Rabu, 22 Mei 2024

Iran’s Khamenei leads prayers at Raisi memorial before tens of thousands - Al Jazeera English

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has led prayers at a memorial ceremony for late President Ebrahim Raisi and his entourage, who died in a helicopter crash.

“Oh Allah, we didn’t see anything but good from him,” said Khamenei on Wednesday, paying tribute to Raisi at the University of Tehran before crowds of tens of thousands, who proceeded to walk from Enghelab (Revolution) Square to Azadi (Freedom) Square.

The caskets of Raisi, who was 63, and the seven others who died in the crash on Sunday, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, were draped in Iranian flags with their pictures on them.

Al Jazeera’s Resul Serdar, reporting from Freedom Square, said there was tight security in the area.

“The streets are completely closed to the traffic, [with] heavy security measures here, several security checkpoints, and you can see thousands and thousands of people are already pouring into this area.”

Guests at the memorial event included Hamas’s political leader Ismail Haniyeh, Turkey’s vice president and foreign minister, the deputy prime minister of India, the head of the Russian Duma, the Iraqi prime minister and representatives of the Taliban from Afghanistan, he reported.

“We have lost a prominent personality. He was a very good brother. He was an efficient, competent, sincere, and serious official,” Khamenei told visiting Iraqi Prime Minister Mohamed Shia al-Sudani.

“I come in the name of the Palestinian people, in the name of the resistance factions of Gaza … to express our condolences,” Haniyeh told those gathered. He recounted that he had met Raisi in Tehran during Ramadan and had heard the late president saying Palestine was the key issue of the Muslim world.

Khamenei has declared five days of national mourning. Memorials for Raisi and his entourage began on Tuesday in the city of Tabriz and the Shia clerical centre of Qom.

Iranian media reported that in addition to closing cinemas, the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance has also halted all cultural and artistic activities across the country, including concerts, for seven days.

All Cultural Heritage Week events have been postponed, museums closed, all sports competitions suspended, wedding halls closed and wedding ceremonies postponed.

Following Wednesday’s procession, Raisi’s body will be taken to his hometown of Mashhad in the country’s northeast, where he will be buried after funeral rites at the Imam Reza Shrine.

The remains of others who were killed in the crash will also be sent to their hometowns to be buried.

Investigation

State television announced Raisi’s death early on Monday, a day after the helicopter crashed on a fog-shrouded mountainside in northwest Iran on the way to the city of Tabriz.

A search and rescue operation was launched, with help from Turkey, Russia and the European Union.

Questions have been raised as to whether Raisi, Amirabdollahian and the others should have been travelling on a two-blade Bell 212 believed to have been decades old.

Foreign sanctions on Iran dating back to the 1979 revolution, and subsequently over its nuclear programme and its backing of the so-called “axis of resistance”, have made it difficult for the country to obtain aircraft parts or new aircraft.

The country’s armed forces chief of staff Mohammad Bagheri has ordered an investigation into the cause of the helicopter crash.

Raisi was elected president in 2021 and was widely expected to be a candidate to succeed Khamenei as supreme leader.

At Wednesday’s procession, huge banners hailed the late president as “the martyr of service” and “the servant of the disadvantaged”.

But he leaves a complex legacy, having overseen a deepening economic crisis and a harsh crackdown on mass protests that erupted in 2022 after the death in police custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.

Khamenei, who wields ultimate authority in Iran, has assigned Vice President Mohammad Mokhber, 68, as caretaker president until the June 28 election for Raisi’s successor.

“Iranian society is deeply divided on political lines,” said Al Jazeera’s Serdar.

“In recent elections, turnout has been lower and lower. The turnout is one of the primary sources of political legitimacy for the political establishment here, and we can see that it is going down and many people are losing faith in elections,” he said.

“The political establishment here is going to mobilise all the means and capabilities in trying to bring that turnout high and show that the nation is united behind the political establishment.”

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Selasa, 21 Mei 2024

Singapore Airlines: British man dies in severe turbulence as flight from London Heathrow forced to land in Bangkok - Sky News

A 73-year-old British man has died from a suspected heart attack after "sudden extreme turbulence" on a London-Singapore flight.

Dozens more have been injured after passengers described people being "launched into the ceiling" and overhead lockers.

Singapore Airlines flight SQ321 from Heathrow was forced to make an emergency landing in Thailand.

The plane left London on Monday night but diverted to Bangkok, landing at 3.45pm local time on Tuesday.

The interior of Singapore Airline flight SQ321 is pictured after an emergency landing at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport.
Pic: Reuters
Image: Oxygen masks were left dangling from the ceiling. Pic: Reuters
Staff member carry people on stretchers after an emergency landing at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport, in Bangkok.
Pic Reuters
Image: Some passengers were taken into ambulances on stretchers. Pic Reuters

Read more:
Images show damage in plane after one killed in turbulence
Is flight turbulence getting worse - and what types are there?

Singapore Airlines said the pilot declared a medical emergency and landed in Bangkok after "sudden extreme turbulence over the Irrawaddy Basin at 37,000 feet about 10 hours after departure".

Passenger Dzafran Azmir, 28, described the chaos on board.

"Suddenly the aircraft starts tilting up and there was shaking so I started bracing for what was happening," he said.

"And very suddenly there was a very dramatic drop so everyone seated and not wearing seatbelts was launched immediately into the ceiling."

"Some people hit their heads on the baggage cabins overhead and dented it," he added.

"They hit the places where lights and masks are and broke straight through it."

The interior of Singapore Airline flight SQ321 is pictured after an emergency landing at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport.
Pic: Reuters
Image: Damage inside the plane. Pic: Reuters
Pic: Reuters
The interior of Singapore Airline flight SQ321 is pictured after an emergency landing at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport, in Bangkok, Thailand May 21, 2024. Obtained by Reuters/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES
Image: Passengers on board. Pic: Reuters

Briton Andrew Davies told Sky News "anyone who had a seatbelt on isn't injured".

He said the seatbelt sign came on, but there was no time for crew to take their seats.

Mr Davies said "every single cabin crew person I saw was injured in some way or another, maybe with a gash on their head... One had a bad back, and was in obvious pain."

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Emergency services surround plane on tarmac

Kittipong Kittikachorn, head of Bangkok airport, told reporters a British man, 73, had died from probable cardiac arrest.

He said it's believed the turbulence hit while people were having breakfast and that an "air pocket" was to blame.

"Seventy-one people needed treatment and six of them had critical injuries," said Bangkok's Smitivej Srinakarin Hospital.

However, Singapore Airlines seemed to contradict those numbers and said only 30 people had been taken to hospital.

In a statement, the UK Foreign Office said it was "in contact with the local authorities".

Forty-seven Britons were among the 211 passengers and 18 crew onboard the plane, a Boeing 777-300ER.

A Singapore airline aircraft is seen on tarmac after requesting an emergency landing at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi International Airport.
Pic: Pongsak Suksi/Reuters
Image: The Boeing 777-300ER was forced to land in Bangkok. Pic: Pongsak Suksi/Reuters
Airline meals
Image: Airline meals lie scattered on the floor
Image: Cabin crew members surrounded by debris

Flight tracking data showed the plane cruising at 37,000ft (11,280m) before dropping 6,000ft (1,830m) in around three minutes.

However, a spokesperson for FlightRadar24 said this appeared to "just be a flight level change in preparation for landing".

Ambulances surrounded the aircraft on the tarmac after landing, with images showing some passengers taken away on stretchers.

Turbulence can hit without warning

Jo Robinson

Weather producer

@SkyJoRobinson

There are a few forms of turbulence – where there's a sudden change in airflow and wind speed.

Turbulence can often be associated with storm clouds, which are usually well forecast and monitored, allowing planes to fly around them.

Clear-Air Turbulence (CAT) is much more dangerous as there are no visual signs, such as clouds.

This invisible vertical air movement usually occurs at and above 15,000ft and is mostly linked to the jet stream.

There are clues on where CAT may occur, but generally it can't be detected ahead of time, which means flight crews can be caught unaware with no time to warn passengers and put seat belt signs on.

It's been understood for some time that climate change is increasing turbulence during flights, and the trend is set to worsen according to reports.

"Singapore Airlines offers its deepest condolences to the family of the deceased," it said in a statement.

"We deeply apologise for the traumatic experience that our passengers and crew members suffered on this flight."

It said it was working with Thai authorities and "providing all necessary assistance during this difficult time", including sending a special team to Bangkok.

Read more:
Climate change causing more turbulence, say scientists

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Singapore is considered a standard-setter for the aviation industry and consistently tops airline awards.

Turbulence-related injuries are the most common type on passenger planes, according to a study by the US National Transportation Safety Board.

It found it was responsible for more than a third of accidents between 2009 and 2018, but no aircraft damage.

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Trump trial live updates: Witness Robert Costello back on stand - The Independent

'No case, no crime': Trump ahead of hush money trial on Tuesday 21 May

Both sides have rested their cases in Donald Trump’s New York hush money trial at Manhattan Criminal Court, after further testimony from the defense’s first and only witness, lawyer Robert Costello. Despite early assurances that he would, Mr Trump did not testify.

After the prosecution rested its case on Monday, the former president’s attorneys ran into trouble when Mr Costello was angrily admonished by Judge Juan Merchan for “staring him down”.

Earlier, Mr Trump’s estranged ex-lawyer Michael Cohen concluded his testimony after more than 17 hours giving evidence.

Cohen endured something of a rocky ride during that time, particularly when he was accused of lying by defense attorney Todd Blanche and challenged over inconsistencies in his statements about the Stormy Daniels payoff at the heart of the case.

Mr Trump denies having an affair with the adult film star and all of the 34 felony charges he faces over the falsification of business records to hide the $130,000 payment made to Ms Daniels in October 2016.

Closing arguments are scheduled for next Tuesday with the jury expected to deliberate from next Wednesday.

Alex Woodward is covering the trial for The Independent at Manhattan Criminal Court.

1716303640

Defense rests without Trump taking the witness stand

To literally no one’s surprise...

Oliver O'Connell21 May 2024 16:00
1716303481

Watch: Trump loyalists hold press conference

Oliver O'Connell21 May 2024 15:58
1716302740

Trump loyalist echoes boss with ‘lawfare' post

Oliver O'Connell21 May 2024 15:45
1716302140

Watch: MSNBC breaks down schedule going forward

MSNBC’s Yasmin Vossoughian breaks down what happens next as we near closing arguments and deliberations in Donald Trump’s historic criminal trial:

Oliver O'Connell21 May 2024 15:35
1716301554

Judge: Closing arguments to take one day

Merchan talks to the jurors:

He expects closing arguments to take at least a day, and his instructions to the jury to take an hour.

“My belief is it is always best not to break up summations” so that the jury will hear statements from both parties back to back, followed by jury instructions and deliberations.

“There’s no way we can possibly do what needs to be done in a cohesive manner.”

“At the end of the day I think the best thing we can do is adjourn now until next Tuesday.”

Merchan asks the jurors to consider working next Wednesday so that the closing arguments aren’t broken up by the day off.

We may be looking at the beginning of deliberations on May 29.

The court is being excused until 2:15pm.

When we return, the judge will hold the charging conference.

Alex Woodward21 May 2024 15:25
1716300856

Defense rests after brief re-cross

After Bove concludes his questioning of Costello, Hoffinger is up again for the prosecution.

Cohen never signed a retainer and never paid you, correct? Correct.

Nothing further.

Judge Merchan: Counsel?

“The defense rests.”

Alex Woodward21 May 2024 15:14
1716300694

Bove is looking at the June 14 2018 email replicated in full below.

“Was that your pressure Michael Cohen to do anything?”

“No, not at all,” says Costello.

Did you ever pressure Michael Cohen to do anything?

“No, I did not.”

Di you have control over Michael Cohen?

“Clearly not.”

Does a lawyer ever control—

Objection. Sustained.

I just want to ask about how you practice law—

Objection. Sustained.

Costello glanced over at Judge Merchan a couple of times during a series of sustained objections.

Alex Woodward21 May 2024 15:11
1716300560

Defense begins redirect examination

Trump defense lawyer Emil Bove begins redirect examination.

Costello says that a remark that Cohen “played us” is about their frustration with Cohen refusing to sign a retainer agreement.

Bove: “Were you concerned you were representing Michael Cohen but he hadn’t signed the retainer agreement?”

“Yeah, sure.”

Bove asked Costello to “look at the evidence about who initiated communication” but there’s an objection, a sidebar, and then Merchan sustained.

Alex Woodward21 May 2024 15:09
1716300071

Prosecution wraps cross-examination

Hoffinger is now drilling down on Costello’s prior testimony that he was only looking out for Cohen when he was pursuing him as a client.

And a new email, from June 22 2018, complaining to Jeff Citron that Cohen “continues to slow play us and the president.”

“Is he totally nuts?” Costello wrote. “What should I say to this asshole? He’s playing with the most powerful man on the planet.”

Hoffinger: “That email certainly speaks for itself, doesn’t it Mr Costello?”

“Yes, it does.”

“You lost control of Michael Cohen for the president, did you not?”

Hoffinger tries again.

“No, I answered no.”

Costello says he doesn’t have any animosity about Cohen.

Asked if he testified to Congress to intimidate him, Costello called the question “ridiculous.”

Nothing further from the prosecution.

Alex Woodward21 May 2024 15:01
1716299843

Costello denies encouraging Cohen not to cooperate

The court then sees an email exchange between Costello and Cohen in which the former sends the latter a YouTube video leading Cohen to respond: “Why send this to me?”

Costello then replies (as we saw yesterday):

The answer to your question will be found in watching the video. It seems clear to me that you are under the impression that Trump and Giuliani are trying to discredit you and throw you under the bus to use your phrase. I think you are wrong because you are believing the narrative promoted by the left wing media. They want you to believe what they are writing . Many of them are already writing that you are cooperating. This strategy has been consistent from the start to put pressure on you into believing that you are alone, that everyone you knew before is distancing themselves from you and you are being “thrown under the bus.” The whole objective of this exercise by the SDNY is to drain you, emotionally and financially, until you reach a point that you see them as your only means to salvation. I told you that the very first day I met you.

Yesterday you were very upset by the stories they were writing about the end of McDermott Will & Emery. You knew this was coming and this was the plan yet it really seemed to throw you off your game emotionally. Whatever you do in the future on this case, please keep in mind that getting upset and flying off the handle, play into your adversaries hand. I know it is very difficult, but you have to keep your head in these trying times.

You are making a very big mistake if you believe the stories these “journalists” are writing about you. They want you to cave. They want you to fail. They do not want you to persevere and succeed. If you really believe you are not being supported properly by your former boss, then you should make your position known. If you really want certain things to happen, you should make that known. If you really want other lawyers to refrain from saying this or that, you should make it known. You have the ability to make that communication when you want to. Whether you exercise that ability is totally up to you.

Hoffinger asks whether he was encouraging Cohen not to cooperate. “Yes, or no.”

“Let me read it. … OK. And your question is?”

“In this email, are you encouraging him not to cooperate? Yes, or no.”

Oliver O'Connell21 May 2024 14:57

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Senin, 20 Mei 2024

ICC prosecutor seeks arrest warrants for Israeli and Hamas leaders over alleged war crimes - Financial Times

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2024-05-20 20:43:54Z
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Iranian president helicopter crash updates: Ebrahim Raisi and foreign minister dead - The Independent

Rescue efforts underway to find missing helicopter of Iran president

Iran has declared five days of mourning after president Ebrahim Raisi was killed in a helicopter crash amid heavy fog in northern Iran, as world leaders share their reactions.

Rescuers found the helicopter that was carrying the Iranian president, as well as the country’s foreign minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and other senior officials, after it crashed in a mountainous northwest region of Iran.

Minutes after the Red Crescent Society announced its team had reached the site of the crash, state TV reported that there were “no signs of life” and an official said the helicopter had been “completely burned”.

The state-run Mehr news agency then announced that the president and foreign minister had been “martyred”.

Iran’s first vice president Mohammad Mokhber will take charge of the executive branch and has a maximum period of 50 days to hold elections following the death of president Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said.

China’s Xi Jinping and Russia’s Vladimir Putin were among leaders to share their reactions on Monday morning, both of whom lamented the death of their “good friend”.

1716219674

Kim Sengupta | What the sudden death of Iran’s president will mean for the Middle East and beyond

In this analysis piece,The Independent’s world affairs editor Kim Sengupta takes a look at what Ebrahim Raisi’s death could mean for Iran, the Middle East, and beyond. He writes:

“The sudden death of President Ebrahim Raisi creates a vacuum at the top of the country’s political and theocratic hierarchy as the country goes through a time of turbulent strife at home and abroad ...

“There remains a host of unanswered questions about the circumstances surrounding the deaths: why were the two most senior politicians in the party travelling in the same aircraft? How did the two other helicopters in the same air convoy manage to land safely? Why was there such a long delay in announcing the deaths when the news of it was circulating among officials in Tehran for hours?

“ ... It seems highly unlikely, however, that there will be any significant change in policy, foreign or domestic in the Islamic Republic.”

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 16:41
1716218543

Watch: Close-up of Iranian president's helicopter wreckage broadcast on TV after crash

Close-up of Iranian president's helicopter wreckage broadcast on TV after crash
Andy Gregory20 May 2024 16:22
1716217428

Raisi’s death could see infighting unlike anything since 1980s, expert suggests

In the wake of Ebrahim Raisi’s death, powerful actors including the Revolutionary Guards and influential clerics in Qom are now expected to step up efforts to shape the process by which the next supreme leader is picked, a former Iranian official has told Reuters.

While Khamenei has not endorsed a successor, Iran watchers say Raisi was one of the two names most often mentioned, with the second being Khamenei’s second son, Mojtaba, who is widely believed to wield influence behind the scenes.

Ali Vaez, Iran project director at the International Crisis Group, said that “none but a handful at the top likely know how much of the Raisi-as-heir narrative had a basis in reality”, adding: “But if this was the plan, Raisi’s death introduces great uncertainty in the succession.”

Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran Program at the Middle East Institute in Washington, said many viewed Khamenei’s role in promoting Raisi as a sign that he wanted him as successor.

His death “could result in internal infighting in [the] regime unlike anything we have seen since the early 1980s”, he said.

New acting president Mohammad Mokhber, right, led a cabinet meeting in Tehran this morning
New acting president Mohammad Mokhber, right, led a cabinet meeting in Tehran this morning (AP)
Andy Gregory20 May 2024 16:03
1716216896

Iran using ‘very malign influence’ to destabilise Middle East, UK minister says

Defence minister Leo Docherty has warned that Iran is using “its very malign influence” to destabilise the Middle East.

Asking questions of defence ministers in the House of Commons, Tory MP Bob Blackman said: “Clearly, the brave resistance fighters in Iran will be celebrating the demise of the Butcher of Tehran today, but of course Iran controls Hamas, Hezbollah and other terrorist organisations.

“Given the attack by Iran on Israel, what further assessment has my honourable friend taken of the potential for Iran to launch another attack?”

Mr Docherty said Iran “uses its very malign influence to continue to destabilise the Middle East through its pernicious use of proxies, and our judgment is that that capability and intent remains”.

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 15:54
1716214232

Tory security minister says he will not mourn Raisi in rebuke to EU chief

Britain’s security minister Tom Tugendhat has said he will not mourn the death of Ebrahim Raisi, noting that the late Iranian president’s “regime has murdered thousands at home, and targeted people here in Britain and across Europe”.

He made his remarks in response to comments by European Council president Charles Michel in which he said the EU offered its sincere condolences for the deaths of Mr Raisi, Iran’s foreign minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and the others on board.

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 15:10
1716213495

Turkish authorities could not locate helicopter’s signal, minister says

The helicopter did not have its signal system turned on or did not possess such a system, Turkey’s transport minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu has claimed.

Mr Uraloglu told reporters that since Iran fell within Turkey’s area of responsibility for emergency response, authorities had checked for a signal from the helicopter upon hearing news that it had crashed.

“But unfortunately, [we think] most likely the signal system was turned off or that the helicopter did not have that signal system, because those signals would definitely see those signals, but they didn’t [show this time],” he said.

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 14:58
1716213010

Who was on board the helicopter?

The helicopter was carrying Iran’s president Ebrahim Raisi, foreign minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, the governor of Iran’s East Azerbaijan province and others officials, according to the state-run Irna news agency.

Mr Raisi was returning on Sunday after traveling to Iran’s border with Azerbaijan to inaugurate a dam with Azerbaijan’s president Ilham Aliyev when the crash happened in the Dizmar forest.

The crash killed eight people in all, including three crew members aboard the Bell helicopter, which Iran purchased in the early 2000s, Irna reported.

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 14:50
1716211385

Taliban ‘grieving’ over death of Raisi

The Taliban has said they were deeply saddened by the deaths of Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi and the country’s foreign minister.

“We share our grief with the Islamic Republic of Iran and the people of that country and offer our condolences to all the families of the victims, the nation and the government of Iran,” the Taliban prime minister, Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund, said in a statement.

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 14:23
1716210787

‘Pity’ Netanyahu wasn’t on Iran president’s chopper, university official says

The chair of Tel Aviv University’s Executive Council said he thought it was a “pity” Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was not onboard the helicopter crash that crashed and killed Iran’s president Ebrahim Raisi.

“A pity Netanyahu was not on the helicopter too. One accident can solve many problems for us and the world,” Eli Gelman wrote in a private WhatsApp group, with a link to an article about the accident.

In response to a comment in the group calling for him to delete the post, Gelman doubled down on his comment.

Alexander Butler20 May 2024 14:13
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Russia can assist Iran with probe into helicopter crash, says Shoigu

Russia can assist Iran with its investigation into the helicopter crash, the secretary of Russia’s security council Sergei Shoigu has said, according to the state RIA news agency.

Andy Gregory20 May 2024 14:05

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Portal connecting Dublin and New York 'reawakens' under new restrictions after 'inappropriate behaviour' - Sky News

A portal which links people in Dublin and New York via a live stream has been reactivated after "mooning" and other inappropriate behaviour was reported.

The artwork had been temporarily shut due to "inappropriate behaviour" which included people flashing body parts to the camera, swearing and displaying images of 9/11.

The portal has now reopened with set times of operation - 6am to 4pm in New York City and 11am to 9pm in Dublin.

In a bid to tackle antisocial behaviour at the installation, the team behind it - Portals.org - has adopted a "proximity-based solution" whereby if people now try stepping on the portal and block the camera, it will trigger a blurring of the live stream on both sides of the Atlantic.

In New York, the portal will continue to have on-site security during all hours of operation, while fencing has been installed to help with crowd management.

In Dublin, "physical design features" are being put in place to assist with the crowds.

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The interactive artwork drew the attention of tens of thousands after it opened at the start of the month - and received nearly two billion online hits.

But while the majority of people felt a "sense of joy and connectedness" - solutions were subsequently sought to crack down on the inappropriate behaviour of a small minority of people in front of the portal.

'I invite communities to care about their portals'

The portal has now "reawakened", a joint statement from Dublin City Council, Portals.org and the Flatiron NoMad Partnership said.

"The team will continue making updates as needed to ensure that everyone can continue to enjoy the portal."

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Portals.org artist and founder Benediktas Gylys said: "As humans we are creating the portals experience together.

"I invite local communities not only to enjoy but to care about their portals and how other community members are approaching the sculptures."

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2024-05-20 08:57:07Z
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