Sabtu, 19 Juni 2021

Joe and Jill Biden announce death of 'beloved' dog Champ - BBC News

Joe Biden's dog, Champ, lays down on 10 May, 2012
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US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden have announced the passing of their "beloved" German Shepherd Champ, who had been with them for 13 years.

"Our family lost our loving companion Champ today. I will miss him," President Biden wrote on Twitter.

Champ was one of two German Shepherds living at the White House with the Bidens, alongside Major.

He had also lived in Washington when Mr Biden was vice-president.

"In our most joyful moments and in our most grief-stricken days, he was there with us, sensitive to our every unspoken feeling and emotion. We love our sweet, good boy and will miss him always," the Bidens said in a statement.

"Even as Champ's strength waned in his last months, when we came into a room, he would immediately pull himself up, his tail always wagging, and nuzzle us for an ear scratch or a belly rub. Wherever we were, he wanted to be, an everything was instantly better when he was next to us," they said.

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In his younger days, when Joe Biden was vice-president, Champ was "happiest chasing golf balls on the front lawn of the Naval Observatory or racing to catch our grandchildren as they ran around our backyard in Delaware", the Bidens said.

First Lady Jill Biden pets one of the family dogs, Champ, after his arrival from Delaware at the White House in Washington
Reuters

The arrival of Champ and Major, a three-year old rescue dog the Bidens adopted in 2018, marked the return of pets to the White House after a hiatus under former President Donald Trump.

Major was in the news in March for reportedly twice biting people in the White House.

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2021-06-19 17:22:31Z
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Robert Schuman: Pope puts father of modern Europe on sainthood path - BBC News

Robert Schuman in 1947
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Pope Francis has put French statesman Robert Schuman, one of the founders of modern Europe, on the path to sainthood in the Roman Catholic Church.

The Vatican said the Pope approved a decree recognising Schuman's "heroic virtues", an early stage of the long process that can lead to canonisation.

One miracle would have to be attributed to Schuman for him to be beatified and then another for him to become a saint.

Schuman, who died in 1963, was key in creating today's European institutions.

Several popes have praised the role Schuman, who was a devout Catholic, played in trying to break the cycle of wars in Europe. The decree means that he now has the title of "venerable" in the Church.

Born in Luxembourg in 1886 and naturalised as a French citizen, Schuman briefly supported Marshal Pétain, who would be sentenced to death for being a Nazi collaborator in World War Two. After the German occupation of France in 1940, Schuman was arrested by the Gestapo but managed to escape a year later, and went on to live in hiding until the end of the war.

In the post-war period, Schuman served as France's prime minister and foreign minister. In 1950, he proposed that coal and steel resources should be pooled between European countries as a way to avoid future conflicts. The plan became known as the Schuman Declaration, and the day it was announced, 9 May, is celebrated as Europe Day.

Six founding members - France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands - signed the Treaty of Paris, creating the European Coal and Steel Community. It evolved in 1957 to become the European Economic Community and finally the European Union, in 1993.

He also played a key role in founding Nato, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, in 1949, and served as the first president of the predecessor to the current European Parliament, in 1958. When he left office due to poor health he was given the title of Father of Europe.

Last year, on the 70th anniversary of the Schuman Declaration, Pope Francis said it had led to "the long period of stability and peace from which we benefit today".

The France-based Institut Saint Benoît has been promoting sainthood for Schuman for decades, Reuters news agency reports.

The next step in the sainthood path of the Catholic Church is beatification. To reach that stage a miracle needs to be attributed to prayers made to the individual after their death. Claims need to be verified by evidence before they are accepted as miracles.

A second miracle normally needs to be attributed to prayers made to the candidate after they have been beatified for the process to move to canonisation, the final step in declaring a deceased person a saint.

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2021-06-19 16:19:32Z
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Wuhan lab leak investigation: China silent on claim top spycatcher has defected to US - Daily Express

Counterintelligence chief Dong Jingwei allegedly flew from Hong Kong to the US in February with his daughter. Mr Dong was made a vice-minister of state security - responsible for counterintelligence - three years ago and undoubtedly knows many of Xi Jinping’s darkest secrets including the real origins behind the Covid-19 virus. BBC journalist John Simpson today tweeted: "There are rumours in Washington and London, nothing more substantial yet, that one of top intelligence figures, Dong Jingwei, has defected to the US.

"If it turns out to be true, we could soon find out whether coronavirus really started in the Wuhan lab.

"And much, much more."

It was first reported by SpyTalk that he had defected - and comes just weeks after the US publicly said that the virus could have escaped from a laboratory.

The claim of the defection was announced by Dr Han Lianchao, a pro-democracy activist based in the US, who was once a former Chinese foreign ministry official.

READ MORE: Covid restrictions may remain after July 19, documents suggest

His departure would also be highly embarrassing, coming just weeks before the Chinese Communist Party celebrates its centenary on July 1.

And as well as defecting, he could have crucial evidence which settles the debate over Covid’s origins once and for all.

Mr Jingwei, China's vice minister of state security, was reported to have flown from Hong Kong to the US.

However, there was no mention of the rumour of Mr Jingwei's defection in Chinese media.

Neither China nor the US has confirmed the rumour.

The South China Morning Post yesterday issued a story claiming that China's top spy-catcher, Mr Jingwei, has even been urging Beijing to step up efforts to hunt-down "anti-China" forces within the country.

The Chinese social media account of the Central Political Legal Affairs Commission has claimed that Mr Dong had recently warned spies to watch out for “insiders” who collude with “anti-China” forces.

He was also quoted in social media as warning against “people who bankroll their activities behind the scene".

In May, US president Joe Biden ordered the US intelligence community to deliver in 90 days a report on whether there was a pathogen leak n Wuhan.

Mr Biden said US officials had already "coalesced around two likely scenarios".

One scenario was that it was transferred from animals to humans, with the other being that a laboratory accident happened at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

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2021-06-19 14:47:31Z
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Iran election: Hardliner Raisi set to become president - BBC News

raisi
Getty Images

Hardliner Ebrahim Raisi is set to be Iran's next president after winning most of the votes counted so far.

He beat three other candidates in a poll in which most would-be candidates were barred from standing.

Mr Raisi is Iran's top judge and holds ultra-conservative views. He is under US sanctions and has been linked to past executions of political prisoners.

Iran's president is the second-highest ranking official in the country, after the supreme leader.

Mr Raisi will have significant influence over domestic policy and foreign affairs. But in Iran's political system it is the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the top religious cleric, who has the final say on all state matters.

The country is run according to conservative religious values, and there have been curbs on political freedoms since its Islamic Revolution in 1979. Many Iranians saw this latest election as having been engineered for Mr Raisi to win, and shunned the poll.

Who is Ebrahim Raisi?

The 60-year-old cleric has served as a prosecutor for most of his career. He was appointed head of the judiciary in 2019, two years after he lost by a landslide to Hassan Rouhani in the last presidential election.

Mr Raisi has presented himself as the best person to fight corruption and solve Iran's economic problems. "Our people's grievances over shortcomings are real," he said as he cast his vote in Tehran.

He is fiercely loyal to Iran's ruling clerics, and has even been seen as a possible successor to Ayatollah Khamenei as the country's supreme leader.

voters
Getty Images

Many Iranians and rights groups have pointed to Mr Raisi's role in the mass executions of political prisoners in the 1980s. He was one of four judges who oversaw death sentences for about 5,000 prisoners, according to Amnesty International.

"That Ebrahim Raisi has risen to the presidency instead of being investigated for the crimes against humanity of murder, enforced disappearance and torture, is a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran," said Amnesty chief Agnès Callamard.

Iran has never acknowledged the mass executions and Mr Raisi has never addressed the allegations about his role in them.

Amnesty also says that as head of the judiciary Mr Raisi oversaw impunity for officials and security forces accused of killing protesters during unrest in 2019.

What does his win mean for Iran and the world?

Mr Raisi has promised to ease unemployment and work to remove US sanctions that have contributed to economic hardship for ordinary Iranians and caused widespread discontent.

BBC Persian correspondent Kasra Naji adds that under Mr Raisi Iran's hardliners will seek to reinforce a puritanical system of Islamic government, possibly meaning more controls on social activities, fewer freedoms and jobs for women, and tighter control of social media and the press.

The hardliners are suspicious of the West, but both Mr Raisi and Supreme Leader Khamenei favour a return to an international deal on Iran's nuclear activity.

The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, signed in 2015, gave Iran relief from Western sanctions in return for limiting its nuclear activities.

The US pulled out of the deal in 2018, and President Trump's administration re-imposed crippling limits on Iran's ability to trade. Mr Raisi was among the officials sanctioned.

Iran has responded by re-starting nuclear operations that were banned under the deal.

Talks aimed at resurrecting the deal are ongoing in Vienna, with President Joe Biden also keen to revive it. But both sides say the other must make the first move.

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Iran will be a more closed society

Analysis by Kasra Naji, BBC Persian

The election was engineered to pave the way for Mr Raisi to win. This has alienated a good number of Iranians already deeply discontented with their living conditions in an economy that is crippled by US sanctions but also mismanagement.

The result of the election will not help with their concerns and may even lead to more instability at home. In the past few years Iran has witnessed at least two rounds of serious nationwide protests - with hundreds, some say thousands, killed.

With Mr Raisi taking the presidency the hardliners will have taken all the centres of power: the executive branch as well as the legislative and the judiciary. Iran will be a more closed society. Freedoms will likely be curtailed even more than before.

The regime will look to China to help the economy out of deep crisis. There will be more tension with the West. Indirect talks between Iran and the US in Vienna over reviving the nuclear deal may face more uncertainty. There are already reports that the talks will now break up for a few weeks, allowing all sides to take stock of the new reality in Iran.

line

Was the election free?

With counting continuing, state TV said Mr Raisi had so far received 62% of the vote - nearly 18 million of more than 28 million votes cast. Some 59 million Iranians were eligible to vote.

Almost 600 hopefuls, including 40 women, registered for the election.

But in the end only seven men were approved last month by the 12 jurists and theologians on the Guardian Council, an unelected body that has the ultimate decision with regard to candidates' qualifications. Three of those candidates subsequently pulled out before polling day.

In response to this, some dissidents and reformists vowed to boycott the election. Turnout this time appears to have been just under 50% - significantly lower than the 73% of voters who turned out for the 2017 presidential poll.

Before he withdrew, reformist candidate Mohsen Mehralizadeh hinted that the vote would be a foregone conclusion, saying during a candidates' TV debate that the ruling clerics had aligned "sun, moon and the heavens to make one particular person the president," according to The Economist.

Meanwhile former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, one of those barred from running, said in a video message that he would not vote, declaring: "I do not want to have a part in this sin."

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2021-06-19 10:21:38Z
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Iran election: Hardliner Raisi set to become president - BBC News

raisi
Getty Images

Hardliner Ebrahim Raisi is set to be Iran's next president after winning most of the votes counted so far.

He beat three other candidates in a poll in which most would-be candidates were barred from standing.

Mr Raisi is Iran's top judge and holds ultra-conservative views. He is under US sanctions and has been linked to past executions of political prisoners.

Iran's president is the second-highest ranking official in the country, after the supreme leader.

The president has significant influence over domestic policy and foreign affairs. But in Iran's political system it is the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the top religious cleric, who has the final say on all state matters.

Iran is run according to conservative religious values, and there have been curbs on political freedoms since its Islamic Revolution in 1979. Many Iranians saw this election as having been engineered for Mr Raisi to win, and shunned the poll.

Who is Ebrahim Raisi?

The 60-year-old cleric has served as a prosecutor for most of his career. He was appointed head of the judiciary in 2019, two years after he lost by a landslide to Hassan Rouhani in the last presidential election.

Mr Raisi has presented himself as the best person to fight corruption and solve Iran's economic problems. "Our people's grievances over shortcomings are real," he said as he cast his vote in Tehran.

He is fiercely loyal to Iran's ruling clerics, and has even been seen as a possible successor to Ayatollah Khamenei as the country's supreme leader.

voters
Getty Images

Many Iranians and rights groups have pointed to Mr Raisi's role in the mass executions of political prisoners in the 1980s. He was one of four judges who oversaw death sentences for about 5,000 prisoners, according to Amnesty International.

"That Ebrahim Raisi has risen to the presidency instead of being investigated for the crimes against humanity of murder, enforced disappearance and torture, is a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran," said Amnesty chief Agnès Callamard.

Iran has never acknowledged the mass executions and Mr Raisi has never addressed the allegations about his role in them.

Amnesty also says that as head of the judiciary Mr Raisi oversaw impunity for officials and security forces accused of killing protesters during unrest in 2019.

What does his win mean for Iran and the world?

Mr Raisi has promised to ease unemployment and work to remove US sanctions that have contributed to economic hardship for ordinary Iranians and caused widespread discontent.

BBC Persian correspondent Kasra Naji adds that under Mr Raisi Iran's hardliners will seek to reinforce a puritanical system of Islamic government, possibly meaning more controls on social activities, fewer freedoms and jobs for women, and tighter control of social media and the press.

The hardliners are suspicious of the West, but both Mr Raisi and Supreme Leader Khamenei favour a return to an international deal on Iran's nuclear activity.

The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, signed in 2015, gave Iran relief from Western sanctions in return for limiting its nuclear activities.

The US pulled out of the deal in 2018, and President Trump's administration re-imposed crippling limits on Iran's ability to trade. Mr Raisi was among the officials sanctioned.

Iran has responded by re-starting nuclear operations that were banned under the deal.

Talks aimed at resurrecting the deal are ongoing in Vienna, with President Joe Biden also keen to revive it. But both sides say the other must make the first move.

line

Iran will be a more closed society

Analysis by Kasra Naji, BBC Persian

The election was engineered to pave the way for Mr Raisi to win. This has alienated a good number of Iranians already deeply discontented with their living conditions in an economy that is crippled by US sanctions but also mismanagement.

The result of the election will not help with their concerns and may even lead to more instability at home. In the past few years Iran has witnessed at least two rounds of serious nationwide protests - with hundreds, some say thousands, killed.

With Mr Raisi taking the presidency the hardliners will have taken all the centres of power: the executive branch as well as the legislative and the judiciary. Iran will be a more closed society. Freedoms will likely be curtailed even more than before.

The regime will look to China to help the economy out of deep crisis. There will be more tension with the West. Indirect talks between Iran and the US in Vienna over reviving the nuclear deal may face more uncertainty. There are already reports that the talks will now break up for a few weeks, allowing all sides to take stock of the new reality in Iran.

line

Was the election free?

With counting continuing, state TV said Mr Raisi had so far received 62% of the vote - nearly 18 million of more than 28 million votes cast. Some 59 million Iranians were eligible to vote.

Almost 600 hopefuls, including 40 women, registered for the election.

But in the end only seven men were approved last month by the 12 jurists and theologians on the Guardian Council, an unelected body that has the ultimate decision with regard to candidates' qualifications. Three of those candidates subsequently pulled out before polling day.

In response to this, some dissidents and reformists vowed to boycott the election. Turnout this time appears to have been just under 50% - significantly lower than the 73% of voters who turned out for the 2017 presidential poll.

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2021-06-19 10:02:40Z
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Conservative cleric Raisi wins Iran presidential election by a landslide - Financial Times

Ebrahim Raisi, a conservative cleric and judiciary chief, has won Iran’s presidential election, in a landslide victory that will give regime hardliners full control over all branches of the state for the first time in almost a decade.

Raisi, who many Iranians believe was the favoured candidate of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, secured almost 18m votes after 90 per cent of ballots in Friday’s election were counted.

His closest rival, Mohsen Rezaei, a senior conservative general, garnered just 3.3m votes, while the sole reformist candidate, Abdolnaser Hemmati, a former central bank governor, took 2.4m.

The cleric’s victory means that hardliners, who won a sweeping majority in parliamentary elections last year and control the judiciary and the military, are now at their most powerful since 2013. Reformists, who favour greater engagement with the west, have been pushed to the margins.

The election was held at a critical time for the Islamic republic and the region. The Biden administration is seeking to ease tension in the Middle East, which was inflamed by Donald Trump’s decision in 2018 to unilaterally withdraw the US from the nuclear accord with Iran and impose sanctions on the nation.

Raisi has said his government would continue negotiations with the deal’s remaining signatories — the UK, France, Germany, Russia and China.

But hardliners will want to negotiate on their own terms as the second and final term of President Hassan Rouhani’s centrist government ends in August. The election of Raisi, who has headed the judiciary for the past two years and was the subject of sanctions by the Trump administration in 2019, as it targeted dozens of senior regime officials, risks complicating those talks.

Raisi’s victory means that Iran will be even more unlikely to rein in its support for militant groups across the region or curb its expansive missile programme.

President Joe Biden has promised to rejoin the nuclear agreement if Tehran falls back into full compliance with the deal. But his administration is under pressure from US politicians, Israel and Washington’s Arab partners to take a tough line on Iran’s support for militias and its missile programme.

Raisi has said domestic policies would be his priority. He faces the daunting task of reviving an economy crippled by sanctions and the coronavirus pandemic, festering social pressures and a deep sense of disillusionment with the theocratic system among many Iranians.

The schisms in society were underscored by the turnout.

Iranian media reported that conservatives voted in large numbers. But Iranians who want reform registered their disillusionment with the theocratic system by staying at home, in what pro-democracy activists described as an act of civil disobedience.

A low turnout would undermine the popular legitimacy Iran’s leaders seek to claim from elections at a time when the gap between the regime’s ideology and policies, and the aspirations of the youthful population is widening.

Conservative analysts said Raisi would probably be closer to Khamenei’s thinking than Rouhani, who wanted to use the nuclear deal to re-engage with the west before Trump imposed his “maximum pressure” campaign.

Unlike his predecessor, Raisi will not attempt to diminish the role of the powerful Revolutionary Guards, which dominate overseas military operations and control a sprawling economic empire at home.

“Raisi’s background in the judiciary tells us that he is obedient to the ones above him but very strict with those junior to him,” said a reformist politician.

“Two good years in the judiciary is similar to a rosy engagement period. From now on, it’s like after marriage that comes with all the realities and disappointments.”

Raisi has made few comments on foreign policy and has said his focus will be on boosting Iran’s industrial production and easing the economic pressures on Iranians.

Conservatives hope he will bring unity to the ruling system after Rouhani’s final term was blighted by bitter internal clashes. Trump’s hostility towards Iran emboldened hardliners who blamed the centrist government and its reformist backers for trusting the US.

But reformers worry that the hardliners’ victory will exacerbate the country’s problems and set back any lingering hopes of gradual reform.

“Reformists need to get prepared for a tough political era . . . and not to succumb to this result,” said Abbas Abdi, a reformist commentator.

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2021-06-19 07:45:02Z
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Three killed, two missing after dropping over dam in inflatable rings - four rescued after 19 hours - Sky News

Three people are dead and two are missing after a group of nine people, all believed to be from the same family, went missing after floating down a river on inflatable rings and dropping over the edge of a dam.

Four of the group were rescued and taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries after the tragedy on the Dan River in North Carolina, Rockingham County emergency services director Rodney Cates said.

The nine people were tubing - an activity which involves travelling across water on inflatable rings.

They went over the Duke Energy dam in the city of Eden at around sunset on Wednesday, Mr Cates said.

He added the dam is approximately 2.5m (8ft) high.

Mr Cates also said that a Duke Energy employee who saw some of the tubers called 911 to report what was happening.

Rockingham County Sheriff Sam Page identified those rescued as Reuben Villano, 35 - and children Eric, 14, and Irene, 18.

More from US

The fourth person rescued was Karlos Villano of LaPorte, Indiana.

Rescue workers are seen near the Dan River on Friday
Image: Rescue workers are seen near the Dan River on Friday

The sheriff's office named those who died as Bridish Crawford, 27, Antonio Ramon, 30, and Sophie Wilson, 14.

The two missing are Teresa Villano, 35, and Isiah Crawford, 7.

Search teams were combing the Dan River on Friday to try and locate those who have not been found.

The search will resume on Saturday, Mr Cates said.

Boats and helicopters have been used in the search in Rockingham County, north of Greensboro along the Virginia state line.

Mr Cates said the rescued people spent the night floating in the water near the dam before they were found clinging to their tubes.

He said they managed to stay afloat for approximately 19 hours, describing them as "very, very fatigued" when they were found.

Rescue workers are seen near the Dan River on Friday
Image: Rescue workers are seen near the Dan River on Friday

First responders indicated the survivors were caught in fast-moving water near the dam when they were found, according to recordings of scanner traffic on broadcastify.com.

The emergency workers could be heard over public safety radio ordering boats and other swift water rescue equipment to the area shortly after the 911 call came in at around 3:15pm on Thursday.

"We're taking a call on the Dan River at the dam near the Duke Energy plant. Caller is advising five tubers... went over the dam," one person says.

A rescuer says on the recording that some of the tubers were stuck near the dam because of the pull of water flowing over it.

"They're on that side... at the abutment for the dam. And they're all caught in the pull. If you can come over... we can probably pull them out pretty good, hopefully," the rescuer can be heard saying.

Mr Cates told reporters that debris and rocks in the river can puncture tubes or rafts, so it's important for people to wear life jackets. He said it wasn't clear if any of the nine were wearing such a jacket.

Mr Cates said it is not unusual for people to float the river on tubes or rafts in the area, but most get out and walk around the dam, which is marked by signs.

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2021-06-19 04:59:08Z
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