Friday, August 27, 2021

CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF COMPROMISE —

“Worst cloud vulnerability you can imagine” discovered in Microsoft Azure

30% of Cosmos DB customers were notified—more are likely impacted.


JIM SALTER - 8/27/2021, 

Enlarge / Cosmos DB is a managed database service offering—including both relational and noSQL data structures—belonging to Microsoft's Azure cloud infrastructure.

Cloud security vendor Wiz announced yesterday that it found a vulnerability in Microsoft Azure's managed database service, Cosmos DB, that granted read/write access for every database on the service to any attacker who found and exploited the bug.

Although Wiz only found the vulnerability—which it named "Chaos DB"—two weeks ago, the company says that the vulnerability has been lurking in the system for "at least several months, possibly years."

A slingshot around Jupyter

Jupyter notebook functionality in CosmosDB enables many advanced data visualization techniques with relatively little coding experience or effort.
Wiz

A privilege escalation vulnerability allowed anyone with a Cosmos DB account to filch the private key for any other Cosmos DB account, by way of the Jupyter notebook functionality.
Wiz

Once an attacker has the victim's primary key, it's game over—full read/write/delete access is granted permanently, and cannot be revoked without replacing the affected keys.

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FURTHER READING

In 2019, Microsoft added the open-source Jupyter Notebook functionality to Cosmos DB. Jupyter Notebooks are a particularly user-friendly way to implement machine learning algorithms; Microsoft promoted Notebooks specifically as a useful tool for advanced visualization of data stored in Cosmos DB.

Jupyter Notebook functionality was enabled automatically for all Cosmos DB instances in February 2021, but Wiz believes the bug in question likely goes back further—possibly all the way back to Cosmos DB's first introduction of the feature in 2019.

Wiz isn't giving away all the technical details yet, but the short version is that misconfiguration in the Jupyter feature opens up a privilege escalation exploit. That exploit could be abused to gain access to other Cosmos DB customers' primary keys—according to Wiz, any other Cosmos DB customer's primary key, along with other secrets.

Access to a Cosmos DB instance's primary key is "game over." It allows full read, write, and delete permissions to the entire database belonging to that key. Wiz's Chief Technology Officer Ami Luttwak describes this as "the worst cloud vulnerability you can imagine," adding, "This is the central database of Azure, and we were able to get access to any customer database that we wanted."Advertisement

Long-lived secrets

Unlike ephemeral secrets and tokens, a Cosmos DB's primary key does not expire—if it has already been leaked and is not changed, an attacker could still use that key to exfiltrate, manipulate, or destroy the database years from now.

According to Wiz, Microsoft only emailed 30 percent or so of its Cosmos DB customers about the vulnerability. The email warned those users to rotate their primary key manually, in order to make certain that any leaked keys are no longer useful to attackers. Those Cosmos DB customers are the ones which had Jupyter Notebook functionality enabled during the week or so in which Wiz explored the vulnerability.

Since February 2021, when all new Cosmos DB instances were created with Jupyter Notebook functions enabled, the Cosmos DB service automatically disabled Notebook functionality if it wasn't used within the first three days. This is why the number of Cosmos DB customers notified was so low—the 70 percent or so of customers not notified by Microsoft had either manually disabled Jupyter or had it disabled automatically due to lack of use.

Unfortunately, this doesn't really cover the full scope of the vulnerability. Because any Cosmos DB instance with Jupyter enabled was vulnerable, and because the primary key is not an ephemeral secret, it is impossible to know for certain who has the keys to which instances. An attacker with a specific target could have quietly harvested that target's primary key but not done anything obnoxious enough to be noticed (yet).

We also can't rule out a broader impact scenario, with a hypothetical attacker who scraped the primary key from each new Cosmos DB instance during its initial three-day vulnerability window, then saved those keys for potential later use. We agree with Wiz here—if your Cosmos DB instance might ever have had Jupyter notebook functionality enabled, you should rotate its keys immediately to ensure security going forward.
Microsoft's response

Microsoft disabled the Chaos DB vulnerability two weeks ago—less than 48 hours after Wiz privately reported it. Unfortunately, Microsoft cannot change its customers' primary keys itself; the onus is on Cosmos DB customers to rotate their keys.

According to Microsoft, there's no evidence that any malicious actors found and exploited Chaos DB prior to the Wiz discovery. An emailed statement from Microsoft to Bloomberg said, "We are not aware of any customer data being accessed because of this vulnerability." In addition to warning 3,000+ customers of the vulnerability and providing mitigation instructions, Microsoft paid Wiz a $40,000 bounty.

Guatemala Assists Migrants Deported From the US

Latin American migrants arrive in Guatemala, Aug. 25, 2021.
 | Photo: Twitter/ @conamigua1

Published 26 August 2021

"The promises that Biden had made made regarding migration does not correspond to what he is implementing," The Migrant House NGO Director Mauro Verzeletti pointed out.

On Wednesday, Guatemala’s National Council for Assistance to Migrants (CONAMIGUA) Secretary Raul Berrios traveled to the El Ceibo border point with Mexico to coordinate care for Central American migrants who are entering his country due to the U.S. accelerated expulsion policy.

Guatemalan Congress Repeals State-of-Calamity Decree

"We spoke with these people to know about their needs and provide them voluntary return service to El Salvador and Honduras,” Berrios stated. About 400 migrants on average per day have been deported to Guatemala since July 30, when U.S. President Joe Biden officially resumed the Trump administration's policy of immediate deportations.

The asylum seekers are sent from the U.S. border to El Ceibo without economic resources to return to their home countries. The Migrant House (MH) NGO Director Father Mauro Verzeletti condemned this policy, arguing that the Guatemalan-Mexican border zone lacks the infrastructure to receive migrants.

"The promises that Biden had made made regarding migration does not correspond to what he is implementing," Verzeletti pointed out.

"Nations cannot manage migration alone. To solve mass migration to the U.S., Biden must adopt a policy of multilateral cooperation," he added.

On Wednesday, Guatemala’s Foreign Affairs Ministry Pedro Brolo requested that the return of migrants be carried out through either the reception centers established in Tecun Uman and San Marcos cities or through the Air Force center in Guatemala City so as to receive deported migrants in a safe and dignified manner.

On March 21, 2020, Former U.S. President Donald Trump approved a deportation policy known as Title 42, which allows migration authorities to immediately deport undocumented migrants to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Thanks to this policy, from October 2020 to June 2021, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) deported 751,844 migrants who attempted to cross this country’s southern border.
Nicaragua, Mexico & Argentina Support Investigation of Almagro

Luis Almagro has destroyed the OAS as an institution and is getting away with murder, said Bolivia's Foreign Minister Rogelio Mayta in a meeting with Almagro. | Photo: Twitter @KawsachunNews

Published 26 August 2021 (20 hours 59 minutes ago)

Nicaragua, Mexico and Argentina support Bolivia's initiative to investigate Luis Almagro's actions in the 2019 Bolivian electoral process and coup d'état.

During an extraordinary virtual meeting of the Permanent Council of the Organization of American States (OAS), which brings together its 34 active member countries, the Government of Bolivia reiterated that it would initiate a campaign against the OAS Secretary General, Luis Almagro, denouncing "interference" and a "new and unjustified outrage" against the Andean country, when Almagro claimed again on August 9 that there had been fraud in the Bolivian presidential elections of 2019.

Bolivia Denounces Interference Attempt at OAS

During his intervention, the Bolivian Foreign Minister, Rogelio Mayta, warned that "if Luis Almagro's actions are not overseen through the institutional channels," in the future, other countries in the region could be, like Bolivia, victims of attacks and coups d'état promoted by the OAS Secretary-General.

The position of La Paz was supported by several countries, among them Mexico, Argentina, and Nicaragua, which denounced, in addition to the interference of the OAS in the electoral process, the support of the organization to the de facto government led by Jeanine Áñez.

Speaking at the session, the Nicaraguan ambassador, Luis Alvarado, reiterated the "firm and unwavering solidarity and support to the people and government of Bolivia, which continues to confront the coup aggression perpetrated by the OAS General Secretariat."

The Nicaraguan official considered "illegal and fallacious" the report presented by the mission of that regional organization in 2019 on the "irregularities" in the Bolivian electoral process.





Alvarado denounced that through the political instrumentalization of the electoral mission of the US government, through its frontmen in the OAS General Secretariat, the coup d'état of 2019 against the then president and candidate, Evo Morales, was materialized.

For her part, the Mexican ambassador, Luz Elena Baños, raised her voice in support of the Bolivian government, criticizing Almagro for "exceeding his functions" and "deepening polarization" in the hemisphere.

The OAS Secretary General, strongly supported by the United States, is accused of being behind the coup d'état in Bolivia. In view of Almagro's continuous interference in the internal affairs of other nations, different countries in the region agree on the urgent need to replace the OAS with other organizations, such as the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), among others.

Salvadorans Reject Implementation of Bitcoin Law

Visual arrangement that includes the flag of El Salvador.
 
| Photo: Twitter/ @JusBecuze
Published 27 August 2021

Around 77.5 percent of the Salvadoran population considers the adoption of the Bitcoin as a legal tender was not a wise decision.

The Salvadoran Association of International Cargo Transporters (ASTIC) requested the modification of President Nayib Bukele’s Bitcoin Law because it rejects the mandatory use of cryptocurrency as payment.

RELATED:
World Bank Not to Assist El Salvador in Bitcoin Implementation

"No Central American carrier who is hired by a Salvadoran economic agent will accept bitcoins as payment," ASTIC said and explained that carriers will only accept cash.

Arguing that only El Salvador has established Bitcoin as legal tender, the ASTIC pointed out that carriers cannot require customers from other countries to use that cryptocurrency.

The cargo transporters warned they will suspend their services if they do not get a favorable response to their request from Congress and the Presidency. They also pointed out that if the Bukele administration insists on forcing them to receive Bitcoins, the value of all freight charges will be increased by 20 percent.

 


In June, the Salvadoran Congress approved the “Bitcoin Law”, which should be implemented on Sep. 7. This possibility, however, is being rejected by workers, university students, and transporters, who called for citizen protests on Friday.

Recently, the Francisco Gavidia University's Citizen Studies Center published a poll according to which 77.5 percent of the Salvadoran population considers that the adoption of the Bitcoin as a legal tender was not a wise decision.

Nevertheless, the Bukele administration asked Congress to approve the use of over US$200 million for implementing the cryptocurrency as legal tender. Around US$150 million would go towards a trust that would guarantee the "automatic and instantaneous convertibility" of Bitcoin to dollars and vice versa. Another fraction of the US$200 million budget would be used by the government to provide citizens with a "bonus" to encourage them to use an electronic wallet.


All of this would be possible by making a budget modification, which allows Bukele to use US$600 million from a loan granted by the Central American Development Bank (CABEI) for the Trust for the Economic Recovery of Salvadoran Companies (Firempresa).






Environmental Protest Reaches London’s Financial Center


Environmental protest group Extinction Rebellion has set 4 days of protests in London this week, ahead of the COP26 global climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland. | Photo: Twitter @CallawayClimate

Published 27 August 2021

The financing of fossil fuels is killing the planet, Extinction Rebellion group's banners warned as they disguised as bankers with their faces and hands painted red to look like blood.

Environmentalists, who have been demanding urgent action in the streets of London to curb climate change for several days, targeted on Friday the City of London, the heart of the UK's financial center.

Extinction Rebellion Calls for Climate Protest in Berlin

The known "Blood Money" march was directed mainly against banks that finance companies that profit from extracting fossil fuels such as oil, natural gas, and coal, Prensa Latina reported.



The financing of fossil fuels is killing the planet, Extinction Rebellion group's banners warned as they disguised as bankers with their faces and hands painted red to look like blood.

Two of the protesters scaled the entrance portico of Standard Chartered and sprayed the bank's windows with red paint. At the same time, another group did the same to the façade of the building that houses the corporation that manages the City.

We want the banks to recognize their role in the current climate crisis, a young woman who preferred to remain anonymous told Prensa Latina.

The activist assured that banking institutions such as Barclays and HSBC invest in the fossil fuel sector, being aware that oil, natural gas, and coal are among the leading environmental pollutants.

Will, who held up one end of a large banner, "Nothing is Impossible," noted the British government's goal of reducing carbon emissions to zero by 2050 is too late.





The march that disrupted the City of London on Friday was called by the British green group as part of its "Impossible Rebellion," a civil disobedience action launched on Monday after months of inactivity due to the pandemic.

The Metropolitan Police did not report the number of people arrested at the protest yet. Still, as of yesterday, when activists painted the fountain in front of Buckingham Palace red, there were around 300 detained.


Fake blood thrown over London’s Guildhall during Extinction Rebellion protests

Sean Seddon
METRO UK
Friday 27 Aug 2021 
Climate protesters have accused financial institutions of making ‘blood money’
 (Picture: AFP)

Extinction Rebellion protesters have targeted London’s financial district as its fortnight of action continues.

The group daubed the Guildhall in the City of London with red paint and accused financial institutions of making ‘blood money’.

Fake blood was also poured over the London Stock Exchange and the headquarters of the banking and financial services company Standard Chartered.

Protesters have threatened two weeks of disruption, prompting the Metropolitan Police to draft in extra officers from elsewhere in the country ahead of the weekend.

So far 305 arrests have been made over the protests for a wide variety of offences, including 112 on Tuesday alone.

Extinction Rebellion said in a statement: ‘The Guildhall is the administrative and ceremonial heart of the corporation of the City of London.

‘It is the symbolic and actual centre of the system that is killing us.’

Extinction Rebellion have taken to the streets of London for a sixth day running (Picture: AFP)

Today’s protests are part of its ‘Impossible Action’ campaign (Picture: AFP)

Protestors targeted the Guildhall at the heart of London’s financial district (Picture: AFP)

Demonstrators marched with signs reading ‘fossil fuel finance is killing the Earth’ and ‘the financial industry is bleeding the Earth dry’.

The climate activists launched a week of action on Monday, with members occupying parts of London including Parliament Square and Oxford Circus.

Yesterday, activists dyed the water red in the fountains outside Buckingham Palace.

Extinction Rebellion is calling on the government to halt all new fossil fuel investment immediately.

Meanwhile, the Metropolitan Police said it is preparing to deploy thousands of extra officers in the capital over the bank holiday weekend to police further climate protests as well as other planned events.

Deputy assistant commissioner Matt Twist said: ‘As we head into the weekend, we are ready to respond to a number of different demonstrations by protest groups, including Extinction Rebellion.

The controversial protest group has threatened a fortnight of disruption in the capital (Picture: AFP)


Costumed protesters covered Paternoster Square with fake blood (Picture: PA)

The group are targeting financial institutions it says are profiting from environmentally damaging practices (Picture: Getty)

‘This past week, officers have worked hard to balance the rights of the protesters with those of the community, however on many occasions demonstrators’ actions became unreasonable and they caused or tried to cause serious disruption to the public and businesses.

‘Activists have frustrated the policing response by using complex lock-on devices which take time for officers to safely remove.

‘They have also used paint to deface London landmarks – action which we consider is totally unacceptable

‘Like everyone else, Extinction Rebellion have the right to assemble and protest, however this is a qualified right, and they do not have the right to cause serious and unreasonable disruption to others.

‘The unreasonable disruption caused by Extinction Rebellion, particularly as London continues to recover from the pandemic, is deeply frustrating, especially for communities who will see local officers pulled into central London in response.’


Extinction Rebellion’s ‘Blood Money’ march hits City of London

Central London’s big banks and giant financial organisations became a target of today’s protest


The Big Zero report
Dimitris Mavrokefalidis
Friday 27 August 2021


Image: ELN

Hundreds of Extinction Rebellion activists took to the streets around the Bank of England today to protest against financial institutions in the city.

On their fifth day of demonstrations, with their so-called ‘Blood Money’ march in the City of London, the mob targetted financial institutions and businesses that they claim fund fossil fuel industries.

During the march, some rebels climbed on the top of a central bank’s doors and threw fake blood over the building.

Dr Gail Bradbrook, Extinction Rebellion Co-Founder, Tim Crosland, Extinction Rebellion spokesperson, Director of Plan B and Environmental Lawyer and protestors talked with ELN about the importance of today’s protest.

ELN contacted the Bank of England, the City of London Corporation and Barclays for a response and they declined to comment.

Watch the video to find out more.



Buckingham Palace: Arrests as Animal Rebellion protesters dye fountains red

By Laura Webster @LauraEWebsterr
Digital Audience and Content Editor
26th August

Animal Rebellion protesters stand in the fountain at the 
Queen Victoria Memorial, which they have covered in red paint

SCOTLAND Yard said arrests have been made after demonstrators released red dye into the Buckingham Palace fountains in protest at animal hunting.

Campaign group Animal Rebellion staged the protest at the Victoria Memorial water feature, which sits directly in front of the Queen’s London residence, this afternoon.

The group said it had dyed the fountains “blood red in a protest against use of crown land for hunting and animal agriculture” during two weeks of events in the capital urging action on the climate crisis.

The Metropolitan Police tweeted: “A number of activists have vandalised the Victoria Memorial water feature outside Buckingham Palace.

“We are on scene and arrests have been made. The suspects are being taken to custody.”



Demonstrators were detained by police officers as they stood in the red water at the monument to Queen Victoria, with some holding flares and signs.

Harley McDonald-Eckersall, a spokesperson for Animal Rebellion, said: “Crown land should be used to grow healthy, nutritious food for all and to provide homes for the animals we share this country with.

“We are demanding that the Queen end the use of crown land for industries which are contributing to the climate and ecological emergency and the death of animals.”

Extinction Rebellion began its Impossible Rebellion protests this week and is demanding the UK Government immediately ends investment in fossil fuels that are driving climate change.



A series of arrests have been made as the environmental group targeted areas across London, including Oxford Circus yesterday, bringing traffic to a standstill.

Scotland Yard said a “significant” operation would be in place for the climate protests over the bank holiday weekend but also acknowledged the activists’ “important cause”.

Extinction Rebellion: Government must end investment in fossil fuels immediately

“We know that mass participation and civil disobedience works”.


Basit Mahmood Today

As Extinction Rebellion engages in two weeks of climate protests, we take a closer look at what the group hopes to achieve as a result of the latest action it is undertaking and what its message is to its critics.

Extinction Rebellion also known as (XR) has made it clear that it believes in using non-violent civil disobedience to compel governments to tackle what it says is a climate and ecological emergency. The recent report published by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s leading authority on climate science, made clear the scale of the crisis facing the planet.

Scientists declared that human activity was responsible for changing the earth’s climate in unprecedented ways, warning that within the next two decades, temperatures could rise by more than 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, meaning there could be more extreme weather events. Countries like Germany and Belgium have suffered the deadliest flooding in decades, with at least 190 people losing their lives last month. The 20 hottest years since records began in 1850 have occurred in the last 22 years.

Groups like XR are demanding the government act faster to tackle the threat posed by climate change. The UK will be hosting the UN Climate Change Conference (Cop26) in Glasgow in November, where heads of state, climate experts and campaigners try to coordinate action to tackle climate change.

“We’re out on the streets ahead of the COP26 climate talks. We have our three demands, tell the truth, act now and put in place a national citizens assembly on the climate crisis,” says Nuala Gathercole-lam, a spokesperson from the group.

“But we’ve also got an immediate demand this time, for government to stop all new investment in the fossil fuels immediately.”

Nuala says that this isn’t a particularly radical or new demand, with the International Energy Agency also saying that countries must halt all investment in new fossil fuel supply projects.

“We’re saying to the government, that if you’re at all serious and if you want to show the public and the world that you’re serious about the climate crisis ahead of COP26, this is the least that you could do, it’s the smallest first step you could take.”

More than 200 arrests have taken place since XR began its protests, known as the Impossible Rebellion which kicked off on Monday. The group says it will also be focusing on the capital’s institutions which it says are helping to fuel climate change.

XR says it does not plan to disrupt public transport. “This time we’ve been in Covent Garden, in Cambridge Circus, we’ve actually been in relatively undestructive locations and the idea has been to hold crisis talks.

“The government hasn’t consulted with ordinary working people about how we address this crisis and so we’ve said come to the table let’s talk about this, the public deserve to be part of the conversation.”

The government has pledged to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. In recent week,s there’s been an attempt among the right to portray commitments to net-zero as too expensive and unrealistic. It’s a charge that Nuala rejects.

“It’s ridiculous. The idea that we would determine whether or not we act on the climate crisis on the basis of what the poorest in society can afford out of their own pocket is completely ridiculous.

“There is the money to pay for this. What we need is for the government to make a plan to pay for it, the idea you would leave it up to whether people can afford to insulate their own houses , change their boilers, is completely insane. The government has just scrapped the green homes grant which was a big investment in insulating homes and helping people out with fuel poverty at the same time and transitioning away from such heavy fossil fuel use, so they’re moving in the opposite direction.”

There has been some criticism of Extinction Rebellion in the past, for lacking racial diversity and being too middle class. Does Nuala agree with such criticism?

“It’s absolutely the case that this crisis will play out along existing fault lines of class and race as we see food shortages and price hikes. In response to that, it’s people of colour and working-class communities that are going to feel that first and at XR we very much understand we have a job to do.

“We’re not diverse enough, the climate movement isn’t diverse enough, this rebellion actually started on the anniversary of the Haitian revolution and was opened by the XR internationalist solidarity network. We’re going into rebellion in solidarity with groups that have been in rebellion for centuries around the world and just here in the UK now we’re waking up to the fact that the system we’re in is coming for us as well. We know we need to be in solidarity with people who have had to fight for life for hundreds of years.”

Over the coming days XR is planning further protests, occupations and acts of rebellion in a bid to get the government and others to recognise the scale of the climate emergency facing the planet. There will be a Carnival for Climate Justice.

“We know that mass participation and civil disobedience works”, says Nuala.

“It worked in the civil rights movement in the US, it worked when the suffragettes did it to get votes for women in the UK, it worked in 2019 after our rebellion, Parliament declared a climate emergency. So we know this works and there are lots of different ways to get involved, you don’t have to be ready to be arrested or be doing this full-time, just come down and speak to us.”




Basit Mahmood is co-editor of Left Foot Forward

El Salvador: Four Martyrs of the Civil War Are Beatified

Citizen holds an image of the Jesuit priest Rutilio Grande. | Photo: Twitter/ @Telemundo44

Published 27 August 2021

Rutilio Grande, Cosme Spessotto, Manuel Solórzano, and Nelson Rutilio Lemus were killed by death squads.

On Friday, the Vatican authorized the beatification of the Jesuit priest Rutilio Grande and Franciscan friar Cosme Spessotto, who were assassinated in El Salvador during the civil war.

Salvadorans Protest Against Bukele and Recall Student Massacre

"Pope Francis has granted the celebration of the beatification of the venerable servants of God," the Episcopal Conference of El Salvador said and announced that the beatification ceremony will be presided over by Cardinal Gregorio Rosa Chavez on Jan. 22, 2022.

Father Rutilio Grande was assassinated by death squads while traveling to El Paisnal, north of San Salvador, on March 12, 1977. During this operation of State terrorism, Manuel Solorzano, 72, and Nelson Rutilio Lemus, 15, also died.

After the canonization of Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero, the Salvadoran church began the canonical process of the Great Jesuit and the Vatican recognized his martyrdom on February 22, 2020.



The tweet reads, "As ordered by the Episcopal Conference, the bells of El Paisnal were replicated at 12:00 in honor of the beatification of Father Rutilio Grande, Nelson Rutilio Lemus, Manuel Solorzano and Father Cosme Spessotto."

Cosme Spessotto was shot dead in the parish of San Juan Nonualco on June 14, 1980. Although he was born in Mansue in Italy, the Franciscan friar chose to live in El Salvador where he served as priest for 30 years.

During his life, Spessotto denounced injustices and helped the sick, thus becoming an uncomfortable character for the powerful who managed to assassinate him while he was officiating mass in his parish. His martyrdom was approved "out of hatred of the faith" on May 27, 2020.


Currently, Archbishop Romero is the only Salvadoran who has been elevated to the altars of the Catholic Church in a ceremony held on Oct. 14, 2018.


El Mundo
by teleSUR/ JF
Cuban Hospitals Receive Italy's Humanitarian Aid

Humanitarian aid is delivered on Friday at a hospital in the municpality 
of 10 de Octubre in the capital Havana. | Photo: Twitter/ @siempreconcuba
Published 27 August 2021

According to the President of the Agency for Cultural and Economic Exchange with Cuba (AICEC) Michele Curto, in only three weeks the organization was able to raise almost €1.5 million to purchase medicines and the support will continue.

Cuban hospitals started receiving around 200 tons of humanitarian aid from Italy on Friday, as the Caribbean country battles the COVID--19 pandemics during its worst outbreak since last year.

'Cuba Will Never Be a Land of Hatred', Diaz-Canel Says

The shipment included contributions from organizations and individuals from Spain, Italy, and France and Cuban residents, who sent lung ventilators, generic drugs for comorbidity and associated symptoms, hospital antibiotics, health supplies, and rapid antigen tests for diagnosing Covid-19.

 

"This morning, the first official delivery of a part of the donation was made at the Hospital Clínico Quirurgico of the municipality ten de Octubre, it contains gloves, masks, artificial respirators."

According to the President of the Agency for Cultural and Economic Exchange with Cuba (AICEC), Michele Curto, in only three weeks, the organization raised almost €1.5 million to purchase medicines and the support will continue.

As Cuba tackles the COVID-19 pandemic, several governments, organizations, and individuals from all over the world have mobilized to help the Caribbean nation, also hit by the U.S. blockade, to get medicines, technology, food supplies, and syringes to carry out its immunization campaign with its vaccines.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Chicago: DoorDash, Grubhub mislead restaurants, customers


BY KATHLEEN FOODY ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUGUST 27, 2021 

CHICAGO

Chicago officials on Friday accused DoorDash and Grubhub of harming the city's restaurants and their customers by charging high fees and through other deceptive practices when delivery and takeout business became essential to the industry during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The city officials believe their lawsuits against the delivery companies are the most sweeping of their kind brought by a city.

“It is deeply concerning and unfortunate that these companies broke the law during these incredibly difficult times, using unfair and deceptive tactics to take advantage of restaurants and consumers who were struggling to stay afloat," Mayor Lori Lightfoot said in a statement.

Representatives for the two companies called the lawsuits filed Friday in Cook County Circuit Court “baseless.”

Delivery companies have been the target of legal authorities in other cities and states before, but those efforts have targeted specific policies compared to Chicago's attack on numerous elements of the companies' operations.

San Francisco's district attorney has accused delivery companies of violating California law by classifying drivers as contractors. And Washington, D.C., reached a settlement with DoorDash in 2019 after alleging the company misled customers about how much drivers received in tips.

The Massachusetts attorney general’s office in July filed a lawsuit accusing Grubhub of charging restaurants illegally high fees during the pandemic. The state had capped fees for much of 2020.

According to the Chicago lawsuits, both companies advertise delivery services for restaurants without their agreement, hurting the businesses’ reputation when customers are unhappy about the cost or service.

City investigators also found that both companies charge higher prices for items than restaurants set on their own menus and charge more in total fees than initially disclosed to customers.

Taylor Bennett, a spokesman for DoorDash, called the suit “baseless.”

“DoorDash has stood with the City of Chicago throughout the pandemic, waiving fees for restaurants, providing $500,000 in direct grants, creating strong earning opportunities, and delivering food and other necessities to communities in need," Bennett said. "This lawsuit will cost taxpayers and deliver nothing.”

Grant Klinzman, a spokesman for Grubhub, said the company was disappointed by Lightfoot's decision to file the suit.

“Every single allegation is categorically wrong and we will aggressively defend our business practices,” he said. "We look forward to responding in court and are confident we will prevail.”

The lawsuits don't specify a total financial penalty they're seeking. The city is asking for a fine for each violation of the city's code and an order that would stop them from violating it.
Music industry weighs vaccine mandates, but politics collide
By KRISTIN M. HALL

1 of 11
This combination of photos shows signage for Stubb's BBQ and Amphitheater appears outside the establishment in Austin, Texas, on Aug. 21, 2021, left, and a sign requesting customers wear masks is displayed near the entrance. The music industry is moving toward vaccine mandates for concertgoers, but local and state laws have created murky legal waters for COVID-19 rules in venues. Texas state law says businesses can’t require customers to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccination. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The coronavirus vaccine gave the live entertainment industry hope for a rebound in 2021. Now, as COVID-19 cases surge and hospital beds fill up, it feels like March 2020 all over again.

Tom DeGeorge runs the popular Crowbar club in Tampa, Florida, that once hosted about 300 concerts a year, mostly touring bands. He managed to stay afloat and reopen last fall, hosting about six shows a month. But with cases surging in Florida, show cancellations have racked up and attendance has plummeted.

“The amount of people that are coming out right now is I’d say about 25, 30 percent of what it should be,” said DeGeorge. “I have a feeling that I’m probably going to lose the majority of my fall and winter calendar, but I’m basically already mentally prepared for the worst-case scenario.”

In hope of salvaging and surviving another devastating year, the industry is moving rapidly toward vaccine mandates for concertgoers, event staff and crew. In some instances, fans are being asked to show proof of vaccination or a negative test — such as for Harry Styles’ upcoming fall U.S. tour.

But the politicization of the pandemic and vaccines have dealt venues like DeGeorge’s another heavy blow. Across the country, there are a myriad of state and local rules that regulate when and where mask mandates and vaccine requirements can be enforced.


A pedestrian walks by Crowbar, a live music venue in Ybor City's historical district, in Tampa, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

In Florida and Texas, for instance, governors have issued bans on vaccine passports, which in some cases apply to private businesses. Some governors’ executive orders are being challenged — either in court or by businesses experimenting with how far they can go.

“What we’ve seen really in Austin is people with a lack of clear direction trying to explore and understand what can be done,” said Cody Cowan, executive director of Red River Cultural District in Austin, Texas, home to 15 music venues. “I think certainly the sentiment is, by both the venues and the musicians, that everyone wants public health in place, even if the state has decided to not put orders in place around public health.”

He said Austin venues are trying out various vaccine and testing requirements — but that comes with significant risk. Texas state law says businesses can’t require customers to show proof of a COVID-19 vaccination. The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, which regulates liquor licenses, has notified some restaurants and music venues that their requirements were not in compliance. For most music venues, alcohol sales are a majority of their revenue, and Cowan says that indicates the state is willing to penalize venues for violations of COVID-19 rules.

“You may have your license suspended, revoked or taken away permanently if you choose to attempt to enforce public health,” Cowan said. “That’s the sort of fear we’re living under constantly.”

A sign showing a drawing of Willie Nelson requesting masks be worn is posted near the entrance to 3TEN in Austin, Texas
. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

Adjoining venues ACL Live and 3TEN will comply with requests by performers to require fans to show negative test results and masks are required, according to Colleen Fischer, general manager and director of booking for both venues. If a fan won’t provide test results, they will also accept proof of vaccination.

Florida’s DeGeorge said he’s been spit on by a patron and others have tried to physically fight him over requirements to wear masks. He feels that anger stems from political messaging about masks and other virus protection policies.

But he worries more that as vaccine mandates become industry standards in other places, touring artists won’t bother coming to Florida.

“Touring bands, the best of the best, are not going to come down here if they don’t feel like they can be safe and we can’t offer to them the same assurances that they have in other states,” DeGeorge said.

The push for vaccine requirements for concerts is not only coming from the biggest promoters like Live Nation and AEG Live, but also artists themselves. The Foo Fighters, Phish, Maroon 5, The Killers and Dead & Company have all publicly said they’ll require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test for fans.

Singer Jennifer Nettles, who performs solo and as a part of the country duo Sugarland, said she looks at it from a business perspective when she considers the health of the people who work for her as well as the fans.

“We can’t force anyone to get a vaccine,” Nettles said. “But we do have the right to say, ‘OK, if you don’t have it, then you can’t come because that is dangerous.’ It’s not a character judgment that’s being made. It’s a matter of fact.”

And Nettles is equally frustrated that political division and misinformation is dominating the conversation among fans and sometimes artists.


Jennifer Nettles. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

“Especially if you look at country music, wowza, when you consider that demographic and the political lines that are drawn, I feel like it makes it extremely difficult,” Nettles said.

Other artists have staunchly come out against vaccine mandates for concerts, including Eric Clapton and Van Morrison. Country singer Travis Tritt said in a statement that vaccine policies at concerts are discriminatory.

“I have always been a huge defender of basic human rights and liberty for all,” Tritt said. “No government, employer, or private entity should ever be allowed to infringe on those rights and liberties. I’m also very much against discrimination of any kind. All forms of discrimination need to be called out and condemned in the strongest terms possible.”

The differences in these policies as well as changing conditions in state COVID rates has made booking national tours in 2021 fraught with difficulty and last-minute changes, said Paul Lohr, president of New Frontier Touring, a booking agency that represents about 80 artists, including The Avett Brothers and Rodney Crowell.

“Because of the variances state by state, it can all of a sudden leave a tour looking like Swiss cheese,” said Lohr. “If you start taking out — and every tour is different — a quarter, a third or half of your dates, that’s the margin of profit on a tour right there. And it just torpedoes the whole thing.”

At Nashville’s famed rock club Exit/In, owner Chris Cobb said that they had to turn away about 10% of attendees the first time they instituted a vaccine requirement for a show. He says some of those turned away weren’t aware of the just-enacted policy.

“We have to carry the burden of figuring out how to implement it,” said Cobb. “And it’s extremely helpful when artists are not only supportive but vocally supportive.”


A sign showing blues singer Lavelle White requesting masks be worn is displayed near the entrance to Antone's Nightclub in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

While the top-tier bands can afford to cancel based on COVID safety concerns, many small and local musicians don’t have many financial options. Roots musician Hilary Perkins saw that the pandemic was creating inequality and systematic problems for musicians who need regular gigs.

“Women are particularly concerned, and people of color are particularly concerned,” said Perkins, who performs as Nell Robinson.

When she couldn’t find any industry wide standards on what musicians and artists could ask for in their contracts, her organization, Whippoorwill Arts, developed a set of health and safety guidelines for musicians to ask venues and promoters to adopt.

“You have a right to ask for what you need, you have a right to say what you require, what you prefer and what you can negotiate,” said Perkins.

Nettles has been sharing on social media the data on unvaccinated people filling up the small local hospital in her hometown in Georgia.

“This isn’t an artist making a power play,” Nettles said. “People are dying. There is a way to keep people from dying.”

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Follow Kristin M. Hall at https://twitter.com/kmhall

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This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Whippoorwill Arts.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR BILLIONAIRES
Lanai rental housing project gets green light

WAILUKU, Hawaii (AP) — A county affordable housing committee voted to recommend approval of a rental project on Lanai, where no new affordable homes have been built in 30 years.

The Hokuao 201H Housing Project, which was proposed by billionaire Larry Ellison’s company Pulama Lanai, includes the development of 150 two-bedroom rental homes on former pineapple fields. About half of the units will be market-rate priced. The project will be developed under the state’s fast-track approval process for affordable housing.

The Maui County Council’s Affordable Housing Committee voted 8-0 to recommend giving the project the green light after multiple meetings packed with public testimony and hours of discussion over concern about the project’s number of market-rate homes, The Maui News reported Friday.

Council Chairwoman Alice Lee said the project is “desperately needed.”

Pulama Lanai had sought an exemption for sidewalks in the future subdivision, saying including them would cost about $2 million. Sharon Thom, senior vice president of development and construction for Pulama Lanai, said the sidewalks would change the “look and feel” of Lanai City.

Committee Chairman Gabe Johnson argued to include sidewalks, saying the county needs to advocate for pedestrian safety and accessibility.

“I really think sidewalks and walkable towns are a very important part of our community,” he said.

Preliminary plans include sidewalks.

The project also includes a 1-acre park, a 1,500-square-foot community center and 60 parking stalls.

Ten of the units must be reserved for teachers in grades pre-K through 12 residing on Lanai, according to a condition initiated by Council Member Yuki Lei Sugimura.

The Hokuao project will be financed by Lanai Island Holdings, another entity owned by Ellison, who acquired 98% of Lanai in 2012.