is a big step,” said Dr. Binita Ashar, director of the Office of Surgical and Infection Control Devices in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. “We are committed to ensure the safety of these products.” The rules came after tens of thousands of women for years complained that after receiving breast implants they experienced brain fog, fatigue, and other health problems known collectively as “breast implant illness.” NBC NEWS

Malaysian gynaecologist John Tang Ing Chinh invents the world’s first unisex condom, that can be used by males and females, from a medical grade material usually used as a dressing for injuries and wounds. (Reuters via Today) 

The End

lowell

Wednesday, October 27th, 2021 

Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov warns that the delivery and Ukraine’s first operational deployment of the Turkish Bayraktar TB2 in Donbas may “destabilize the situation” in the region. Ukraine carried out its first strikes against separatist forces using the Bayraktar drone yesterday. (Reuters) 

Ukrainian troops regain control of the village of Staromaryivka in the so-called “grey zone” between Ukraine and the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), according to DPR Foreign Minister Natalya Nikonorova. (TASS) 

Four policemen are killed and 263 more are injured during clashes with supporters of the banned far-right Islamic extremist Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan party in Lahore, Pakistan. (Al Jazeera) 

A report by the United Nations and the government of Papua New Guinea finds that thousands of Papuans from Indonesia have crossed into the remote border areas of western Papua New Guinea. In one of the areas, the sole police commander, Terry Dap, has asked the central government in Port Moresby to help reduce the influx of asylum seekers into Papua New Guinea. (RNZ) 

The African Union suspends Sudan in response to Monday’s military coup. (DW) 

The Central Bank of Brazil raises its interest rate by 150 basis points to 7.75 percent, its largest increase since 2002. (AFP via RFI) 

Singapore reports a record 5,324 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 184,419. (Today) 

Merck & Co. signs a licensing agreement with the UN-backed Medicines Patent Pool that will allow more companies to manufacture generic versions of its experimental oral antiviral COVID-19 treatment molnupiravir with a royalty-free license that will apply to 105 low- and middle-income countries. (Reuters) 

Saudi Arabia summons the Lebanese ambassador over “offensive” remarks about the war in Yemen made by Lebanese information minister George Kurdahi. (Arab News) 

Tajikistan approves the construction of a new US$10 million Chinese military base near its border with Afghanistan, and in a separate statement offers to hand over a pre-existing base to China and waive future rent payments on the base in exchange for military aid. The approval comes as the Tajik government expressed concerns about the worsening security situation along the border after the Taliban took over Afghanistan a few months prior. (RFE/RL) 

Following a meeting with European officials in Brussels, Iranian foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian announces that negotiations on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action will resume in November. Negotiations were halted following the United States’ withdrawal from the deal. (AFP via WION) 

The Brazilian Senate votes to charge President Jair Bolsonaro over his controversial handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. The charges include crimes against humanity, incitement to crime, falsification of documents and the violation of social rights. Brazil‘s COVID-19 death toll is second only to that of the United States. (BBC News) 

Protests continue for a second consecutive day across Ecuador due to an increase in the price of gasoline, as president Guillermo Lasso orders the deployment of security forces to highways in order to maintain order. Lasso also calls on indigenous populations and civil society groups to engage in dialogue. (Reuters) 

The budget proposed by the Socialist minority government of Prime Minister António Costa is rejected by the Assembly of the Republic for the first time in the country’s democratic history, following moves by the Left Bloc and the Communist Party to join the right-wing parties and reject the budget. It is expected that the President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa will dissolve the parliament and call for early elections. (AFP via France 24) 

The European Court of Justice (ECJ) fines Poland €1 million per day, for breaking the law by maintaining the disciplinary chamber of its Supreme Court. The ECJ says Poland has failed to comply with its order, and finds it might pose a “serious and irreparable harm to the legal order of the European Union”. The fine is the highest daily penalty the ECJ has ever imposed on any EU member state. (DW) 

Australian professional soccer player Josh Cavallo comes out as gay, becoming the only current openly gay top-flight male soccer player. (CNN) 

 
FDA advisers recommend Pfizer vaccine for kids ages 5 to 11 The Food and Drug Administration’s advisory committee on Tuesday made a non-binding recommendation to authorize the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for children ages 5 to 11. The panel said the potential benefits outweighed the risks of a rare cardiac side effect. The vote was 17 to 0, with one abstention. The pediatric vaccine’s step toward approval came more than 10 months after the first U.S. adults got their COVID-19 vaccines. Approval for pediatric vaccines is seen as crucial to protecting children in school and in holiday gatherings during an ongoing pandemic that has killed more than 736,000 people in the United States, according to The Washington Post. “To me, it seems that it is a hard decision but a clear one,” said Patrick S. Moore, a microbiologist at the University of Pittsburgh, noting that 94 children in the age group have died of COVID-19. THE WASHINGTON POST 

Senators grill YouTube, Snap, TikTok leaders on damaging posts Lawmakers questioned YouTube, Snap, and TikTok on data privacy, damaging posts, and other issues on Tuesday, shifting attention briefly to other social media companies after weeks of criticism of Facebook for allegedly putting profits above user safety. A bipartisan group of senators told executives of the companies they feared the firms’ software was driving young users to inappropriate posts, and companies were not doing enough to remove dangerous content. “Everything that you do is to add users, especially kids, and keep them on your apps for longer,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.). The companies said they were working hard to protect child users. Several lawmakers said their staff had accessed harmful content with ease, sometimes logged in as a teenager, echoing concerns about Facebook that were raised by whistleblower Frances Haugen. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Democrats want $500 billion for climate programs in spending bill  The White House has told several congressional allies that the Democrats’ spending bill will include between $500 billion and $555 billion for climate change programsPolitico reported Tuesday, citing four people familiar with the matter. A senior Biden administration official declined to confirm the amount, but said the White House sees “the ball moving forward.” Politico‘s sources said the bill will not include a proposed system of penalties intended to get power companies to increase renewable energy, a program opposed by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.). It will be replaced with grants, tax credits, and loans to help steel, cement, and aluminum companies decarbonize. President Biden has pledged to cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions 50 to 52 percent below 2005 levels this decade. He will attend a global climate summit next week in Scotland. POLITICO 

Democrats consider taxes on billionaires, corporations to pay for spending plan  Senate Democrats rushed to try to finalize a deal on a major spending plan before President Biden leaves on a foreign tour this week. The Build Back Better proposal could cost $1.75 trillion over a decade, and some Democrats are pushing a tax hike that would raise more than half of its revenue from the 10 richest people in America, including Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. The “billionaire” tax proposal would make the 700 wealthiest taxpayers the main revenue source for the spending plan, which would expand the social safety net and boost Biden’s effort to fight climate change. Leading Democrats also are proposing a 15-percent minimum tax on corporations posting more than $1 billion in profits over three years, and a 3 percent “surtax” on millionaires earning more than $5 million annually. REUTERS 

Biden mocks Virginia Republican for refusing to campaign with Trump  President Biden campaigned with Democrat Terry McAuliffe in Alexandria, Virginia, on Tuesday night, a week before Virginia chooses its next governor. Polls show a tight race between McAuliffe and his Republican rival, former private equity executive Glenn Youngkin, and Biden pointedly asked the crowed why Youngkin is not campaigning with the head of his party, former President Donald Trump. “Is there a problem with Trump being here? Is he embarrassed?” Biden said. Biden seemed to be “trying to goad Donald Trump to weigh in” as the campaign ends, CNN’s Jeff Zeleny tweeted. He also touted McAuliffe’s accomplishments as governor, called Youngkin a “Trump acolyte,” and hit Trump on his claims of election fraud, his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, and the Jan. 6 insurrection. POLITICO 

‘Dune’ sequel confirmed for 2023 release Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures have confirmed that director Denis Villeneuve’s adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic sci-fi novel Dune will get a second installment. Dune: Part Two is scheduled to hit theaters in October 2023. “I just received news from Legendary that we are officially moving forward with Dune: Part Two,” Villeneuve told The Hollywood Reporter. “It was a dream of mine to adapt Frank Herbert’s Dune and I have the fans, the cast, and crew, Legendary and Warner Bros. to thank for supporting this dream. This is only the beginning.” Dune fans had been anxious about whether this second movie would go forward, since the new film doesn’t adapt the entire book and is even referred to on screen as Dune: Part One. But the film’s solid $40.1 million in domestic ticket sales in its opening weekend appeared to have helped, especially considering it was also available to stream on HBO Max. THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 

Japan’s Princess Mako marries commoner, loses imperial status Japanese Princess Mako lost her royal status on Tuesday after quietly marrying a commoner, Kei Komuro. “For me, Kei-san is a priceless person. For us, our marriage was a necessary choice to live while cherishing our hearts,” Mako said in a televised news conference, using the traditional honorific in speaking of her husband. The couple announced in 2017 that they planned to get married the following year, but a financial dispute involving his mother resulted in an extended delay. Some opposed the marriage. Because of the criticism, Mako declined a $1.23 million payment she was entitled to for leaving the imperial family. Mako, a niece of Emperor Naruhito, and Komuro met when they were classmates at Tokyo’s International Christian University. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Tuesday,  October 26th, 2021 

It is revealed that yesterday’s explosion on a bus in Mpigi District was carried out by an ADF suicide bomber. The attacker was killed, and three other people were wounded. (France 24) 

Military leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan says that he and his forces seized power in an attempt to avoid a civil war in Sudan, saying that “the dangers we witnessed last week could have led the country into civil war”. Meanwhile, anti-coup protests occur across the country. (Reuters) 

Deposed prime minister Abdalla Hamdok and his wife are released by the military. However, several government officials continue to be detained and face trial. (AFP via Gulf News) 

Ukraine confirms it has carried out its first drone strikes using the Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2, destroying a pro-Russian separatist D-30 howitzer. A Ukrainian soldier is killed and another is wounded by rebel artillery near Hranitne in Donetsk Oblast. (The Moscow Times) 

Princess Mako of Akishino marries commoner Kei Komuro, thereby nullifying her imperial title under Japanese law and becoming Mako Komuro. (AFP via France 24) 

A cyberattack affects gas stations across Iran, rendering government-issued electronic cards used to buy subsidized fuel unuseable and leaving motorists stranded in long queues. No group immediately claims responsibility for the attack. Iran blames an Two people are killed and another is missing as floods triggered by a powerful storm is affecting Catania, Sicily, Italy. Roads have been completely submerged in parts of the region. (BBC News) 

Belgium reintroduces the usage of face masks at public places and will expanding the usage of COVID Safe Ticket to bars, restaurants, and fitness club beginning next week amid a rise of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. (AP) 

Russia reports a record 1,106 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide death toll to 232,775. (The Moscow Times) 

Ukraine reports a record 734 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide death toll to 64,936. (RFE/RL) 

Bahrain approves the usage of the Sinopharm BIBP COVID-19 vaccine for children between the ages of 3 and 11 years old. (Khaleej Times) 

The city of Lanzhou is placed under lockdown due to a cluster of COVID-19 cases. The city, which has a population of over four million, accounts for roughly a fifth of new cases reported in China since October 17. (NDTV) 

The African Union will purchase 110 million doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine in a deal brokered by the United States, which will defer delivery of some doses intended for the U.S. in order to facilitate the deal. (Al Jazeera) 

Poland increases the number of soldiers deployed on its border with Belarus from 6,000 to “about 10,000” in order to prevent the flow of further illegal crossings by Middle Eastern migrants being flown in by the Belarusian government. The troop surge comes after two border guards were hospitalized over the weekend after a group of 70 migrants stormed a section of the border. (EU Observer) 

The ASEAN Summit takes place virtually without the participation of Myanmar, following the bloc’s decision to disinvite the country’s military junta chief Min Aung Hlaing for refusing to cooperate on a peace process. (AFP via France 24) 

A Senate committee approves a resolution to gain access to Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s internet activity. The Senate also votes today on whether to indict Bolsonaro with multiple charges, including charges accusing him of mismanagement of the pandemic, charlatanism and crimes against humanity. (Reuters) 

At least 150 people are arrested by European and U.S. authorities during a joint crackdown on traders of drugs, weapons and other illicit goods on darknet e-commerce sites. The majority of those arrested are from Germany, the U.S. and the United Kingdom. (AP) 

The End

Tuesday,  October 26th, 2021 

At least 150 people are arrested by European and U.S. authorities during a joint crackdown on traders of drugs, weapons and other illicit goods on darknet e-commerce sites. The majority of those arrested are from Germany, U.S. and the United Kingdom. (Reuters) 

The city of Lanzhou is placed under lockdown due to a cluster of COVID-19 cases. The city, which has a population of over four million, accounts for roughly a fifth of new cases reported in China since 17 October. (NDTV) 

Greenhouse gases hit record level despite drop during coronavirus lockdowns  Greenhouse gas concentrations surged to a record level last year despite a temporary decline in emissions during coronavirus lockdowns, the United Nations said Monday ahead of the organization’s climate talks in Glasgow, Scotland. A new U.N. World Meteorological Organization (WMO) report found that carbon dioxide levels increased by more than the average rate of the last decade in 2020, reaching 413.2 parts per million. WMO Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said that the rate of increase would push up temperatures “far in excess” of the 2015 Paris Agreement target of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. “We are way off track,” he said. “We need to revisit our industrial, energy, and transport systems and whole way of life.” REUTERS 

Yesterday’s explosion on a bus in Mpigi District was carried out by an ADF suicide bomber. The attacker was the only fatality while three people were wounded. (France24)

Military leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan says that he and his forces seized power in an attempt to avoid a civil war in Sudan, saying that “the dangers we witnessed last week could have led the country into civil war”. Meanwhile, anti-coup protests occur across the country. (Reuters) 

Princess Mako of Akishino marries commoner Kei Komuro, thereby nullifying her imperial title in accordance with Japanese law. (AFP via France 24) 

Russia reports a record 1,106 deaths from COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide death toll to 232,775. (The Moscow Times) 

The African Union will buy 110 million doses of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine in a deal brokered by the United States, which will defer delivery of some doses first intended for internal use as part of the deal. (Al Jazeera) 

Poland increases the number of soldiers deployed on its border with Belarus from 6,000 to “about 10,000” to prevent the flow of further illegal crossings by Middle Eastern migrants. The troop surge comes after two border guards were hospitalized over the weekend after a group of 70 migrants stormed a section of the border. (EU Observer) 

Facebook whistleblower testifies to U.K. lawmakers  Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen testified to British lawmakers on Monday, urging them to crack down on the spread of hate speech and other harmful content on social media platforms before it is too late. “Right now, Facebook is closing the door on us being able to act. We have a slight window of time to regain people control over AI,” Haugen said. Haugen repeated an allegation that she made recently to Congress, saying, “Facebook has been unwilling to accept even a little sliver of profit being sacrificed for safety.” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said that was “just not true.” Facebook said Monday in a statement that it had “reduced the amount of hate speech that people see by half this year.” CNBC 

Biden administration halts aid to Sudan after coup The Biden administration plans to suspend $700 million in economic assistance to Sudan in response to a military coup in the northeast African nation, the State Department said Monday. The announcement came shortly after the military arrested Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and other members of the government. The U.S. is calling for Sudan’s military to respect “the aspirations of the Sudanese people to restore the country’s path to democracy,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said. The military declared a state of emergency as protesters took to the streets in the capital, Khartoum, calling for a return to the transition to democracy that started with the ouster of longtime dictator Omar Hassan al-Bashir more than two years ago. Soldiers responding to the protest killed at least three people. THE WASHINGTON POSTREUTERS 

Gunman kills 2 at Boise shopping mall A shooting at a Boise, Idaho, shopping mall on Monday left two people dead and five others injured, including the suspect, Boise police said. A police officer who was among those injured was treated and released from a hospital. The unidentified gunman also was wounded in an exchange of gunfire with police and hospitalized in critical condition. The shootout occurred after officers responding to a report of gunfire in the mall encountered a person matching the suspect’s description, Boise Police Department Chief Ryan Lee said. Police did not immediately identify the people killed or injured, and Lee said it was too early in the investigation to determine a motive. Boise Mayor Lauren McLean thanked shopkeepers who “reacted so quickly to take care of folks that were there,” saying they “showed in a tough and chaotic moment, how much you care.” IDAHO STATESMAN 

Trial showed Moderna vaccine safe, effective in children 6 to 11 Moderna said Monday that its COVID-19 vaccine was shown to be generally safe and effective in a clinical trial involving children aged 6 to 11. The company said it would submit the results to the Food and Drug Administration and its regulatory counterparts in Europe and elsewhere, seeking emergency authorization to administer the shots to children in that age group. The Moderna vaccine currently is authorized in the U.S. for people 18 and older. The company already has asked the FDA to authorize giving its vaccine to children aged 12 to 17, but a decision has been delayed as the agency assesses the risk of a rare inflammation of the heart. Pfizer and BioNTech are expected to get authorization for the use of their vaccine in children 5 to 11 within days or weeks. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL 

Tesla’s market cap hits $1 trillion for 1st time Tesla shares jumped by nearly 13 percent on Monday, vaulting the electric-car maker’s market capitalization above $1 trillion for the first time. The spike followed car rental company Hertz’s announcement that it planned to buy 100,000 Tesla cars by the end of 2022. After the purchase, electric vehicles will make up 20 percent of the Hertz fleet worldwide. Tesla shares, which bottomed out below $100 in the early days of the pandemic, settled above $1,000 for the first time, closing at $1,024.86. Tesla, the world’s first trillion-dollar automaker, is now worth more than General Motors, Toyota Motor, Ford, Volkswagen, BMW, Honda, and several other automakers combined. The surge appeared to surprise Tesla CEO Elon Musk. “Strange that moved valuation,” he said via Twitter, “as Tesla is very much a production ramp problem, not a demand problem.” THE NEW YORK TIMESREUTERS 

White House launches program letting private citizens sponsor resettling Afghans  The Biden administration on Monday announced a new initiative allowing private citizens to sponsor resettling Afghan refugees. The program could shore up the U.S. resettlement system that proved weak as it was tested by thousands of recent arrivals, Roll Call said. Under the arrangement, groups of citizens can form what are called “sponsor circles” to help refugees with basic services and tasks traditionally handled by nonprofits — like securing housing, accessing government benefits, and providing food and clothing — during their first 90 days in the U.S. Local communities and organizations like Welcome.US, Airbnb, Integrated Refugee and Immigrant Services, among others, will also assist in the program, according to ABC News. ROLL CALLABC NEWS 

NYC police union challenges vaccine mandate in court New York City’s largest police union on Monday filed a lawsuit asking a judge to let unvaccinated police officers keep working despite a vaccine mandate imposed by Mayor Bill de Blasio last week. The Police Benevolent Association of New York said the city should give police officers the option of testing regularly, arguing that a “test-or-vax” rule would protect public safety. On the day the lawsuit was filed in Staten Island, where many officers live, a crowd that included fire, police, and sanitation workers marched across the Brooklyn Bridge to City Hall, chanting, “We Will Not Comply.” COVID-19 was the most common cause of officer duty-related deaths in 2020 and 2021, according to the Officer Down Memorial Page. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Monday,  October 25th, 2021 

Petrol prices hit a record high of £1.4294 per litre (equivalent to $7.45 per gallon) in the United Kingdom amid fuel shortages. (BBC News) 

The death toll from the clashes between the Somali National Army and Sufi paramilitary group Ahlu Sunna Waljama’a in Galmudug increases to 120. (Reuters) 

Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and other senior members of the civilian government are detained by the military in a coup d’état. The military also seizes state television and blocks internet access. Thousands of people gather in Khartoum to protest the coup. (The Guardian) 

Ten civilians are killed and 140 more are injured as mass protests occur following the coup. (BBC News) 

Chairman of the Sovereignty Council Abdel Fattah al-Burhan announces a state of emergency and the dissolution of the Sovereignty Council and the government. (Saudi Gazette) 

It is announced that around 1.5 million people have visited the Expo 2020 event in Dubai since its opening on October 1. (Al Arabiya) 

In a near-return to normalcy, operating hours restrictions on bars and restaurants have been lifted in cities across the Greater Tokyo Area and Osaka for the first time in 11 months, also allowing these establishments to resume their alcohol sales at any time during their business hours as the number of COVID-19 cases decreases. (The Asahi Shimbun) 

Romania imposes a nationwide curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. for those who have been unvaccinated or who have not recovered from COVID-19 and makes face masks mandatory in all public venues in an attempt to reduce the number of COVID-19 cases. The country also begins to implement a mandatory green certificate for shopping malls, restaurants, public institutions and workplaces. (See News) 

Mexico begins vaccinations for at-risk children in Mexico City. (La Prisna Latina) 

Hours after the coup d’état in Sudan, the United States Department of State suspends $700 million worth of aid to the country until the restoration of the civilian government. (AFP via CNA) 

A court in Munich, Germany, sentences an Islamic State-affiliated 30-year-old woman to 10 years in prison for allowing a 5-year old Yazidi girl to die from thirst in Iraq. The woman was found guilty on multiple charges, including some related to terrorism. (CBS News) 

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi announces that the state of emergency, which was imposed in April 2017, will be lifted. (The New York Times) 

Facebook and Alphabet Inc., which owns Youtube, announce that they have removed a video of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro claiming that vaccines cause AIDS after the video was found to have violated their respective company’s policies about COVID-19 vaccines. (Reuters) 

October 25th, 2021 

Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and other senior members of the civilian government are detained by the military in a coup d’état. The military also seizes state television and blocks internet access. Thousands gather in Khartoum to protest the coup. (The Guardian) 

Three civilians are killed and 80 more injured as mass protests erupt after the coup. (Al Jazeera) 

Chairman of the Sovereignty Council Abdel Fattah al-Burhan announces a state of emergency and the dissolution of the Sovereignty Council and the government. (Reuters) 

An explosion on a bus in Mpigi District, kills one person and injures several others. (Al Jazeera) 

Saturday’s bombing of a Kampala restaurant is claimed by Islamic State. (Reuters) 

The death toll from the clashes between the Somali National Army and Sufi paramilitary group Ahlu Sunna Waljama’a in Galmudug rise to 120. (Reuters) 

In near return to normalcy, operating hours restrictions on bars and restaurants have been lifted in cities across the Greater Tokyo Area and Osaka for the first time in eleven months, which also allowing establishments to resume their alcohol sales at any time during their business hours as the number of COVID-19 cases decreases. (The Asahi Shimbun) 

Romania imposes a nationwide curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. for those who have been unvaccinated or unrecovered from COVID-19 and mandatory face masks in all public venues in attempt to curb the spike of COVID-19 cases. It also begins to implement a mandatory green certificate for entering shopping malls, restaurants, public institutions or going to work. (See News) 

Russia reports a record 37,930 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, thereby bringing the nationwide total of confirmed cases to 8.279 million. (Emirates News Agency) 

The Biden administration signs an presidential proclamation requiring international travellers to be fully vaccinated using any WHO-approved COVID-19 vaccines and allows “mix-and-match” jabs. The proclamation also requiring unvaccinated Americans and immigrants to tested negative for COVID-19 one day before departure. These rules will take effect on November 8. (Financial Times) 

A court in Munich, Germany sentences an IS-affiliated woman to 10 years in prison for allowing a young Yazidi girl to die from thirst in Iraq. The woman was found guilty on multiple charges, some related to terrorism. (Reuters) 

Sudan military detains prime minister in apparent coup Sudan’s military detained Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, along with cabinet members and other civilian leaders, in an apparent coup that threatened to derail the northeast African nation’s fragile democratic transition. Military forces put Hamdok under house arrest, then moved him to “an unknown location” after he refused to “endorse the coup,” the country’s Ministry of Culture and Information said in a Facebook post. Internet services were disrupted in the capital Khartoum and other parts of the country. Protesters filled Khartoum’s streets early Monday. Smoke from burning tires filled the air. The turmoil came days after the capital’s biggest pro-democracy protests since the 2019 wave of popular anger that forced out longtime authoritarian ruler Omar Hassan al-Bashir. Since then, the country has been ruled by a civilian-military council. THE NEW YORK TIMESTHE WASHINGTON POST 

Fauci: Coronavirus vaccines likely available to kids aged 5 to 11 in November Coronavirus vaccines should be available for children aged 5 to 11 by mid-November, top U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday on ABC’s This Week. Food and Drug Administration officials are reviewing an application from Pfizer and BioNTech to authorize their two-dose vaccine for children in the age group. The FDA’s panel of outsiders is scheduled to consider the vaccine on Oct. 26, and the FDA usually follows their recommendations. After that, advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will weigh in, and the CDC is expected to quickly follow up with a final decision. “If all goes well, and we get the regulatory approval and the recommendation from the CDC, it’s entirely possible if not very likely that vaccines will be available for children from 5 to 11 within the first week or two of November,” Fauci said. REUTERS 

Jan. 6 rally organizers implicate GOP lawmakers in planning Two people who helped plan the Jan. 6 rally in Washington that preceded the Capitol insurgency are sharing their knowledge with the House Jan. 6 committee, and they have “explosive allegations that multiple members of Congress were intimately involved in planning both [former President Donald] Trump’s efforts to overturn his election loss and the Jan. 6 events that turned violent,” Rolling Stone reported Sunday. “I remember Marjorie Taylor Greene specifically,” one organizer told Rolling Stone. Along with Greene (R-Ga.), both planners said GOP Reps. Paul Gosar (Ariz.), Lauren Boebert (Colo.), Mo Brooks (Ala.), Madison Cawthorn (N.C.), Andy Biggs (Ariz.), and Louie Gohmert (Texas), or their top staffers, participated in the conversations. Greene “had nothing to do with planning of any protest,” a spokesman said. ROLLING STONE 

Husband starts hunger strike on behalf of U.K. charity worker jailed in Iran The husband of a U.K. charity worker detained in Iran started a hunger strike on Sunday after an Iranian court extended her prison term another year. Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has already been detained for more than five years. She was arrested at Tehran’s airport in April 2016 and later convicted on a charge of plotting to overthrow the country’s government, which she and human rights groups deny. Her husband, Richard Ratcliffe, launched his hunger strike outside the British government’s Foreign Office in central London. Two years ago, he fasted for 15 days outside the Iranian Embassy. He said that was what got Iran to release their 7-year-old daughter, Gabriella. “We are now giving the U.K. government the same treatment,” he said, adding that Iran was the “primary abuser” in the case but that the “U.K. is also letting us down.” THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

Trial starts in lawsuit over Charlottesville rally violence  A long-delayed lawsuit gets underway in Charlottesville, Virginia, on Monday to determine whether the far-right organizers of the August 2017 “Unite the Right” rally plotted for the event to turn violent. The gathering started with a torch-lit march during which participants chanted racist and antisemitic slogans. The next day, a rally supporter drove into a crowd of counterprotesters, killing one woman and injuring dozens of others. The plaintiffs accuse the two dozen organizers of intentionally fomenting the violence that left them injured. The 24 defendants, including 10 far-right organizations, white supremacists, neo-Nazis, Klan sympathizers, and other extremists, have argued that rally participants involved in clashes were acting in self-defense. The plaintiffs are asking for unspecified financial damages. THE NEW YORK TIMES 

Yellen says inflation will improve by middle or end of 2022 Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Sunday she expects inflation to ease by “the middle to end of next year,” but that rates could remain abnormally high for months. “The COVID shock to the economy has caused disruptions that we’ll be working through over the next year,” Yellen told CNN’s State of the Union. “And, of course, Americans have not seen inflation like we have experienced recently in a long time.” Yellen also pushed back on the idea that the U.S. is losing control of inflation. “As we get back to normal, expect that to end,” she added of the high rates. The most recent Consumer Price Index indicated that consumer prices rose 5.4 percent in the past 12 months. POLITICOCNN 

October 24th, 2021 

Clashes between the Somali National Army and Sufi paramilitary group Ahlu Sunna Waljama’a in Galmudug kill at least 30 people and injure more than 100 others. (Reuters) 

Eastern Europe surpasses 20 million cases of COVID-19, with Russia, Ukraine and Romania reporting the most deaths. (Al Jazeera) 

Uzbeks head to the polls to elect their president. Analysts say that incumbent Shavkat Mirziyoyev has his victory for a second term secured as the country struggles with its tourism industry and security issues on the Afghanistan–Uzbekistan border since the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan. (Deutsche Welle) 

Guatemala imposes a month-long dawn to dusk curfew on the eastern Izabal Department following two days of protests over a new mining project in the region. (The Washington Post) 

The End