Saturday, July 02, 2022

How mRNA tech blew open the door of UPS's cold chain logistics business


·Senior Reporter
UPS cold chain freight







UPS (UPS) will have doubled its health-care facilities footprint by 2023, as a result of unprecedented demand for mRNA vaccines, and the company is making a long-term bet that demand for cold chain storage in medicine will only grow in coming years.

The logistics giant began building out millions of square feet of space as a result of its partnership with Pfizer (PFE)/ BioNTech (BNTX), according to UPS Healthcare and Life Sciences President Wes Wheeler, but that only sped up a strategy the company was pursuing before the pandemic.

"Health care at UPS was part of its matrix organization. It was not a business unit like it is today. It was not given the kinds of priorities that we've been given since I took the role," Wheeler told Yahoo Finance in a recent interview.

Pandemic aside, the market for health care logistics has been growing in recent years, as more targeted treatments, known as biologics, takes hold.

Cold chain storage, in particular, has become increasingly important as a result, with some projections estimating the market will surpass $225 billion by 2026. UPS is among the top players, and market share only figures to grow as it targets new global hubs.

The company was already on track to expand by roughly 1 million square feet per year, but in the past two years UPS has added about 4 million square feet, Wheeler said.

That will put the company at about 15 million square feet by the end of 2023, compared to about 7.5 million square feet when Wheeler started in 2020.

And with companies like Pfizer and Moderna (MRNA) focused on mRNA as a base technology for future vaccines, which requires minus 80 or minus 70 degrees Celsius transport, there is opportunity to capture a new market.

"I think it's here to stay, and I think we're planning on that," Wheeler said of mRNA, at the company's Innovation Summit in June.

"Which means we have to secure these cold chain supply routes all around the world from now on," he added.

A timely move

The company appointed Wheeler to be the head of a more structured health care unit at the end of 2019 — just before the pandemic began.

The company had seen its health care segment leading growth quarter over quarter, as a result of the health industry's increased use of time and temperature sensitive treatments, among other critical patient needs, and had just launched a more high-tech solution in October 2019.

Soon after coming on board, Wheeler was tasked with the sudden surge in need to build out cold chain facilities and routes in partnership with Pfizer, to prepare to deliver hundreds of millions of doses of a COVID-19 vaccine out of Kalamazoo, Mich.

While that was nowhere near where UPS had identified a need for new space and routes, the company invested in Michigan and Louisville, Ken., to build out freezer farms, warehouse space and routes to ensure timely distribution.

"Because of the pandemic, we shifted gears from what would have been a longer term, very specific strategy of building out our capability. So we built a lot of capacity ... We built supply routes out of places we would not normally have prioritized. For example, Michigan would not have been our first choice. But we moved, we pivoted, and we started to build capacity," Wheeler told Yahoo Finance.

The same goes for Louisville, where the company created a dry ice factory to help transport the new, ultra-cold-needing vaccines, and built out storage for PPE and test kits.

After becoming a private partner in Operation Warp Speed (OWS), the operation launched by the Trump administration to ensure quick distribution of COVID-19 vaccines once they became available, UPS has continued to play a central role in vaccine deliveries — with weekly calls still ongoing among all partners including Pfizer and Moderna.

They began under OWS when Gen. Gustave Perna, who co-led the effort, "immediately turned to UPS for help. He realized that the U.S. military was not capable of doing what we did," Wheeler said.

All partners coordinated regularly to ensure everything was running smoothly.

"Those kinds of meetings still happen with the government every week," Wheeler said.

He wishes that a similar level of coordination could have been reached globally, especially in Africa.

"The African Union, ministries of health, UNICEF, Gav i... all these people that got involved made the stew a little bit too complicated. That's why Africa has been slow to get vaccinated," Wheeler said.

NAKURU, KENYA - 2022/06/06: A medical officer is seen preparing to administer a covid-19 vaccine jab to a man at The Nakuru County Referral and Teaching Hospital. In May 2022, the covid-19 positivity rate shot up to 5.6% from 0.3% at the beginning of the year. So far 8.4 million Kenyans are currently fully inoculated. The Government is targeting to vaccinate a population of 27million Kenyans by end of year. (Photo by James Wakibia/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Equity and global networks

To that end, a key learning from the pandemic has been the need for more equitable and timely global distribution of medicines. Nowhere is that more clearly visible than in sub-Saharan Africa, where a majority of countries are still trying to administer first doses of COVID-19 vaccines.

The reasons behind that are many, but in part, a lack of domestic infrastructure, as well as an over-reliance on a limited number of global players, all lead to the current situation, Wheeler noted.

At the macro level, many of the starting ingredients for pharmaceutical products are made in China, but the recent lockdown in Shanghai, and in general disruptions throughout the pandemic, have lead to a discussion of nearshoring, Wheeler explained.

"Which means, ideally, putting more manufacturing sites in the United States. That's not economically feasible," he said.

Which is why UPS sees opportunity in India.

"We believe India will be the next really large exporter of sterile drugs and biologic drugs into the U.S. and into Europe," Wheeler said.

South Korea is another target, as it has been pushing more into biologics manufacturing. Currently, sterile manufacturing is largely done in Europe. But UPS is focusing on expansion in South Korea that will also provide similar capacity and transit routes.

In Africa, some countries have been a focus of vaccine makers in recent months, as commitments to expand manufacturing have been announced. South Africa, in particular, is serving as the mRNA hub for the continent.

But moving further upstream in the process than just the final fill/finish process — will require more emphasis on tech transfer.

In the past, the process can take as much as two years, Wheeler said. But the pandemic has helped reduce that time.

Wheeler noted that South Africa is already a big pharmaceutical market, and UPS has done a lot of business in the past. But some key hurdles need to be overcome in order to truly succeed.

Last mile

Getting shipments transferred safely, securely and with quality intact was just one part of the problem during the pandemic.

The last mile in some regions of the world remains an obstacle.

"The biggest challenge we've had is truly understanding how long a passive package can last at temperature, when you're trying to deliver something from a place in Michigan to a remote village in Africa. That time in transit is such an important component," Wheeler said.

The complexities include very technical issues, such as the varying regulations and customers requirements at each port.

"If you ship across country borders without proper customs, brokerage and claims, it can be stuck in the air ... or even on the ground side of the airport for days. In that case, it all expires," Wheeler said.

And there are protocols and notifications to various regulatory bodies in the event of disposing of expired doses.

It's why partners and suppliers like Zipline, which has been piloting drone deliveries of mRNA vaccines, matter.

"These are little technical details we worry about all day long," Wheeler said.

Still, the pandemic experience has given the company confidence in its growth in the cold chain health care — especially in new markets.

"I think as long as we can get airlift capacity out of some of these remote countries, and provided we can continue building our (manufacturing) facilities around the world where we need them, I think there's going to be a bright future for biologic drugs in the future," Wheeler said.

Follow Anjalee on Twitter @AnjKhem


Tunisia’s draft constitution: Ending the parliamentary regime, or undoing democracy?

Pierre AYAD 12 hrs ago

Tunisian President Kais Saied delivered his draft for a new constitution to the public on Friday after months of political turmoil. A referendum is expected to be held on July 25 to decide the document’s fate, and, according to some, the fate of the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring uprisings. Tunisia’s 2014 constitution established a representative republic based on a parliamentary system, but Saied’s draft, if accepted by voters, would derail it.

© Muhammad Hamed, Reuters

Tunisia’s political crisis started on July 25, 2021, after rampant protests due to a poor coronavirus response, collapsing healthcare, economic decline, high unemployment and fewer state services. In response, Saied invoked emergency powers under article 80 of the constitution to remove the prime minister, and to suspend parliament for 30 days, parliamentary immunity and most of the constitution itself.

Saied has since tightened his grip on political power. He removed the minister of defence, the acting minister of justice, the CEO of Wataniya (Tunisia’s major national television channel) and members of government including former anti-corruption committee head Chawki Tabib. The president further eroded Tunisia’s political institutions by dismantling the constitutional commission, which reviews the constitutionality of laws, and suspending the constitution indefinitely in September.

Saied later announced a roadmap to guide the country out of political calamity on December 14, 2021. That map foresaw the amendment of the constitution, a referendum on the document in July 2022 and new parliamentary elections under a new electoral law that has yet to be passed. Alongside these moves, no presidential elections have been set or even hinted at by the president.

The dismantling of the country’s political institutions continued in 2022, as Saied dissolved the High Judicial Council in February and parliament, after it tried to halt the move, in March; took control of the electoral commission in April; and fired 57 judges, under suspicion of “corruption”, in June.

The drastic moves were largely seen as the dislocation of a democratically elected parliament and the equivalent of a presidential coup. Furthermore, Saied has largely been seen as the sole author of the draft of the new constitution, with most of the political opposition boycotting the process.

The lack of participation in the drafting of the constitution, and the absence of any hint of a new presidential election as Saied has weakened every political entity in Tunisia, is seen by many as the first step towards a “president for life” situation. The country’s deepening economic problems, stemming in large part from the decline of tourism due to the Covid-19 pandemic and aggravated by the domestic political climate and the war in Ukraine, could potentially cause more unrest and lead to a protest movement akin to the one in 2011 that led to the Arab Spring.
‘A step back’

The draft constitution expands on the powers of the executive and takes away rights from the legislative and judicial branches. The text published in the official gazette late on Thursday states that Saied would continue to rule by decree until a new parliament is elected at the end of the year. It would also allow him to present draft laws and have sole responsibility for proposing treaties and drafting state budgets. It would create a new “Council of Regions” as a second chamber of parliament. In Tunisia’s 2014 constitution, parliament more directly exercises political power, taking the lead role in appointing the government and approving legislation.

“This constitution is Kais Saied’s constitution, it reflects his vision and his point of view regarding the political system, it serves to maintain his powers”, said Abd El Razek Mokhtar, a professor of public law at the University of Sousse. “This constitution will transform the country’s system from a parliamentary system to a presidentialist system, not a presidential one,” he added.

Under the new text, the government would answer to the president, in lieu of parliament, though the legislative chamber could withdraw confidence from the government with a two-thirds majority. The president could serve two five-year terms and would have the right to dissolve parliament. A separate electoral law laying out how voting would work would be published later, according to the draft.

“This constitution represents a step back,” said Salsabil Klib, a constitutional law professor at the University of Tunis. “It is a presidentialist constitution, in which the balance leans towards the president as he enjoys vast prerogatives.” Klib also said: “This constitution weakens the legislative branch by introducing two rooms, by not mentioning who will elect the representatives, by giving the president the capacity to dissolve the parliament and by introducing a measure in which the people can directly recall representatives.”

‘Absence of any counterweight’

Mokhtar said that the draft constitution violates principals of a democratic constitution by not separating between branches of government, protecting the judicial branch or guaranteeing its independence, and not establishing any independent legal or constitutional institutions that would provide oversight to the president’s power.

“It is a constitution that augments the president’s prerogatives and gives him not just the executive branch, but also vast legislative powers as well as a domination over the judicial branch,” Mokhtar said. “The absence of any counterweight to his authority is felt and the only constitutional entity that remains is the constitutional court, which he owns. We are at a place where the president is omnipresent.”

The draft constitution includes a potentially important shift on the place of Islam in Tunisia. The 2014 constitution’s first article states: “Tunisia is a free, independent, sovereign state; its religion is Islam…”. The new draft states that Tunisia belongs to “an Ummah” (the worldwide Muslim community) “whose religion is Islam”. Establishing an Islamic identity for the country in the new text “could be an out to Islamize the country later on”, Mokhtar said.

Saied has maintained most parts of the 2014 constitution that enumerate rights and liberties, including freedom of speech, the right to organise in unions and the right to peaceful gatherings. However, in the new text, judges, police, army members and customs officials will not have the right to strike. Tunisian judges have recently been on strike for weeks to protest against Saied's moves to curtail judicial independence.
An underwhelming response from the opposition

When asked why Tunisians allowed Saied to attain his level of power, Klib explains that the president “became so powerful because of the Islamists who ruled for the last 10 years and made the Tunisians accept any other option but the Islamic one”.

Ennahda, an Islamist political party and one of the main forces in Tunisia (and previously its parliament), has moved to form several coalitions against Saied’s recent moves. In September, it formed a group with most of Tunisia's other Islamist movements called Citizens Against the Coup, which has been responsible for several protests and later joined the National Salvation Front, a coalition of leftist and national parties, which emerged in May. This coalition, led by leftist politician Ahmed Najib Chebbi, opposes the president’s roadmap and aims to boycott the July 25 referendum.

Another five leftist and centrist parties formed a group called the Coordination of Democratic Forces, and decided to participate in the referendum and vote “no” to the draft constitution.

The Tunisian General Labour Union, the most powerful union in the country, agreed with Saied’s use of emergency powers to sack the prime minister and suspend parliament last July, but has been critical of most of the president’s decisions since then. The union's administrative body decided on Saturday to let members choose whether to vote in or abstain from the referendum.


The fragmentation in the opposition ranks, as well as their various stances on the upcoming referendum, could possibly result in a win for Saied. If it does, “giving the president vast, unchecked powers will harm the democratic system of Tunisia in the long run”, Klib said.

'Fragile situation' as Libya anger

boils over living conditions

AFP , Saturday 2 Jul 2022

Libya's rival leaders were under growing street pressure Saturday after protesters stormed parliament as anger exploded over deteriorating living conditions and political deadlock.

Libya
Libya s charred parliament building is seen in Tobruk, Libya, Saturday, July 2, 2022. APLinkedIn

Libyans, many impoverished after a decade of turmoil and sweltering in the soaring summer heat, have been enduring fuel shortages and power cuts of up to 18 hours a day even as their country sits atop Africa's largest proven oil reserves.

Libya has been mired in chaos and repeated rounds of conflict since a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed leader Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.

Protesters stormed the seat of the House of Representatives in the eastern city of Tobruk on Friday night, ransacking its offices and torching part of the building.

In both the main eastern city of Benghazi -- the cradle of the 2011 uprising -- and the capital Tripoli, thousands took to the streets to chants of "We want the lights to work".

Some brandished the green flags of the former Kadhafi regime.

Calm appeared to have returned to Tobruk on Saturday, though there were calls on social media for more protests in the evening.

The UN's top Libya envoy Stephanie Williams said that "riots and acts of vandalism" were "totally unacceptable".

"It is absolutely vital that calm is maintained, responsible Libyan leadership demonstrated and restraint exercised by all," she tweeted.

UN-mediated talks in Geneva this week aimed at breaking the deadlock between rival Libyan institutions failed to resolve key differences.

'Extremely painful' year

Presidential and parliamentary elections, originally set for December last year, were meant to cap a UN-led peace process following the end of the last major round of violence in 2020. 

But voting never took place due to several contentious candidacies and deep disagreements over the polls' legal basis between the rival power centres in east and west.

In Tripoli on Friday, hundreds came out to demand elections, fresh political leadership and an end to the chronic power cuts.

The sudden eruption of unrest appeared to be spreading to other areas of the country, with Libyan media showing images of protesters in the oasis city of Sebha, deep in the Sahara desert, torching an official building.

A local journalist said protesters in Libya's third city Misrata were blocking roads after setting fire to a municipal building on Friday night.

Interim prime minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah leads a Tripoli-based administration while former interior minister Fathi Bashagha draws support from the Tobruk-based House of Representatives and eastern military leader Khalifa Haftar.

"For more than a year, the overwhelming majority of diplomatic and mediation efforts around Libya have been monopolised by the idea of elections, which won't happen for at least two years, given the failure of the Geneva negotiations," Libya expert Jalel Harchaoui told AFP.

This year "has been extremely painful for Libyans" because the country "imports almost all its food and the Ukraine war has hit consumer prices", Harchaoui said.

'Fragile situation'

Libya's energy sector, which during the Kadhafi era financed a generous welfare state, has also fallen victim to political divisions, with a wave of forced closures of oil facilities since April.

Supporters of the eastern-based administration have shut off the oil taps as leverage in their efforts to secure a transfer of power to Bashagha, whose attempt to take up office in Tripoli in May ended in a swift withdrawal.

Libya's National Oil Corporation has announced losses of more than $3.5 billion from the closures and a drop in gas output, which has a knock-on effect on the power grid.

"There is kleptocracy and systematic corruption in the east as in the west, as the fancy cars and villas of the elite constantly remind the public," Harchaoui said, accusing militias from both camps of carrying out "massive" fuel trafficking.

Recent weeks have seen repeated skirmishes between armed groups in Tripoli, prompting fears of a return to full-scale conflict.

The European Union's envoy to Libya, Jose Sabadell, said Friday's events "confirm people want change through elections".

But he urged peaceful protests, adding that "special restraint is necessary given the fragile situation".

London Pride: Thousands turn out in force as the capital celebrates 50 years since the first march for LGBTQ+ rights

Thousands of people have gathered across London to be part of this year's Pride celebrations - which marks 50 years since the first march for LGBTQ+ rights in the capital.

People wearing the traditional rainbow patterns, as well as face paint and glitter, are taking part in the event this year - the first since 2019 due to the COVID pandemic.

Floats queued up along Park Lane ahead of the main parade and march through London, with more than a million people expected to line the streets in celebration of the movement.

Dubbed "the biggest and most inclusive event in history", several artists will perform on four stages across London, including Emeli Sande, who publicly came out earlier this year.

Closing the show in Trafalgar Square will be performer Ava Max, with other artists on the line-up including Israel's Eurovision winner Netta, noughties popstar Samantha Mumba and American actress Kat Graham.

The parade route this year will pay tribute to the original march in 1972.

Some of the organisers of that important event 50 years ago are joining this year's proceedings that will see participants pass important landmarks along the way.

Speaking to Sky News, Martin, who was at the original march in the 70s, said: "We've still got a fight to do and certainly a big fight internationally.

"What happened in Oslo last weekend has made this even more relevant - in my own choir, the guy who is organising our Pride march was attacked by homophobes last night and ended up in hospital.

"If anything, it shows that what we're doing today is absolutely relevant... and you see the flags, you see the rainbow as you see this joyous expression of being gay.

"But actually at the heart of this, the political activism is everything, that's what it was all about."

All the money raised from the commercial partnerships will go to straight back into the LGBTQ+ community, organisers say, with the Unity Fund, which provides grassroots funding for community projects, being one major beneficiary.

Read more:
LGBTQ+ on screen: We've come a long way but there's more work to do

Pride parade has become 'overly corporate', says one of UK's leading LGBTQ+ rights activists

'There's still a danger to this community'

Earlier, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan warned there was still a "danger" to the LGBTQ+ community in London, telling people not to be "complacent" at the event.

He said: "We're back after the last two-and-a-half years or so. This year is the 50th anniversary of Pride, celebrating this community, celebrating the progress made, but also continuing to campaign and never be complacent.

"We saw this time last week an attack in Oslo just hours before that parade, where two people lost their lives and more than 20 were injured.

"So, we've got to be conscious of the fact that there's still a danger to this community of discrimination, bias and violence. But allies like me are really important to support this community."

Prime Minister Boris Johnson also hailed this year's events, saying in a statement: "It gives me the greatest pride to lead a country where you can love whomever you choose to love. And where you can be free to be whoever you want to be.

"This hasn't always been a given, and certainly wasn't the case 50 years ago.

"Marching the streets in 1972 was an incredibly brave thing to do, and today will see thousands of people, friends and families once more coming together to mark the tremendous milestone of 50 years of our capital's Pride."

London marks 50 years of Pride


London on Saturday celebrated the 50th anniversary of its first Pride parade, marking half a century of progress in the fight for equality and tolerance but with warnings that more still needs to be done.

Several hundred people took part in the first march on July 1, 1972, just five years after homosexuality was decriminalised in the UK.

Fifty years on, more than 600 LGBTQ+ groups danced, sang and rode floats along a similar route to the original protest, in the first Pride since the coronavirus pandemic, watched by huge cheering crowds.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan told reporters the event, which organisers said was the "biggest and most inclusive" in its history, was a celebration of community, unity and progress.

But he said it was also a reminder of the need to "campaign and never be complacent" and the need for "an open, inclusive, accepting world".




"We saw this time last week an attack in Oslo just hours before that parade, where two people lost their lives and more than 20 were injured," he said.

"So, we've got to be conscious of the fact that there's still a danger to this community of discrimination, bias and violence."

Khan's predecessor as mayor, Prime Minister Boris Johnson, said it gave him "the greatest pride to lead a country where you can love whomever you choose to love and where you can be free to be whoever you want to be".

The 50th anniversary was a "milestone", he said, paying tribute to the bravery of those who did it first.

TOM ROBINSON BAND-SING IF YOUR GLAD TO BE GAY


Peter Tatchell, a veteran gay rights campaigner who took part in the 1972 march, said some from the original event have boycotted the modern-day sponsored version as "depoliticised and commercialised".

- Campaigning -


In 1972, "Gay Pride", as it was then known, was a demand for visibility and equality against a backdrop of lingering prejudice, discrimination and fear among many gay men and women about coming out.



In the 1980s, Pride became a focal point for campaigning against legislation by prime minister Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government against the "promotion of homosexuality" in schools.

It also helped to raise awareness and support for people with HIV/Aids.

Now, with the rainbow flag of inclusion and tolerance spread ever more widely over the spectrum of human sexuality and gender, Pride in London is more celebration than protest.

Tatchell said that despite victories such as same-sex marriage, "we are still fighting to ban LGBT+ conversion practices which seek to change a person's sexual orientation or gender identity".

"We're still fighting to secure trans people's right to change their legal documents with ease by a simple statutory declaration. And of course, we are standing in solidarity with a global LGBT+ movement," he told AFP.

Julian Hows, now 67, was at the first march. He said "progress is always incremental", criticising curbs on LGBTQ+ rights around the world.

"We have to be vigilant. The price of liberation and to keeping people's human rights intact is vigilance," he added.



- Visibility -

Padraigin Ni Raghillig, president of Dykes on Bikes London, a motorcycle club for gay women, said the event retained part of its original campaigning spirit.



"It's still important, I think, to at least once a year to be out and about, and to say 'we're here, we're queer, and we're not going shopping'," said Ni Raghillig, astride a Harley Davidson.

Among those marching was a contingent from Ukraine, who criticised homophobia in Russia.

This year's Pride saw warnings for people with monkeypox symptoms to stay away, after public health officials said many cases in the UK were reported among gay and bisexual men.

LGBTQ+ campaign group Stonewall said everyone had a part to play to stop the spread of monkeypox, which is passed through close contact regardless of sexual orientation.

Phil HAZLEWOOD Sat, July 2, 2022
AFTER A DECADE
Woman awarded $431,000 for Occupy Wall Street police actions

Mary Tardif, of Manhattan, sits with her service dog, Daisy, Friday, July 1, 2022, in New York, after a Manhattan federal court jury awarded her $431,250 after finding in her favor in a lawsuit she brought against New York City and its police department for injuries she suffered when she served as a medic for protesters at Occupy Wall Street events in 2012.
 (AP Photo/Larry Neumeister) 

LARRY NEUMEISTER Fri, July 1, 2022

NEW YORK (AP) — A Manhattan woman was awarded over $400,000 on Friday by a federal jury after suing New York City and its police department, saying she suffered a traumatic brain injury when she was thrown to the ground by a police sergeant while serving as a medic for protesters during 2012 Occupy Wall Street events.

Mary Tardif, 33, won the $431,250 award nearly a decade after suing in 2013. She had sought unspecified damages for injuries she incurred as a medic for protesters at multiple rallies staged by the grassroots movement that began in Manhattan, spread globally, and was known for its refrain: “We are the 99 percent.”

In an interview, Tardif called the verdict “very vindicating.”

“I feel like I have actually known justice for the first time,” said Tardif, who works at Broadway Advocacy Coalition where she does sign language interpreting for Broadway shows and serves as a disability adviser.

Tardif, who has had epilepsy since she was 19, said she considered the verdict, which found “battery” had occurred but no assault, a win for those “occupiers who never got to see this day or never got to have their day in court.”

“It feels like a win for all of us. I wish I could share it with them. There were so many,” she said, speaking of others who were injured at rallies, as she celebrated at a restaurant near the courthouse with her service dog, Daisy, a black Labrador Retriever who was with Tardif throughout the trial but was hidden from jurors.


Nick Paolucci, a New York City Law Department spokesperson, said the city was “disappointed with this result" and was reviewing options.

He noted that a jury in 2018 had rejected the claims before the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan reinstated the case, citing flaws in the first trial.

Paolucci said Tardif “was never thrown to the ground, as she claimed. Additionally, and unfortunately, the jury was not aware that the plaintiff had introduced new injuries at this second trial that were never alleged in the initial case.”

During opening statements, city attorney Michael Viviano said a police sergeant who has since been promoted to lieutenant grabbed onto Tardif's arms on March 21, 2012, and moved her away as police were clearing a park in Union Square because she had put her hands on a police officer's back.

“The plaintiff then falls to the ground. The plaintiff was not thrown,” he said.

Reza Rezvani, an attorney arguing on Tardif's behalf, told jurors in an opening statement that the sergeant grabbed her with both of his hands.

“He throws her to the ground. Her head hits the pavement,” he said.

Tardif maintained in her 2013 lawsuit that her epileptic condition was often ignored after she suffered violent abuses from police officers who arrested her at several protests while she served as a medic. The lawsuit said they kicked her, walked on her limbs and tossed her to the ground.

According to trial evidence and Tardif's statements, the violent encounter at Union Square caused her head to slam into the ground with such force that she was left with a permanent brain injury that leaves her unable to work except for a job where she has flexible hours and can sometimes call in sick when she is completely immobile.

Japan’s 87-year-old ‘Naked Hermit’

returns to remote island for a final farewell


Bryan Ke Fri, July 1, 2022 

After returning to civilization in 2018, Japan’s "Naked Hermit" went back to the remote island he once called home for nearly three decades to give it a proper farewell.

Masafumi Nagasaki, 87, returned to Sotobanari Island in Okinawa Prefecture in early June with the help of Docastaway founder Alvaro Cerezo and his team. They documented the man referred to as the “Naked Hermit” in 2014 and stayed with him on the remote island for less than a week last month.

In a June 16 blog post, Cerezo provided insight into the life of the voluntary castaway after he was “rescued” from the island and returned to civilization in 2018.

Cerezo said Nagasaki was unable to build new friendships, especially due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He also could not make any progress adjusting to the modern world after living alone for 29 years.

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“Nagasaki had quite a ‘complicated’ personality, and always spoke with no filter,” Cerezo wrote. “In a quintessential society like that of the Japanese, there was hardly anyone who could either understand his eccentric way of life or his extreme desire to live naked on a desert island.” 

“As a result, most people in his neighborhood looked at him with contempt and a little bit of fear,” he added.

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Nagasaki was “rescued” from the island around four years ago after a local fisher spotted him nearly unconscious by the beach. According to Cerezo, the Japanese government only provided him with “a little bedroom and very little money to cover his basic needs.”

After returning to civilization, Nagasaki spent most of his years confined inside his tiny room that became his own deserted island, where he could live without his clothes on, just like he did on Sotobanari.

Cerezo noted that Nagasaki, who would sometimes go out and collect trash on the street, was “horrified” by the amount of garbage left by people.

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During his “moments of despair,” Nagasaki would use the only old phone booth still operational in the city and call Cerezo’s Japanese operation manager, Tamiki, to tell him that he struggled being surrounded by people and that he missed Sotobanari Island.

Nagasaki first arrived on the island in 1989 as a voluntary castaway at the age of 53. Speaking to Reuters in 2012, Nagasaki said he chose the island as the place where he would die.

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“It hadn’t really occurred to me before how important it is to choose the place of your death, like whether it’s in a hospital or at home with family by your side,” he was quoted as saying. “But to die here, surrounded by nature – you just can’t beat it, can you?” 

Cerezo and Tamiki managed to convince the local Japanese authorities to let them take Nagasaki back to the island for a few days to visit. They did not mention Nagasaki’s wish to stay on Sotobanari Island and eventually die there.

As they took a boat to the island, Nagasaki grinned at the sky and “thanked life with folded hands.” Upon reaching their destination, the elderly man raised his arms in delight and cheered.

After finding his old belongings at his former campsite inside the jungle, Nagasaki, Cerezo and his team returned to the shore. The “Naked Hermit” then proceeded to take off all his clothes slowly, and Cerezo noticed that age had taken its toll on the once agile man.

“Tamiki and I realized that he was not as strong as he used to be in the past,” Cerezo wrote. “Although Nagasaki was 79 when I first met him in 2014, at that time he was very agile, energetic and capable of surviving on a desert island. Now he is almost 87 and the last four years of which he spent in a tiny room.”

Cerezo and his team planned to leave Nagasaki on the island the next morning, but they had to reconsider after seeing the man looking exhausted. It soon became clear to Cerezo and his team that Nagasaki was not as youthful as he used to be.

Nagasaki eventually asked Cerezo and Tamiki if they could stay and take care of him for a few more days on the island. He would then return with them to civilization after that.

On the day of their departure, Cerezo said Nagasaki chose to leave all of his old belongings behind, adding, “Luckily, Nagasaki was not sad to leave. It seemed he was satisfied to have had the opportunity to bid ‘Farewell’ to his island.”

“Perhaps in a few years from now, if he still desires to spend his last days at Sotobarani [sic] Island, and feels his time is right and he is ready to depart this world, we will be there to help him undoubtedly,” Cerezo added.

After his nostalgic journey, Nagasaki returned to his government-subsidized room in Ishigaki, Japan, Cerezo told the New York Post on Monday.

Featured Image via Images Docastaway – Desert Island Experiences