Monday, November 16, 2020

Peru now has no president as crisis takes chaotic 

LIMA, Peru — Who is the president of Peru? The answer to that question Monday was no one.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Latin American nation’s political turmoil took a chaotic turn Sunday when interim leader Manuel Merino quit and Congress couldn’t decide on his replacement. That left Peru rudderless and in crisis less than a week after legislators ignited a storm of protest by removing President Martín Vizcarra, an anti-corruption crusader highly popular among Peruvians.

“There is no one at the head of the government in a deep public health and economic crisis,” said Abhijit Surya, Peru analyst for The Economist Intelligence Unit. “It doesn't bode well.”

There are two potential exits to the ordeal: Congress could put forward a new candidate to approve with a simple majority vote or the country’s highest court could step in. But with neither route guaranteed to bring a solution, some Peruvians called for new protests and the country verged on collapse.

“I think this is the most serious democratic and human rights crisis we have seen since Fujimori was in power,” said analyst Alonso Gurmendi Dunkelberg, referring to the turbulent rule of strongman Alberto Fujimori from 1990 to 2000.

Peru has much at stake: The country is in the throes of one of the world’s most lethal coronavirus outbreaks and political analysts say the constitutional crisis has cast the country’s democracy into jeopardy.

Congress sparked the calamity a week ago when lawmakers overwhelmingly voted to oust Vizcarra. Using a 19th-century-era clause, legislators accused him of “permanent moral incapacity,” saying he took over $630,000 in bribes in exchange for two construction contracts while governor of a small province years ago.

Prosecutors are investigating the accusations, but Vizcarra has not been charged. He vehemently denies any wrongdoing.

The move outraged many in Peru, who denounced it as an illegal power grab by a Congress full of inexperienced politicians looking out for their own interests. Half of the lawmakers are under investigation for potential crimes, including money laundering and homicide. Vizcarra wanted to do away with their parliamentary immunity — a move popular with Peruvians but not with the legislature.

The little-known president of Congress, Manuel Merino, a rice farmer, was sworn into office last Tuesday as hundreds of Peruvians protested nearby. He promised to keep in place a scheduled presidential election in April. But his Cabinet appointments irked many, and a heavy-handed response by police fueled anger.

A network of human rights groups reported that 112 people were injured in Saturday’s protests from projectiles, batons and inhaling tear gas. Two died — Jack Pintado, 22, who was shot 11 times, including in the head, and Jordan Sotelo, 24, who was hit four times in the chest near his heart.

“Two young people were absurdly, stupidly, unjustly sacrificed by the police,” Peruvian writer and Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa said in a recorded video shared on Twitter. “This repression — which is against all of Peru — needs to stop.”

The protests rocking Peru have been unlike any seen in recent years, fueled largely by young people typically apathetic to the country’s notoriously erratic politics. They come a year after a wave of anti-government demonstrations around Latin America demanding better conditions for the poor and working class.

“We want the voice of the people to be heard,” protester Fernando Ramirez said as he banged a spoon against a pot at a weekend protest.

Merino stepped down Sunday after most of his Cabinet resigned.

The protests sent a resounding message to political elites that Peruvians will serve as a check on Congress if they try to illegitimately grab power, said Steven Levitsky, a Harvard University political scientist who has extensively studied Peru.

“This is a very good day for Peruvian democracy,” Levitsky said.

But hours after jubilant Peruvians filled the streets, cheering Merino’s departure, the country’s crisis was far from a resolution.

Congress has relatively few options for a new president that will appease protesters. An overwhelming majority — 105 of the 130 lawmakers — voted in favour of removing Vizcarra. They were widely expected to choose the latest president from among those who voted against Vizcarra's ouster.

“You look for someone who is clean — not corrupt, not tainted, not behaving in some sort of ridiculous self-interested way. You don’t have a lot of options,” Levitsky said.

After Merino quit, congressional leaders initially nominated Rocio Silva, a lawyer and poet from the leftist Broad Front party who would have become the country’s first female president. But just 42 of the 119 legislators who cast votes supported her nomination.

A new candidate from the centrist Purple Party will go before lawmakers Monday afternoon. Francisco Sagasti, an engineer who has worked at the World Bank, would become Peru's third president in a week. The constitutional Tribunal could also weigh in on whether Congress' efforts to oust Vizcarra were legal or not; however, some experts said their decision will not be retroactive.

The timing of the crisis could not be worse. Peru has the world’s highest per-capita COVID-19 mortality rate and has seen one of Latin America’s worst economic contractions. The International Monetary Fund projects a 14% decline in GDP this year.

In Lima’s historic district — the focal point of protests — demonstrators laid flowers and wrote messages lamenting the two young men killed. Many put the blame squarely on those who voted for Vizcarra’s removal.

“The 105 congressmen are the only ones guilty in their deaths,” protester Rosa Rodriguez shouted through her face mask.

Armario reported from Bogota, Colombia.
Franklin BriceñO And Christine Armario, The Associated Press

Prosecutors probe resigned president over Peru protest deaths

Public prosecutors in Peru opened a preliminary investigation Monday against former president Manuel Merino, his interior minister and other officials over the deaths of two people in weekend anti-government protests, state prosecutor Zoraida Avalos said.
© Luka GONZALES 
People light candles at a memorial for two people killed in street protests against interim president Manuel Marino, who resigned on Sunday

Merino, who resigned on Sunday, his chief of staff Flores Araoz and interior minister Gaston Rodriguez face investigation for "abuse of authority and intentional homicide" for the death of the two protesters on Saturday, apparently from shotgun pellets fired by police, said Avalos. 

Avalos said the deaths "will not go unpunished."

The case may also involve other defendants because of "serious injuries" to dozens of other protesters during clashes with police in Lima, the prosecutor said.

She said the investigation would also cover cases of "forced disappearance," because of nine demonstrators whose whereabouts have been unknown since Saturday. 

Initially more than 40 demonstrators were listed as missing, but most turned up on Sunday. 

The Congress is scheduled to meet later Monday to try to agree on a new president to replace Merino. 

The former Congress speaker spent just five days in power after setting off street protests following his controversial replacement of the impeached Martin Vizcarra.

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Scott Atlas: Trump coronavirus adviser urges Michigan to 'rise up' against new Covid-19 measures

#INSURRECTION  #SEDITION  #TREASON #QUACK

White House coronavirus task force member Dr. Scott Atlas criticized Michigan's new Covid-19 restrictions in a tweet shortly after they were announced Sunday evening, urging people to "rise up" against the new public health measures
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© Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images 
US President Donald Trump (L) listens to White House coronavirus adviser Dr. Scott Atlas speak during a press conference on September 23, 2020.

"The only way this stops is if people rise up," Atlas said. "You get what you accept. #FreedomMatters #StepUp"

His message -- which runs counter to the consensus of public health officials -- is likely to fuel new tension between the White House and Michigan Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, whom federal and state officials announced last month was the target of an alleged domestic terrorism kidnapping plot.

Responding to Atlas' tweet Sunday evening, Whitmer told CNN's Wolf Blitzer, "We know that the White House likes to single us out here in Michigan, me out in particular. I'm not going to be bullied into not following reputable scientists and medical professionals."

Instead, Whitmer said, she consults "people that actually have studied and are well respected worldwide on these issues, not the -- not the individual that is doing the President's bidding on this one."

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel echoed that message in a pair of tweets Sunday evening, casting Atlas' posting as, "disappointing, irresponsible, and the reason why the United States finds itself in such desperate circumstances regarding COVID-19."

"I look forward to a new federal administration that works cooperatively with our state government to protect Michigan residents," Nessel, a Democrat, said.

"A patriot," she continued, "is one who protects America from its enemies, both foreign and domestic."

"COVID-19 is the enemy, not each other. Stop pitting Americans against each other and start supporting policies proven to effectively fight the virus."

Whitmer announced in a news conference earlier Sunday that Michigan will begin a "three-week pause targeting indoor social gatherings and other group activities" to mitigate the spread of Covid-19.

"If everyone does their part, we will see a big benefit from it," she told Blitzer of the new measures. "But we'll be assessing it every step of the way."

Throughout the pandemic, Whitmer has been the focus of extreme vitriol from far-right groups. The alleged scheme to kidnap her included plans to overthrow several state governments that the suspects "believe are violating the US Constitution," according to a federal criminal complaint.

Still, she joins a slate of officials who are tightening their restrictions as coronavirus cases continue to soar.

The United States surpassed 11 million coronavirus cases on Sunday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The latest milestone comes just six days after the US recorded 10 million cases.

It was the fastest the US has added one million new cases since the pandemic began.

Unlike the government medical experts who advised Trump in the early months of the pandemic, Atlas has adopted a public stance on the virus much closer to the President's -- including decrying the idea that schools cannot reopen this fall as "hysteria" and pushing for the resumption of college sports.

"He's working with us and will be working with us on the coronavirus," Trump said in August. "And he has many great ideas. And he thinks what we've done is really good, and now we'll take it to a new level."

Atlas under fire for telling Michigan to 'rise up' against COVID-19 restrictions

Dr. Scott Atlas, a controversial member of President Donald Trump's coronavirus task force, is facing heavy criticism after telling Michiganders to "rise up" against Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's new COVID-19 restrictions imposed as new cases surge in the state.

Whitmer has denounced Atlas' call to action, in a call with Michigan Capitol reporters Monday morning, slamming it as "incredibly reckless, considering everything that has happened, everything that is going on."

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top expert on infectious diseases, told NBC's "Today" program Monday he "totally disagrees" with Atlas, and Dr. Ashish Jha, the dean of Brown University's School of Public Health, called the comment "particularly irresponsible," noting the death threats officials say Whitmer has faced.
© Chris Kleponis/POOL/EPA via Shutterstock 
White House advisor Scott Atlas speaks to a member of the media at the White House in Washington, DC., Nov. 3, 2020.

"He is supposedly a physician and a disgrace to our profession," Jha said in a tweet Sunday night.MORE: President Trump's split with health advisers on coronavirus fuels speculation of shake-up

Whitmer, a Democrat who has come under frequent fire from Trump, detailed a new order Sunday to help slow the spread of the virus as the country enters a new wave resembling its peak in April.

In response to the rising number of cases, starting Wednesday for three weeks, Michigan will suspend in-person instruction at high schools and colleges, halt indoor dining at restaurants and close some businesses, including movie theaters and casinos.
© Michigan Office of the Governor via AP In this photo provided by the Michigan Office of the Governor, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer addresses the state during a speech in Lansing, Mich., Nov. 15, 2020.

Shortly after the announcement, Atlas, a neuroradiologist with no training in infectious diseases who joined the White House coronavirus task force in August and has since railed against COVID-19 restrictions, tweeted, "The only way this stops is if people rise up. You get what you accept. #FreedomMatters #StepUp."

The language echoed Trump's previous calls to "LIBERATE MICHIGAN!"

About three hours after the original tweet, Atlas attempted to walk back his comment as the criticism poured in, saying he wasn't talking about violence but raised people peacefully protesting and voting.

But Jha noted in his tweet that Whitmer is not up for election until 2022 and that Atlas "was not telling people to vote when he said they should rise up against her."

It all comes a little over a month after authorities revealed an alleged plot to overthrow the state Capitol and kidnap Whitmer. Individuals charged in the plot had protested against Whitmer's stringent restrictions which Trump also repeatedly criticized.
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xMORE: How FBI says Michigan gov kidnapping plot went from texts, small gatherings to raid

© Leah Millis/Reuters, FILE 
President Donald Trump listens as Dr. Scott Atlas speaks to reporters during a news conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC., Sept. 16, 2020.

Atlas, from Stanford's Hoover Institution, has become Trump's favorite adviser because they share the same view that closures and restrictions aimed at slowing the spread of the coronavirus aren't worth the economic turmoil and negative impact on the public's mental health. Atlas has advocated for the idea of allowing the virus to spread rapidly among healthy populations while shielding more vulnerable groups -- an idea that the nation's top public health experts say is nearly impossible and would result in unacceptable death tolls.

Fauci has distanced himself from Atlas several times in the past. While Fauci spent the summer warning of the dangers of rising case and urging mask-wearing and social distancing, Atlas argued that young people should resume their lives as normal and questioned the efficacy of mask-wearing.

The White House has attacked Fauci for his public disagreements with Trump and criticisms of Atlas in recent weeks. After Fauci told the Washington Post in an interview on Oct. 30 that the country needed to make an "abrupt change" in its response and called out Atlas for his lack of expertise, the White House called Fauci's comments "unacceptable," especially coming just before the election.

"I have real problems with that guy," Fauci said of Atlas. "He's a smart guy who's talking about things that I believe he doesn't have any real insight or knowledge or experience in. He keeps talking about things that when you dissect it out and parse it out, it doesn't make any sense."

© ABC News Dr. Fauci appears on "Good Morning America," Nov. 12, 2020.

As the country is on track to reach 250,000 COVID-19 deaths by the end of this week, surpassing the 240,000 top estimate the White House initially gave for the year, doctors including Jha are now saying the country should follow Michigan's lead now and note the restrictions are still less severe than those issued in spring, when several states including Michigan were under stay-at-home orders.

With over 1.8 million cases reported in the last 15 days, November is well on track to become the country's worst month on record for COVID-19 cases.

In response to the rising numbers, Washington state and Oregon have also imposed new restrictions.
Bernie Sanders says Trump denying election results 'beyond belief in terms of behavior for an American president'

Rema Rahman, THE HILL NOV 15, 2020



Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Sunday called President Trump's denial of election results and refusal to participate in a transition of power to President-elect Joe Biden's team a "disgraceful" move by an American president.  
© Getty Images 
Bernie Sanders says Trump denying election results 'beyond belief in terms of behavior for an American president'

"Trump will have the distinction of doing more than any person in the history of this country in undermining American democracy," Sanders said on CNN's "State of the Union."


Trump has refused to concede to Biden after the 2020 presidential election was called more than one week ago. The president's campaign has unleashed a torrent of lawsuits in battleground states in which Trump lost, arguing that unproven widespread election fraud led to Biden's victory.

"The idea that he continues to tell his supporters that the only reason he may have lost this election is because of fraud is an absolutely disgraceful, un-American thing to do and I would just hope to God that he has the decency in him to man-up and say, 'you know what, we fought hard, we lost the election, good luck to Joe Biden, I love America,'" Sanders said on Sunday.

Thousands of Trump supporters descended on Washington, D.C. on Saturday to protest the election results. Biden is currently projected to win 290 electoral votes compared to Trump's 232, according to the most recent tally by The Associated Press.

Sanders, who lost bids for the Democratic nomination for president in 2016 and 2020, also said on Sunday that Trump not allowing his administration to participate in the transition process, including preventing Biden from receiving official intelligence briefings and keeping millions in taxpayers dollars from being spent on transition resources, is unbecoming for anyone who has led the White House.

"The fact that he's not even cooperating in the transition, the fact that he continues to deny reality, continue to suggest that Biden has illegally won the election is beyond belief in terms of behavior for an American president," Sanders said.
Israelis protest EU delegation's visit to planned settlement

JERUSALEM — Israeli protesters shouted down a group of European diplomats on Monday who were visiting the site of a planned settlement expansion in east Jerusalem that would make it even harder to establish a viable Palestinian state and could anger the incoming U.S. administration
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© Provided by The Canadian Press

The diplomats went to Givat Hamatos, in east Jerusalem, to voice their opposition a day after Israeli authorities announced tenders for more than 1,200 new homes. The new construction would further sever east Jerusalem from the nearby Palestinian town of Bethlehem and the southern West Bank.

They were met by around 50 right-wing protesters who waved Israeli flags and chanted “EU, shame on you!” The protesters chanted so loudly that members of the delegation were unable to deliver public statements and had to relocate to another part of the city.


Sven Kühn von Burgsdorf, the EU representative to the Palestinian territories, said the planned settlement expansion “gives some observers the impression” that Israel is trying to create “facts on the ground” before President-elect Joe Biden assumes office in January.

“It’s very important to demonstrate unity in the international community that any such project, any such construction, which is illegal under international law, cannot go forward,” he said.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Palestinians want a future state that includes east Jerusalem and the West Bank — territories occupied by Israel in the 1967 war — and view settlements as a major obstacle to peace. With nearly 500,000 settlers now living in the West Bank, and over 220,000 more in east Jerusalem, the Palestinians say the chances of establishing their state are quickly dwindling.

Israel has long dismissed international criticism of settlement activity, but the decision to move ahead with construction at Givat Hamatos could strain ties with Biden, who is opposed to settlement expansion and hopes to revive negotiations on a two-state solution.

President Donald Trump has given unprecedented support to Israel, including by abandoning the decades-old U.S. position that settlements are illegitimate. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo plans to visit a Jewish settlement in the occupied West Bank later this week in a stunning departure from his predecessors, who often spoke out against settlement construction.

Earlier on Monday, the U.N.'s Mideast envoy said he was “very concerned” by Israel's decision to advance construction in Givat Hamatos.

“It would significantly damage prospects for a future contiguous Palestinian State and for achieving a negotiated two-state solution based on the 1967 lines, with Jerusalem as the capital of both states," Nickolay Mladenov, the U.N. envoy to the Middle East peace process, said in a statement.

"Settlement construction is illegal under international law and I call on the authorities to reverse this step.”

Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement group that closely tracks settlement activity, said Sunday's move allows contractors to begin bidding on the tenders, a process that will conclude just days before Biden’s Jan. 20 inauguration. Construction could then begin within months.

“The construction here may bury the chances for peace,” said Hagit Ofran, an expert on the settlements at Peace Now who accompanied the EU delegation. “We are here to protest and call for all the world to stop it, because it’s not only for Israel, it’s for the whole world.”

Moshe Edri And Joseph Krauss, The Associated Press




Alec Baldwin says Trump should be buried in 'Nazi graveyard' with 'a swastika on his grave'
Emma Colton 


Actor Alec Baldwin said President Trump should be buried “in a Nazi graveyard” while lauding the U.S. citizens who voted for Joe Biden.
© Provided by Washington Examiner

“Bury Trump in a Nazi graveyard and put a swastika on his grave. The majority of Americans made the right choice. Trump is a maniac,” Baldwin tweeted Sunday evening.

The message comes after most media outlets declared Biden the victor of the 2020 presidential election, which Trump has contested, citing widespread voter fraud.

Thousands of Trump’s supporters converged on Washington, D.C., on Saturday to support the president’s legal fights concerning the election in a rally called the “Million MAGA March.”

Videos from the rally have gone viral, including scenes of people singing the national anthem in unison, as well as footage of counterprotesters attacking Trump supporters.


One video showed a man wearing a pro-Trump shirt being shoved to the ground by counterprotesters in Washington, D.C.’s Black Lives Matter Plaza.


Baldwin has been a vehement critic of Trump, especially since the onset of the coronavirus, and told Trump supporters they are “mentally ill” if they voted for the president.

“Trump has reached for, and nearly gained, a control of the federal govt unrivaled by other Presidents. He fired huge numbers of govt professionals. He steamrolled the Congress, whenever possible. And now this. If you vote for Trump again, you are mentally ill,” he tweeted in April.


Baldwin also compared Senate Republicans to Nazis in February.

"You wonder how Hitler took control of a once great country. For those of you too young to recall the War or its aftermath, simply watch how this GOP-controlled Senate behaves. Their sniveling fealty and lack of courage. And you begin to get it," he tweeted.

Original Location: Alec Baldwin says Trump should be buried in 'Nazi graveyard' with 'a swastika on his grave'
Jetliner hits brown bear after landing at Alaska airport


A jetliner struck an adult brown bear on the runway at Yakutat Airport in Alaska on Saturday in a surprise collision that killed the animal and damaged the aircraft's engine.
© Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
 In this file photo, a brown bear sow and cub are shown on the shore of Lake Crescent in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve in Alaska on Aug. 21, 2020.

The female bear was with a two-year-old cub at the time, officials say. The cub was not injured in the incident.

The collision happened around 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Alaska Airlines and state officials said.

Airport crews had cleared the runway about 10 minutes before Alaska Airlines Flight 66 was due to land, and everyone followed the normal runway check procedures before the landing, according to Sam Dapcevich, a spokesperson for the Alaska Department of Transportation.

The Boeing 737-700 jet landed on the runway and was slowing down when pilots saw the bears crossing their path, Dapcevich said.

"The nose gear missed the bears, but the captain felt an impact on the left side after the bears passed under the plane,” Alaska Airlines said in a statement.

The jet's left engine cowl was dented and crumpled by the impact, photos show.

No humans were injured in the collision.

The dead bear was spotted lying about six metres from the centre of the runway, Alaska Airlines said.

Alaska Airlines Flight 66 had stopped over in Yakutat en route from Cordova to Juneau. It was pulled out of service for repairs after the collision and passengers were rebooked on other flights.

Aircraft have hit birds and even caribou in the past, but this is the first known case of a flight hitting a bear in Alaska, Dapcevich told the Anchorage Daily News.

He added that the Yakutat airport is partially enclosed by a fence, and that staff are trained to deal with wildlife venturing onto the runway.

It's unclear what happened to the cub that survived the encounter.


—With files from The Associated Press
Belarus: thousands protest against death of teacher in police custody
Andrew Roth in Moscow 


Thousands of Belarusians have protested against the death in police custody of a military veteran and children’s art teacher arrested for his opposition to authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko.© Provided by The Guardian Photograph: BelaPAN/Reuters

Roman Bondarenko, a 31-year-old artist, was pummelled by several men believed to be plainclothes police officers in a Minsk courtyard known as the Square of Change on Wednesday in a dispute over ribbons indicating support for anti-government protests.

Bondarenko, who reportedly hit his head on the ground during the attack, was then detained and taken away in a van, disappearing into police custody. When his family finally located him, he was in a coma in a city hospital, where he died due to brain damage on Thursday.
© Photograph: BelaPAN/Reuters 
Thousands attend a vigil on Square of Change where Bondarenko was arrested.

The government has washed its hands of the incident, saying that Bondarenko’s injuries were sustained in a street fight between government and opposition supporters.

His family is convinced that he was beaten in custody after his arrest, with one relative saying that “everything that happened to him happened after the square”.

“I am filming this video so that more people know what is happening in this country, that people are absolutely defenceless,” Olga Kuchurenko, a relative, said in a video posted by Radio Svoboda.

Belarus has been rocked by the largest protests in its history after Lukashenko claimed victory in August elections marred by widespread voter fraud.

Related: ‘Crush the fascist vermin’: Belarus opposition summons wartime spirit

The death is the latest trauma endured by Belarus’ protest movement, which has already seen thousands beaten and tortured in police stations, the political opposition jailed and forced to flee the country, and, most recently, donations to victims seized by the government.

Protests took place on Thursday and Friday, with thousands taking part in a vigil at the square on Thursday evening, leaving flowers and lighting candles in Bondarenko’s memory. “Tribunal!” the crowds chanted, calling for justice.

Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, a former presidential candidate now living outside of Belarus, wrote on Telegram: “Roman Bondarenko was killed by accomplices of the regime. He was an innocent victim of an inhumane system that considers people’s lives to be the cost of power. We all understand that any peaceful person could have ended up in his place.”

European diplomats also expressed concern over Bondarenko’s death. Linas Linkevičius, Lithuania’s foreign affairs minister, wrote that he was “shocked” at the “astonishing cynicism, cruelty of the regime”.

“This is an outrageous and shameful result of the actions by the Belarusian authorities who have not only directly and violently carried out repression of their own population, but also created an environment whereby such lawless, violent acts can take place,” said an EU spokesman, threatening to impose additional sanctions against the government.

Last week, the EU announced sanctions, including a travel ban and asset freeze, against Lukashenko, his son Viktor, and 13 other officials responsible for the “violent repression and intimidation of peaceful demonstrators.”

On Friday the Belarusian parliament discussed a new measure apparently aimed at opposition supporters that could see those guilty of extremism or “causing damage to the national interest” stripped of citizenship.




Newsmax TV May Be Target For Acquisition Or Investment By Donald Trump Allies – WSJ

Bruce Haring 

© Newsmax TV


Click here to read the full article.

Newsmax TV, the conservative, pro-Donald Trump television network whose ratings have lately jumped as its rivals leaned to the left, may be a takeover or acquisition target, the Wall Street Journal reported today.

The WSJ said that allies of President Trump have been looking for a vehicle to challenge Fox News, which some on the right believe is gradually moving away from conservatives. Whether Donald Trump himself would be involved if he fails in his bid to overturn the election results was not mentioned. However, Trump has long been rumored to be interested in his own conservative network platform.

The report indicates Hicks Equity Partners, a private-equity firm with ties to a co-chair of the Republican National Committee, has held talksabout acquiring and investing in Newsmax. The WSJ cited “people familiar with the matter,” and said any move would be part of a larger effort that could also include a streaming-video service.

Newsmax has staunchly defended President Trump’s claims that the election was stolen, and has attracted a large contingent of Trump true believers frustrated with Fox.

How far along talks are for any Newsmax investment is unclear, the WSJ said.

President Trump has repeatedly praised Newsmax and the One America News Network for their support. He has also voiced concern about Fox moving away from his views, at least on the part of their news reporting.

Fox has led cable news network ratings for years, so any challenge is a formidable task. The WSJ reports Newsmax’s average prime-time audience jumped 156% to 223,000 viewers during the week of the election, according to Nielsen data, and last Thursday crossed one million from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., about half of Fox’s audience during the time period.

Newsmax Media Chief Executive Chris Ruddy told the WSJ that he has had many discussions with suitors over the years. “Newsmax never had any deal with the Hicks group, and if it’s true they were using our name for the purposes of capital fundraising, that is wholly inappropriate,” he said.

Fox Corp., which owns the WSJ, had no comment.
USA 
Top federal information security officer also member of private group investigating voter fraud

The federal government's chief information security officer, Camilo Sandoval, says he has taken leave from his day job to help the private voter fraud investigation group, "Voter Integrity Fund."
© Brynn Anderson/AP 
An election worker handles ballots as vote counting in the general election continues at State Farm Arena on Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020, in Atlanta.

"Voter Integrity should matter to everyone, and a failed or flawed contest undermines the legitimacy of our democracy. As a volunteer on this project and former campaign political data scientist, I am leveraging my skills to bring further transparency and accountability to our electoral process by rigorously modeling and evaluating publicly available election results," Sandoval, a Trump appointee, said in a series of text messages with CNN.


"The results of our findings should be fascinating to everyone, Republican or Democrat."

The Philadelphia Inquirer first reported on the group with further reporting Sunday by The Washington Post.

But local, state and federal officials across the country have stated there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud. And while the founder of Voter Integrity Fund, Matt Braynard, told CNN the group has found some evidence of voters illegally voting across state lines, they haven't made any evidence public. Multiple lawsuits filed by the Trump campaign and others have been thrown out of court.

Chris Krebs, the Trump administration official in charge of helping states secure their elections, has ramped up his efforts to reject the false claims coming from President Donald Trump and his supporters. His agency, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, released a statement last week along with state and private election officials saying, "There is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised."

Multiple federal officials are working in the Voter Integrity Fund, according to Braynard, which is based out of his apartment in northern Virginia.



© MCI, LC Camilo Sandoval

"This is neither illegal, unprecedented, or you can make the argument but I would also say it's clearly (ethical)," Braynard said.

The Hatch Act prohibits federal employees from engaging in political activities while on official duty, making it illegal for any federal officials in the group to use government resources or invoke their government titles. The federal officials working for the group are on leave from their federal government jobs, according to Braynard.

"None of them are here because they work in the Trump administration. They're all here because I worked with them on the campaign and they happened to get jobs in the administration," Braynard said of the team who worked together on Trump's 2016 campaign.

Still, the officials are on a potentially slippery slope.

"All it would take is a slip of a few words," Nick Schwellenbach, a senior investigator at the nonprofit watchdog group Project on Government Oversight and an Obama-era spokesman for the Office of Special Counsel told The Washington Post. "Even if they stay on the right side of the law, they could be treading in dangerous territory."

For his part, Sandoval, the federal chief information security officer, said he has no concerns about any potential violations.

"I'm volunteering as a data scientist, while on leave, to evaluate the data after Election Day and sharing the results for public scrutiny," Sandoval told CNN.

Azerbaijan vows to protect Christian churches as many flee


MOSCOW — The president of Azerbaijan is promising that Christian churches will be protected when the strongly Muslim country takes possession of areas formerly controlled by Armenians, as residents burned down their homes and fled in cars and trucks ahead of Sunday's expected takeover.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

President Ilham Aliyev’s office said he made the promise in a telephone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is deploying peacekeeping forces in the areas under an agreement that ended six weeks of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Ethnic Armenian forces had controlled Nagorno-Karabakh and sizeable adjacent territories since 1994, after the end of a separatist war. Fighting resumed in late September and ended with an agreement that calls for Azerbaijan to regain control of the outlying territories as well as allowing it to keep parts of Nagorno-Karabakh that it seized during the recent fighting.

The first of the territories, Kalbajar, was to be turned over on Sunday. But Azerbaijan agreed at the last minute to give Armenian forces and civilians until Nov. 25 to withdraw.

Kalbajar is home to the well-known Dadivank monastery of the Armenian Apostolic Church. On Saturday, a day before the territory’s expected handover, workers removed many of the monastery’s sacred objects.

Azerbaijani presidential spokesman Hikmet Hajiyev said Sunday that the delay was requested by Armenia and granted “taking into account the worsening weather conditions and the difficult mountainous terrain.”

Civilians fleeing the region caused huge traffic jams on the single road leading to Armenia.

Ethnic Armenian Garo Dadevusyan wrenched off his home's metal roof in Kalbajar in the last few days, trying to figure out how to destroy it.

“In the end, we will blow it up or set it on fire, in order not to leave anything to Muslims,” Dadevusyan said. He piled the roof and family goods onto an old flatbed truck but their final destination was unclear.

“We are homeless now. We do not know where to go and where to live ... It is very hard,” his wife, Lusine, said, choking back tears as the couple gave their house a final look.

Azerbaijan is about 95% Muslim and Armenians fear that churches would be damaged or closed when it takes control of the territories.

"President Aliyev said that Christian churches in Azerbaijani territories, which are returned to Azerbaijan in accordance with the trilateral statement, will also be properly protected by the state. Christians of Azerbaijan will have access to these churches,” said the statement from his office.

Hundreds, if not thousands, of combatants and civilians have been killed since fighting flared anew in late September.

Sandbags and monks in khaki: Russian troops guard Armenian monastery after ceasefire



DADIVANK, Azerbaijan (Reuters) - Soldiers unloaded sandbags and monks donned khaki vests over their cassocks on Sunday after Russian peacekeepers arrived to guard the 12th century Armenian Dadivank monastery in territory due to be ceded to Azerbaijan within days.
© Reuters/STRINGER
 An ethnic Armenian soldier is seen inside a destroyed school in the village of Knaravan
© Reuters/STRINGER
 Russian peacekeepers are seen at Dadivank monastery in Kalbajar district

Russia has deployed troops as part of a Moscow-brokered ceasefire deal to end six weeks of fighting between ethnic Armenian forces and Azeri troops over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas.
© Reuters/STRINGER
 Ethnic Armenian soldiers are seen in the village of Knaravan

Ethnic Armenians have set fire to their homes, severed electricity cables and cut down trees before leaving the area that is to be handed over to Baku's control.

But Father Ovanes, the superior of the monastery, said he would not leave, regardless of whether there were Russian peacekeepers stationed there to protect him.

"I was prepared and I said: I'm not getting out of here," he told Reuters.

Azerbaijan was initially expected to take over the Kalbajar region, controlled by ethnic Armenians since the end of the first war over Nagorno-Karabakh in 1994, on Sunday.
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A service member of the Russian peacekeeping troops stands next to a military vehicle at Dadivank monastery in Kalbajar district

But Baku has extended the deadline until Nov. 25, presidential administration official Hikmet Gadjiyev said.

Gallery: Fighting between Armenia, Azerbaijan (USA TODAY)


Russia's President Vladimir Putin has told his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev to take care of Christian shrines in parts of Nagorno-Karabakh that Azerbaijan gets under the deal, the Kremlin said on Saturday.

Reuters reporters saw Russian peacekeepers guarding a newly established checkpoint next to the monastery. An armoured personnel carrier was parked in front of a chapel, and troops took selfies with the clergy inside
.
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Ethnic Armenian soldiers load bottles with water into the truck in the village of Knaravan

"We are happy that our Russian soldiers, our brothers are here to protect the border and to protect this monastery, and the monastery will bless them and protect them," said Father Moses, a clergyman.

Peacekeepers might be allowed to remain at the monastery as a result of negotiations which are still ongoing, Father Ovanes said.

The clergy has taken down church bells and cross-stones and sent them out of the region, fearing they could be desecrated and vandalised.

The monastery overlooks a village that was burnt down and abandoned by its residents after the peace deal.

Most residents had already left the Kalbajar district by Sunday, but some Armenian soldiers stayed behind to finish demolishing the houses in another village called Knaravan.

Reuters reporters saw them taking down electricity poles, sawing them and loading them into a truck next to a school that had its windows smashed and roof torn off.

"We don't want to leave to the enemy, to Azerbaijan, what belonged to us. We just try to keep what belonged to us," said one of the soldiers who declined to give his name.

(Additional reporting by Nvard Hovhannisyan in Yerevan and Nailia Bagirova in Baku; Editing by Matthias Williams and Hugh Lawson)



Shell-shocked Armenians return to Nagorno-Karabakh after peace deal



STEPANAKERT, Azerbaijan (Reuters) - Armenian refugees who fled a six-week war between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces have begun to return home to Nagorno-Karabakh to try to rebuild their shattered lives after Russia last week brokered a peace deal over the enclave.
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Daily life after ceasefire deal in Stepanakert in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh

At least two convoys of buses carrying residents arrived in Stepanakert, the capital of the mountainous area, from neighbouring Armenia over the weekend.
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 Daily life after ceasefire deal in Stepanakert in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh

Under the terms of the agreement, control over the enclave's main city Stepanakert, in territory internationally recognised as Azerbaijan, will stay with ethnic Armenians despite them being forced to cede other land to a victorious Azerbaijan.
© Reuters/STRINGER
 Daily life after ceasefire deal in Stepanakert in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh

On Monday, refugees lined up in the centre of Stepanakert, which had been deserted for weeks beforehand, to collect bags of humanitarian aid which included staples such as canned food and pasta.

Several men handed out rolled-up pieces of plastic which the returnees could use to fix broken windows in their homes

Some said they had come back with a heavy heart.

“I have seen the third war already here. In 1992 and 2016 I did not leave the city for even a minute. But this time it was awful,” said a middle-aged woman who declined to give her name.

The woman, who said she had returned on Sunday, said she had left for the Armenian border town of Sisian after the first week of fighting in early October when she had been forced to hide from shelling in a bomb shelter.

While Stepanakert may remain in ethnic Armenian hands after the deal, Shusha, the second largest town in Nagorno-Karabakh, is now controlled by Azerbaijan after fierce fighting.

“There are no Armenians in Shusha now,” said 35-year-old Alexander Simonyan, a gymnastics teacher from Shusha.

When the fighting began, he sent his wife and children to Armenia and joined the Nagorno-Karabakh defence forces.

He said he now lived with a friend in Stepanakert and had nowhere to house his family, though he hoped local authorities might offer them all somewhere to live. “This is our land. Where else can I go? I can’t live in another place.”
© Reuters/STRINGER
 Daily life after ceasefire deal in Stepanakert in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh

The Russian defence ministry said on Monday it had helped 475 people to return on Sunday and that a total of 725 people had come back to the enclave since Nov. 14.

LOST LAND

After the ceasefire, Andranik Sarkisyan, 27, a former fighter, managed to bring his wife and two sons back from Armenia to their home village of Badara in Nagorno-Karabakh.

News of the truce had been painful, he said. “I was on the front line and they (commanders) simply called and told us that the land has been given up. All the soldiers were crying.”

Sarkisyan worked as a hairdresser in Stepanakert before the war and went to fight in the district of Gadrut, which was taken by Azeri forces at the start of the conflict.

Many men in his battalion had been killed by artillery fire in an Oct. 11 attack, he said, adding that he had only survived because he had left earlier to guard a checkpoint.

“The guys were simply burnt, they died, we collected their body parts. I saw it every night. It was unbearable, impossible,” he said.

Such memories make it difficult for him to think about the terms of the settlement.

“It is not about land. It is about the blood spilled on it,” he said. “I hope it was the last war.”

(Reporting by Reuters reporters; Editing by Andrew Osborn and Mark Heinrich)