Showing posts with label fight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fight. Show all posts

G7 to discuss Russian oil price cap as Ukraine fight grinds on

Fast News

UN inspectors visit Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia to prevent a nuclear accident at a Russian-occupied power plant where recent shelling has prompted fears of disaster, as fighting rages on day 190 of conflict.

Key oil consumers China and US partner India have stepped up imports of discounted Russian barrels to record levels.
Key oil consumers China and US partner India have stepped up imports of discounted Russian barrels to record levels. (Reuters Archive)
Thursday, September 1, 2022 G7 finance chiefs to discuss Russian oil price cap on Friday Finance ministers from the Group of Seven club of wealthy nations will discuss the US Biden administration's proposed price cap on Russian oil when they meet on Friday, the White House has said. "This is the most effective way, we believe, to hit hard at Putin's revenue and doing so will result in not only a drop in Putin's oil revenue, but also global energy prices as well," said White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre. Despite Russia's oil exports hitting their lowest levels since last August, its export revenue in June increased by $700 million month on month due to higher prices, 40 percent above last year's average, the International Energy Agency said last month. Key oil consumers China and America's partner India have stepped up imports of discounted Russian barrels to record levels. For live updates from Wednesday (August 31), click here Source: TRTWorld and agencies

#discuss #Russian #oil #price #cap #Ukraine #fight #grinds https://www.globalcourant.com/g7-to-discuss-russian-oil-price-cap-as-ukraine-fight-grinds-on/?feed_id=18485&_unique_id=630ff316437f6

Ukraine's Zelensky Vows Fight 'Until the End' on 6-month War Anniversary

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was in Kyiv on Wednesday, hailing Ukraine's six-month long resistance to the Russian invasion as his counterpart President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed the fight would continue "until the end". Wednesday marked half a year since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the large-scale invasion of Ukraine, as well as the day the nation annually celebrates its 1991 independence from the Soviet Union. During a surprise visit to the Ukrainian capital Johnson said Putin had failed to account for the "strong will of Ukrainians to resist." "You defend your right to live in peace, in freedom, and that's why Ukraine will win," he said in front of reporters during the afternoon. The Ukrainian leader had issued his own defiant morning video address, declaring: "We don't care what army you have, we only care about our land. We will fight for it until the end." Referring to Russia he vowed Ukraine "will not try to find an understanding with terrorists". "For us Ukraine is the whole of Ukraine," he said. "All 25 regions, without any concession or compromise."

Fresh aid

Meanwhile on Wednesday, the U.S. announced $3 billion in fresh military aid. The new tranche of U.S. funding will help Kyiv acquire more weaponry, ammunition and other supplies for its armed forces, locked in a grinding war of attrition with Russian troops in the east and south with neither side advancing significantly in weeks. Johnson also unveiled his own £54 million ($64 million) package of aid, including 2,000 "state-of-the-art drones" as well as anti-tank munitions. The White House announcement came as Washington warned Moscow could be planning a surge in strikes on civilian targets coinciding with Independence Day observations. Gatherings have been banned in the capital Kyiv and Zelensky has urged citizens to be on guard against "Russian terror". Nevertheless the leader and his wife marked a minute of silence for fallen Ukrainian soldiers and laid yellow and blue floral bouquets at a memorial in central Kyiv, the president's office said.

European support

Johnson's visit was accompanied by other messages of support from Ukraine's allies. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the anniversary of the start of Russia's war in Ukraine a "sad and tragic milestone". European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU has been standing with Ukraine "from the very beginning" and "will be for as long as it takes." But in an absurd message, the authoritarian leader of Belarus, which offered its territory as a staging ground for Russia's invasion, gave congratulations to Ukraine on its Independence Day. "I am convinced that today's contradictions will not be able to destroy the centuries-old foundation of sincere good neighbourly ties between the peoples of our two countries," Alexander Lukashenko said.

Muted anniversary

In the early days and weeks of Russia's invasion, Kyiv was under siege by Russian troops which reached the suburbs of the capital. Moscow's offensive quickly faltered, and its forces withdrew in late March to regroup for assaults on Ukraine's east and south. But in the capital, Ukrainians were sombre about the anniversary after a half-year of death and destruction.  "Six months, the peace of life has been broken in every family," Nina, an 80-year-old pensioner, said at Independence Square in central Kyiv, on Tuesday. "How much destruction, how many dead, how can we relate to it?" she asked. The capital city's administration said it would shut public service centres on Wednesday and Thursday, and shopping malls said they would close for the anniversary for safety concerns.  However, in central Kyiv crowds of people gathered in a surreal atmosphere to inspect dozens of disabled Russian tanks, trucks and armoured vehicles installed near the government quarter to showcase Ukraine's military prowess. Cotton candy vendors plied trade to pedestrians, who peered down tank barrels and posed for selfies, draped in the Ukrainian flag. 

#Ukraines #Zelensky #Vows #Fight #6month #War #Anniversary https://www.globalcourant.com/ukraines-zelensky-vows-fight-until-the-end-on-6-month-war-anniversary/?feed_id=15321&_unique_id=63066fd09ee6c

Two women fight over seat in Delhi Metro

You must have witnessed many fights over a bus seat but recently a video of two women fighting over a seat in Delhi Metro is going viral on social media.

In the viral clip, a woman in a yellow saree is seen seated comfortably with her bag on an empty seat while a woman in orange kurta struggles to find a seat for herself in Delhi Metro. The argument begins when the woman, wearing saree, says she won’t offer the empty seat and the other woman goes on to sit in the small gap between her and another passenger.

The woman in the yellow saree said that she had reserved the empty seat for someone she’s waiting for but the other woman says she can’t reserve a seat like this. The kurta-clan woman forcibly sits at the empty gap squeezing the other woman.

The first woman then says that she can’t make her sit on her lap, to which the kurta woman responds saying she’s not asking to sit in her lap.

The video shared by a Twitter user has gone viral with more than 168k views and 5,100 likes so far

Comments


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/two-women-fight-over-seat-in-delhi-metro/?feed_id=11483&_unique_id=62fb23c5cd22d

CDC eases guidance as U.S. has more tools to fight the virus

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eased its Covid-19 guidance on Thursday, saying the virus now poses a much lower risk of severe illness, hospitalization and death compared to earlier in the pandemic.

The CDC no longer recommends testing people in schools who don't have Covid symptoms, its previous strategy to catch possible infections and head off outbreaks. But such screening is still recommended in certain high risk settings such as nursing homes, prisons and homeless shelters.

And people who aren't vaccinated no longer need to quarantine if they have been exposed to Covid, according to the new CDC guidance. Instead, public health officials now recommend that these individuals wear a mask for 10 days and get tested on day five.

A sign outside of a hospital advertises COVID-19 testing on November 19, 2021 in New York City. On Friday vaccine advisers to the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention voted unanimously in recommending a booster shot of the COVID-19 vaccines for all adults in the United States six months after they finish their first two doses.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

The CDC, in a report published Thursday, said there is a high level of immunity in the population from both the vaccines and infections which means the virus now poses a much lower threat to public health. Greta Massetti, a CDC epidemiologist, said the U.S. has the vaccines and treatments needed to fight the virus. But it remains crucial for everyone to remain up to date on their vaccines, according to the public health agency.

"This guidance acknowledges that the pandemic is not over, but also helps us move to a point where COVID-19 no longer severely disrupts our daily lives," Massetti said in a statement.

The changes in CDC guidance come as public health officials have warned that the U.S. could face a major wave of infection in the fall and winter, as immunity from the vaccines wanes off and people gather indoors to escape the colder weather.

The U.S. has repeatedly faced new omicron subvariants that are more transmissible than previous versions of the virus, which has led to stubbornly high levels of infection. The dominant version of the virus right now is omicron BA.5, which caused infections to increase during the spring and early summer.

What to do if you test positive

People with healthy immune systems, regardless of vaccination status, should isolate for five days after testing positive for the virus, but you can end isolation at day six if you have not had symptoms or if you have not had a fever for 24 hours and other symptoms have improved, according to the guidelines.

After leaving isolation, you should wear a high-quality mask through day 10 after your positive test. If you have had two negative rapid antigen tests you can stop wearing your mask earlier, according to the guidelines. But you should avoid people who are more likely to get sick from Covid, such as the elderly and people with weak immune systems, until at least day 11.

People with weakened immune systems, those who have been hospitalized with Covid, or those who have had shortness of breath due to the virus should isolate from others for 10 days. But people with weakened immune systems and those who were hospitalized should also consult a physician before ending isolation.

If you end isolation but your Covid symptoms worsen, you should return to isolation and follow the guidelines from scratch again, according to the CDC.

The U.S. is currently reporting more than 107,000 new Covid cases a day on average, according to the CDC. That's likely a significant undercount because many people are now testing at home and results are not picked up in official data.

About 6,000 people with Covid are admitted to the hospital a day on average, according to the CDC data. Nearly 400 people are still dying a day on average from the virus.

About 67% of people in the U.S. are fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. But only 48% of those who received their first two shots got their recommended booster dose. And just 30% of children ages 5 to 11 are fully vaccinated, according to the data.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/cdc-eases-guidance-as-u-s-has-more-tools-to-fight-the-virus/?feed_id=9719&_unique_id=62f5a363b224b

'ANC policies are not the Bible' - KZN determined to fight its battles at December conference


  • The ANC in KwaZulu-Natal doesn't believe the policy conference is where its policy strategy will be won. 
  • The province is determined to win the fight over the step-aside resolution and expropriation of land without compensation. 
  • Provincial secretary Bheki Mtolo said the party's policies were not the Bible and were meant to be amended. 

ANC policies are not the Bible and are destined to be amended, reviewed and even scrapped by its members. 

This was ANC KwaZulu-Natal provincial secretary Bheki Mtolo's latest defence on the province's push to amend the step-aside resolution, which has become the latest proxy fight at the party's national policy conference. 

The newly-elected Mtolo told News24 the idea of the step-aside issue being untouchable was a fallacy. 

This despite President Cyril Rampahosa telling delegates during his opening address of the party's need to defend its renewal agenda. 

Mtolo said ANC policies were not untouchable and were designed to be amended when material conditions changed. 

"The policies that are there are not the Bible. The only documents I know that have never had a conference to be amended are the Bible and the Quran. You cannot amend those. But any policy and the Constitution can be amended by anyone. 

"You establish a policy under certain material conditions, and when those conditions change, you review. We are not saying step-aside must not be implemented. We are saying, let us review it and scrap it because it is selectively applied. It is a weapon for a powerful, dominant faction to target political opponents," Mtolo said on Saturday on the sidelines of the ANC policy conference. 

READ | Pro-Zuma song shut down at ANC policy conference, while KZN sticks to guns on step-aside rule

Mtolo said the KZN delegation at the policy conference was not there to convince anyone of the worthiness of its policy positions, because the province's might will be felt at the national elective conference in December. 

The policy conference is expected to recommend policy reviews and recommendations for the party. 

The ANC elective conference has the constitutional mandate to amend any of the party's policies, including the step-aside resolution adopted at the 2017 conference. 

Mtolo is well aware of where the KZN ANC will have its most significant push on its policies. 

He stressed that the firebrand province, as the biggest region for the ANC, would ensure it wins the proxy fight. 

"We are not here to convince delegates that we are successful because we are unaware of how the delegates here are structured. These people here are not representing branches. They represent structures. For example, in other provinces, it is the whole PEC," Mtolo said. 

"Even if we are defeated here, it does not matter. I can tell you for sure that in December, 90% of delegates deciding there will be from branches. In KZN, we have 831 branches. We have 182 delegates here; of that, only 140 come from branches. This conference is a recommending body. I can tell you we will pass everything we want at the national conference, because it has strength and power," he said. 

'Overboard'

Mtolo launched an attack on Chief Justice Raymond Zondo, saying he had overreached his powers in recommending the ANC reviews its cadre deployment policy.

He said it would not be reviewing the policy, despite the party leaders already indicating a willingness to do so.

The provincial secretary also attacked several members of the ANC, saying their stance on state capture had soured for some people, including national chairperson Gwede Mantashe. 

He said those who supported the commission were now determined to review the report's findings, because of their implications. 

When state capture started, those pushing for the commission are now taking the report on review. Why are they taking it on review? There are people in the top six who are no longer happy. They thought the State Capture Commission would find bad things against Zuma. Now they believe Zondo has gone overboard.

"No sober judge can recommend that a political party can recommend that it changes its own rules. I am a beneficiary of cadre deployment and have not been involved in corruption. We are not going to review cadre deployment. That will never happen," Mtolo said. 

He accused the ANC of failing its previous resolutions and watering down its stance on expropriating land without compensation. 

He said the party lost support from the EFF for good reason, because it diverted its 2017 resolution. 

"We are serious about expropriation of land without compensation. The ANC did not fail. It shot itself in the foot. It watered down its own resolution. If we did not water down our resolution, the EFF would have supported us. The 54th national conference captured the original resolution. We watered down our own resolution. Ours is to mandate the coming NEC, not to water down the resolution," said Mtolo. 


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/anc-policies-are-not-the-bible-kzn-determined-to-fight-its-battles-at-december-conference/?feed_id=4586&_unique_id=62e61cb1da447

Buttigieg rips Rubio for having 'time to fight against Disney' but not for protecting same-sex marriage

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Biden's transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sunday lashed out at Republican Sen. Marco Rubio for having time to feud against Disney, while not backing a bill to codify same-sex marriage. 

During an appearance on CNN’s "State of the Union," Buttigieg, who shares twins with his husband Chasten Buttigieg, was asked if he had any message to Senate Republicans, namely to Rubio, R-Fla., who remarked to a reporter that a vote to codify same-sex marriage was a "stupid waste of time."

"If he's got time to fight against Disney, I don't know why he wouldn't have time to help safeguard marriages like mine," Buttigieg told CNN host Jake Tapper. "Look, this is really, really important to a lot of people. It's certainly important to me."

"I started my day as I try to do on weekends, I try to give Chasten a little bit of a break and do breakfast with both of our twins. And that alone, that's no small thing as every parent of small kids knows," Buttigieg said. "It was one of those days where the tray table wasn't quite fitting into the highchair, and I'm trying to make sure that they're busy enough with their little cereal puffs to give me enough time to chop up the banana and get the formula ready – and that half hour of my morning had me thinking about how much I depend on and count on my spouse every day." 

RICK SCOTT BLASTS PETE BUTTIGIEG'S ‘OUT OF TOUCH’ PUSH FOR ELECTRIC VEHICLES: AMERICANS ‘CAN’T AFFORD IT'  

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg delivers remarks at the Plenary II: State of Black America: Combating the Threat to Civil Rights & Democracy during National Urban League Conference on July 22, 2022, in Washington, DC. 

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg delivers remarks at the Plenary II: State of Black America: Combating the Threat to Civil Rights & Democracy during National Urban League Conference on July 22, 2022, in Washington, DC.  ((Photo by Brian Stukes/Getty Images))

"And our marriage deserves to be treated equally," he said. "And I don't know why this would be hard for a senator or a congressman. I don't understand how such a majority of House Republicans voted no on our marriage on as recently as Tuesday, hours after I was in a room with a lot of them talking about transportation policy, what I thought were perfectly normal conversations with many of them on that subject, only for them to go around the corner and say that my marriage doesn't deserve to continue."

"If they don't want to spend a lot of time on this, they can vote yes and move on. And that would be really reassuring for a lot of families around America, including mine," he added. 

During a midterm election year, Democrats have been campaigning to codify federal protections for contraception and same-sex marriage after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. 

In his opinion overturning Roe last month, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that the court should now review other precedents. He mentioned rulings that affirmed the rights of same-sex marriage in 2015, same-sex intimate relationships in 2003 and married couples' use of contraceptives in 1965.

Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican from Florida, speaks during the Republican Party of Florida 2022 Victory Dinner in Hollywood, Florida, on July 23, 2022.

Sen. Marco Rubio, a Republican from Florida, speaks during the Republican Party of Florida 2022 Victory Dinner in Hollywood, Florida, on July 23, 2022. (Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The House voted Tuesday to codify federal protections for same-sex marriage, with 47 Republicans joining all Democrats in backing the measure. 157 Republicans voted no on the so-called "Respect for Marriage Act." 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

At least 10 Republicans will need to back the measure in the Senate to skirt the filibuster.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/buttigieg-rips-rubio-for-having-time-to-fight-against-disney-but-not-for-protecting-same-sex-marriage/?feed_id=1726&_unique_id=62de3f21a6433

Pakistan Army soldier embraces martyrdom amid fight with terrorists in DI Khan

Pakistan Army soldiers alert on position on a check post. — AFP/File
Pakistan Army soldiers alert on position on a check post. — AFP/File

RAWALPINDI: A Pakistan Army soldier embraced martyrdom during an intense exchange of fire between the troops and terrorists in district Dera Ismail Khan’s Daraban Tehsil on Saturday, July 23, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a  statement on Sunday.

The military’s media wing added that the troops effectively engaged the terrorist’s location. However, the 31-year-old resident of Lakki Marwat Lance Naik Mujeeb Ur Rehman fought gallantly and embraced martyrdom.

The ISPR stated that the military is determined to sanitise the area to ‘eliminate any terrorists’.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/pakistan-army-soldier-embraces-martyrdom-amid-fight-with-terrorists-in-di-khan/?feed_id=1534&_unique_id=62ddb260ce01f