Monday, July 01, 2024

Missouri pol says ‘unpatriotic lesbian’ Brittney Griner should be in Russian jail, not Olympics

Valentina Gomez made the inflammatory remarks about the WNBA star in a video posted on social media platform X.


MIKE LAWRIE/GETTY IMAGES; LEV RADIN/SHUTTERSTOCK

CHRISTOPHER WIGGINS
JUNE 12 2024 

AMissouriRepublican candidate for secretary of state, Valentina Gomez, has called WNBA star Brittney Griner an “unpatriotic lesbian” and said she should be back in aRussian prison rather than competing in the 2024ParisOlympics. Gomez commented in a 20-second video posted to X, formerlyTwitter, on Monday.

“Brittney Griner should be rotting in a Russian prison, not going to the Olympics,” she said. “Caitlin Clark is the only reason why we even watch women’s basketball,” Gomez continued. “She deserves to go to the Olympics, unlike this unpatriotic lesbian.”



Gomez captioned the post with “The Olympics are about meritocracy, not DEI.”

USA Basketball cited experience as the reason that Clark was not included on the U.S. women’s Olympic roster, according to the Associated Press. Despite Clark’s immense popularity and skill, the selection committee felt she lacked high-level experience. The team includes seven players from the group that won gold in Tokyo, including Griner.

Gomez has a history of inflammatory remarks against LGBTQ+ people and policies she deems “weak and gay.”

Griner, who was arrested in Russia in February 2022 for possessing vape cartridges with cannabis oil, spent 10 months in detention before being released in a high-profile prisoner exchange. During her detention, Griner faced severe conditions and homophobic treatment.

Gomez’s remarks have drawn significant backlash on social media. One user commented, “Nobody should be ‘rotting in prison’ for marijuana,” while another wrote, “I like you but no one should be rotting in prison over weed.”

In May, Gomezurged Americans not to be “weak and gay” in a campaign video, saying, “In America, you can be anything you want, so don’t be weak and gay. Stay fucking hard.” The footage showed her running through a neighborhood of St. Louis with high LGBTQ+ representation while holding a gun. Earlier this year, she posted a video of herself using a flamethrower to burn LGBTQ-themed books, promising to “BURN all books that are grooming, indoctrinating, and sexualizing our children” if elected.

Her platform also includes “protecting children against the transgender agenda,” “securing the Second Amendment,” and opposing vaccine mandates. Gomez’s primary election is set for August 6, where voters will decide if her provocative campaign tactics will secure her a place in the general election. She is one of several candidates seeking the Republican nomination for secretary of state. The current officeholder, Republican Jay Ashcroft, is running for governor to replace term-limited fellow GOPer Mike Parson.

Nonbinary runner Nikki Hiltz dedicates record-breaking Olympic qualifier to 'all the LGBTQ folks'


PATRICK SMITH/GETTY IMAGES

Hiltz was in fourth place with 300 meters left before they suddenly accelerated past their competition, breaking the U.S. Olympic Track and Field trials record.

RYAN ADAMCZESKI
JULY 01 2024 

Nikki Hiltz isn't just breaking records — they're breaking barriers.

The out transgender nonbinary runner qualified for the Paris Olympics on Sunday after completing the 1500-meter race at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field trials with a record time of 3 minutes and 55.33 seconds. Hiltz was in fourth place with 300 meters left before they suddenly accelerated past their competition, cutting down their previous personal best by four seconds.

“I told myself, I’m not going to think about all the love and support [I have] until 100 meters to go,’” Hiltz told reporters afterwards. “‘And then, at that moment, you can let it all fill you up and push you to the finish line.’ That’s exactly what I did, and I think that’s what brought me home.”



Hiltz won their title at the 2023 USA Track & Field Outdoor National Championship in a similar fashion, rocketing from third to first place in the last 300 meters. Their victory also made them the organization's first nonbinary national champion.

Hiltz came out transgender and nonbinary in 2021 in a post to Instagram. They said at the time: “Hi I’m Nikki and I’m transgender. That means I don’t identify with the gender I was assigned at birth. The word I use currently to describe my gender is non-binary. The best way I can explain my gender is as fluid.”

Hiltz told NBC Sports in an interview after the race that they were also motivated by the "love and support" they've received from the LGBTQ+ community, saying: "This is bigger than me."

“It’s the last day of Pride month. I wanted to run this one for my community, and yeah, all the LGBTQ folks," Hiltz said. "You guys brought me home that last hundred [meters]. I could just feel the love and support.”

DESANTISLAND 

HISTORIAN RECEIVES $1.5M GRANT TO EXPAND RACIAL JUSTICE TOURS

The 84-year-old still desires people to experience history at places where Black lives were lost to hatred

by Daniel Johnson

July 1, 2024

Marvin Dunn, a Florida historian and founder of the Miami Center for Racial Justice, received $1.5 million in funding from the Mellon Foundation. This grant will allow him to expand his “Teach the Truth” tours, which focus on sites of racial violence, from Florida to other Southern states.

As the Miami Herald reports, Dunn is looking to partner with universities in the states he will expand his tour to encompass. Dunn also recognizes that the story he is telling through his tours is the story of American history, not just Black history.

“Florida was not the only state where lynchings took place. It’s all of our history,” Dunn told the outlet. “It’s all of our pain. It’s not just Black pain or white guilt: it’s all of our pain; it’s all of our responsibility to correct this record.”

In 2023, Phillip Brian Harper, the higher learning program director at the Mellon Foundation, reached out to Dunn after reading about his tours, resulting in a $150,000 grant from the foundation, marking its second funding of Dunn’s center, which supports the tours.

Harper told the Herald that Dunn’s commitment to telling the complete story is what motivated him to fund his efforts. “If we don’t have a full variety of perspectives grounded in the full variety of experiences that inform the history and culture of this country, people will go through their lives poorly informed about the true depth, complexity, and richness of this country,” Harper said. “And that means we would have an extremely impoverished society.”

This time, the Mellon Foundation is granting Dunn’s center $1.5 million in funding, leading to the potential expansion of several sites in Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi. In an interview with the Herald, 84-year-old Dunn expressed his continued desire for people to experience history by visiting places where blood was shed, and Black lives were lost due to hatred.

“We’re just now beginning to find out where the worst lynchings in Georgia took place,” Dunn said. “That’s why we need to do this: I’m considered an expert on anti-Black violence in the country, at least in the South, and I’m not sure what happened everywhere in Georgia, but I know a lot of people died by the rope. We’ll find out and take people to those places.”

Since Dunn is of advanced age, he told the paper that the plan is to “identify faculty members and have them teach the students” in the states the tour will expand to. He also indicated that those students would receive payment for working as guides on the tour. Although he has not officially decided on the tour’s sites, he is interested in taking the tour either to Emmett Till’s grave in Mississippi or the Equal Justice Institute in Alabama.

Dunn’s tours received increased national attention in the wake of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ crackdown on teaching Black history in Florida classrooms. 

Jamora Arroyo-Jefferson, a high school student who attended the first “Teach the Truth” tour in 2023 made a short documentary about her experience, which went on to win the 2024 Princeton Prize in Race Relations and a South Florida Regional “Certificate of Accomplishment” as well as praise from Dunn himself. 

Dunn told Arroyo-Jefferson in a blurb for the documentary, “Jamora, I congratulate you on your excellent documentary on the first “Teach the Truth” tour. I have seen no other film that captures my work so effectively and I have been followed on the tour by MSNBC, CNN, and a host of other filmmakers. Your film goes to the very heart of the purpose and success of the tour. To have this quality of work come from a high school student is incredible.”

RELATED CONTENTThe National Museum Of African American History And Culture Acquires Charleston Slave Badges For Searchable Exhibit

STATEHOOD OR INDEPENDENCE

Activists demand energy independence amid ongoing blackouts in Puerto Rico


By Mivette Vega
June 21, 2024

Recent weeks have seen a surge in blackouts in Puerto Rico caused by problems in transmission and generation lines. Towns in the south, like Santa Isabel and Coamo, have borne the brunt of these outages.

Activists from Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rican diaspora staged a protest in New York Wednesday night, calling for a better energy system for island residents. Thousands of Puerto Ricans have endured constant blackouts in recent weeks.

The group went to the Manhattan offices of New Fortress Energy, the parent company of Genera, which is in charge of generating electricity on the island.
RELATED: Major power outage leaves 350,000 Puerto Ricans in the dark

“The privatization of energy distribution by LUMA, combined with the privatization of energy generation by Genera PR/New Fortress Energy, has gone from bad to worse,” said unionist David Galarza in a statement.

Recent weeks have seen a surge in blackouts caused by problems in transmission and generation lines. Towns in the south, like Santa Isabel and Coamo, have borne the brunt of these outages, with residents facing not just darkness but damaged appliances, lost food due to lack of refrigeration, and limited access to water due to failing pumps. Last Wednesday, another massive power outage affected 350,000 clients.

Protesters pointed out the long-term economic consequences of relying on private companies for energy. The high cost of electricity stifles business growth and burdens households.

But beyond economics, the protest resonated with a deeper yearning for self-determination. Casa Pueblo, a self-managed community organization renowned for its energy independence initiatives, played a key role in organizing the demonstration. Their message: Puerto Rico can’t chart its own course if it’s tethered to foreign energy corporations.

“The energy transition we need is one that leads to independence,” declared Arturo Massol Deyá, Casa Pueblo’s executive director. He highlighted his upcoming testimony before the United Nations Decolonization Committee, where he will argue that energy sovereignty is a crucial prerequisite for genuine self-determination for Puerto Rico.

RELATED: Puerto Rico Extends LUMA’s Contract Despite Strong Opposition

The timing of the protest was intentional. It coincided with the Committee’s scheduled session, where Puerto Rico’s right to self-determination will be discussed for the 42nd time. For many activists, the energy crisis symbolizes a larger struggle: the fight for Puerto Rico’s right to shape its own future, free from external control.

The group of protestors included organizations like Jornada se Acabaron Las Promesas, Por Libertad, La Colectiva Feminista en Construcción, and the Socialist Front. They called for the government to reclaim control of the energy sector and invest heavily in renewable energy sources. Moving away from fossil fuels, they argued, was not just an environmental necessity, but also a key step towards energy independence and economic resilience in the face of climate change.

Author

Mivette Vega  is a seasoned journalist and multimedia reporter whose stories center the Latino community. She is passionate about justice, equality, environmental matters, and animals. She is a Salvadorrican—Salvadorian that grew up in Puerto Rico—that has lived in San Juan, Venice, Italy, and Miami.


LUMA IS A JV WITH ALBERTA'S ATCO 
Hurricane Beryl grows to Category 5 strength in the southeast Caribbean

By Bill Chappell
NPR
Published July 1, 2024

NOAA/NESDIS/STAR GOES-EastHurricane Beryl loomed toward St. Vincent — and grew in power — as it brought threats of catastrophic winds and dangerous storm surges to the Windward Islands. The storm is seen here in a satellite image just after sunrise on Monday.

Updated July 01, 2024

Hurricane Beryl upgraded to a "potentially catastrophic" Category 5 storm late Monday night, the National Hurricane Center said, as it crossed islands in the southeastern Caribbean.

Beryl’s winds increased to 160 mph, late Monday, the hurricane center said. Beryl was about 510 miles east-southeast of Isla Beata in the Dominican Republic and was moving west-northwest at 22 mph. It was forecast to pass near Jamaica on Wednesday.

A hurricane warning was in effect for Jamaica.

Earlier Monday, the eye of Beryl "made landfall on Carriacou Island" as it brought 150 mph winds and a dangerous storm surge to islands on the eastern edge of the Caribbean, the NHC said. The storm hit the island after another round of rapid strengthening.


"This is an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation. Take action now to protect your life!" the center said ahead of Monday's landfall. "Residents in the Grenadine Islands and Carriacou Island should not leave their shelter as winds will rapidly increase within the eyewall of Beryl."

The Category 4 storm has been moving at 20 mph. Its center passed well south of Barbados, but Beryl still hammered the island with winds that gusted up to 70 mph.

As of 2 p.m. ET, the government of Barbados has discontinued its hurricane warning for the island.

Warnings remain in place for St. Vincent, the Grenadine Islands and Grenada. A less urgent hurricane watch — meaning hurricane conditions are possible, though not explicitly expected — is in place for Jamaica.

 A five-day forecast cone shows the likely path of Hurricane Beryl as it moves across the Caribbean Sea and an eventual landfall — likely near Mexico's Yucatan.National Hurricane Center /A five-day forecast cone shows the likely path of Hurricane Beryl as it moves across the Caribbean Sea and an eventual landfall — likely near Mexico's Yucatan.

Beryl has put up some eyepopping numbers in recent days, with warm ocean water allowing it to quickly gain strength after becoming a tropical depression on Friday. When it blossomed into a Category 4 storm on Sunday, it became the first Atlantic hurricane on record to attain that status in June. 

How dangerous is the storm?

Beryl weakened slightly to a Category 3 storm early Monday, but meteorologists predicted it would likely gain power again after an eyewall replacement took place in that same timeframe.

Its sustained winds of 140 mph place Beryl's in Category 4 on the Saffir-Sampson wind scale. The power of storms in that class is fierce.

"There is a very high risk of injury or death to people, livestock, and pets due to flying and falling debris," according to the NHC. "Nearly all older (pre-1994) manufactured homes will be destroyed. A high percentage of newer manufactured homes also will be destroyed," and poorly built homes could see all of their walls collapse.

While hurricane winds draw much attention, the cyclones pose the greatest threat to life with floodwater, from rain and storm surge.

"A life-threatening storm surge will raise water levels by as much as 6 to 9 feet above normal tide levels" close to its landfall, the NHC said.

Beryl is forecast to drop 3 to 6 inches of rain across the Windward Islands through Monday afternoon.

Despite passing south of Barbados, Barbados Meteorological Services Director Sabu Best said in an update early Monday that wind gusts were dangerously strong, from 50 up to 70 mph, urging residents to stay inside until an "all clear" has been announced. Rainfall, he added, had not been as bad as expected. 

What is Beryl's expected path?

The hurricane is currently heading west-northwest, moving through the Windward Islands Monday morning before heading across the southeastern and central Caribbean Sea, the NHC said.

A west-northwest track is a common heading for an Atlantic hurricane. And while many storms that have hit the U.S. have eventually curved distinctly toward the north, Beryl is currently forecast to maintain a predominantly westward motion until it hits Mexico. Its current forecast track is further south than earlier predictions.

On its current forecast path, the earliest tropical storm-force winds are expected to hit Central America Wednesday night. Mexico's coastal states of Quintana Roos and Yucatan will likely feel those winds on Thursday.

What about the warming ocean?

Climate change — and specifically, an established trend of warmer ocean and air temperatures — has led to more intense hurricanes and other storms. And this year, that dynamic is already rewriting the record books.

Since forming in late June, Beryl is now the earliest Category 4 Atlantic storm; it was also "the farthest east that a hurricane has formed in the tropical Atlantic (<=23.5°N) in June on record, breaking the old record set in 1933," as Colorado State University meteorologist Phil Klotzbach said on X.

Near-record warm ocean temperatures in the Atlantic were cited as one reason National Weather Service forecasters have predicted an unusually active Atlantic hurricane season, with up to 25 named storms.

Copyright 2024 NPR

Hurricane Beryl Seen From Space as 'Unprecedented' Storm Makes Landfall

Category 4 Hurricane Beryl Strengthening at 'Unheard Of' Rate

 for a hurricane to make direct landfall on Grenada on the first day of July is completely unprecedented."

Senior Writer, General Assignment
Published Jul 01, 2024 



Satellites produced a "sobering" image of Beryl as it made landfall Monday in the Windward Islands as a Category 4 hurricane.

Beryl strengthened into a hurricane on Saturday, becoming June's easternmost major hurricane in the Atlantic. The storm underwent rapid intensification, and it became a Category 4 hurricane as soon as its wind speeds reached 130 miles per hour. Beryl temporarily weakened to a Category 3 before strengthening again, with maximum winds documented at 150 miles per hour when it made landfall.

"Sobering satellite imagery of high-end Category 4 Hurricane #Beryl with max winds of 150 mph making landfall on Carriacou Island (Grenada)," extreme storm chaser Colin McCarthy posted on X (formerly Twitter).

He went on: "Beryl is the strongest Caribbean hurricane ever recorded this early in the season and [it's] making landfall at peak intensity. Only one other Category 4-5 hurricane on record since 1850 has moved within 75 miles of Grenada: Ivan in September 2004. However, for a hurricane to make direct landfall on Grenada on the first day of July is completely unprecedented."


A map from the National Hurricane Center shows the arrival time of winds associated with Hurricane Beryl. NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER

The satellite video McCarthy included with his post shows Beryl swirling over the Caribbean before it tears through Grenada, one of the Windward Islands.


National Hurricane Center (NHC) senior hurricane specialist John Cangialosi told Newsweek that satellite imagery is a forecaster's "eyes" when it comes to hurricanes.

"That's what gives us so much information about where the center is located, its structure to some degree, its strength," he said. "It helps us understand how the storm is changing over time."

Cangialosi added that satellite imagery is NHC's No. 1 data point.

The NHC has published numerous updates warning residents of the "extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation." As of 11 a.m. Atlantic Standard Time, Beryl's eyewall, a ring of thunderstorms that produce heavy rains and typically the strongest winds, was moving through the southern Windward Islands.

"Residents in Grenada, the Grenadine Islands, and Carriacou Island should not leave their shelter as destructive winds and life-threatening storm surge are expected during the next few hours," the NHC said.

In addition to the winds and storm surge, Beryl produced heavy rainfall and localized flash flooding.

"Beryl is expected to remain a powerful hurricane as it moves across the Caribbean Sea later this week," the NHC said. "A Hurricane Watch has been issued for Jamaica. Interests in the Cayman Islands, Belize, the Yucatan Peninsula, and the remainder of the northwestern Caribbean should monitor its progress."

Beryl is the first hurricane of the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season and the second named storm. Tropical Storm Alberto made landfall in Mexico on the morning of June 20. Shortly after Beryl formed, the third named storm of the season—Tropical Storm Chris—formed quickly on Sunday night. Chris made landfall in Mexico on Sunday night, with wind speeds at around 40 mph. It has since dissolved.

The NHC is tracking another tropical disturbance, in the central tropical Atlantic, that has a 20 percent chance of forming in the next 48 hours.

 




Puerto Rico braces for indirect impacts as Hurricane Beryl pummels Carriacou

Hurricane Beryl floods a street in Hastings, Barbados, Monday, July 1, 2024. 
AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan.


By Mivette Vega, 
Associated Press
July 1, 2024

According to a recent projected trajectory, the closest approach of the center would be 241 miles to the southwest of Cabo Rojo.

The dangerous and extremely powerful Hurricane Beryl made landfall Monday on the Caribbean island of Carriacou after becoming the earliest storm of Category 4 strength to form in the Atlantic, fueled by record warm waters.

Just shy of a Category 5 storm, the hurricane blew off roofs, uprooted trees, and caused other damage on Carriacou, one of the islands of Grenada, and elsewhere in the southeast Caribbean.
RELATED: Meteorologists expect an ‘explosive’ hurricane season

“This is an extremely dangerous and life-threatening situation,” the National Hurricane Center said.

Puerto Rico is outside Beryl’s cone of uncertainty, but starting Monday afternoon, the hurricane’s indirect effects will begin to be felt.

Because the hurricane will pass about 200 miles or more south of the island, a high risk of ocean currents is expected. Therefore, the National Weather Service San Juan (NWSSJ) issued a warning for small boat operators, which will be in effect from 6:00 p.m. on Monday until noon Wednesday.

According to a recent projected trajectory, the closest approach of the center would be 241 miles to the southwest of Cabo Rojo.

Beryl’s outer bands could move across Puerto Rico starting Monday night, generating squally weather and breezy conditions, according to NWSSJ.

Dangerous breaking waves of up to 17 feet are anticipated on Tuesday in areas such as Patillas, Guayanilla, Guayama, Salinas, and Arroyo, among others.

“On its path, the outer bands of Beryl will bring periods of thunderstorms and breezy to windy conditions, with winds ranging between 25 and 30 miles per hour with stronger gusts. Beryl will also bring dangerous seas and life-threatening rip currents with high surf conditions,” the NWSSJ said in a previous report.

RELATED: As hurricanes strengthen, scientists consider adding Category 6

Beryl strengthened from a tropical depression to a major hurricane in just 42 hours — a feat accomplished only six other times in Atlantic hurricane history, and with Sept. 1 as the earliest date, according to hurricane expert Sam Lillo.

It also was the earliest Category 4 Atlantic hurricane on record, besting Hurricane Dennis, which became a Category 4 storm on July 8, 2005.

Floricua’s staff journalist, Mivette Vega, contributed to this story.


‘Historic’ Hurricane Beryl could take life-threatening shape as a potential Category 4 storm

AP | ByAshima Grover
Jun 30, 2024 

Hurricane Beryl, which strengthened its fury as a Category 3 storm on Sunday morning, is now forecast to become a scarier Category 4.

Hurricane Beryl is forecast to strengthen into a powerful Category 4 storm as it approaches the southeast Caribbean, which began shutting down Sunday amid urgent pleads from government officials for people to take shelter.

This National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)/GOES satellite handout image shows Tropical Storm Beryl at 19:30UTC on June 29, 2024. Much of the southeast Caribbean went on alert Saturday as Tropical Storm Beryl was set to undergo rapid strengthening, becoming a "dangerous" major hurricane before it crosses the Windward Islands sometimes on June 30, forecasters said.(AFP)

Hurricane warnings were in effect for Barbados, St. Lucia, Grenada, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Beryl's center is expected to pass about 70 miles (112 kilometers) south of Barbados on Monday morning, said Sabu Best, director of Barbados’ meteorological service.

“This is a very serious situation developing for the Windward Islands,” warned the National Hurricane Center in Miami, which said that Beryl was “forecast to bring life-threatening winds and storm surge.”

Beryl strengthened into a Category 3 hurricane on Sunday morning, becoming the first major hurricane east of the Lesser Antilles on record for June, according to Philip Klotzbach, Colorado State University hurricane researcher.

Beryl is now only the third Category 3 hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic in June, following Audrey in 1957 and Alma in 1966, said hurricane specialist and storm surge expert Michael Lowry.

How dangerous is Hurricane Beryl?

“Beryl is an extremely dangerous and rare hurricane for this time of year in this area,” he said in a phone interview. “Unusual is an understatement. Beryl is already a historic hurricane and it hasn’t struck yet.”

Also read | Who is Nyay Mway? South Asian boy shot dead by NYPD for holding a pellet gun, video goes viral

Hurricane Ivan in 2004 was the last strongest hurricane to hit the southeast Caribbean, causing catastrophic damage in Grenada as a Category 3 storm.

“So this is a serious threat, a very serious threat,” Lowry said of Beryl.

Beryl was located about 420 miles (675 kilometers) east-southeast of Barbados. It was a Category 3 storm with maximum sustained winds of 115 mph (185 kph) and was moving west at 21 mph (33 kph). It was expected to pass just south of Barbados early Monday and then head into the Caribbean Sea as a major hurricane on a path toward Jamaica. It is expected to weaken by midweek but still remain a hurricane as it heads toward Mexico.

Forecasters warned of life-threatening storm surge of up to 9 feet (3 meters) in areas where Beryl will make landfall, with up to 6 inches (15 centimeters) of rain for Barbados and nearby islands.

Long lines formed at gas stations and grocery stores in Barbados and other islands as people rushed to prepare for a storm that has broken records and rapidly intensified from a tropical storm with 35 mph winds on Friday to a Category 1 hurricane on Saturday.

Warm waters were fueling Beryl, with ocean heat content in the deep Atlantic the highest on record for this time of year, according to Brian McNoldy, University of Miami tropical meteorology researcher. Lowry said the waters are now warmer than what they would be at the peak of hurricane season in September.

Beryl marks the farthest east that a hurricane has formed in the tropical Atlantic in June, breaking a record set in 1933, according to Philip Klotzbach, Colorado State University hurricane researcher. If Beryl’s winds reach 125 mph, it would be the second earliest such storm in the Atlantic on record, surpassing Audrey in 1957, he said.

In addition, if Beryl reaches a Category 3, it would only be the third storm to do so in the Caribbean prior to August; Dennis and Emily both did so in July of 2005, according to Klotzbach.

“We have to remain vigilant,” Barbadian Prime Minister Mia Mottley said in a public address late Saturday. “We do not want to put anybody’s life at risk.”

Thousands of people were in Barbados for Saturday’s Twenty20 World Cup final, cricket’s biggest event, with Mottley noting that not all fans were able to leave Sunday despite many rushing to change their flights.

“Some of them have never gone through a storm before,” she said. “We have plans to take care of them.”

Mottley said all businesses should close by Sunday evening and warned the airport would close by nighttime.

Kemar Saffrey, president of a Barbadian group that aims to end homelessness, said in a video posted on social media Saturday night that those without homes tend to think they can ride out storms because they’ve done it before.

“I don’t want that to be the approach that they take,” he said, warning that Beryl is a dangerous storm and urging Barbadians to direct homeless people to a shelter.


Echoing his comments was Wilfred Abrahams, minister of home affairs and information.

“I need Barbadians at this point to be their brother’s keeper,” he said. “Some people are vulnerable.”

Meanwhile, St. Lucia Prime Minister Philip J. Pierre announced a national shutdown for Sunday evening and said schools and businesses would remain closed on Monday.

“Preservation and protection of life is a priority,” he said.

Caribbean leaders were preparing not only for Beryl, but for a cluster of thunderstorms trailing the hurricane that have a 70% chance of becoming a tropical depression.

“Do not let your guard down,” Mottley said.


Beryl is the second named storm in what is forecast to be an above-average hurricane season, which runs from June 1 to Nov. 30 in the Atlantic. Earlier this month, Tropical Storm Alberto came ashore in northeastern Mexico with heavy rains that resulted in four deaths.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicts the 2024 hurricane season is likely to be well above average, with between 17 and 25 named storms. The forecast calls for as many as 13 hurricanes and four major hurricanes.

An average Atlantic hurricane season produces 14 named storms, seven of them hurricanes and three major hurricanes.
Trump can't end war in a day, Russia UN envoy says

"I'll get it settled fast, before I take office."

Updated July 1 2024 -

US presidential candidate Donald Trump has boasted he could end the war in Ukraine in a day. (AP PHOTO)

Russia's UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia says that "the Ukrainian crisis cannot be solved in one day," when asked about US presidential candidate Donald Trump's frequent claims that he could end the war within 24 hours if re-elected.

Republican candidate Trump has not given any details and has said that if there had been a "real president" in the US - who was respected by Russian President Vladimir Putin - then Moscow would not have invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

"I will have that war settled between Putin and (Ukrainian President Volodymyr) Zelenskiy as president-elect before I take office on January 20th. I'll have that war settled," Trump said last week during a debate against President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

"I'll get it settled fast, before I take office."

US voters go to the polls on November 5 to elect the next president for a four-year term.

The outcome of the election matters to Russia, despite its attempts to play it down, because it will determine the extent of Washington's commitment to keep backing Ukraine against Moscow and supplying it with advanced US weapons.

"The Ukrainian crisis cannot be solved in one day," Nebenzia told a news conference on Monday to mark the beginning of Russia's presidency of the United Nations Security Council for July.

In response, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung told Reuters: "President Trump is the most effective statesman and negotiator in history, and he will solve this conflict when he is elected."

The Kremlin has said that any peace plan for Ukraine proposed by a possible future Trump administration would have to reflect the reality on the ground but that Putin remained open to talks.


Australian Associated Press