Friday, June 23, 2023


BBQ restaurant explosion in China kills 31, prompts national safety campaigns




Bryan Ke
Fri, June 23, 2023

Chinese President Xi Jinping has ordered safety campaigns across China to rectify any risks and “hidden dangers” after a recent barbecue restaurant gas explosion that left at least 31 people dead and seven injured.

Key details: The incident reportedly occurred in Yinchuan, a city in China’s Ningxia region, at around 8:40 p.m. on Wednesday — just a day before China celebrated its three-day Dragon Boat Festival. The fire resulting from the explosion lasted until 4 a.m. on Thursday, according to reports.

Of the seven injured from the blast, one was reported to be in critical condition, while the remaining victims were treated for minor injuries, burns and cuts from glass shards.

What happened: Witnesses on the scene told authorities that two staffers smelled a gas leak inside the restaurant caused by a broken petroleum gas tank valve, the Yinchuan government said in a statement on Thursday. The explosion occurred while another staffer was attempting to replace the valve.

Addressing the nation: Xi recently addressed the incident, demanding officials give victims urgent medical care, determine the cause of the explosion and roll out safety campaigns across China to address “all types of risks and hidden dangers” and promote workplace safety.

Meanwhile, the deputy party chief of Yinchuan apologized to those affected by the incident during a news conference on Thursday.

The aftermath: Nine people, including the restaurant’s manager, employees and shareholders, have reportedly been detained following the incident and have had their assets frozen.

Some Chinese social media users criticized the safety of barbecue restaurants, with one Weibo user commenting, “All barbecue shops in the country should be shut down and rectified." Another user wrote, “Profits should not be earned with the blood of the people."
GOOD NEWS
Belarus Weekly: No nukes in Belarus, yet



Maria Yeryoma
Fri, June 23, 2023 

Russian President Vladimir Putin claims that the first of Russia's tactical nukes destined for Belarus have arrived. Ukraine denies Putin's claim, saying Russia has yet to deliver a "single nuclear warhead" to Belarus.

PACE urges "practical support" for exiled Belarusians, calling on its members to make legal entry, stay, and travel in the EU easier for Belarusian exiles and their families.

On a similar note, the International Labour Organization urges its members to reconsider their relations with Lukashenko's regime amid human rights concerns.

Following the introductions of trials in absentia, Belarus is seeking to persecute the dead.

A draft bill that would allow the prosecution of deceased people for crimes against humanity is registered in parliament.

A Belarusian singer could face up to four years in prison for having rejected a personal scholarship awarded by Belarus dictator Alexander Lukashenko in 2020.

Ukraine denies Putin's claims that tactical nukes have arrived in Belarus

Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed on June 16 that the first of Russia's tactical nuclear weapons destined for Belarus have arrived. However, Ukraine has denied the claim.

"The first nuclear charges were delivered to Belarus," Putin said at the International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, Russia. "But only the first ones, the first part. By the end of the summer, by the end of the year, we will complete this work."

Putin continued: "It is precisely an element of deterrence so that all those who are thinking about inflicting a strategic defeat on us are not oblivious to this circumstance."

On June 9, Putin told Lukashenko that the non-strategic nuclear weapons, promised in a bilateral agreement on May 25, would arrive at the beginning of July once the necessary storage facilities are ready. Lukashenko claimed on June 13 that Russian tactical nuclear weapons will arrive within "days."

However, Ukraine's Military Intelligence Head Kyrylo Budanov said on June 20 that Russia hasn't yet delivered a "single nuclear warhead" to Belarus. According to Budanov, the preparation for a "possible transfer" is ongoing, and storage facilities in Belarus are being equipped.

Russia won't tell US number of nuclear warheads in Belarus


 Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov


Reuters
Fri, June 23, 2023 

(Reuters) - Russia will not inform the U.S. about the number of nuclear warheads it is stationing in Belarus or tests of its nuclear-capable Poseidon torpedo, the Interfax news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying on Friday.

Moscow and Minsk say Belarus has already begun receiving the Russian tactical, or short-range, nuclear weapons that President Vladimir Putin had publicly promised to station there, as tensions with the West soar over Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

"I deeply doubt that this topic will become the subject of any public discussion or disclosure on our part," Ryabkov was quoted as telling reporters in the southern town of Sochi.

"For decades the United States has kept its tactical nuclear weapons on the territory of a number of European countries, and it never gives exact numbers."

Short-range weapons do not fall under the terms of the New Start treaty, the last remaining U.S.-Russia arms control treaty, which caps the countries' strategic nuclear arsenals. Putin has suspended Russia's participation in it, although both sides have pledged to continue to respect its limits.

There is also no treaty or verification mechanism covering nuclear-capable and nuclear-powered autonomous torpedoes such as Poseidon, and Ryabkov said Russia therefore had no plans to inform the United States about tests of the system.

U.S. and Russian officials have both described Poseidon as a new category of retaliatory weapon, something of a cross between a torpedo and an underwater drone, capable of triggering radioactive ocean swells to attack naval battle groups or render coastal cities uninhabitable.

The state news agency TASS reported in January, citing an unidentified defence source, that Russia had produced the first set of Poseidon torpedoes for deployment on the Belgorod nuclear-powered submarine.

In April, TASS said Russia planned to form a division of special-purpose submarines that will carry Poseidon torpedoes as part of its Pacific Fleet by the end of 2024 or first half of 2025.

(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Kevin Liffey and Alison Williams)


NHC now tracking Tropical Storms Cindy and Bret. See spaghetti models, expected impacts

It's the first time since 1968 there have been two named storms in the Atlantic in June at the same time


Cheryl McCloud, Palm Beach Post
Fri, June 23, 2023 

Tropical Storm Cindy formed overnight and is expected to continue strengthening, according to the latest advisory from the National Hurricane Center.

Cindy joined Tropical Storm Bret in the Atlantic basin. Bret moved across the Lesser Antilles shortly before midnight as a strong tropical storm. At 8 a.m., Bret's center was over the southeastern Caribbean Sea.

Track all active storms

Excessive rainfall forecast


It's the first time since 1968 there have been two named storms in the Atlantic in June at the same time, according to Philip Klotzbach, Colorado State University meteorologist who specializes in Atlantic basin seasonal hurricane forecasts.

Bret is expected to run into wind shear in the Caribbean Sea, which will cause it to weaken and become a tropical depression in the coming days, according to AccuWeather.

'Unprecedented' hurricane season: Tropical Storm Bret and (possible) Cindy may mean active hurricane season ahead

Tropical Storm Cindy is not likely to impact land as it remains well north of the Greater Antilles, said AccuWeather forecasters.

Here's the latest update from the NHC as of 8 a.m. June 23:
Tropical Storm Bret path


Location: 160 miles west of St. Vincent; 1,406 miles southeast of West Palm Beach


Maximum sustained winds: 60 mph


Movement: west at 18 mph


Pressure: 1001 mb

Track Tropical Storm Bret

More on Tropical Storm Bret: Tropical Storm Bret bringing rain, gusty winds as it moves into Caribbean

Tropical Storm Bret: See spaghetti models, expected impact as Bret approaches Caribbean

Tropical Storm Cindy path



Location: 990 miles east of the Lesser Antilles; 2,374 miles southeast of West Palm Beach


Maximum sustained winds: 45 mph


Movement: west-northwest at 15 mph


Pressure: 1005 mb

Track Tropical Storm Cindy

More on Tropical Storm Cindy: Tropical Storm Cindy forms in Atlantic. Get latest spaghetti models, expected impacts

What's out there and where are they?


Radar images of tropics, including Tropical storms Bret and Cindy 5 a.m. June 23, 2023.

Tropical Storm Bret: At 8 a.m., the center of Tropical Storm Bret was located 160 miles west of St. Vincent. Exact location: near latitude 13.4 North, longitude 63.6 West.


Tropical Storm Cindy: At 5 a.m., the center of Tropical Storm Cindy was located 990 miles east of the Lesser Antilles. Exact location: near latitude 12.1 North, longitude 46.9 West.

What's an invest? We explain and break down the weather forecaster's term

Tropical wave 1: An Atlantic Ocean tropical wave is located south of Cabo Verde. It's moving west at 11 mph. Exact location: 23W/24W, from 14N south.


Tropical wave 2: A tropical wave in the Caribbean is located between Cuba and Jamaica. It's moving west at 17 mph. Exact location: along 75W/76W, from 19N south.
How likely are they to strengthen?

Tropical Storm Bret: Maximum sustained winds are near 60 mph, with higher gusts. Weakening is forecast during the next couple of days, and Bret is expected to dissipate over the central Caribbean Sea by Saturday night or Sunday.

June hurricanes? A hurricane making Florida landfall in June? Here is how often that's happened

Tropical Storm Cindy: Maximum sustained winds are near 45 mph, with higher gusts. Some strengthening is forecast during the next couple of days. Tropical-storm-force winds extend outward up to 60 miles from the center.
Who is likely to be impacted?

Tropical Storm Bret: Tropical storm conditions are expected to diminish within the tropical storm warning areas later this morning.


Tropical Storm Cindy: Tropical Storm Cindy is not likely to impact land. The NHC forecast track keeps Cindy to the northeast of the northern Leeward Islands over open waters.

Forecasters urge all residents to continue monitoring the tropics and to always be prepared.
Weather watches and warnings issued for your area

If you can't see any local weather warnings here, you'll need to open this story in a web browser.
When is the Atlantic hurricane season?

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30.

When is the peak of hurricane season?


Hurricane season's ultimate peak is Sept. 10 but the season goes through Nov. 30. Credit: NOAA

The peak of the season is Sept. 10, with the most activity happening between mid-August and mid-October, according to the Hurricane Center.
Tropical forecast over the next seven days

Excessive rainfall forecast

What's out there?



Systems currently being monitored by the National Hurricane Center.
What's next?

We will continue to update our tropical weather coverage daily. Download your local site's app to ensure you're always connected to the news. And look at our special subscription offers here.

This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: NHC tracking tropical storms Bret, Cindy. Forecast paths, impacts
BIOFUEL
Singapore Buys Record Amount of Used Cooking Oil From China

Alfred Cang
Thu, June 22, 2023 




(Bloomberg) -- Chinese exports of used cooking oil to Singapore jumped to a record last month, likely due to more demand from Neste Oyj’s renewable fuel refinery.

Shipments of UCO rose to 48,832 tons in May, 18% more than April and almost double the amount from a year earlier, according to data from Chinese customs.

The surge was mainly attributable to the Finnish company’s plant, which completed an expansion this year, said biofuel traders who asked not to be identified as they aren’t authorized to speak publicly. The facility is the world’s biggest renewable diesel refinery and largest producer of sustainable aviation fuel, according to Neste.

Demand for green diesel and jet fuel is increasing as governments and industries seek to de-carbonize. China exported a record 1.58 million tons of UCO in 2022, while shipments from Malaysia and Indonesia also climbed.

The jump in cargoes to Singapore come as Chinese biodiesel producers pledge to improve compliance and export standards after European rivals called for action to stem “potentially fraudulent” shipments. China’s sales of methyl ester, a feedstock for biodiesel that’s made from UCO, to Europe have jumped sharply, but there are claims the fuels may be being mixed and mislabeled.

China’s total exports of used cooking oil rose 9% in May from a month earlier to 151,428 tons, the customs data show. Shipments to the US climbed 46%. Sales to Singapore and the US accounted for over 70% of Chinese exports, while most of the rest went to Europe.

Most of the Chinese UCO exports to Singapore and the US would be used to produce hydrogenated vegetable oil, which is recognized as a second-generation biodiesel.




How protest movements use feminine images and social media to fight sexist ideologies of authoritarian regimes – podcast


Daniel Merino, Associate Science Editor & Co-Host of The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation 
 Nehal El-Hadi, Science + Technology Editor & Co-Host of The Conversation Weekly Podcast,
 The Conversation
Thu, June 22, 2023


Pro-resistance social media pages share photos of graffiti like this. Provided by Michaela Grancayova and Aliaksei Kazharski.

Modern protest movements, like the ongoing protests in Iran, often center around women who have been killed or harmed by agents of authoritarian governments. While it can be easy to chalk up this consistent, state-sponsored abuse of women to simple sexism, researchers say there is a deeper story at play.

Authoritarian regimes often lack a coherent underlying ideology. So to fill that gap, many leaders turn to discrimination, using gender, race or sexuality to vilify opponents and generate support. As a result, pushback against gender as a tool of oppression has taken on a visual and artistic component as protests have entered the social media age.

In this episode of The Conversation Weekly, we speak to three experts who have studied protests and the role of gendered ideology, images and social media as tools of resistance as well as of oppression.

In August 2020, Belarus erupted into unrest after Alexander Lukashenko, the longtime authoritarian leader of the country, won the presidency for the fifth time in an election few considered free or fair.

“There had never been so many people out in the streets before – hundreds of thousands in a country of less than 10 million,” says Aliaksei Kazharski. Kasharski researches international politics and security at Charles University in Prague, in the Czech Republic. He himself is Belarusian.

Belarusian people rose up in massive protests after Alexander Lukashenko claimed to have been reelected to the presidency in 2020. Ulf Mauder/picture alliance via Getty Images

Michaela Grancayova is a researcher who focuses on language and politics, particularly in the Middle East, and was studying at the same university as Kazharski in 2020. As she was watching the protests in Belarus unfold, Grancayova noticed some striking similarities to the Arab Spring, her own area of research. “The regimes in both countries were relying on the traditional gender images, images of how the ideal woman should behave and should look like,” she explains. “Or how an ideal man should look like, should behave – in this case, hegemonic masculinity.”

“These ideas of hegemonic masculinity and gender basically substitute for an official ideology, which is missing from those regimes,” Kazharski explains. “And in a society that’s more or less traditionalist, this image of a strong leader, a macho, real man actually appeals to many people.”

Not only were there similarities between Lukashenko and Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian leader who was overthrown during the Arab Spring, Grancayova noticed that the protest movements of both countries fought against these gendered ideologies in much the same fashion, too.

A woman known as the ‘girl in the blue bra’ was beaten during protests against the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces which ruled Egypt after the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak. After a video showing her beating, during which her abaya came off and revealed her blue bra, event went viral, protesters used the image of the blue bra, as seen in this social media post, as a symbol. 
Provided by Michaela Grancayova and Aliaksei Kazharski

One prominent theme was an idea the researchers call the iconization of victimhood. “There were people who were tortured and humiliated by the regimes, and they were meant to be turned into the victims,” explains Grancayova. “But in reality the people who took part in the protest turned them into heroes and visual icons.”

In both Egypt and Belarus, protesters turned to social media to distribute images of the bloodied martyrs or share images of graffiti or other symbolic visuals.

As a response, both the Egyptian and Belarusian governments tried to squash the social media branches of the protests. As Kazharski explains, Lukashenko “did try to shut down the internet in 2020 for a couple of days but then realized it was way too costly.” Instead, agents of the regime went door to door, searching laptops and phones and torturing those who wouldn’t give up their passwords.
Women’s movements in Iran

These same themes of gender and weaponized social media are playing out today, too, in the ongoing protests in Iran.

Since Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman, was killed by the Morality Police in fall of 2022, Iran has been enveloped in protests. The movement, called “Woman, Life, Freedom” is in many ways focused, as the name suggests, on restoring the freedoms of women, who have severely limited by the Iranian government.


During the initial uprisings after the death of Mahsa Amini in Iran, many women began going in public without the mandated headscarves.
Darafsh/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Parichehr Kazemi is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Oregon, in the US, where she studies women’s resistance movements across the Middle East with a focus on the use of images on social media.

Previous women’s movements in Iran, like My Stealthy Freedom, where women posted photos of themselves without hijabs in public places, were often centered around images. Kazemi explains that after 2009, “images were birthed because of a very repressive environment under the Islamic Republic that didn’t really give women other opportunities to express dissent.”

When protests erupted in late 2022 after the Morality Police killed Amini, videos of massive crowds and clashes between police and protesters flooded social media. As Kazemi followed the protests on social media, she began seeing more representational imagery emerge. “Over time, it’s not just images of tons of women running from security forces in the streets,” she says. “You see women cutting their hair. You see girls in the streets without their veils. You see them burning their hijabs. You see them dancing in circles. This isn’t something that we’ve seen under the Islamic Republic.”

Under a regime where public protesting can get you killed, Kazemi says, “Images have become a way for people to continue showing the world what’s happening in Iran.”

As in Belarus and Egypt, the Iranian government has been cracking down on social media as a tool of resistance. Among the debates over whether social media is generally a force for resistance or a tool of state control, Kazemi had a bigger-picture perspective. “Social media is embedded within our lifestyles, and we’ll figure out a way to use it as an extension of ourselves. But regimes will also use it as an extension of themselves.”

This episode was written and produced by Katie Flood. Mend Mariwany is the executive producer of The Conversation Weekly. Eloise Stevens does our sound design, and our theme music is by Neeta Sarl.

You can find us on Twitter @TC_Audio, on Instagram at theconversationdotcom or via email. You can also subscribe to The Conversation’s free daily email here.

Listen to The Conversation Weekly via any of the apps listed above, download it directly via our RSS feed or find out how else to listen here.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. If you found it interesting, you could subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

It was written by: Daniel Merino, The Conversation and Nehal El-Hadi, The Conversation.


Read more:


Iranian protesters remain defiant in the face of violent and brutal regime oppression


Hijab rules have nothing to do with Islamic tenets and everything to do with repressing women

WORKERS CAPITAL
2.5M Genworth policyholders and 769K retired California workers and beneficiaries affected by hack



California Public Employees Retirement System's building in Sacramento, Calif. California officials say the personal information of about 769,000 people has been exposed in a third-party data breach linked to the state's retirement system.
 (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File) 

SOPHIE AUSTIN and FRANK BAJAK

Thu, June 22, 2023 

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — The country's largest public pension fund says the personal information of about 769,000 retired California employees and other beneficiaries — including Social Security numbers — was among data stolen by Russian cybercriminals in the breach of a popular file-transfer application.

It blamed the breach on a third-party vendor that verifies deaths. The same vendor, PBI Research Services/Berwyn Group, also lost the personal data of at least 2.5 million Genworth Financial policyholders, including Social Security numbers, to the same criminal gang, according to the Fortune 500 insurer.

The California Public Employees Retirement system said they were offering affected members two years of free credit monitoring. Genworth said in a statement posted online it would offer credit monitoring and ID theft protection.

The breach of the MOVEit file-transfer program, discovered last month, is estimated by cybersecurity experts to have compromised hundreds of organizations globally. Confirmed victims include the U.S. Department of Energy and several other federal agencies, more than 9 million motorists in Oregon and Louisiana, Johns Hopkins University, Ernst & Young, the BBC and British Airways.

The criminal gang behind the hack, known as Cl0p, is extorting victims, threatening to dump their data online if they don't pay up.

Genworth disclosed the hack Thursday of the MOVEit instance managed by PBI Research in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Minnesota-based PBI Research did not immediately return a phone message seeking details on which of its other customers may have been affected. The company's website lists the Nevada, New Jersey and Tennessee public pension funds as among customers of its mortality verification service.

“This external breach of information is inexcusable,” CalPERS CEO Marcie Frost said in a news release. “Our members deserve better. As soon as we learned about what happened, we took fast action to protect our members’ financial interests, as well as steps to ensure long-term protections.”

CalPERS had more than $442 billion in assets as of Dec. 31 and about 1.5 million members.

Security experts say such so-called supply-chain hacks expose an uncomfortable truth about the software organizations use: Network security is only as strong as the weakest digital link in the ecosystem.

The stolen data included names, birth dates and Social Security numbers — and might also include names of spouses or domestic partners and children, officials said. CalPERS planned to send letters Thursday to those affected by the breach.

CalPERS said PBI notified it of the breach on June 6, the same day cybersecurity firms began to issue reports on the breach of MOVEit, whose maker, Ipswitch, is owned by Progress Software.

PBI reported the breach to federal law enforcement, and CalPERS placed “additional safeguards” to protect the information of retirees who use the member benefits website and visit a regional office, officials said. The agency did not elaborate on those safeguards, citing security reasons.

___

This story has been corrected to reflect that Genworth disclosed the hack on Thursday, not June 16.

___

Bajak reported from Boston.

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Sophie Austin is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Austin on Twitter: @sophieadanna
Animal sedative adds new suffering to opioid drug crisis, but is it driving up deaths?













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Sharday Miller, walks away holding extra bandages she received after having her skin treated at the Kensington Hospital wound care outreach van parked in the Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia, Tuesday, May 23, 2023. Xylazine, a powerful animal sedative that's moving through the illicit drug supply is complicating the U.S. response to the opioid crisis, causing gruesome skin wounds and scrambling longstanding methods for treating addiction and reversing overdoses. 
(AP Photo/Matt Rourke)


MATTHEW PERRONE
Thu, June 22, 2023

WASHINGTON (AP) — A powerful animal sedative in the illicit drug supply is complicating the U.S. response to the opioid crisis, scrambling longstanding methods for reversing overdoses and treating addiction.

Xylazine can cause severe skin wounds, but whether it is leading to more deaths — as suggested by officials in Washington — is not yet clear, according to health and law enforcement professionals on the front lines of efforts in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania. In fact, early data suggests the drug may inadvertently be diluting the effects of fentanyl, the synthetic opioid behind most overdose deaths.

There is broad agreement, however, that much more information is needed to understand xylazine’s impact, to craft ways of disrupting illegal supplies and to develop medicines to reverse its effects.

“We don’t know whether xylazine is increasing the risk of overdose or reducing the risk of overdose,” said Dr. Lewis Nelson of Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, who advises federal regulators on drug safety. “All we know is that there are a lot of people taking xylazine and a lot of them are dying, but it doesn’t mean that xylazine is doing it.”

In almost all cases, xylazine — a drug for sedating horses and other animals — is added to fentanyl, the potent opioid that can be lethal even in small amounts. Some users say the combination, dubbed “tranq” or “tranq dope,” gives a longer-lasting high, more like heroin, which has largely been replaced by fentanyl in U.S. drug markets.

Like other cutting agents, xylazine benefits dealers: It’s often cheaper and easier to get than fentanyl. Chinese websites sell a kilogram for $6 to $20, no prescription required. Chemicals used to produce fentanyl can cost $75 or more per kilogram.

“Nobody asked for xylazine in the drug supply,” said Sarah Laurel, founder of Savage Sisters, a Philadelphia outreach group. “Before anybody knew it, the community was chemically dependent on it. So now, yes, people do seek it out.”

From a storefront in Philadelphia’s Kensington neighborhood, Laurel’s group provides first aid, showers, clothes and snacks to people using drugs.

Xylazine’s effects are easy to spot: users experience a lethargic, trance-like state and sometimes black out, exposing themselves to robbery or assault.

“It’s a delayed reaction, I could be walking down the street, it's 45 minutes later,” says Dominic Rodriguez, who is homeless and battling addiction. “Then I wake up, trying to piece together what happened.”

___

U.S. regulators approved xylazine in 1971 to sedate animals for surgery, dental procedures and handling purposes.

In humans, the drug can cause breathing and heart rates to drop. It’s also linked to severe skin ulcers and abscesses, which can lead to infections, rotting tissue and amputations. Experts disagree on the exact cause of the wounds, which are much deeper than those seen with other injectable drugs.

In Philadelphia, the drug’s introduction has created a host of new challenges.

Naloxone, a medication used revive people who have stopped breathing, doesn’t reverse the effects of xylazine. Philadelphia officials stress that naloxone should still be administered in all cases of suspected overdose, since xylazine is almost always found in combination with fentanyl.

With no approved reversal drug for xylazine, the Savage Sisters group has taken to carrying oxygen tanks to help revive people.

Meanwhile, a roaming van staffed by local health workers and city staffers aims to treat the skin wounds before they require hospitalization.

The wounds can make it harder to get people into addiction treatment programs, which typically don’t have the expertise to treat deep lesions that can expose tissue and bone.

“If you have someone out there who’s ready to come in for treatment, you really want to act on that quickly,” said Jill Bowen, who runs Philadelphia's behavioral health department.

The city recently launched a pilot program where hospitals treat patients for wounds and then directly transfer them into addiction treatment.

Xylazine can be addictive and patients who stop taking it report severe withdrawal symptoms, including anxiety and distress. There’s no approved treatment but physicians have been using the blood pressure-lowering drug clonidine, which is sometimes prescribed for anxiety.

In April, federal officials declared xylazine-laced fentanyl an “ emerging threat,” pointing to the problems in Philadelphia and other northeastern cities. Testing is far from uniform, but the drug has been detected in all 50 states and appears to be moving westward, similar to earlier waves of drug use.

Officials describe the drug's toll in stark terms and statistics: Fatal overdoses involving xylazine increased more than 1,200% percent between 2018 and 2021. But that largely reflects increased testing, since most medical examiners weren’t looking for the drug until recently.

“What it is doing is making the deadliest drug we’ve ever seen, fentanyl, even deadlier,” Anne Milgram, head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, told attendees at a recent conference.

But those who have studied the problem closely aren’t so sure.

___

One of the only studies looking at the issue reached a startling conclusion: People who overdosed on a combination of fentanyl and xylazine had “significantly less severe” outcomes than those taking fentanyl alone.

It was the opposite of what Dr. Jennifer Love and her colleagues expected, given xylazine’s dangerous effects on breathing. But their analysis of more than 320 overdose patients who received emergency care found lower rates of cardiac arrest and coma when xylazine was involved.

Love, an emergency medicine physician at New York's Mount Sinai hospital, suggested xylazine may be reducing the amount of fentanyl in each dose. She stressed that this is only one possible explanation, and more research is needed into xylazine's long-term effects. She also noted that the study didn’t track downstream effects of xylazine that could be deadly, including skin infections and amputations.

But hints that xylazine could be blunting fatal overdoses are showing up elsewhere.

In New Jersey, about one-third of the opioid supply contains xylazine, based on testing of drug paraphernalia. But less than 8% of fatal overdoses involved xylazine in 2021, the latest year with complete data.

Police Capt. Jason Piotrowski, who oversees the analysis of state drug data, said xylazine’s ability to extend users’ high may be a factor in why it's showing up less than expected in fatal overdoses.

“If xylazine is lasting longer and that’s why people are using it, then they’re not going to need as many doses,” he said. “So now their exposure to the more deadly fentanyl decreases.”

Like other experts, Piotrowski stressed that this is only one theory and xylazine's impact is far from clear.

Philadelphia officials see no upside to the drug.

“I don’t frankly see a plus side to xylazine,” said Dr. Cheryl Bettigole, the city’s health commissioner. “It seems to increase the risk of overdose and it causes these severe, debilitating wounds that interfere with peoples’ ability to get into treatment.”

Philadelphia's annual toll of fatal overdoses has climbed by 14% since xylazine became a significant part of the local drug market around 2018. In 2021, the city reported 1,276 overdose deaths. Bettigole expects final 2022 figures to show another increase.

More than 90% of lab-tested opioids in Philadelphia contain xylazine, according to city figures.

Even as Savage Sisters and other advocates deal with xylazine's toll, they are seeing newer drugs circulate, including nitazenes, a synthetic opioid that can be even more potent than fentanyl.

A shifting mix of opioids, stimulants and sedatives has come to define the U.S. drug epidemic, making it harder to manage a crisis that now claims more than 100,000 lives a year.

The Biden administration and Congress are considering changes to try to limit xylazine prescribing and distribution.

But past restrictions didn’t solve the problem: When regulators cracked down on painkillers like OxyContin, people largely shifted to heroin and then fentanyl.

“First we had pills, then we had heroin and then we had fentanyl,” Piotrowski said. “Now we have everything. And xylazine is just a part of that.”

___

Follow Matthew Perrone on Twitter: @AP_FDAwriter

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AP journalists Tassanee Vejpongsa and Matt Rourke in Philadelphia contributed to this story.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
UN says Somalia faces a `dire hunger emergency' but aid has been cut over lack of funding


 Nunay Mohamed, 25, who fled the drought-stricken Lower Shabelle area, holds her one-year old malnourished child at a makeshift camp for the displaced on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia on June 30, 2022. Two U.N. agencies are warning of rising food emergencies including starvation in Sudan due to the outbreak of war and in Haiti, Burkina Faso and Mali due to restricted movements of people and goods. The four countries join Afghanistan, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen at the highest alert levels.
 (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File) 

EDITH M. LEDERER
Thu, June 22, 2023

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Somalia’s “dire hunger emergency” is spiraling upward with one-third of the population expected to face crisis or worse levels of food needs, but the U.N. has been forced to drastically cut food assistance because of a lack of funding, the head of the World Food Program said Thursday.

Cindy McCain told the U.N. Security Council the latest food security data show that over 6.6 million Somalis desperately need assistance including 40,000 “fighting for survival in famine-like conditions.”

But she said WFP was forced to cut monthly food assistance, which had reached a record 4.7 million people in December, to just 3 million people at the end of April – “and without an immediate cash injection, we’ll have to cut our distribution lists again in July to just 1.8 million per month.”

McCain, who visited Somalia last month, said she saw “how conflict and climate change are conspiring to destroy the lives and livelihoods of millions of Somalis.” She said the country’s longest drought on record, which killed millions of livestock and decimated crops, recently gave way to disastrous flash floods in the south.

Urging donors to be as generous as they were and hauling Somalia “back from the abyss of famine in 2022,” McCain warned that the survival of millions of Somalis is at stake.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres visited Somalia in April “to ring the alarm” and appealed for “massive international support” for Somalia.

But the results of a high-level donors’ conference for three Horn of Africa countries – Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya – on May 24 were very disappointing. It raised less than $1 billion of the more than $5 billion organizers were hoping for to help over 30 million people.

Only in the past few years has Somalia begun to find its footing after three decades of chaos from warlords to the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab extremist group and the emergence of Islamic State-linked extremist groups. Last May, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, who served as Somalia’s president between 2012 and 2017, was returned to the top office by legislators after a protracted contest.

Somalia has faced numerous attacks from al-Shabab and recently the government embarked on what has been described as the most significant offensive against the extremist group in more than a decade.

Catriona Laing, the new U.N. special representative for Somalia, told the council that the government’s operations have degraded al-Shabab militarily and dislodged its fighters from a number of areas which is “a notable achievement."

But Laing said al-Shabab remains a significant threat,” pointing to “a recent resurgence in the scale, tempo and geographic distribution" of its attacks including a June 9 attack on the Pearl Beach Hotel in the capital Mogadishu that killed nine people.

The African Union has a force in Somalia providing support to government forces battling al-Shabab. Last year, the Security Council unanimously approved a new AU transition mission known as ATMIS, to support the Somalis until their forces take full responsibility for the country’s security at the end of 2024.

Laing said the drawdown of ATMIS and handover are proceeding, but her initial assessment “is that the complexity, the constraints, and pace of the transition process presents risks, (and) this will be challenging.”
They fled the war in Nigeria's northeast. Then bulldozers levelled their homes at a camp in Abuja






Nigeria Forced Evictions
Residents salvage objects from houses demolished by government officials in Otodo-Gbame waterfront in Lagos Nigeria. Saturday, March 18, 2017. Slums and shantytowns are often targeted in rampant demolitions across Africa’s most populous country, and especially in Abuja. The government has defended the actions as a sustained effort to restore the city’s master plan, a conceptual layout meant to promote growth in this oil-rich Western African nation.
 (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba, File)


CHINEDU ASADU
Thu, June 22, 2023 


ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — On a breezy morning at the height of the dry season six months ago, Rifkatu Andruwus and her children were chatting in front of their house in a displacement camp in the heart of Nigeria’s capital. Suddenly, security forces stormed into the camp, followed closely by bulldozers.

The family of seven had just about half an hour to pack their belongings and leave before their shanty house and about 200 others were reduced to rubble.

“They sent people to come and tell us to pack,” said 66-year-old Andruwus. “Then they started demolishing.”

The Durumi camp for the displaced in Abuja, Nigeria's capital, had been home for Andruwus since her family fled the fighting 10 years ago between Nigerian security forces and Islamic extremists in the country’s northeast.

She arrived here after narrowly escaping death herself, but one of her sons and a grandson were killed in an attack by the extremists in the town of Gwoza in the northeastern Borno state.

Islamic extremist rebels launched an insurgency there in 2009 to fight against Western education and to establish Islamic law, or Sharia, in the region. At least 35,000 people have been killed and more than 2 million displaced due to the violence by the militant Boko Haram group and a breakaway faction backed by the Islamic State group, according to U.N. agencies.

Since the demolition of Durumi in December, Andruwus and hundreds of others who had lived in the camp, have been forced to spend their nights out in the open and under the rain — with no compensation or alternative shelter provided by authorities.

Slums and shantytowns are often targeted in rampant demolitions across Africa’s most populous country, and especially in Abuja. The government has defended the actions as a sustained effort to restore the city’s master plan — a conceptual layout meant to promote growth in this oil-rich Western African nation.

But the latest demolitions have evicted some of the most vulnerable people in the city, further worsening a housing crisis caused by high rents and growing demand, activists say.

The situation has led activists to mount a pressure campaign on authorities to provide alternative shelter or at least compensate the homeless, many of whom are among the poorest in the country.

Almost two-thirds of Nigerians live in poverty and the country also struggles with record unemployment. The World Bank says as many as 46% of the nation's more than 200 million people do not have access to electricity.

So far, the activists' efforts have had little success, and even then, mainly thanks to help from philanthropists. Authorities in Abuja have insisted the demolition of the Durumi camp was legal and carried out for safety reasons.

Amnesty International says the forced evictions in the city are illegal — often with no prior notice or alternative shelter provided for those whose houses are demolished.

“Many of the demolitions in and around Abuja are just cases of an attempt to take over land from the poor (and give it) to the rich,” said Isa Sanusi, Amnesty's acting director for Nigeria.

He said Nigerian authorities often use the issue of illegal drugs and insecurity as an excuse for the evictions.

“That victims of the forced evictions are without a shelter just shows that no resettlement plans nor compensation have been put in place before the forced evictions,” added Sanusi.

The Durumi camp was for years a place of shelter and hope for those who fled the extremist violence and were looking to rebuild their lives in Abuja. But the authorities claimed it was a hideout for criminals.

Though it housed more than 2,000 displaced persons, the improvised camp had not received any aid from the government in recent years, surviving only on food items and medicines donated by aid groups and benefactors, according to Ibrahim Ahmadu, who acts as the camp's chairman and now helps to mobilize resources for the homeless.

Many of the families that once lived in Durumi now roam the streets homeless while the young are further exposed to social ills such as drug abuse, violence and crime, said Gabriel Ogwuche. His group, the Society for the Youth and the Downtrodden, has been fighting the demolitions.

Like many other households, Andruwus' family managed to survive while in the camp on what they earned from menial jobs, as farmworkers or from petty trade. But with no roof over their heads, survival has become increasingly difficult.

Many of the camp's former occupants have found shelter under the trees in Durumi and under overpasses that crisscross Abuja's streets. The lucky ones have mosquito nets they were given by aid groups or charitable individuals.

Some of the others have decided to return to their villages in Borno despite the ongoing fighting there.

“We lived a life more than this (but) it was Boko Haram that chased us from our homes and brought us here,” said 18-year-old Ibrahim Zakaria, whose family also lost their house in the demolition of Durumi.

“Now we seek help from the government and no help comes," he added.
UN calls for AI watchdog agency due to 'tremendous' potential: 'very clear' urgency


Amandeep Singh Gill

Peter Aitken
FOX NEWS
Fri, June 23, 2023

The United Nations sees an urgent need for an artificial intelligence (AI) watchdog group but understands that member states must first align on general policies and interests before any such agency could form.

"The urgency is very clear in the U.N.’s perspective," Under-Secretary-General and U.N. Tech Envoy Amandeep Gill told Fox News Digital in an interview. "Urgency in terms of addressing the risks and addressing the governance gap in the institutions."

Gill has led the way on the U.N.’s efforts to establish an advisory committee on AI policy, which the organization expects to have up and running by the end of the year. The committee is something the U.N. can establish since it has no governing power, and any watchdog agency must come from the member states and the U.N. can only act with what power the members provide it.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recently urged members to pay attention to "alarm bells over the latest form of artificial intelligence," which are "loudest from the developers who designed it."

AI FOUNDER SAYS TECHNOLOGY'S ROLE IN EDUCATION WILL BE ‘INEVITABLE’

"We must take those warnings seriously," he said, calling for the formation of an agency "inspired by what the international agency of atomic energy is today."

The U.N. has repeatedly stressed the urgency of having guardrails in place to handle the "tremendous potential" of AI technology, but the lack of investment in governance tools, "benchmarks" and safety requirements has left governments and member states under-equipped for the changes that AI will create within society.

"Public sector institutions are way behind in terms of their understanding, in terms of their ability to cope with the implications, whether it's the shifts in the job market or misinformation, disinformation, the threat to democracies," Gill said. "So, that is driving the perspective on the risk side."

"At the same time, there's tremendous potential of AI and data to accelerate progress on the sustainable development goals," he added. "Whether it's climate change, resilient agriculture, or, you know, handling the next pandemic, AI can be an invaluable tool."

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"We need to get governance right not only to address the risks but also to be able to drive up the trust in the solutions that we need for sustainable development."

Discourse concerning AI has intensified since developer OpenAI allowed public access to its ChatGPT program, which took hold of the public’s imagination and attention as the benefits and possible pitfalls started to crystalize.


U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recently urged members to pay attention to "alarm bells over the latest form of artificial intelligence," which are "loudest from the developers who designed it."

Many people have understandably latched onto the more frightening potential of AI, such as the ability to severely exacerbate misinformation, increase job loss and shift political bias among the population.

Algorithms that compose the operational capabilities of artificial intelligence are built by humans with certain political and social biases. If humanity becomes reliant on AI to seek out information, then these systems could skew research in a way that benefits one side of the political aisle.

AI ‘KILL SWITCH’ WILL MAKE HUMANITY LESS SAFE, COULD SPAWN ‘HOSTILE’ SUPERINTELLIGENCE

A risk analysis expert previously told Fox News Digital that "an AR-15 is nothing compared to … artificial intelligence, from the disruptive uses of these tools."

Slowly, however, the positive benefits of AI have grown more evident as experts highlight their potential uses to revolutionize and improve a number of fields.


Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI

AI could help push a new model for more efficient and relevant students within the workforce, changing the way the U.S. education system functions. Companies have utilized AI’s capability to process inhuman amounts of data in the smallest of time frames to accomplish such unbelievable feats as helping companies identify potential forced or child labor in their supply chains.

Governments in Africa have started to use AI systems to improve crop rotation and yields, and some have utilized AI to help catch poachers and protect the many endangered species on the continent.

GOP LAWMAKER WARNS CONGRESS IS ‘BEHIND’ ON AI

Gill highlighted concerns about the U.N. falling behind on sustainable development goals and the handling of certain crises, including the cost of living crisis – all of which AI can help to alleviate or even resolve.

"The most impressive results I've seen with AI is in terms of exploration of research and innovation," Gill said. "What used to take years in terms of predicting the structure of proteins can be done in months now, so I'm very excited by the potential of AI to accelerate the R&D of solutions across the board, from climate change to agriculture, to health and so on."

The greatest concern regarding AI lays with the use of "biased or incomplete datasets" because "the context has not been understood properly."


The United Nations sees an urgent need for an artificial intelligence watchdog group but understands that member states must first align on general policies and interests before any such agency could form.

"[AI can] lead us to solutions or insights and analysis that does not quite reflect the reality, whether it is at all decisions for people who have been incarcerated or it is decisions related to health, etc.," Gill said. "So, if we get those wrong, then the impact can be massive, also in terms of trust in the AI."

"The unwise deployment of AI, the rushed deployment of AI without sufficient consideration to context, governance and the life cycle of AI, that's what concerns me the most."

Fox News Digital's Nikolas Launum and Reuters contributed to this report.