• Why the Winner of Canadas Election Could Be Decided by Greater Toronto
    www.nytimes.com
    The Conservatives had enjoyed a lead over Liberals in the region largely because of rising housing and food costs. But President Trumps tariffs have shifted the equation.
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  • Pope Francis bestowed a special nickname on APs Vatican reporter for her often-tough questions
    apnews.com
    Pope Francis shakes hands with Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield aboard his plane bound for Fatima, Portugal, on May 12, 2017. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)2025-04-25T04:11:43Z VATICAN CITY (AP) He called me la prima della classe, or the first in class. It wasnt necessarily a compliment.I had earned the nickname from Pope Francis in 2018, a year that marked a low point in his papacy, and a turning point in how he handled cases of priests who sexually abused children.The pope had just bungled a big abuse case in Chile and I, like many in the Vatican press corps, reported the scandal during Francis problematic trip to the South American country. Francis had discredited abuse victims, defended a bishop implicated in covering up their case and showed himself to be insensitive to their trauma.A turbulent news conference Pope Francis sits next to Greg Burke, right, with journalists after turbulence interrupted his news conference, during a flight from Lima, Peru, to Rome, Jan. 21, 2018. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Pope Francis sits next to Greg Burke, right, with journalists after turbulence interrupted his news conference, during a flight from Lima, Peru, to Rome, Jan. 21, 2018. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Returning to Rome, Francis was inundated with questions about the Chile scandal during the traditional in-flight news conference. Turbulence temporarily halted the session, but when it resumed, I picked up where others had left off, pressing the issue and incredulous that he seemed so unaware of the victims pain.Francis insisted no victims had come forward to accuse Bishop Juan Barros of protecting the abuser priest, Fernando Karadima. I knew otherwise, and told Francis as much in a tone of voice that still shocks me today. (AP Audio) Its the victims who are saying this, I told him.I havent heard from any victim of Barros, Francis responded. There are! There are! I insisted. The pope interrupted, but I cut him off, my voice rising. No! There are victims of Karadima who say that Barros was there! But they didnt come forward, Francis replied. They didnt give evidence for a judgment. You, with good intentions, tell me that there are victims, but I havent seen them because they didnt present themselves.By the genteel standards of Vatican protocol, it was a stunningly sharp exchange. Francis could have dug in or retaliated against me and other journalists who challenged him so publicly. But he didnt. His response commissioning an investigation and, once finished, apologizing to the victims for discrediting them underscored what friends and foes alike saw as one of Francis most remarkable attributes: a willingness to admit mistakes and change course. In a 2023 interview with The Associated Press, Francis acknowledged the 2018 airborne news conference was a turning point the moment he understood the depths of the abuse scandal. I couldnt believe it. You were the one on the plane who told me, No, thats not the way it is, Father, Francis told me.Thats when the bomb went off, when I saw the corruption of many bishops in this, he said, making a gesture indicating his head had exploded. There you witnessed that I myself had to wake up to cases that were all covered up, didnt I? Pope Francis during an interview with APs Nicole Winfield in 2023. Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield shows Pope Francis an Associated Press book at the Vatican, on Jan. 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield shows Pope Francis an Associated Press book at the Vatican, on Jan. 24, 2023. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A nickname emergesBy then, Francis already had bestowed the nickname on me, coming up with it in August 2018, while the Chilean scandal was still fresh.AP colleague Eva Vergara and I had followed up with a story that Francis had indeed received a letter from a Chilean victim detailing the abuse and cover-up he endured.Again aboard Air Pope One heading to Ireland, Francis came back to greet journalists. When he got to my row, Francis smiled, shook my hand and said, Ahh, la prima della classe. La prima della classe. I wondered what he meant. In Italian it can be translated as the first in class. But it can also carry a negative connotation: a know-it-all, goody-goody or teachers pet.I saw the nickname as Francis grudging acknowledgement that AP and I had accurately called him out and corrected him.As reporters, we had to keep a professional distance, covering him in the tough but fair way that met our standards and which was perhaps behind his respect for our work. Pope Francis jokes with Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield aboard a flight to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Tuesday, July 23, 2013. (LOsservatore Romano/Pool Photo via AP, File) Pope Francis jokes with Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield aboard a flight to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Tuesday, July 23, 2013. (LOsservatore Romano/Pool Photo via AP, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More An evolving relationship with the pressThe nickname stuck, and Francis used it whenever we met. In many ways, it showed how his relationship with the press evolved over time.When he was elected, Francis made clear his discomfort with journalists. He had had negative experiences in Argentina, where his record as head of the Jesuits in the 1970s during the military dictatorship and his tenure as Buenos Aires archbishop had put him in the media crosshairs.Truly, I dont give interviews. Why, I dont know, its just that way, Francis told reporters traveling to Brazil in 2013 for his first foreign trip as pope. Over time, Francis loosened up and his airborne news conferences became a new chapter in papal communication. His comments sometimes required official clarifications, but they pushed the envelope in ways he couldnt in speeches or documents on issues like LGBTQ+ outreach or the role of women in the church.Francis granted more interviews than his two predecessors combined, using the media to speak to his flock in the informal, personal style that characterized his papacy. Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield works in the Vaticans press room, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield works in the Vaticans press room, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A work-life dilemma arisesOur last substantive encounter came in January 2024, when reporters met with him in the Apostolic Palace. At the time, I was concerned with an impending work-life conflict: My daughter would be starting college in late August and our family was planning to be in New England to attend orientation and move her into her dorm.At the same time, rumors were circulating that Francis would embark on his longest, most ambitious trip: a four-nation tour of Asia that, in all likelihood, would occur in late August. I couldnt miss either.At the end of the audience, Francis greeted the journalists individually. To this day, I cannot believe what I said, but I laid out my dilemma, summoning both maternal desperation and nothing-to-lose chutzpah. Ever polite, Francis listened intently he often asked about my children as I suggested, somewhat cheekily, that delaying the Asia trip would enable me to cover it.Francis didnt dismiss it outright, and I figured I could at least tell my daughter I had tried, knowing Id inevitably have to tell her the Asia trip would take precedence. In this photo provided by Jean-Marie Guenois, Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield speaks with Pope Francis on his plane en route to Jakarta, Indonesia, on Sept. 2, 2024. (Jean-Marie Guenois via AP) In this photo provided by Jean-Marie Guenois, Associated Press correspondent Nicole Winfield speaks with Pope Francis on his plane en route to Jakarta, Indonesia, on Sept. 2, 2024. (Jean-Marie Guenois via AP) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More A final surpriseMonths later, to my astonishment, the date of the trip was announced: Sept. 2-13. I could do both.I didnt dare think my impromptu conversation as Francis met scores of journalists could have entered into the complicated calculations of organizing a papal trip. But I later received a breathless voicemail from someone close to Francis who had just met with him. You will not believe what he told me, he said. The pope said he changed the dates of the trip to ensure I could come, he said.I still dont know if other factors affected what became the last major foreign journey of Francis life. Pope Francis meets people after giving an address in the Sir John Guise Stadium in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, Sept. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File) Pope Francis meets people after giving an address in the Sir John Guise Stadium in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, Sept. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Im grateful I was able to go. I was a witness as Francis, hobbled and in a wheelchair, ministered to his flock in Indonesia and Singapore, the jungles of Papua New Guinea and steamy East Timor, where half the population attended his final Mass in Dili.On the long plane ride home, I wrote about his resilience.There was Francis, defying the doubters who had questioned if he could, would or should make such an arduous trip to Asia given everything that could go wrong, my story said. The moment seemed to serve as proof that, despite his age, ailments and seven hours of jet lag, Pope Francis still could pope, still likes to pope and has it in him to pope like he used to at the start of his pontificate.Id like to think he might have read it, knowing it came from la prima della classe.___Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the APs collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. NICOLE WINFIELD Winfield has been on the Vatican beat since 2001, covering the papacies of St. John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI and the Francis pontificate and traveling the world with them.
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  • While the world watches Gaza, here is whats happening in the West Bank
    apnews.com
    Residents of the West Bank refugee camp of Nur Shams, Tulkarem, evacuate their homes as the Israeli military continues its operation in the area on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)2025-04-25T05:02:46.198Z After the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023 ignited the devastating war in Gaza, a deadly new reality also took hold for Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.With the worlds attention focused on Gaza, Israeli military operations in the West Bank grew in size, frequency and intensity. The army launched the stepped-up campaign to counter what it says is a growing militant threat.Heres a look at where things stand, with data collected by the U.N.s humanitarian office and Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement tracking group.Palestinian deaths by Israeli fire have surgedSince the war in Gaza erupted, the majority of Palestinians killed by Israeli fire in the West Bank have been shot during military raids in villages and towns. Israel says the operations are needed to stamp out militancy. Many of the dead were militants killed in clashes, or youths throwing stones or firebombs.But Palestinians and rights groups say scores of uninvolved civilians have been caught in the crossfire. Of those killed since the Hamas attack, at least 182 have been children under 18, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry, some of whom Israel says were involved in stone-throwing and militancy. Rights groups accuse Israel of using excessive force.Israeli offensives evicted 40,000 from refugee camps Israel is staging a massive offensive across four major refugee camps in the north of the West Bank. The raids, at their height, pushed 40,000 people from their homes. Many are now sheltering with relatives in neighboring villages, others racking up debt renting apartments while they wait to return.Israeli officials, meanwhile, have said those displaced will not be allowed to go back for at least a year. Forces have ripped up roads, destroyed infrastructure and demolished hundreds of homes. Israel says it is dismantling terrorist infrastructure. But civilian homes have also been destroyed.In another escalation, the military has resumed previously rare tactics, like drone strikes, in these densely populated areas. Settler attacks on Palestinians occur almost daily Settler attacks causing injury or death to Palestinians surged in the wake of the Hamas attack. For Palestinians living in small Bedouin villages in areas under full Israeli control, the attacks have become a near-daily occurrence as settlers emboldened by Israels pro-settler government build new unauthorized outposts on nearby hilltops.Israel says it opposes settler violence and blames it all on a small, extremist fringe. Palestinians say that the Israeli army does little to protect them, and that the attacks are part of a systematic attempt to expel them from their land.Israeli outposts spring up across territorySettlers have established about 80 new outposts since the war began. Rights groups say the outposts, often populated by extremist activists, are the main drivers of violence against Palestinians. The tiny unauthorized land grabs are tolerated and even encouraged by Israel, which over the years has converted many outposts into authorized settlements as it cements its hold on the territory and moves to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state. Israels government, dominated by settler leaders and supporters, has established 13 new settlements since the war began, at least five of which originally sprung up as outposts. That brings the total number of settlements to 140.Most of the international community considers settlements illegal, though U.S. President Donald Trump has supported them. Checkpoints choke Palestinian movementMeanwhile, movement between Palestinian towns and cities has only grown more difficult. New checkpoints have further divided the territory and created choke points the Israeli army can shut off on a whim. Crossings that had been open 24/7 started closing during morning and evening rush hours, disrupting the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and turning once-routine commutes into hours-long journeys.As the war in Gaza continues and the West Bank seethes, Palestinians say life is only growing more difficult. Residents of the West Bank refugee camp of Nur Shams, Tulkarem, evacuate their homes as the Israeli military continues its operation in the area on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed) Residents of the West Bank refugee camp of Nur Shams, Tulkarem, evacuate their homes as the Israeli military continues its operation in the area on Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More JULIA FRANKEL Frankel is an Associated Press reporter in Jerusalem. twitter mailto
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  • Sources: Brazil in talks again with Ancelotti's camp
    www.espn.com
    Carlo Ancelotti is once again the front-runner for Brazil's vacant coaching job, sources told ESPN Brasil.
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  • Giants trade up for QB Dart after drafting Carter
    www.espn.com
    The Giants selected Penn State star Abdul Carter and QB Jaxson Dart in the first round of the NFL draft.
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  • www.nytimes.com
    Smooth floors. Public restrooms. A built-in audience: The lower level of Moynihan Hall doubles as a rehearsal space for a variety of dance groups, including K-pop, salsa and Brazilian Zouk.
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  • They Caught the Flu, and Never Came Home
    www.nytimes.com
    The virus leads to an estimated 36,000 deaths in the United States each season many of them so sudden that families are left reeling.
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  • India and Pakistan again teeter on the brink of conflict over Kashmir. Heres why
    apnews.com
    Pakistan's paramilitary soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint near Wahag, a joint border crossing point between the Pakistan and India border, Thursday, April 24, 2025.(AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)2025-04-24T12:43:36Z NEW DELHI (AP) A deadly attack on tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir has again moved India and Pakistan closer to war as the two rivals downgraded diplomatic and trade ties, closed the main border crossing and revoked visas for each others nationals. Pakistan has denied it was behind Tuesdays attack that killed 26 mostly Indian tourists at a scenic spot in the Himalayan region, where India claimed it restored a sense of calm despite a decadeslong rebellion. A previously unknown militant group calling itself Kashmir Resistance has claimed responsibility for the attack. India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir, which is split between them and claimed by both in its entirety. Heres what to know about an escalation in tensions between the two nuclear-armed rivals. Supporters of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party chants slogans during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Supporters of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party chants slogans during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Whats at the heart of the dispute? Ties between India and Pakistan have been shaped by conflict, aggressive diplomacy and mutual suspicion, most notably in their competing claims over the stunning Himalayan region of Kashmir. Armed insurgents in Kashmir have resisted New Delhi for decades, with many Muslim Kashmiris supporting the rebels goal of uniting the territory either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country. India accuses Pakistan of fomenting violence, a charge denied by Islamabad. Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict over the years. How has Pakistan responded to Indias reprisals? On Tuesday, gunmen fatally shot 26 people, mostly Indian tourists, in an attack near the picturesque town of Pahalgam. New Delhi immediately linked Pakistan to the attack, although it did not publicly produce any evidence. India announced a string of punitive measures. It downgraded diplomatic ties, suspended a crucial water-sharing treaty and revoked all visas issued to Pakistani nationals. India also said it will reduce its staff in its high commission in Pakistan and bring down the number of Pakistani diplomats in New Delhi to 30 from 55 from May 1. Pakistan called Indias actions irresponsible and canceled visas for Indian nationals, suspended all trade with India including via third countries and closed its airspace to Indian aircraft. Supporters of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party chants slogans during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Supporters of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party chants slogans during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Islamabad warns dispute over water could lead to war Indias decision to suspend the water treaty could potentially mark a major turning point in how the two neighbors manage an essential shared resource between them. Pakistan warned Thursday that any Indian attempt to stop or divert the flow of water between them would be considered an act of war. The Indus Water Treaty, brokered by the World Bank in 1960, allows for sharing the waters of a river system that is a lifeline for both countries. The treaty has survived two wars between the countries, in 1965 and 1971, and a major border skirmish in 1999. It governs sharing of the water supply from the Indus River system and its distributaries. Under the treaty, India has control over the eastern rivers of Ravi, Sutlej, and Beas, and Pakistan controls the western rivers of Jhelum, Chenab, and Indus that follow through Kashmir region. Pakistan said the treaty was binding and contained no provision for unilateral suspension. Pakistan described it as a vital national interest. The treaty is essential for supporting agriculture and hydropower in the country with 240 million people. Suspending it could lead to water shortages at a time when parts of Pakistan are already struggling with drought and declining rainfall.Pakistan warns it could suspend a peace treaty A supporter of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party holds a crossed poster of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the words Modi butcher during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) A supporter of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party holds a crossed poster of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the words Modi butcher during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Islamabad, meanwhile, has warned it could suspend the Simla Agreement, a significant peace treaty signed after the 1971 India-Pakistan war that ended in Bangladesh splitting from Pakistan.Under the agreement, India and Pakistan established the Line of Control, previously called the Ceasefire Line, a highly militarized de facto border that divides disputed Kashmir between the countries. They also committed to settle their differences through bilateral negotiations.Militant attacks scale back peace efforts Despite largely strained relations, the neighbors have intermittently made efforts for peace. However, regular border flare-ups and multiple militant attacks in Kashmir and India have marred peace overtures as New Delhi has taken tough position on Islamabad, accusing it of terrorism.In 1999, Pakistan-backed rebels and Pakistani soldiers seized Indian military posts in the icy heights of Kargil region. Indian troops responded and a 10-week conflict killed at least 1,000 combatants on both sides. The fighting stopped after a U.S. intervention.In 2008, a group of heavily armed assailants of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group went on a rampage in Indias financial capital Mumbai, killing 166 people. New Delhi blamed Pakistans intelligence service for the assault, an accusation denied by Islamabad. In 2019, a suicide car bombing killed 40 Indian soldiers in Kashmir and brought the countries closer to war. In response, India said its air force struck a militant training camp inside Pakistan. Pakistan responded by aerial raids, downed an Indian military aircraft and captured an Indian pilot, who was later released.Months later, Prime Minister Narendra Modis government revoked Kashmirs semi-autonomous status and imposed sweeping security measures. Since then, India has kept order in the region with a huge security presence and drastically curbed dissent, civil liberties and media freedoms.Worries of nuclear confrontationIndia and Pakistan have built up their armies and nuclear arsenals over the years. India was the first to conduct a nuclear test in 1974, followed by another in 1998. Pakistan followed with its own nuclear tests just a few weeks later. The sides have since armed themselves with hundreds of nuclear warheads, missile delivery systems, advanced fighter jets and modern weapons to take on each other.
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  • As immigrant arrests surge, complaints of abuse mount at Americas oldest detention center in Miami
    apnews.com
    The Krome Detention Center, Wednesday, April 16, 2025, in Miami. (AP Photo/Marta Lavandier)2025-04-25T04:07:45Z MIAMI (AP) As hundreds of migrants crowded into the Krome Detention Center in Miami on the edge of the Florida Everglades, a palpable fear of an uprising set in among its staff.As President Donald J. Trump sought to make good on his campaign pledge of mass arrests and removals of migrants, Krome, the United States oldest immigration detention facility and one with a long history of abuse, saw its prisoner population recently swell to nearly three times its capacity of 600.There are 1700 people here at Krome!!!!, one U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement employee texted a co-worker last month, adding that even though it felt unsafe to walk around the facility nobody was willing to speak out. That tension fearing reprisal for trying to ensure more humane conditions comes amid a battle in federal courts and the halls of Congress over whether the presidents immigration crackdown has gone too far, too fast at the expense of fundamental rights. At Krome, reports have poured in about a lack of water and food, unsanitary confinement and medical neglect. With the surge of complaints, the Trump administration shut down three Department of Homeland Security oversight offices charged with investigating such claims. A copy of the text exchange and several other documents were shared with The Associated Press by a federal employee on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. Other documents include detainee complaints as well as an account of the arrival of 40 women at Krome, an all-male facility, in possible violation of a federal law to reduce the risk of prison rape. There is a critical shortage of beds in detention facilitiesKrome is hardly alone in a core challenge faced by other facilities: a lack of bed space. Nationwide, detentions have surged to nearly 48,000 as of March 23, a 21% increase from the already elevated levels at the end of the Biden administration. In recent weeks, they have mostly flatlined as efforts to deport many of those same migrants have been blocked by several lawsuits. To address the shortage, ICE this month published a request for bids to operate detention centers for up to $45 billion as it seeks to expand to 100,000 beds from its current budget for about 41,000. As part of the build out, the federal government for the first time is looking to hold migrants on U.S. Army bases testing the limits of a more than century-old ban on military involvement in civilian law enforcement.By some measures, Trumps controversial approach is working. Barely 11,000 migrants were encountered at the U.S.-Mexican border in March, their lowest level in at least a decade and down from 96,035 in December 2024, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Other facilities have caps on the number of detaineesKrome is just one of five facilities that ICE directly runs the others are in Buffalo, Arizona and two in Texas and can house detainees for more than 16 hours. After Trump took office, ICE had orders to round up migrants with few options on where to send them. The vast majority of bed space is leased from local prisons, jails or privately run facilities that have strict limits on how many detainees they are contractually obligated to accept.As its concrete cellblocks began filling up, federal workers started documenting the worsening conditions in weekly reports for the Department of Homeland Securitys leadership. They worked their way up the chain through DHS Office of Immigration & Detention Ombudsman, an independent watchdog established by Congress during the first Trump administration to blunt the fallout from a string of scandals about treatment at detention facilities.The office went through four ombudsmen in two months as Trump officials surged arrests with no apparent plan on where to send them. The situation worsened in mid-March, when the offices 100 staffers including a case manager at Krome were placed on administrative leave in what officials described as an effort to remove roadblocks to enforcement.Rather than supporting law enforcement efforts, they often function as internal adversaries that slow down operations, DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said. Around the same time, Kromes chaos spilled into public view. Images secretly shot on a cellphone and posted on TikTok showed a group of men sleeping on concrete floors and under tables with little more than their shoes as pillows.We are practically kidnapped, Osiris Vzquez, his eyes bloodshot due to a lack of sleep, said in the grainy video, which garnered 4.4 million views. We dont want likes. We want help. Please!Vzquez, who was detained while driving home from a construction job near Miami, said he shared for two weeks a small room with some 80 men. Showers and phone calls werent allowed, the fetid-smelling bathrooms wre left unattended and food was restricted to peanut butter sandwiches.There was no clock, no window, no natural light, recalled Vzquez in an interview. You lost all notion of time, whether its day or night. Eventually, Vzquez decided to self-deport. But his nightmare didnt end. Once back in his hometown of Morelia, Mexico, where he hadnt set foot in almost a decade, he had to be hospitalized twice for a respiratory infection he says he caught at Krome.Everyone I know got sick. We were so close together, said Vzquez. It couldve been worse. Since Trump returned to the White House, three detainees have died while in ICE custody two of them at Krome. The latest, Maksym Chernyak, died after complaining to his wife about overcrowding and freezing conditions. The 44-year-old Ukrainian entered the U.S. legally with his wife in August under a humanitarian program for people fleeing the countrys war with Russia.He was sent to Krome after an arrest in south Florida for domestic violence and immediately got sick with a chest cold. After being monitored for a week with high blood pressure, on Feb. 18, at 2:33 a.m., he was taken to a hospital for seizure-like vomiting and shaking. An ICE report said he appeared intoxicated and unresponsive at times. Two days later, he died. Other than acetaminophen, he received no medication to treat the blood pressure, according to a two-page ICE report about Chernyaks death. An autopsy listed the cause of death as complications from a stroke aggravated by obesity. Chernyaks widow said that before her husbands detention he was a strong, healthy man. Without a translator, she said, her husband struggled to communicate with guards about his deteriorating health. They saw his condition, but they ignored him, said Oksana Tarasiuk in an interview. If he wasnt put in Krome, Im sure that he would still be alive.ICE, in a statement, didnt comment on specific allegations of mistreatment but said it adjusts its operations as needed to uphold its duty to treat individuals with dignity and respect.These allegations are not in keeping with ICE policies, practices and standards of care, the agency said. ICE takes its commitment to promoting safe, secure, humane environments for those in our custody very seriously.Attorneys said that in recent days, Krome has transferred out a number of detainees and conditions have improved. But that could just be shifting problems elsewhere in the migration detention system, immigration attorneys and advocates say. Some 20 miles east of Krome, at the Federal Detention Center in downtown Miami, correctional officers last week had to deploy flash bang grenades, pepper spray paint balls and stun rounds to quell an uprising by detainees, two people familiar with the matter told the AP. The incident occurred as a group of some 40 detainees waited almost eight hours to be admitted into the facility as jail officers miscounted the number of individuals handed over by ICE, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak publicly. As confusion reigned, the arriving detainees, some from Jamaica, ripped a fire sprinkler from a ceiling, flooding a holding cell, and took correctional officers batons, according to the people. The federal Bureau of Prisons, which runs the facility, would not confirm details of the incident but said that at no time was the public at risk.That has put a massive strain over our staff, said Kenny X. Castillo, the president of the union representing workers at FDC Miami. We are doing the job of two agencies in one building.Detentions drive profitsTrumps administration has yet to reveal his plans for mass deportations even as he seeks to eliminate legal status for 1 million migrants previously granted humanitarian parole or some other form of temporary protection. The latest ICE data suggests so-called removal of migrants is actually below levels at the end of the Biden administration. That means detentions are likely to rise and, with facilities at capacity, the need to house all the detainees will get more urgent. Spending on new facilities is a boon for federal contractors, whose stock prices have surged since Trumps election. But finding workers willing to carry out Trumps policy remains a major challenge.Only a handful of applicants showed up at a recent hiring fair in Miami organized by Akima Global Services, a $2 billion federal contractor that staffs several immigrant detention centers, including Krome.Many of these facilities have been chronically understaffed for years, said Michelle Bran, an immigration attorney and the last ombudsman during the Biden administration. These are not easy jobs and they arent pleasant places to work.On Thursday, advocates led by the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organization filed a lawsuit against DHS seeking to challenge the Trump administrations decision to shutter the oversight offices.Krome has a history of substandard conditionsAllegations of substandard conditions are nothing new at Krome. The facility was set up as essentially the nations first migrant detention center in the 1970s to process the large number of boat refugees fleeing Haiti. Before that, almost no migrants were detained for more than a few days.In the early 2000s, the facility was wracked by harrowing accounts of guards sexually assaulting or coercing sexual favors from female prisoners. Several guards were criminally charged.But more recently, the facility appeared to have turned a corner, with ICE even inviting the media to tour a first-of-its-kind mental health facility. Then it changed abruptly.The facility housed 740 men and one woman on March 31, according to the latest ICE data, which reflects only the midnight count on the last day of the month. Thats up 31% from just before Trump took office. ICE refused to disclose Kromes current capacity because of security concerns.So far this year, the ombudsmans office has received more than 2,000 inmate complaints, according to the federal employee.Bran said she worries that detainee deaths, which started to rise during the Biden administration as arrests surged, could spike without anyone on the ground to investigate complaints of mistreatment. To my knowledge, everything was just frozen and people were told to go home, said Bran. If youre ramping up, youre taking away the oversight and youre increasing the number of people youre detaining, its a recipe for disaster.Following Chernyaks death, a grassroots coalition of immigration activists and far-left groups organized a demonstration on the highway leading to Kromes entrance calling for the closure of the center. A few hundred protesters showed up, some holding pictures of migrants kidnapped by ICE and signs that read American Gulag, American Shame and Immigrants Make America Great.This month, Miami Mayor Daniella Levine Cava, a Democrat, wrote Homeland Secretary Kristi Noem requesting a tour of the facility. The DHS media office didnt reply to an email asking whether Noem had granted her request. In addition, 49 Democrats in Congress have also written Noem demanding to know how the agency intends to ease overcrowding at ICE facilities. Huber Argueta-Perez said he saw many of those same conditions during his detention at Krome last month. The 35-year-old Guatemalan, who has lived in the U.S. for almost two decades, was detained March 10 after dropping off his two American daughters at school in Miami. He spent nine days sleeping on the concrete floor of a small, overcrowded room. He said he got feverishly sick from the cold but was repeatedly denied a sweater and medicines. We didnt fit, Argueta-Perez, who was deported March 19, said in an interview from Guatemala. But the more we complained, the worse was the punishment.___AP writers Michael Sisak in New York and Rebecca Santana in Washington contributed to this report. JOSHUA GOODMAN Goodman is a Miami-based investigative reporter who writes about the intersection of crime, corruption, drug trafficking and politics in Latin America. He previously spent two decades reporting from South America. twitter mailto GISELA SALOMON Salomon is a Miami-based reporter who covers Latin America and immigration affairs for The Associated Press.Salomon es una periodista que desde Miami cubre asuntos latinoamericanos y de inmigracion. twitter mailto
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  • Raiders GM honors son's preference, picks Jeanty
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    The Raiders selected Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty with the No. 6 pick in the NFL draft Thursday night.
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  • Jags trade up for Hunter, who can 'alter the sport'
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    The Jacksonville Jaguars traded up to acquire the No. 2 pick Thursday and selected wide receiver and cornerback Travis Hunter.
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  • Indian officials say troops exchanged fire with Pakistani soldiers in disputed Kashmir
    apnews.com
    People burn Pakistani flags during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Guwahati, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)2025-04-25T06:21:50Z SRINAGAR, India (AP) Indian officials said the army had a brief exchange of fire with Pakistani soldiers along their highly militarized frontier in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, as the nuclear-armed rivals ramped up tit-for-tat diplomatic offensive following a deadly attack on tourists. A supporter of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party holds a crossed poster of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the words Modi butcher during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) A supporter of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party holds a crossed poster of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with the words Modi butcher during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More The report of a gunfight comes amid soaring tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad after gunmen killed 26 people near the resort town of Pahalgam in Kashmir on Tuesday. India immediately described the massacre a terror attack and said it had cross border links, blaming Pakistan for backing it.Pakistan denied any connection to the attack, which was claimed by a previously unknown militant group calling itself the Kashmir Resistance.Three Indian army officials said that Pakistani soldiers used small arms to fire at an Indian position in Kashmir late Thursday. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with departmental policy, said Indian soldiers retaliated and no casualties were reported.In Pakistan, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday decline to confirm or deny the report. Ministry spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan told a news conference that I will wait for a formal confirmation from the military before I make any comment. He added there had been no effort yet from any other country to mediate. People burn Pakistani flags during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Guwahati, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath) People burn Pakistani flags during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Guwahati, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Members of airlines and tourism facility providers walk with posters during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Kolkata, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Bikas Das) Members of airlines and tourism facility providers walk with posters during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Kolkata, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Bikas Das) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More In the past, each side has accused the other of starting border skirmishes in Kashmir, which both claim in its entirety.The United Nations has urged India and Pakistan to exercise maximum restraint and to ensure that the situation and the developments weve seen do not deteriorate any further. Any issues between Pakistan and India, we believe can be and should be resolved peacefully, through meaningful, mutual engagement, the statement said Friday.Following the attack, India announced a series of diplomatic actions against Pakistan. New Delhi on Wednesday suspended a crucial water-sharing treaty that has withstood two wars between the two countries and closed the only functional land border crossing between the countries while also cutting the number of diplomatic staff. A day later, India revoked all visas issued to Pakistani nationals with effect from Sunday. Members of airlines and tourism facility providers walk in a procession with posters during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Kolkata, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Bikas Das) Members of airlines and tourism facility providers walk in a procession with posters during a protest against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Kolkata, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Bikas Das) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Supporters of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party stand over the crossed posters of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Indian Minister of Home Affairs Amir Shah during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Supporters of the Pakistan Murkazi Muslim League party stand over the crossed posters of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Indian Minister of Home Affairs Amir Shah during a demonstration against the suspension of water-sharing treaty by India with Pakistan, in Karachi, Pakistan Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More In retaliation, Pakistan on Thursday responded angrily that it has nothing to do with the attack, and canceled visas issued to Indian nationals, closed its airspace for all Indian-owned or Indian-operated airlines and suspended all trade with India, including to and from any third country.It also warned that any Indian attempt to stop or divert flow of water would be considered an act of war and met with full force across the complete spectrum of Pakistans national power.Tuesdays attack in Kashmir was the worst assault in years, targeting civilians in the restive region that has seen an anti-India rebellion for more than three decades.India and Pakistan each administer a part of Kashmir. New Delhi describes all militancy in Kashmir as Pakistan-backed terrorism. Pakistan denies this, and many Muslim Kashmiris consider the militants to be part of a home-grown freedom struggle. People place candles after a march against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki) People place candles after a march against the killing of tourists by militants near Pahalgam in Indian controlled Kashmir, in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More ___Roy reported from New Delhi. Munir Ahmed in Islamabad contributed to this report. AIJAZ HUSSAIN Hussain is a senior reporter for The Associated Press covering the Kashmir conflict, Indian politics and strategic affairs, and climate. He has worked for the AP for nearly two decades. twitter mailto
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  • Negotiations between Iran and the US over Tehrans nuclear program return to secluded Oman
    apnews.com
    Tourists take photos at the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque in Muscat, Oman, Saturday, April 12, 2025. (AP Photo/ Fatima Shbair)2025-04-25T05:28:58Z MUSCAT, Oman (AP) Negotiations between Iran and the United States over Tehrans rapidly advancing nuclear program will return Saturday to the secluded sultanate of Oman, where experts on both sides will start hammering the technical details of any possible deal. The talks seek to limit Irans nuclear program in exchange for the lifting of some of the crushing economic sanctions the U.S. has imposed on the Islamic Republic closing in on half a century of enmity. Trump repeatedly has threatened to unleash airstrikes targeting Irans program if a deal isnt reached. Iranian officials increasingly warn that they could pursue a nuclear weapon with their stockpile of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels.Neither Iran nor the U.S. have offered any explanation on why the talks will return to the Omani capital of Muscat, nestled in the Hajar Mountains. Oman has been a mediator between the countries. Last weekends talks in Rome offered a more-equal flight distance between Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and U.S. Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff, who are leading the negotiations. But Rome remains in mourning after the death of Pope Francis, whose funeral will be Saturday. And Iranian state television, in covering last weekends talks, complained at length on air about the paparazzi gathered across the street from the Omani Embassy in Romes Camilluccia neighborhood. As you can see, unlike the first round of talks where the presence of journalists was limited and the Omanis had special management in place to prevent a large and chaotic media presence from disrupting the negotiations, this time in Rome, Italy, that kind of control hasnt been applied, said Hosnieh Sadat Shobeiri, an Iranian state TV journalist in gray, all-encompassing chador. Because of the crowd were seeing here, with media outlets from various countries including some that are anti-Iran its possible that well hear more conflicting reports and news aimed at disrupting the talks coming out of Rome compared to Oman. Expert talks come as Iran lines up Chinese and Russian supportThe Muscat talks come as Iran appears to have lined up Chinese and Russian support. Araghchi traveled to Moscow last week and this week visited Beijing. On Thursday, Chinese, Iran and Russian representatives met the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations nuclear watchdog that likely will verify compliance with any accord like it did with Tehrans 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. That deal included China and Russia, as well as France, Germany and the United Kingdom. However, Iran has greatly restricted the IAEAs inspections leading to fears internationally that centrifuges and other nuclear material could be diverted. The IAEA offered no readout from the talks, but Chinas state-run Xinhua news agency on Friday described the three nations as saying the agency has the necessary potential and expertise to contribute constructively to this process. China, Russia and Iran emphasized that political and diplomatic engagement based on mutual respect remains the only viable and practical path for resolving the Iran nuclear issue, the report said. It added that China respects Irans right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy. The Trump administration has kept France, Germany and the U.K. out of its direct negotiations with Iran, something similarly reflected in Witkoffs negotiations with Russia over ending its war on Ukraine.Araghchi meanwhile has said hes open to visiting Berlin, London and Paris to discuss the negotiations. The ball is now in the E3s court, Araghchi wrote on the social platform X on Thursday, using an acronym for the countries. They have an opportunity to do away with the grip of Special Interest groups and forge a different path. How we act at this critical junction is likely to define the foreseeable future. U.S. hardens its stance on enrichmentThe U.S. technical team was expected to arrive in Oman on Friday ahead of the talks Saturday. Theyll be led by Michael Anton, the director of U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubios policy planning staff. Anton does not have the nuclear policy experience of those who led Americas efforts in the 2015 talks. However, he was an early supporter of Trump, describing the 2016 election as a charge the cockpit or you die vote. A Hillary Clinton presidency is Russian Roulette with a semi-auto, Anton wrote. With Trump, at least you can spin the cylinder and take your chances.He also criticized Iran sycophancy in the same essay. Rubio, speaking on a podcast released this week, also kept up a Trump line that Iran needed to stop its enrichment of uranium entirely.If Iran wants a civil nuclear program, they can have one just like many other countries can have one, and that is they import enriched material, Rubio said.But Iran has insisted that keeping its enrichment is key. Witkoff also has muddied the issue by first suggesting in a television interview that Iran could enrich uranium at 3.67%, then later saying that all enrichment must stop. Meanwhile, one more wildcard is Israel, whose devastating war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip grinds on. Trump initially announced the Iran talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at his side. But Israel, which for years has targeted Irans nuclear program with attacks on its facilities and scientists, has kept open the possibility of airstrikes to destroy Tehrans enrichment sites. On Monday, Israels military conducted drills preparing for possible new Iranian missile attacks, the countrys public broadcaster KAN reported.Our security services are on high alert given past instances of attempted sabotage and assassination operations designed to provoke a legitimate response, Araghchi wrote Wednesday on X. ___The Associated Press receives support for nuclear security coverage from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and Outrider Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.___Additional AP coverage of the nuclear landscape: https://apnews.com/projects/the-new-nuclear-landscape/ JON GAMBRELL Gambrell is the news director for the Gulf and Iran for The Associated Press. He has reported from each of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Iran and other locations across the world since joining the AP in 2006. twitter instagram mailto
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  • Morant on crutches, status uncertain after fall
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    Grizzlies superstar Ja Morant sustained a hip injury in a hard fall during Thursday's Game 3 loss to the Thunder.
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  • Pistons, Knicks miffed by officiating in wild finish
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    Both clubs were unhappy after a pair of odd plays that were or weren't whistled in the closing seconds of New York's win in Detroit on Thursday night.
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  • Markets Rise on Hints of Easing Trade Tensions
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    Stocks were pointing toward a fourth straight positive trading session.
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  • A Mexican musician uses a contentious genre to sing of women imprisoned for killing their abusers
    apnews.com
    Mexican corridos singer Vivir Quintana performs her new album, about violence against women, in Mexico City, Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Aurea Del Rosario)2025-04-25T04:17:08Z MEXICO CITY (AP) Two days before her new album was launched, musical icon Vivir Quintana was behind barbed wire at a womens prison in Mexico. The singer had spent the past 10 years visiting women incarcerated after defending themselves and, in doing so, killing their abusers. Their stories became part of Cosas que Sorprenden a la Audiencia (Things that Surprise the Audience), Quintanas latest album, released Thursday. It tells the story of 10 such women but in a first, Quintana does it through corridos, a typically male-dominated and controversial Mexican music genre thats soared into the spotlight in recent years. The album, Quintana explained, was born out of her desire to dive into the more complicated aspects of gender-based violence. This album has a different heart, Quintana, 40, said in an interview, donning bright red boots, her signature streak of gray slicing through her black hair. This album wasnt made to sell, its to change minds. So many times I didnt defend myselfThe songs are meant to raise awareness about soaring levels of violence against women across Latin America human rights groups estimate that an average of 10 women are killed in Mexico every day and a justice system that many believe protects abusers and silences womens voices. In many cases, women like the ones in Quintanas corridos are charged with excessive legitimate self-defense, charges that have fueled outrage among many in Mexico. So many times I feared for my life. So many times I didnt defend myself, Quintana crooned, cradling her guitar as her booming voice echoed through the halls of her record label building on Wednesday. Now I live locked up in a prison, and I feel more free than I did in my own home.Amplifying womens voices has been a hallmark of Quintanas career, and rocketed her to fame in Mexico and beyond. In 2020, her Cancin Sin Miedo (Song Without Fear) became an anthem for Mexicos Womens Day march and the feminist movement in Latin America.In 2022, she co-wrote a melancholy hymn about healing and freedom for the album of the Black Panther sequel. And last year, she was recognized at the Latin Grammys as one of four Leading Ladies of Entertainment. A cultural reckoningQuintanas new music goes further. She uses corridos, a type of northern Mexican ballads that has seen both an international renaissance and a backlash, with critics claiming that narco corridos songs that glorify cartel violence and use misogynistic lyrics have dominated the form.The topic has grown so heated that the United States even revoked the visas of members of one band who projected the face of a drug cartel boss onto a large screen during a performance.Instead of banning the corridos as a growing number of Mexican states have done, the countrys first woman president, Claudia Sheinbaum, has proposed that the government promote a new style of corridos that avoid glorifying violence and discrimination against women.Were not banning a musical genre; that would be absurd, Sheinbaum said recently. What were proposing is that the lyrics not glorify drugs, violence, violence against women or viewing women as a sexual object. I didnt want to die by his handsQuintanas corridos turn the genre on its head, paying tribute not to violence or criminals, but to women who have been criminalized for defending themselves.The first song on her album, Era l o Era Yo (It Was Either Him or Me) tells the story of Roxana Ruiz, a Mexican woman sentenced to six years for killing a man who was raping her and threatened to kill her in 2021. This isnt justice, Ruiz said after the court ruling. Remember, I am the one who was sexually assaulted by that man, and after he died because I defended myself because I didnt want to die by his hands.Mexican prosecutors later withdrew the case against her after a countrywide outcry.One song tells of a 14-year-old girl in the southern state of Tabasco who killed her father when he was abusing her mother. Another tells of Yakiri Rubio, who was kidnapped by two men, taken to a hotel and raped. After killing one of the men, she was taken to prison and charged with homicide by excessive legitimate self-defense. With each song, Quintana would follow local news reports, interview the women in prisons and spend time with their families, hoping to capture their personalities and not just the violent act that transformed their lives.Its something painful that the state tells you that if you defend yourself, were going to punish you, Quintana said. Its like up until what point do we care about womens life? Shifting the conversationQuintanas inspiration stemmed from a childhood memory of a classic corrido she first heard at the age of 5, played at parties and on the radio in her native northern Mexican state of Coahuila. The ballad is about a woman named Rosita Alvrez, violently killed when she tried to go out to dance. Later, when she was 15, Quintanas best friend was murdered in a femicide, the slaying of women because of their gender. It was then that the brutality of the lyrics sank in.Quintanas album seeks to shift the tone of the corridos to capture the harsh realities Mexican women face, she said, and explore ongoing violence against women and other kinds of machismo with nuance.Her purpose, she added, is to lift up survivors of gender violence and to provide a point of connection for incarcerated women like those in her ballads.They tell these women, you defended yourself, you killed someone and youre in prison, you dont have the right to feel joy, enjoy life, you dont have the right to anything, Quintana said. But its important to dance to these things, no? she added. Because people have to understand that they have the right to music, the right to art, and more than anything, the right to beauty. MEGAN JANETSKY Megan Janetsky covers migration, conflict, human rights and politics in Mexico and Central America for The AP based in Mexico City. Previously, she covered Cuba and the Caribbean for The AP and worked as freelance journalist in Colombia, reporting across South America. twitter instagram facebook mailto FERNANDA PESCE Pesce covers Mexico and Central America for The Associated Press. twitter instagram mailto
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  • AP PHOTOS: 2 girls survived Nepals 2015 earthquake. Each lost a leg but found a friendship
    apnews.com
    Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar play a game on a cell phone as they share a bed at the trauma center of Bir Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, July 6, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha)2025-04-25T01:03:15Z KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) The devastating 2015 Nepal earthquake that killed thousands changed the lives of many in the Himalayan nation. But it was the beginning of a friendship for two girls who each lost a leg in the tremor.Nirmala Pariyar and Khendo Tamang were 7 and 8 years old when they met at the hospital in Kathmandu after they were brought there for treatment. Both were injured during the April 25, 2015, earthquake, which damaged more than 1 million houses and buildings in Nepal. Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar try out their prosthetic legs for the first time at a rehabilitation center in Kathmandu, Nepal, Aug. 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar try out their prosthetic legs for the first time at a rehabilitation center in Kathmandu, Nepal, Aug. 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar share a light moment at the trauma center of Bir Hospital during their treatment in Kathmandu, Nepal, Sept. 8, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar share a light moment at the trauma center of Bir Hospital during their treatment in Kathmandu, Nepal, Sept. 8, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar play in the courtyard of Bir Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, Aug. 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar play in the courtyard of Bir Hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, Aug. 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, right, is dropped off at her home while Nirmala Pariyar, center, waits in the car to be taken to her home after both spent six months at the trauma center of Bir Hospital for treatment in Kathmandu, Nepal, Aug. 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, right, is dropped off at her home while Nirmala Pariyar, center, waits in the car to be taken to her home after both spent six months at the trauma center of Bir Hospital for treatment in Kathmandu, Nepal, Aug. 19, 2015. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More They shared the same hospital bed and supported each other. They went on to attend the same boarding school.Our friendship is still strong and she has been my biggest support even during the times when I am away from family, Pariyar told The Associated Press. The 2015 Nepal earthquake that killed thousands changed the lives of many in the Himalayan nation. But it was the beginning of a friendship for two girls who each lost their legs in the tremor. Nirmala Pariyar and Khendo Tamang were 7 and 8 years old when they met at the hospital in Kathmandu after they were brought there for treatment. Both were injured during the April 25, 2015, earthquake, which damaged more than 1 million houses and buildings in Nepal. (AP video by Mansingh Upendra) When I sometime miss my family and cry she is always there for me, she added. She has been not just a friend but like my own sister to me.Pariyar was pinned under a fallen metal gate and concrete wall after the quake. She was pulled out when people passing by saw her hair, and was transported to the hospital. Nirmala Pariyar waits for a doctor at a rehabilitation center to get the height of her prosthetic leg altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Dec. 27, 2017. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Nirmala Pariyar waits for a doctor at a rehabilitation center to get the height of her prosthetic leg altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Dec. 27, 2017. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More I was unconscious but I was told that one of my legs was barely attached to my body. They put the leg in a cardboard box and took me to hospital, she said.She regained consciousness at the hospital a week after the earthquake. A few days later she met Tamang, who was brought in from her village east of the capital, Kathmandu. Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar walk out of a restaurant in Kathmandu, Nepal, May 8, 2017. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar walk out of a restaurant in Kathmandu, Nepal, May 8, 2017. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More It has taken months of surgery and rehabilitation to get them walking and performing everyday tasks. Both girls have been fitted with prosthetic legs, and often have to visit the disability rehabilitation center to get readjustments.Both girls, now in their teenage years, have just finished the national high school exams and are planning their future. Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar visit a rehabilitation center get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar visit a rehabilitation center get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar share a desk in their classroom, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar share a desk in their classroom, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, left, writes a message on Nirmala Pariyars shirt as they part ways after being together for ten years, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Friday, March 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, writes a message on Nirmala Pariyars shirt as they part ways after being together for ten years, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Friday, March 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar wait at their school for a bus to arrive, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar wait at their school for a bus to arrive, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Nirmala Pariyar, left, watches her friend Khendo Tamang, right, leave as they part ways after being together for ten years, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Nirmala Pariyar, left, watches her friend Khendo Tamang, right, leave as they part ways after being together for ten years, in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Pariyar is considering majoring in science in junior college because that promises better prospects but in her heart she wants to be a singer.Ten years after the devastating earthquake, most of the buildings and houses that were damaged have been rebuilt. Schools and public buildings have been built to better safety standards.Earthquakes are common in Nepal, which is covered mostly by mountain terrain and home to most of the highest peaks in the world. Khendo Tamang, back, waits to board a school bus in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, back, waits to board a school bus in Lalitpur, Nepal, Thursday, March 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Nirmala Pariyar, left, helps her mother at a workshop for handmade bags where her parents work, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Nirmala Pariyar, left, helps her mother at a workshop for handmade bags where her parents work, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Nirmala Pariyars younger sister points to Nirmalas picture on a certificate hanging on the wall of their home in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Nirmala Pariyars younger sister points to Nirmalas picture on a certificate hanging on the wall of their home in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Nirmala Pariyars younger sister braids her hair at their home in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Nirmala Pariyars younger sister braids her hair at their home in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Kendo Tamang looks at a framed photo of her late grandmother, who died in the 2015 Nepal earthquake, at a relatives rented apartment in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Kendo Tamang looks at a framed photo of her late grandmother, who died in the 2015 Nepal earthquake, at a relatives rented apartment in Kathmandu, Nepal, Tuesday, April 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar, right, visit a rehabilitation center to to get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar, right, visit a rehabilitation center to to get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang stands on a platform as she gets the height of her prosthetic leg altered at a rehabilitation center in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang stands on a platform as she gets the height of her prosthetic leg altered at a rehabilitation center in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar, right, register at a rehabilitation center to get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, left, and Nirmala Pariyar, right, register at a rehabilitation center to get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar visit a rehabilitation center to get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Khendo Tamang, right, and Nirmala Pariyar visit a rehabilitation center to get the heights of their prosthetic legs altered, in Kathmandu, Nepal, Friday, April 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Niranjan Shrestha) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More
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  • Black, queer, and built to last, Black Prides defies deletion
    www.pride.com
    At a time when DEI investments are rapidly vanishing across industries and LGBTQ+ rights face mounting attacks, spaces created for and by marginalized communities are not only necessary; they're essential. That's precisely why Black Prides were created: to carve out space where our joy is prioritized, our identities are affirmed, and our communities can gather in resistance, resilience, and love.The Legacy of Black PridesBorn out of exclusion and non-inclusion in late 20th-century mainstream Pride movements, Black Prides emerged as vital spaces where LGBTQ+ people of color could show up fully, loudly, and joyfully. These celebrations weren't just parties but spaces for radical community building and vital resource-sharing hubs, where powerful conversations shaped and strengthened our community.Philadelphia's Black Pride, one of the first in the nation, stands as a pillar in the legacy of Black LGBTQIA+ resistance and celebration. Held every April, our gathering coincides with the historic Penn Relays, creating a vibrant convergence drawing upon generations of Black queer folks from across the country. This tradition traces back to the 1960s when community trailblazer Tyrone Smith hosted gatherings offering refuge and connection for Black LGBTQ+ people during a time of widespread repression.The seeds of Black Pride emerged in an era when police regularly raided gay bars, entrapped queer men, and brutalized drag performers and transgender women, especially those of color. There were no safe spaces, no legal protections, and little to no public sympathy. Smith's gatherings were revolutionary acts of radical care in a social climate riddled with fear and repression.More Than a Celebration, Black Pride is a MovementSmall grassroots gatherings in living rooms and basements blossomed into Philadelphia Black Pride weekend, a powerful and transformative celebration of identity, culture, and healing. What was once a safe refuge in the face of adversity has grown into a cultural movement where Black LGBTQIA+ folks are truly centered, affirmed, and celebrated in the fullness of who they are.More than a party, it's a legacy that continues to thrive due to the unwavering dedication of our committed members and the invaluable support of our community partners.Today, standing on the shoulders of giants who came before us, Philadelphia Black Pride continues to be a trailblazer regarding what impact looks like in the community. Despite operating on a fraction of the budget enjoyed by Pride Month organizers in June, our commitment to our community has never wavered.Last year, in honor of our 25th Anniversary, we launched the Michael Hinson Scholarship Fund, named after a trailblazing advocate for the Black LGBTQ+ community in Philadelphia and a founding member behind the formal establishment of Philly Black Gay Pride in 1999. The fund invests in the next generation of LGBTQ+ leaders, ensuring they have the necessary resources to unlock their fullest potential. Through year-round programming and strategic partnerships, we're committed to building our infrastructure to drive systemic change, advance equity, and create lasting opportunities within the community.The Urgency of NowHowever, this work cannot be done in isolation. Under today's polarizing political climate, Black queer and trans communities often face compounded marginalization, and are among some of the most vulnerable. The threats to our safety, rights, and freedoms continue to mount, and the need for community support has never been greater. As our communities continue to navigate the intersection of race, gender, and sexuality, we must build a coalition of allies and advocates who will stand with us and actively contribute to our safety, joy, and empowerment.Our community needs more than visibility, we need infrastructure. Philly Black Pride is working toward becoming a fully self-sustaining organization that operates year-round, advocates for critical policy change, and creates affirming spaces where Black LGBTQ+ people can truly thrive.This vision demands meaningful support during Philly Black Pride weekend and every day of the year. Whether through financial contributions, in-kind donations, or the gift of time and talent, every act of generosity fuels our mission.We are building something bigger than an eventa movement grounded in care, equity, and possibility.The fight against systemic inequities, racism, transphobia, anti-Blackness, and homophobia requires a collective response. It calls for allies, advocates, and institutions willing to stand with us and be ready to invest in a future where those most marginalized are finally at the center.Erasure of Black and Brown SpacesThe need for Black and Brown spaces is particularly urgent in Philadelphia. Recently, we witnessed the closure of the city'scity's only two Black- and Brown-owned bars in the Gayborhood LevelUp and Cockatoo. Their absence represents more than a lost nightlife experience. It's the erasure of spaces that acted as refuges for LGBTQ+ people of color, where we could enjoy our culture, rally around the community, and patronize our own.Their absence is more than a loss. The shuttering of Black queer nightlife spaces isn'tisn't isolated to Philadelphia; it's part of a troubling national pattern. From Washington D.C. to New York to Los Angeles, beloved Black- and Brown LGBTQ-owned bars, clubs, and lounges are disappearing, erasing vital spaces where our communities have gathered to celebrate, organize, and simply be. Their closures reflect deeper systemic issues, gentrification, underinvestment, and the continued marginalization of Black LGBTQ+ life within both mainstream gay and Black spaces.As these spaces vanish, so do the stories, connections, and legacies they held. We must see this moment as a call to action to reimagine what safe spaces look like for Black LGBTQ+ communities across the nation. It's imperative that our larger communities, allies, and partners join us in changing this narrative. In these turbulent times, it isn't just about survival; it's about shaping a future where Black LGBTQ+ people are empowered year-round.For generations, Black queer and trans communities have been asked to do more with less, stretching limited resources to create vibrant, life-affirming spaces in the face of systemic neglect. But if history has taught us anything, it's that when we are counted out, we rise up. We build our own tables, carve out our own space, and create brilliance despite every barrier.Imagine the societal ills we could remedy if we were fully resourced. Black Prides are more than parties. They're movements with roots that sustain our history, challenge the status quo, and ignite a path toward a more inclusive future. Now, more than ever, support matters.Leaders in our community are ready to build coalitions that show up in unity to ensure that Black LGBTQ+ voices continue to shine bright despite the dark times.Olu Solanke (he/him) is a dynamic public relations and marketing professional with over eight years of experience driving impactful campaigns for top entertainment, lifestyle, and technology brands. With expertise in integrated marketing strategies, media relations, social media engagement, influencer partnerships, event planning, and account management, Olu has consistently delivered results that resonate. Deeply passionate about the intersection of strategic communications and Black culture, Olu is committed to amplifying diverse voices and creating space for underrepresented stories. When not crafting innovative strategies, you'll find him experimenting with new recipes in the kitchen or embarking on outdoor adventures across the globe.Arranged for Pride.com by Nikki Aye, Digital Photo EditorVoices is dedicated to featuring a wide range of inspiring personal stories and impactful opinions from the LGBTQ+ and Allied community. Visit pride.com/submit to learn more about submission guidelines. We welcome your thoughts and feedback on any of our stories. Email us at voices@equalpride.com. Views expressed in Voices stories are those of the guest writers, columnists and editors, and do not directly represent the views of PRIDE.com or our parent company, equalpride.
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  • Packers end 1st-round WR drought, pick Golden
    www.espn.com
    Much to the delight of the Packers-heavy crowd jammed between Lambeau Field and the draft stage, Green Bay selected receiver Matthew Golden of Texas with the 23rd pick in the draft.
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  • Why Jags went all-in on Travis Hunter at the NFL draft: Will he play both sides of the ball?
    www.espn.com
    Hunter has been tabbed as a 'generational' talent. Did the Jags overspend? Breaking down the deal.
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  • ICE Air Has a New Contractor. This State Is Asking How It Will Protect the Detainees on Board.
    www.propublica.org
    by McKenzie Funk ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. Connecticuts attorney general has sent his second warning in a month to the low-cost carrier Avelo Airlines, telling the startup it has jeopardized tax breaks and other local support by agreeing to conduct deportation flights for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.Democrats in the Connecticut legislature, meanwhile, are working to expand the states sanctuary law to penalize companies like Avelo for working with federal immigration authorities.The backlash comes after Texas-based Avelo signed an agreement early this month to dedicate three of its 20 planes to carrying out deportation flights as part of the charter network known as ICE Air. It also follows a report by ProPublica, which Connecticut Attorney General William Tong cited in an April 8 letter to Avelo, revealing flight attendants unease over the treatment and safety of detainees on such flights. The concerns airline staffers raised included how difficult it could be to evacuate people wearing wrist and ankle shackles.Can Avelo confirm that it will never operate flights while non-violent passengers are in shackles, handcuffs, waist chains and/or leg irons? Tongs April 8 letter asks. Can Avelo confirm that it will never operate a flight without a safe and timely evacuation strategy for all passengers?Tong then issued a public statement on April 15 reiterating his concerns. In 2022, before its current ICE Air contract, Avelo flew a series of charters for the immigration agency. A flight attendant captured photos of detainees in wrist and ankle shackles. (Obtained by ProPublica) In an April 3 email to Avelo employees obtained by ProPublica and other publications, CEO Andrew Levy called the deportation contract too valuable not to pursue at a time when his startup was losing money and consumer confidence was declining, leading Americans to take fewer trips. Avelo would close one of its bases, in Sonoma County, California, and move certain flight routes to off-peak days as resources shifted to ICE Air. Deportation flights would be based out of Mesa, Arizona, and would begin in May.Avelo has a major hub in New Haven, Connecticut, and it recently expanded to Bradley International Airport near Hartford. In 2023, the airline won a two-year fuel-tax moratorium from state lawmakers after extensive lobbying.Last Thursday, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal was among the nearly 300 attendees at a rally outside the New Haven airport. Avelo has to change its course, he said. To the president of Avelo: You really stepped in it.Members of the public are raising objections as well. An online petition calling for a boycott of Avelo unless it drops its new ICE contract has collected almost 35,000 signatures since April 6. And protests are spreading from Connecticut to cities the airline serves across the country, including Eugene, Oregon; Rochester, New York; Burbank, California; and Wilmington, Delaware. Tongs letter to Avelo demanded that the airline produce a copy of its ICE Air contract. The attorney general also asked if Avelo would deport people in defiance of court orders, pointing to March flights to El Salvador carried out by another charter airline, GlobalX, after a federal judge ordered that the planes be turned back. Neither ICE nor GlobalX responded to ProPublicas requests for comment.Levy answered Tong with a one-page letter. In it, Levy suggested that if Connecticut wanted more information about Avelos ICE Air contract, it should file a public records request. (Federal statistics show that such requests to ICE typically take months or years to be answered.)If the attorney general wanted to know more about the use of shackles on deportation flights, Levy continued, he should ask the Department of Homeland Security. If Tong wanted to know more about evacuation requirements, he should address questions to the Federal Aviation Administration. For Avelos part, Levy assured Tong, the airline remains committed to public safety and the rule of law.Regardless of the administration or party affiliation, an Avelo spokesperson told ProPublica in an emailed statement, when our country calls our practice is to say yes. We follow all protocols from DHS and FAA.A Democrat-sponsored bill to expand Connecticuts sanctuary law has now cleared its House Judiciary Committee in a 29-12, party-line vote, over the strong objections of Republicans, and awaits a full vote on the floor. If it passes, any companies including airlines proposing to do business with the state must pledge not to cooperate or contract with any federal immigration authority for purposes of the detention, holding or transportation of an individual.Meanwhile, Avelos fuel-tax moratorium expires on June 30. So far, no legislation has been introduced to extend it, and activists are urging Connecticut lawmakers to let the tax break die.
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  • George Santos to Be Sentenced, and the Real Cost of DOGEs Cuts
    www.nytimes.com
    Plus, the fight over pop hits that celebrate cartels.
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  • Hegseths Personal Phone Use Created Vulnerabilities, Analysts Say
    www.nytimes.com
    The phone number used in the Signal chat could also be found in a variety of places, including on social media and a fantasy sports site.
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  • Ukraine says Russia kills 3 in another drone attack after Trump rebukes Putin
    apnews.com
    Medics tend to an injured woman in an ambulance near a house destroyed by a Russian airstrike in a residential neighbourhood in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)2025-04-25T08:23:52Z KYIV, Ukraine (AP) A Russian drone struck an apartment building in a southeastern Ukraine city, killing three people and injuring 10 others, officials said Friday, a day after U.S. President Donald Trump rebuked Russias leader for a deadly missile and drone attack on Kyiv while Washington endeavors to stop the more than three-year war.Among the civilians killed in the nighttime drone strike in Pavlohrad, in Ukraines Dnipropetrovsk region, were a child and a 76-year-old woman, the head of the regional administration, Serhii Lysak, wrote on Telegram.Russian forces fired 103 Shahed and decoy drones at five Ukrainian regions overnight, Ukraines air force reported. Authorities in the northeastern Sumy and Kharkiv regions reported damage to civilian infrastructure but no casualties.Russia pounded Kyiv in an hourslong barrage Thursday, killing at least 12 people and injuring 87 in its deadliest assault on the Ukrainian capital since July. The attack drew a rare rebuke of Russian President Vladimir Putin from Trump, who has said that efforts to end the war are coming to a head.I am not happy with the Russian strikes on KYIV. Not necessary, and very bad timing. Vladimir, STOP! 5000 soldiers a week are dying. Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social platform. Lets get the Peace Deal DONE! Trumps frustration is growing as his effort to get a peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia has failed to make a breakthrough. Senior U.S. officials have warned that the administration could soon give up attempts to stop the war if the two sides do not come to an agreement. Trump envoy Steve Witkoff was expected to meet with Putin in Moscow on Friday, their second meeting this month and the fourth since February.Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy plan to arrive in Rome on Friday for the funeral of Pope Francis in the Vaticans St. Peters Square on Saturday. It wasnt immediately clear if they would meet separately. An explosion in Moscow targets a senior officerMeanwhile, a senior Russian military officer was killed by a car bomb near Moscow on Friday, Russias top criminal investigation agency said.The attack follows the killing of Lt. Gen. Igor Kirillov on Dec. 17, 2024, when a bomb hidden on an electric scooter parked outside his apartment building exploded as he left for his office. Russian authorities blamed Ukraine for the killing of Kirillov.Since Russia invaded, several prominent figures have been killed in targeted attacks believed to have been carried out by Ukraine.Russian forces used Thursdays attack on Kyiv as cover to launch almost 150 assaults on Ukrainian positions along the roughly 1,000-kilometer (620-mile) front line, Zelenskyy said late Thursday.When the maximum of our forces was focused on defense against missiles and drones, the Russians went on to significantly intensify their ground attacks, he wrote on Telegram.Western European leaders have accused Putin of dragging his feet in the negotiations and seeking to grab more Ukrainian land while his army has battlefield momentum. Trump accused Zelenskyy of prolonging the killing field by refusing to surrender the Russia-occupied Crimea Peninsula as part of a possible deal. Russia illegally annexed that area in 2014. Zelenskyy has repeated many times during the war that recognizing occupied territory as Russian is a red line for his country.Zelenskyy noted Thursday that Ukraine agreed to a U.S. ceasefire proposal 44 days ago, as a first step to a negotiated peace, but that Russian attacks continued. During recent talks, Russia hit the city of Sumy, killing more than 30 civilians gathered to celebrate Palm Sunday, battered Odesa with drones and blasted Zaporizhzhia with powerful glide bombs.___Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
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  • A senior Russian military officer has been killed by a car bomb, officials say
    apnews.com
    Medics tend to an injured woman in an ambulance near a house destroyed by a Russian airstrike in a residential neighbourhood in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday, April 24, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)2025-04-25T10:15:52Z MOSCOW (AP) A senior Russian military officer was killed by a car bomb on Friday, Russias top criminal investigation agency said.The Investigative Committee said that Lt. Gen. Yaroslav Moskalik, a deputy head of the main operational department in the General Staff of the Russian armed forces, was killed by an explosive device placed in his car in Balashikha, just outside Moscow. The committees spokesperson, Svetlana Petrenko, said the explosive device was rigged with shrapnel. She said that investigators were at the scene.Russian media ran videos of a vehicle burning in the courtyard of an apartment building. The committee didnt mention possible suspects. The attack follows the killing of Lt. Gen. Igor Kirillov, who died on Dec. 17 when a bomb hidden on an electric scooter parked outside his apartment building exploded as he left for his office. The Russian authorities blamed Ukraine for the killing of Kirillov. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site
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  • Daily briefing: Ancient Phoenicians spread their culture but not their DNA
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 24 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01315-5People from Mediterranean outposts of Phoenician culture shared no ancestry with ancient Middle Easterners. Plus, Mendels last pea plant mysteries have finally been solved and an origami-inspired material can make dancing robots.
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  • 'There's no drop-off down there': How the bottom of the order is powering the Cubs' offense to top of MLB
    www.espn.com
    Chicago has scored more runs than any team in the majors so far -- with the help of some unexpected sluggers.
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  • Slow start? Not this year! Francisco Lindor has Mets rolling
    www.espn.com
    After stumbling out of the gate last season, the star shortstop and his team are lighting up Citi Field.
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  • Nike Says Its Factory Workers Earn Nearly Double the Minimum Wage. At This Cambodian Factory, 1% Made That Much.
    www.propublica.org
    by Rob Davis, photography by Sarahbeth Maney This article was produced by ProPublica in partnership with The Oregonian/OregonLive. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published. They are lines in the payroll ledger of a Cambodian baby clothing factory, invisible lives near the bottom of the global economy.There is Phan Oem, 53, who says she clocked up to 76 hours a week producing clothing for Nike and other American brands, sometimes forced to work seven days a week. She says she feared being fired if she didnt work through lunch breaks, on holidays and occasionally overnight. After 12 years spent packaging clothes, her base pay was the minimum wage: $204 a month.There is Vat Vannak, 40, who at six months pregnant traveled by bus to join hundreds of workers who protested in the streets last year after Nike pulled out and the factory went bankrupt, leaving them unpaid. The authoritarian Cambodian government warned them to stop.And there is the medical worker who said she saw one or two factory employees a month being sent to the hospital after falling unconscious. She said they were among eight to 10 workers a month who became too weak to work. Three other former employees said they sometimes saw two to three people go to the clinic for these issues in a single day. The reason, the medical worker said, was that they didnt sleep much, didnt eat enough and worked long hours.Nikes manufacturing apparatus in Southeast Asia has been shaken in recent weeks by news about President Donald Trumps tariffs. Cambodia and Vietnam, mainstays of Nikes supply chain, have faced import taxes of 49% and 46%, among the highest of any nation. Nike shares have been hammered.The stories of workers at Cambodias Y&W Garment illuminate the longer-term legacy of Nikes push into the region more than two decades ago, when labor abuses led co-founder Phil Knight to acknowledge that Nike products had become synonymous with slave wages, forced overtime and arbitrary abuse. The former employees recent experiences cast doubt on the companys commitment to reform.Unless tariffs force Nike to return manufacturing to the United States, labor advocates say, the company will have to offset the higher import taxes either by raising prices on its apparel or by pressuring its foreign factories for greater productivity, squeezing workers and their wages. Vat Vannak, mother of 7-month-old Bun Kakada, said that the $250 a month she earned at Y&W Garment, including overtime, left her no money for savings. Phan Oem, 53, cuts mangos to prepare a dish for her mother. Phan said she struggled to find work after Y&W Garment closed because she was considered too old. Nike has prided itself on the story of its reinvention since the 1990s sweatshop scandal. Weve gone from a target of reformers to a dominant player in the factory reform movement, Knight wrote in his 2016 memoir, Shoe Dog.The company has worked to convince consumers that it is improving the lives of its factory workers, not exploiting them. It became the first major apparel brand to disclose the names and locations of its suppliers. It established a written code that requires its suppliers to create a safe, healthy workplace, prohibit forced overtime and honor workers right to form unions. The company reports annually about its progress. In Nikes marketing materials, contract factory workers are often smiling.A key tentpole of Nikes claims is that its suppliers pay competitive wages. Nike says contract factory workers for whom it has data now earn an average of 1.9 times their local minimum wage, without counting overtime.Scrutinizing that claim is extraordinarily difficult. Nike acknowledges that the analysis omits more than a third of the 1.1 million people who make its sneakers and apparel worldwide. Nike says its focus in collecting wage data has been on its biggest suppliers. It hasnt said which of its 37 producing countries are included.ProPublica obtained a rare view of wages paid to the factory workers who produce Nike clothing: a highly detailed payroll list for 3,720 employees at Cambodias Y&W Garment. Covering earnings from longtime managers down to freshly hired 18-year-old sewing machine operators, the spreadsheet shows the workforce falling far short of the amount Nike says its factory workers typically earn. While Nike says contract factory workers for which it has data earn 1.9 times their local minimum wage, a Y&W Garment factory payroll ledger shows many workers earning a base pay of $204 a month, Cambodias minimum wage last year. Even including bonuses and incentives, more than three-quarters of the factorys employees earned close to the minimum wage. (Obtained by ProPublica. Highlights and redactions by ProPublica.) Just 41 people, or 1% of the Y&W workforce, earned 1.9 times the local minimum wage of about $1 per hour even when counting bonuses and incentives. These higher-paid employees included accountants, supervisors and a human resources manager. Nike didnt answer specific questions about ProPublicas findings, including whether it dropped Y&W as a supplier because of any violations of its code of conduct. In a statement, Nike said its code sets clear expectations for suppliers and that it is committed to ethical and responsible manufacturing.We build long-term relationships with our contract manufacturing suppliers, the statement said, because we know having trust and mutual respect supports our ability to create product more responsibly, accelerate innovation and better serve consumers.Nike added that it expects its suppliers to continue making progress on fair compensation for a regular work week.Representatives of Y&W Garment and its Hong-Kong-based parent, Wing Luen Knitting Factory Ltd., did not respond to emails, text messages or phone calls seeking comment, and Wing Luens website is defunct. New York-based Haddad Brands, which Y&W workers said was an intermediary for Nike at the factory, did not respond to emailed questions about conditions at the factory and hung up on a reporter who called. Its website says it makes childrens clothing for Nike and that it enforces Nikes code of conduct. ProPublica interviewed 13 former Y&W workers in the Cambodian capital and surrounding villages, plus another one by phone, during two weeks in January.In spare concrete homes and earthen courtyards that smelled of burbling fish sauce, they described workplace abuses that Nike promised to eradicate long ago. In addition to low wages, fainting workers and forced overtime, they spoke of bosses who mocked them if they underperformed and a life of debts that kept piling up.They told ProPublica that what they made in Cambodias standard 48-hour, six-day week wasnt enough to make ends meet. Some feared being fired or angering their supervisors if they refused extra hours. Others said they needed to work overtime simply to keep up. Still, many said they wished the factory hadnt shut down.Khun Tharo, program manager at the Center for Alliance of Labor and Human Rights, a Cambodian legal aid group also known as CENTRAL, said his countrys garment workers including those at Y&W do what circumstances require.When you ask them, Do you want to have the weekend off with your family, your kids? yes, they do, he said. But how can they afford that? Theyre stuck. Theres no choice. Khun Tharo, program manager for a Cambodian legal aid group, says workers feel compelled to work long hours to get by. Nikes arrival inside the corrugated metal walls at Y&W Garment was a big deal.It was December 2021, workers said, when the company began trial production runs inside the expansive factory complex in southern Phnom Penh, about two miles from one of the notorious killing fields of the Khmer Rouges 1970s genocide.Supervisors told ProPublica that the owner, a man they called thaw kae the big boss gave them a message to deliver to line workers: Nike was coming. Money and benefits would follow. And they wouldnt have to work extra hours.Workers were happy. Earning more would let them save, pay off debts and stop borrowing from friends to make it to the next month. They said they felt secure knowing that it was Nike, a company they had heard respected labor laws.But the promise of the big American brand was never realized, according to the workers who spoke to ProPublica. After Nike came, nothing has changed, one worker said. A former Y&W Garment worker who asked not to be identified provided this photo taken inside the factory that produced baby clothing for Nike and other brands. The former Y&W employees said neither their working conditions nor their pay improved while Nike goods were made at the factory. They instead described problems that would violate Nikes code of conduct, which prohibits forced overtime and verbal abuse.Three workers said they faced intense pressure to meet production targets. Two said workers were blamed if they missed their goals. Managers would yell at team leaders when that happened, one of them said; If you cant do it, just go back home, the former worker recalled employees being told. If workers hit their targets, he said, managers set higher ones. If employees refused to work the extra hours needed to get there, two workers said, then managers would tell them their contracts wouldnt be renewed or that they should resign.Y&Ws payroll sheet covers March 2024, when the factorys total employment was down from a previous high of about 4,500 people. The spreadsheet shows that even with bonuses and incentives, more than three-quarters of workers made close to Cambodias minimum wage at most, 15% above it. Workers with seniority earned only a little more. Of the 183 workers whod been at Y&W a decade or longer, more than three-quarters had base pay, bonuses and incentives that put them, at most, 25% ahead of minimum wage. Its hard to know if wages at Y&W are an outlier or emblematic of Nikes Southeast Asia supply chain; comprehensive pay records arent readily available for other factories. But 18 paystubs ProPublica collected at three of Nikes other 25 Cambodian suppliers also show workers at or slightly above the minimum wage. Separately, a 2023 survey by labor advocates found similar results at two factories that supplied Nike. The average pay at Y&W, without overtime but with bonuses and incentives included, is slightly below the $250 to $260 a month that Ken Loo, secretary general of the Textile, Apparel, Footwear and Travel Goods Association in Cambodia, estimated is standard for the industry. Loo said wage increases must be balanced against productivity because it will impact our competitiveness with other garment-producing countries.In December 2023, two years after Nike arrived at Y&W, workers said Nike pulled out. They said they were told to destroy any remaining Nike labels, a standard demand to prevent counterfeit or unauthorized products from being created. Hundreds of workers were let go.In early 2024, around the time of the Lunar New Year, workers said, the factory owner left Phnom Penh for what many thought was a new years trip home to China. He didnt return. Factory suppliers began calling in their debts, hauling away hundreds of rented sewing machines. The factory fell silent.Workers slept in front of the factorys locked gates to prevent the buildings from being cleared out. Hundreds marched in the streets, hoping to get the attention of the government and the brands for whom theyd produced. Nike, in its statement, did not explain why it left Y&W. It said its suppliers have an obligation to pay severance, social security or other separation benefits. In the event of any closure or divest, Nike works closely with the supplier to conduct a responsible exit, the statement said. A section of the former Y&W Garment factory now bears a for-rent sign. A California-based brand that shipping records show also did business with Y&W before its closure, True Classic, did not respond to written questions.Workers said they never heard from the brands. They said they did hear from the government, which was unhappy about their protests. Labor ministry officials called and told them to stop inciting their co-workers, threatening arrest. In March 2024, Cambodian news reports said the government seized the factorys assets and distributed the proceeds to workers. But workers told ProPublica they received far less than they were owed.The garment workers said they took what they could get. It might be hard to understand how far a dollar stretches in Cambodias economy. The countrys current $208 monthly minimum wage a $4 increase from last year doesnt sound like much to Americans. ProPublica heard from workers about why it isnt enough for Cambodians, either.Two women who worked at Y&W Garment and recently gave birth said they each spend $120 a month on powdered infant formula four cans a month at $30 apiece. Sar Kunthea, 34, who packaged clothing at Y&W, pays $282.70 a month on $12,000 she borrowed to make drainage improvements that would keep out floodwaters, which rose halfway up her homes doors during the rainy season. Sar Kunthea said she commonly worked two Sundays a month but still had to borrow money from friends a few times a year to stay afloat.Sar pulls leftovers out of her refrigerator for dinner. She buys the familys groceries daily, she says, because she doesnt have enough money to keep the refrigerator full. Sar pulls leftovers out of her refrigerator for dinner. She buys the familys groceries daily, she says, because she doesnt have enough money to keep the refrigerator full. Vat Vannak, who added metal buttons to clothing, said she typically earned about $250 a month by tacking on two hours at the end of her regular, six-day-a-week 7 a.m.-to-4 p.m. shifts. The overtime pushed her workweek close to 60 hours. Her husband also brings home a paycheck from construction. But their monthly household costs included $109 for a motorbike, $50 for a room near the factory, $60 for food and about $40 for school expenses. She said shed saved nothing.Labor advocates have long pushed brands like Nike to pay whats known as a living wage, calling it a basic human right. Although methods for estimating it vary, a living wage usually includes enough for food, water, housing, education, transportation, health care, energy, clothing, a phone and unforeseen expenses. Vat puts her nephew's hair in a ponytail (first image) and hangs laundry to dry. Vat and her husband, Bun Sokha, dry off their son after a bath. Nike does not explicitly require its factories to pay a living wage, but it says that every worker has a right to compensation for a regular work week that is sufficient to meet workers basic needs and provide some discretionary income. Nike reports that two-thirds of its key suppliers for which it was able to collect data paid above living wage benchmarks for their countries.Estimates from the Asia Floor Wage Alliance, which represents labor unions based in Asia, put that benchmark for Cambodia at $659 a month. The WageIndicator Foundation, an independent Dutch nonprofit, puts it at $276 to $360 a month.But Nikes preferred estimate is just $232, based on research by the Anker Research Institute, which is part of the Global Living Wage Coalition. Nike has sponsored the institutes work.In a statement, the institutes founders and one member of the wage coalition told ProPublica: Our estimates are always fully independent. Companies have no influence over the methodology or estimates.Regardless of what researchers say, Ngin Nearadei says what she earned at Y&W was not enough. Ngin feeds her son rice porridge. Ngin, 26, worked in quality control and found herself with hefty debt payments because, like other workers, recent flooding required her to raise the floor of her house. How much would she need to earn monthly to forgo overtime? About $400, she said, maybe $500. Thats up to 30% more than what Nike says its contract workforce earns, on average, compared to the minimum wage.Speaking in her home, Ngin disappeared for a moment and returned with two creased paystubs. One, covering roughly two weeks, showed just how much she had to work to get close to what she said she needs.She was scheduled to work 104 hours as part of a regular schedule that runs eight hours a day, Monday through Saturday. On top of that, she added 64 hours of overtime, including eight hours on Sunday, the paystub shows.Her total work time for the period was 168 hours, an average of roughly 11 to 12 hours a day if she worked every day. (Paychecks came twice a month; the exact pay period covered was not printed on Ngins document.)When combined with her other paycheck for the month, she earned $341.65. One of Ngins paystubs shows she worked 56 overtime hours and 8 additional hours on Sunday in a roughly two-week period. (Obtained and highlighted by ProPublica.) The workers who make Nikes products have helped Knight, the cofounder, become one of the richest people on earth. Nikes market capitalization was $13 billion in 1998, when Knight delivered his mea culpa about slave wages. Although its stock has been trading far below its 2021 peak, Nike was still worth about $80 billion as of April 21, 2025.The company has been a cash machine. In just its last two fiscal years, Nike has returned $13.9 billion to shareholders through stock buybacks and dividends.According to Dennis Arnold, an associate professor of human geography at the University of Amsterdam whos studied the Cambodian garment industry, unless Nike and others choose lower profit margins for the sake of higher pay, little is likely to change for factory workers. Governments like Cambodias fear that raising the minimum wage dramatically will drive away manufacturing, he said, because companies that benefit from Cambodias low wages must also wait longer and pay more to get garments to Western markets due to shipping costs and the countrys poor infrastructure.All said, its not the most appealing place in the world, and the government is not taking much initiative to try to change the situation for the better, Arnold said. So far, no brand has guaranteed its factory workers a living wage, according to the Clean Clothes Campaign, a Dutch advocacy group. H&M, the Swedish retailer, was quoted by numerous news outlets in 2013 promising that its top suppliers would pay a fair living wage by 2018. An analysis by the Clean Clothes Campaign in 2019 concluded that the promise was not fulfilled. (H&M did not respond to questions from ProPublica.) Recently, H&M and 11 other brands made a smaller commitment in an agreement with a global labor union, IndustriALL: to guarantee production volumes when Cambodian unions sign bargaining agreements that include higher wages, and to pay for the resulting higher labor costs.Nike is not a signatory.European and U.S. regulators could take measures to increase accountability for wages. Jason Judd, executive director of the Global Labor Institute at Cornell University, said they could require publicly traded companies like Nike to consistently disclose what factory workers earn when producing their goods. H&M currently reports what its foreign suppliers pay workers on a country-by-country basis, for example. Puma did too, until stopping this year. Nike did it once in 2001.Companies have enormous leeway in what they report, Judd said. Its enormously difficult to compare within firms across years. Between firms, impossible. Companies are able to pick and choose how they tell their story.Knight, who did not respond to requests for comment, wrote in his 2016 memoir that the question of wages for Nikes factory workers would always remain. The salary of a Third World factory worker seems impossibly low to Americans, and I understand, wrote Knight, whose net worth Forbes put at $28.5 billion as of April 21. Still, we have to operate within the limits and structures of each country, each economy; we cant simply pay whatever we wish to pay.Knight recounted a story, one thats hard to verify. When Nike tried to raise wages in an unnamed country, we found ourselves called on the carpet, summoned to the office of a top government official and ordered to stop. We were disrupting the nations entire economic system, he said. Its simply not right, he insisted, or feasible, that a shoe worker makes more than a medical doctor.At Y&W Garment, payroll data shows, line workers were nowhere close to making that much. On average, they earned $236.25 a month with incentives.The factory doctor made $581. About the NumbersThe Y&W Garment payroll ledger that ProPublica obtained was for March 2024, around the time the factory shut down. The data shows workers monthly base pay and how much they earned from bonuses and incentives, which are also paid on a monthly basis. More than a dozen former workers verified details about their own pay shown in the spreadsheet. To estimate total earnings for each worker, we included base salary, incentives and bonuses for transportation, seniority and attendance, but we excluded overtime pay as Nike does in its calculations of average wages and a meal incentive related to overtime. We assumed every worker got a $10 attendance bonus that Cambodian law requires. Although the spreadsheet did not indicate that $10 transportation bonuses were universal, we assigned this amount to every worker.
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  • A Faithful Throng Pays Last Respects to Pope Francis
    www.nytimes.com
    It meant a lot to me to see him, he gave us so much, said one woman who waited in line to file past the pontiffs casket.
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  • Trump vs. Science
    www.nytimes.com
    We explain the administrations cuts to research.
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  • Immigration is Trumps strongest issue, but many say hes gone too far, a new AP-NORC poll finds
    apnews.com
    President Donald Trump arrives at Leesburg Executive Airport on Marine One in Leesburg, Va., Thursday, April 24, 2025, en route to Trump National Golf Club Washington DC in Sterling, Va. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)2025-04-25T11:02:58Z WASHINGTON (AP) President Donald Trumps handling of immigration remains a point of strength as he takes wide-ranging actions to ramp up deportations and target people in the U.S. illegally, according to a new poll.The survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that 46% of U.S. adults approve of Trumps handling of immigration, which is nearly 10 percentage points higher than his approval rating on the economy and trade with other countries. While Trumps actions remain divisive, theres less of a consensus that the Republican president has overstepped on immigration than on other issues. Still, theres little appetite for an even tougher approach. About half of Americans say hes gone too far when it comes to deporting immigrants in the U.S. illegally. Theyre divided on the deportation of Venezuelan immigrants who are accused of being gang members to El Salvador, and more oppose than support revoking foreign students visas over their participation in pro-Palestinian activism.Heres what the poll shows about how Americans are viewing the Trump administrations actions on immigration. Immigration is a point of strength for Trump, particularly with RepublicansImmigration was a major factor for voters in last Novembers election, particularly for Trumps supporters, and they were more open to tough stances on the issue than theyd been four years earlier. And even though many of Trumps immigration enforcement efforts are currently mired in battles with federal judges, its remained an issue of relative strength in the court of public opinion.Similar to an AP-NORC poll conducted in March, nearly half of Americans approve of Trumps immigration approach, while about 4 in 10 approve of how hes handling the presidency. This higher approval on immigration comes primarily from Republicans. About 8 in 10 Republicans approve of Trumps handling of immigration, higher than the roughly 7 in 10 Republicans who approve of how hes handling the economy or trade negotiations with other countries. Other groups are less enthusiastic about Trumps approach. About 4 in 10 independents and only about 2 in 10 Democrats approve of Trump on immigration.Relatively few Americans are concerned theyll know someone who is directly affected by increased immigration enforcement, according to the poll. About 2 in 10 Americans say they are extremely or very concerned that they or someone they know will be directly affected. Democrats are more likely than Republicans to worry theyll be affected, and Hispanic adults are more likely than white or Black adults to be concerned.About half say Trump has gone too far on deportationsAbout half of Americans say Trump has gone too far when it comes to deporting immigrants living in the U.S. illegally. About one-third say his approach has been about right, and about 2 in 10 say hes not gone far enough.Theyre unhappier, generally, with how hes approaching trade negotiations. About 6 in 10 say hes gone too far in imposing new tariffs on other countries.There is not a strong desire for more aggressive action on immigration, though, even among the people who approve of whats Trump doing. Among the Americans who approve of how Trump is handling immigration, about 6 in 10 say his approach has been about right, and roughly 3 in 10 say he hasnt gone far enough. Americans are split on sending Venezuelans to El Salvador but oppose revoking student visasThere is a deep divide on whether and how the Trump administration should undertake large-scale deportations, according to the survey, which was conducted in mid-April, while Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., was on a trip to El Salvador to demand the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was mistakenly deported there in what officials later described as an administrative error.The poll found that 38% of Americans favor deporting all immigrants living in the U.S. illegally, down slightly from an AP-NORC poll conducted just before Trump took office in January. About the same share of Americans are opposed, and about 2 in 10 are neutral.The findings are very similar for Trumps policy of sending Venezuelan immigrants in the U.S. who authorities say are gang members to a prison in El Salvador. But the public is more opposed, broadly, to revoking foreign students visas over their participation in pro-Palestinian activism, which has emerged as another flashpoint. About half of U.S. adults oppose this, and about 3 in 10 are in support. This action is particularly unpopular among Americans with a college degree. About 6 in 10 strongly or somewhat oppose it, compared with about 4 in 10 Americans who arent college graduates.___The AP-NORC poll of 1,260 adults was conducted April 17-21, using a sample drawn from NORCs probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for adults overall is plus or minus 3.9 percentage points. LINLEY SANDERS Sanders is a polls and surveys reporter for The Associated Press. She develops and writes about polls conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, and works on AP VoteCast. twitter
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  • How the publics shift on immigration paved the way for Trumps crackdown
    apnews.com
    A U.S. Border Patrol agent walks past four men being detained after crossing the border through a gap in the walls separating Mexico and the United States, Jan. 23, 2025, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)2025-04-25T11:13:57Z PASSAIC, N.J. (AP) Alleged gang members without criminal records wrongly sent to a notorious prison in El Salvador.International students detained by masked federal agents for writing opinion columns or attending campus demonstrations. American citizens, visa holders and visitors stopped at airports, detained for days or facing deportation for minor infractions.Since returning to the White House, President Donald Trump has launched an unprecedented campaign of immigration enforcement that has pushed the limits of executive power and clashed with federal judges trying to restrain him. But unlike in his first term, Trumps efforts have not sparked the kind of widespread condemnation or protests that led him to retreat from some unpopular positions.Instead, immigration has emerged as one of Trumps strongest issues in public polling, reflecting both his grip on the Republican base and a broader shift in public sentiment that is driven in part, interviews suggest, by anger at the policies of his predecessor, Democrat Joe Biden. The White House has seized on this shift, mocking critics and egging on Democrats to engage on an issue that Trumps team sees as a win. Americas changed, said pollster Frank Luntz, a longtime ally of Republicans who has been holding focus groups with voters to discuss immigration. This is the one area where Donald Trump still has significant and widespread public support. Luntz said voters dismayed by the historically large influx of migrants under Biden are now prepared to accept a more extreme approach.Make no mistake, he added. The public may not embrace it, but they definitely support it. And this is actually his strongest area as he approaches his 100th day (in office). Changing viewsA poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that immigration is a relative high point for Trump compared with other issues, including his approach to the economy, foreign policy and trade negotiations. Slightly fewer than half of U.S. adults, 46%, say they approve of Trumps handling of the issue, compared with his overall job approval rating of 39%, according to the survey.The poll was conducted April 17-21, a period that included a trip by Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., to El Salvador to demand that Kilmar Abrego Garcia be released from prison after the U.S. government admitted he was wrongly deported.In the 2020 election, few voters considered immigration the most important issue facing the country, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of registered voters in all 50 states.Four years later, after Republicans and conservative media had hammered Biden for his policies and often cast migrant U.S.-Mexico border crossings as an invasion, immigration had risen above health care, abortion and crime. It was second only to the economy.Under Biden, migrant apprehensions spiked to more than 2 million two years in a row. Republican governors in border states bused migrants by the tens of thousands to cities across the country, including to New York, where migrants were placed in shelters and hotels, straining budgets. Voters in the 2024 election were also more open to tougher immigration policies than the 2020 electorate. Last November, 44% of voters said most immigrants living in the United States illegally should be deported to their home countries, according to AP VoteCast, compared with 29% in 2020. Immigration remains a relative strength for Trump today: 84% of Republicans approve of Trumps immigration approach, according to the April AP-NORC poll, compared with 68% who approve of how he is handling trade negotiations.The poll found about 4 in 10 U.S. adults strongly or somewhat favor Trumps policy of sending Venezuelan immigrants who authorities say are gang members to El Salvador, with an additional 22% saying they neither favor nor oppose it. About 4 in 10 were opposed.Americans are more opposed, broadly, to revoking foreign students visas over their participation in pro-Palestinian activism, with about half opposed and about 3 in 10 in support. The changing views are evident in places like northern New Jerseys suburban Passaic County, one of the former Democratic strongholds where Trump overperformed in November. Trump became the first Republican to win the county in more than 30 years. He carried the heavily Latino city of Passaic and significantly increased his support in Paterson, the states third-largest city, which is majority Latino and also has a large Muslim community. He drew 13,819 votes after winning 3,999 in 2016. Having lost New Jersey by nearly 16 percentage points to Biden in 2020, Trump narrowed that margin to 6 percentage points last year. Paterson resident Sunny Cumur, 54, a truck driver who immigrated from Turkey in the late 1990s, describes himself as a Democrat who doesnt usually vote. But he wanted Trump to win, he said, because he was concerned about the border under Biden. While studies show immigrants are generally less likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans, local news in New York and other cities frequently featured what Trump took to calling migrant crime.What Biden did, they opened all the borders, and a lot of people come here for political asylum. Come on! They dont even check if they are terrorists or not, Cumur said. He complained that newcomers willing to work for lower wages have been undercutting workers like him.Throw em out. I dont want to live with criminals, he said.Still, other supporters worry Trump is taking things too far.Republican Manuel Terrero, 39, a real estate agent from Clifton, said he was drawn to Trump because of what felt like chaos under Biden, with too many people crossing the border and too much crime in neighboring New York.It shouldnt be allowed, said Terrero, an immigrant from the Dominican Republic. Trump is doing a lot of good things. And that is one of them, stopping the people that are coming here to create chaos. And the people that have criminal records, send them back. But I am against (deporting) the people that are working, he said. I dont think its the right way to do it.Rep. Nellie Pou, D-N.J., who was elected last year to represent the area in Congress, said her constituents believe strongly in border security but stand by her advocacy for immigrants. She recently joined Democrats on a trip to the U.S.-Mexico border.I do not want anyone that may be a danger to come to our country to harm any of our citizens. No one wants that. And I firmly believe thats what people in our district and across America want, she said. At the same time, she said, Our country was made of immigrants. ... So I believe theres a place for someone who comes in the legal ways.A new paradigmTrump burst onto the political scene in 2015 by labeling Mexican immigrants as criminals and rapists and pledging to build a great wall. He spent much of his first term focused on the border.One of his first actions in office was to impose a travel ban barring the entry of citizens from seven Muslim-majority countries. That caused chaos at airports and protests across the nation. The policy was quickly blocked by the courts, forcing his administration to offer three broader iterations, the last of which was eventually upheld by the Supreme Court.The next flashpoint came in 2018, when border officials began separating families detained after illegally crossing the border. In some cases, children were forcibly removed from their parents under a zero tolerance policy, and the parents were sometimes deported without their kids.Images of children held in cages at border facilities and audio recordings of young children crying for their parents drew intense backlash, with thousands participating in hundreds of marches across the country. The protesters included soon-to-be Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., who was photographed in 2018 breaking down outside a facility in Texas being used to detain migrant children.Republicans joined in that condemnation.Gov. Greg Abbott, R-Texas, called the separations tragic and heartrending in a letter that urged Congress to act. This disgraceful condition must end, he wrote.All Americans are rightly horrified by the images we are seeing on the news, children in tears pulled away from their mothers and fathers. This must stop, said Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. He introduced legislation mandating that apprehended families be kept together.Bowing to pressure and concerned about the impact on the upcoming midterm elections, Trump halted the policy. This time around, with border crossings down, Trump has shifted focus to expelling people already in the United States. He is expanding the limits of executive power and jousting with judges as he uses old laws and rarely used provisions to label hundreds of men gang members so they can be deported without being able to challenge their cases in court. Secretary of State Marco Rubio who as a senator once tried to negotiate a bipartisan immigration package has moved to expel people in the U.S. legally over political beliefs he deems counter to U.S. foreign policy interests.Their targets have included hundreds of students and others with legal status, including those on student visas or holding green cards conferring permanent residency, as well as those who have sought asylum using legal channels.Jorge Loweree, of the American Immigration Council, a nonprofit advocacy group, said Trump was doing something thats wholly new in historical terms.Its critical that people understand what the administration is doing, said Loweree, the councils managing director of programs and strategy. We have an administration that believes they can disappear who they want, where they want, to anywhere they want.Loweree argued that even if voters in November rejected what they saw as chaos at the border, that doesnt necessarily mean that they support these very draconian measures that are being implemented today.Few elected Republicans are speaking out, though some of Trumps outside allies have criticized what they see as overreach. Joe Rogan, the popular podcast host who endorsed Trump late in the campaign, voiced alarm at the case of Andry Hernandez Romero, a gay makeup artist from Venezuela with no criminal record who was among those sent to El Salvadors maximum-security CECOT prison. You gotta get scared that people who are not criminals are getting like lassoed up and deported and sent to like El Salvador prisons, Rogan told his listeners. Thats horrific. And again, thats bad for the cause. Like the cause is lets get the gang members out. Everybody agrees. But lets not (have) innocent gay hairdressers get lumped up with the gangs.Signs of change?The April AP-NORC poll found that about half of Americans say Trump has gone too far when it comes to deporting immigrants living in the U.S. illegally, compared with about 6 in 10 who say hes gone too far on imposing new tariffs on other countries.It found Americans split on mass deportations, with about 4 in 10 in favor of deporting all immigrants living in the U.S. illegally and a similar share opposed. The percentage who support mass deportations is down slightly from an AP-NORC poll conducted in January, just before Trump took office.Still, about one-third of U.S. adults say Trumps actions have been about right on immigration, and about 2 in 10 think he hasnt gone far enough.One case that has gained traction nationally is that of Abrego Garcia, the Maryland resident from El Salvador who was sent to CECOT despite an immigration court order preventing his deportation. Trump officials have said that Abrego Garcia has ties to the MS-13 gang, a claim Abrego Garcias attorneys deny, and noted that his wife once sought a protective order against him. El Salvadors president, Nayib Bukele, has said he will not let Abrego Garcia leave the country.More Democrats have traveled to El Salvador to highlight the case. And people angry about the situation have confronted Republican lawmakers, including at a contentious town hall Wednesday hosted by Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, during which several members of the audience shouted at him to push for Abrego Garcias return. The White House has embraced the fight. A request for Democrats please continue to make defending criminal illegal immigrants your top messaging point, wrote Trumps director of communications, Steven Cheung.Some in the party have urged it to steer clear. Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., called the case a distraction from issues such as tariffs that have emerged as a bigger weakness for Trump.This is the debate (Republicans) want. This is their 80-20 issue, as theyve described it, he said of Republicans on his podcast. Its a tough case, because, he said, it risks people wondering, are they defending MS-13?But Dan Pfeiffer, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama, is urging Democrats to seize on the case. He says border issues are much more nuanced than immigration good for Trump, bad for Democrats and believes that voters are on their side.If we cant stand up against the illegal rendition of the father of a U.S. child to a prison known for torture, then I dont really know what were doing, he said.___Associated Press polling editor Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux in Washington contributed to this report. JILL COLVIN Colvin is an Associated Press national political reporter covering the 2024 presidential campaign. She is based in New York. mailto
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  • Tatooine-like planet orbits two stars but at a weird angle
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 25 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01272-zLike the Star Wars planet, a distant world follows a path around two stars, both of them small, cool bodies called brown dwarfs.
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    www.espn.com
    Players, agents, recruiters are drawn together in search of the best possible deal.
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  • The time is now: Projecting John Cena's final WWE matches
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  • Senior Russian Officer Killed in Car Explosion Near Moscow
    www.nytimes.com
    The generals death is the latest in a series of fatalities involving Ukraines opponents inside Russia. The authorities in Kyiv had no immediate comment.
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  • Putin Keeps Pummeling Ukraine, Convinced Trump Is on His Side
    www.nytimes.com
    The concessions offered so far by President Trump fall short of Russias stated war aims. But President Vladimir V. Putin appears certain that he has the upper hand in talks.
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  • Huge reproducibility project fails to validate dozens of biomedical studies
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 25 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01266-xUnique reproducibility effort in Brazil focuses on common methods rather than a single field and prompts call for reform.
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  • Audio long read: Do smartphones and social media really harm teens mental health?
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 25 April 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-01310-wWhile researchers agree that adolescents are struggling with mental health, there is fierce debate about how much technology is to blame.
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  • Slot insists Liverpool 'still have a job to do' in PL
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    Arne Slot has insisted Liverpool still have a job to do against Tottenham Hotspur this weekend, despite needing only one point to seal the Premier League title.
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    Palmeiras' Estvo had an 18th birthday to remember, netting the club's second goal in a 3-2 Copa Libertadores win over Bolivar before dropping to the turf, vomiting and leaving the field on a stretcher as the high altitude of La Paz took its toll.
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  • Israels A.I. Experiments in Gaza War Raise Ethical Concerns
    www.nytimes.com
    Israel developed new artificial intelligence tools to gain an advantage in the war. The technologies have sometimes led to fatal consequences.
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  • www.nytimes.com
    Last year, the Magic Circle began searching for Sophie Lloyd, who disguised herself as a man in 1991 to gain membership and was then ousted. On Thursday, she returned.
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  • RFK Jr. Starts National Registry Of Introverts Who Sometimes Get Social Anxiety
    theonion.com
    WASHINGTONPromising to use all of his power as health secretary to find a cure for the condition, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. reportedly directed the National Institutes of Health on Friday to create a registry of U.S. introverts who sometimes get social anxiety. When I was younger, there were never people who liked to spend time home alone by themselves, but now its a national epidemic, said Kennedy, who delivered the remarks at a press conference during which he confirmed federal researchers were working hard to develop treatments for individuals who felt occasionally felt uncomfortable in crowded rooms. These people cant live normal lives. They cant make small talk. They cant dance. Theyll never go to a backyard barbecue where they only kind of know one person from work. At press time, experts were warning that the registry could be used to round up introverts for karaoke.The post RFK Jr. Starts National Registry Of Introverts Who Sometimes Get Social Anxiety appeared first on The Onion.
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  • Federal Regulators Hold Celebratory Seatbelt-Cutting Ceremony
    theonion.com
    The post Federal Regulators Hold Celebratory Seatbelt-Cutting Ceremony appeared first on The Onion.
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  • SPONSORED POST: This Easy Mini Mural Added a Huge Dose of Cheer to an Empty Corner
    www.apartmenttherapy.com
    If youve only considered paint as a way to change wall color, this is your sign to play! Inside a single paint can are endless possibilities for a more creative, more personalized, just plain happier home. A fun painting project, like a mural or accent design, is like large-scale coloring and the result will make you smile every time you see it.READ MORE...
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  • Ex-US Rep. George Santos faces sentencing for fraud after duping donors and voters
    apnews.com
    Former U.S. Rep. George Santos arrives at court in Central Islip, N.Y., Aug. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Stefan Jeremiah, File)2025-04-25T04:01:47Z CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. (AP) Disgraced former U.S. Rep. George Santos, who lied about his life story and defrauded donors, faces sentencing in federal court on Friday.The New York Republican, who served in Congress for barely a year before being ousted in 2023 by his House colleagues, pleaded guilty last summer to federal wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.He admitted to deceiving donors and stealing the identities of nearly a dozen people, including his family members, to fund his winning campaign. As part of a plea deal, Santos has agreed to pay roughly $580,000 in penalties in addition to prison time.The 36-year-old told The Associated Press hes resigned to his fate.Im doing as well as any human being would be doing given the circumstances, Santos wrote in a text message on Thursday. I will be in court tomorrow, ready to face the music. Prosecutors are seeking seven years in federal prison for Santos, arguing in recent court filings that he remains unrepentant and has not shown genuine remorse, despite what he claims. They cite recent comments Santos has made on social media in which he casts himself as a victim of prosecutorial overreach. In a letter to the court this week, Santos stressed that he remains profoundly sorry for his crimes but objects to the sentence being sought, which he said is overly harsh. Santos lawyers have called for a two-year prison stint, which is the mandatory minimum sentence for aggravated identity theft. They argue such a penalty is comparable to sentences handed to former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. and other political figures convicted of similar financial crimes.Santos was elected in 2022, flipping a wealthy district representing parts of Queens and Long Island for the GOP.Soon after, it was revealed that the political unknown had fabricated much of his life story, painting himself as a successful business owner who worked at prestigious Wall Street firms and held a valuable real estate portfolio. In reality, Santos was struggling financially and even faced eviction. The revelations led to congressional and criminal inquiries into how he had funded his campaign.As his sentencing approached, Santos was reflective in social media posts, thanking his supporters and detractors alike.I learned that no matter left, right or, center we are all humans and for the most part Americans (LOL) and we have one super power that I cherish and that is compassion, he wrote Thursday on the social platform X. To the trolls well you guys are an impactful part of how people shape themselves, and yall made me much stronger and made my skin thicker!He also made one final plug for his Cameo account, where he records personalized video messages for $100.Think ahead and of any celebration or event coming up later this year. Book them today, Santos wrote, ending the post with a series of heart emojis.___Associated Press reporter Jake Offenhartz in New York contributed to this story.___Follow Philip Marcelo at twitter.com/philmarcelo. PHILIP MARCELO Marcelo is a general assignment reporter in the NYC bureau. He previously wrote for AP Fact Check and before that was based in Boston, where he focused on race and immigration. twitter mailto
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