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Ukraine F-16 destroyed during Russian attack
Catagory:News
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

One of the F-16 fighter jets sent from Nato allies to Ukraine has been destroyed, a Ukrainian military source has told the BBC. The aircraft went down amid a barrage of Russian missiles on Monday, killing pilot Oleksiy Mes, Ukraine's military said. It marks the first loss of its kind since the planes were delivered earlier this month. The cause of the crash was not a direct result of an enemy missile strike, the Ukrainian military claims. It said the pilot destroyed three cruise missiles and one drone in Russia's largest aerial attack to date."Oleksiy saved Ukrainians from deadly Russian missiles," the Ukrainian Air Force wrote in a statement on social media. "Unfortunately, at the cost of his own life." The statement did not specify the type of plane involved, but a military source told the BBC the pilot was flying an F-16. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky officially confirmed on Tuesday the US-made F-16's were being deployed to shoot down Russian drones and missiles. This week, he asked allies to allow Ukraine to use long range missiles to hit targets further into Russia. Dutch Chief of Defence Gen Onno Eichelsheim confirmed the Netherlands will provide Ukraine with 24 of the jets, in addition to more weapons. There will be no restrictions on their usage apart from complying with humanitarian law, he told a conference in Washington on Wednesday - meaning Kyiv could launch deeper strikes into Russian territory. Around 65 F-16s have been pledged by Nato countries since US President Joe Biden first authorised willing European allies to send them to Ukraine in August 2023. Ukraine's F-16s work alongside a limited number of Western-supplied surface-to-air missile systems such as Patriot and Nasams which are already on the ground. They also help defend against Russian glide bombs - dumb munitions fitted with pop-out wing kits and guidance modules to deliver precision strike stand-off capabilities, similar to the JDAM munitions from the United States. The destruction of the aircraft is blow to Zelensky, who said he will deliver a "victory plan" to US President Joe Biden next month.


Type:Technology
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Honey, not marmalade, is saving the real 'Paddington Bear'
Catagory:Reading
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

Drought and conflict with farmers are threatening Bolivia's Andean bear – the real-life Paddington Bear. Now a beekeeping project is helping protect this endangered species. Elsa Limachi looks silently at the mountains around her small straw house. She is scanning her surroundings for the Andean bear. This small "spectacled" bear, with its circular golden markings around its eyes, is the real-life Paddington Bear. Unlike the marmalade-obsessed fictional favourite, Andean bears are not social creatures. They are difficult to spot, but they are there, roaming through the dry Andean forest in southern Bolivia, Limachi says. The inter-Andean dry forest lives up to its name with a landscape dotted with dense trees and bushes, where green merges with yellow and brown. The earthy tones of the landscape provide the perfect camouflage for the Andean bear's dark brown fur. Limachi lives in San Lorencito, a remote farming village in Tarija, southern Bolivia. For generations, the community saw the Andean bear as a threat which was responsible for killing their cattle and eating their crops. These often false beliefs have led to retaliatory killings in the area."Several years ago, we didn't want the bear around because we thought it was not only dangerous, but also harmful to our cattle and crops," says Limachi. "The farmers would always blame the bear," Limachi says. But bear attacks were the cause of only 5% to 10% of livestock deaths, she says, adding that poor management practices of cattle, diseases, tumbling accidents or snake bites, were the main reasons for cattle losses.The Andean bear's conservation status is vulnerable. The bear's main threats are retaliatory killings, habitat fragmentation and degradation, and the effects of climate change on the reproductive success of the species. Bolivia and Peru are home to 70% of the Andean bear population, but the species can also be found in parts of Ecuador, Colombia and Venezuela. It is the only bear species residing in South America and there are an estimated 2,500 to 10,000 mature bears in the wild, according to ecological models. In contrast to Paddington Bear, who always keeps a marmalade sandwich tucked under his hat in case of a hunger emergency, the Andean bear feeds on bromeliads, exotic plants related to the pineapple, and other hard vegetative matter growing on the mountainside. But when there is not enough food in the forest, this opportunistic hunter may attack cattle, leading to conflict with farmers.In San Lorencito, conflict with farmers has led to illegal retaliation killings, threatening the Andean bear's long-term survival. Witnessing the declining bear population in the region, Bolivian biologist Ximena Velez-Liendo came up with a plan to minimise conflict between farmers and bears. The solution? Beekeeping. Velez-Liendo is the founder of the Andean Carnivore Conservation Programme (ACCP), a conservation project led by Chester Zoo in the UK along with other organisations, including WildCRU, Foundation Segré, Darwin Initiative and Whitley Fund for Nature.The ACCP opened a communal apiary with 10 beehives in San Lorencito in 2018, which also served as a school for community members to learn the craft of beekeeping. The programme helped provide resources so each family could start their own apiary, as well as equipment to facilitate honey harvesting. The aim was to provide the community with an alternative economic activity to cattle farming. Velez-Liendo established the beekeeping project in 2018 following a regional assessment which revealed that farming communities were killing one to two bears every year because they blamed the animals for killing their livestock. Most cattle deaths were attributed to the bear, even if other factors, such as diseases and mountain tumbling, were to blame, says the biologist. "The objective was to reduce retaliatory killings of bears by reducing cattle farming, as well as to improve people's attitude and increase tolerance towards bears," says Velez-Liendo, also a research associate at the wildlife conservation research unit at the University of Oxford and Chester Zoo in the UK, based in Tarija. "We do not provide the full cost of the apiary. We provide 70% of the total cost, and the beneficiary the remaining 30%," says Velez-Liendo. "We found out that people value and care more than if it had been completely free."In 2018, there were five bears in San Lorencito – two males and three females –according to a camera trapping study by the ACCP seen by BBC Future Planet. "Having so few individuals, and only one cub, showed us that the Andean bear was disappearing from that region," says Velez-Liendo. Before the programme started in 2018, farmers used to find dead cows and that their crops had been eaten by bears. Limachi says she once woke up to find that the maize she grows next to her house had all been eaten by a hungry bear. She now laughs about it, but at the time it was painful. "It was common to hear of bears being killed in the community. I used to hear that from my dad when I was a child, and then from my husband," Limachi says. "Retaliatory killings of bears, or revenge hunting, arises when bears attack livestock or damage crops, resulting in economic losses or a perceived threat for people," says Velez-Liendo. "Attacks on cattle and maize crops are the main causes of retaliation," says biologist Mauricio Peñaranda, who has spent six years researching human-bear conflict at San Francisco Xavier University in Sucre, southern Bolivia. Peñaranda says that free-ranging cattle that are left to roam in the mountains are particularly vulnerable to bear attacks. "The farmers take the cattle to great areas where they can find pastures, but it is hard to keep control of the animals," he says. "The lack of control can become an opportunity for the bear to attack, but sometimes accidents, such as snake bites or tumbling off the mountain, can cause their death," he says, adding that the bear is usually blamed, even in these instances. We didn't want the bear around because we thought it was not only dangerous, but also harmful to our cattle and crops – Elsa Limachi Mariolina Heredia, 29, the elected secretary of San Lorencito, has four active beehives. Her harvest, which happens once to twice a year, supplements the diet of her three children."I wanted us to be part of the project, because I saw that it was going to be something good," she says. "I thought we could sell the honey or keep it for our own consumption…I don't sell the honey, because I use it to feed my children." In her role as secretary, Heredia has helped to promote the beekeeping project, encouraging other members of the community to participate, and organised training courses. Just like Heredia, Zoilo Aguirre, who is the biggest livestock farmer in San Lorencito, does not sell the honey, because he gives it to his children and grandchildren to supplement their diet and as a substitute for sugar. His family also use propolis, the resin collected by honeybees from tree buds which they use to build their hives, as medicine. Propolis is known for its wound-healing, antiviral and anaesthetic properties. It's like having a pharmacy," says Aguirre. "We use the honey and propolis for coughs, toothache and colds." Each beehive produces between 400g (0.8lb) and 600g (1.3lb) of propolis per year, according to the ACCP.Other beneficiaries of the programme, such as Limachi, sell their entire harvest, about 90kg (198lb), every year for $517 (£404). "By selling the honey, I was able to pay my debts," she says. The average monthly minimum wage in the community is $359 (£279), according to Patricia Sánchez, who oversees the economic initiatives of the ACCP. The honey sales provide roughly 30% of the families' average income, says Sánchez. The ACCP has created the "Valle De Osos" brand, translated as "Valley of the Bears", which community members can use to market their honey as a bear-friendly product. "I consider myself a fairly conscious consumer," says Alejandra Laserna, from Cochabamba, who has been buying Valle De Osos honey since 2019, directly from the community. "I know I am choosing something good for me, but also something that is helping a community's subsistence, as well as the conservation of a species that has no power to protect itself." For Benigno Tárraga, 68, beekeeping provides half of his monthly income of $359 (£281). He harvests honey three times a year, and by selling his honey through the "Valle de Osos" brand, he generates an annual income of $2,155 (£1,675). "I want to get more beehives to sell more honey and keep reducing my cattle, because beekeeping requires less physical effort," says Tárraga, who sees it as a good retirement plan. Heredia also wants to keep more beehives because there is less risk of financial loss. "If a cow dies, there is no way to recover that money. But with honey, if you take care of the beehives properly, you can have a good harvest," she says. Initially the community were hesitant to engage with the ACCP and their beekeeping project. "The first time Ximena came, I asked her to take the bear with her, I didn't want it here," Limachi recalls, laughing. But her attitude changed after she realised that the bear brought a wide range of benefits to the community. "Since the beekeeping project started, we have learned that we can benefit from the bear's presence, in an environmental and economical way," Limachi says. The Andean bear is referred to as the "gardener of the forest" because of its ability to spread seeds through its faeces, facilitating the regeneration of the ecosystems it inhabits, in this case the inter-Andean dry forest. "The bear, by feeding on plants, spreads seeds through its faeces. The bees, on the other hand, pollinate the plants," explains Velez-Liendo. "Bears help regenerate the forest and there is more food for the bees, because there are more flowers," says Heredia.Since the start of the project, cattle farming in the community has reduced by 17%, exceeding the projects expectations, according to Velez-Liendo. "While some community members have sold their cattle, others have lost them due to climate factors, but in both cases, they have not replaced them," she says, adding that this is due to the beekeeping project providing them with an alternative income. Beekeeping provides families with an alternative income stream, making them less reliant on livestock farming, according to the ACCP's Sánchez. Half of their average income now comes from cattle farming, 30% from honey and 20% from agriculture, she says. The number of bears has increased in the area, from five adults identified in 2018, to 40 in 2024, according to the most recent evaluation of the project, seen by BBC Future Planet.Between 2016 and 2024, no bears were killed in retaliation attacks, according to the ACCP. However, in 2019 a dominant male was killed for its fur. The project has also increased the average income of families in San Lorencito by 15% and increased the household's ability to generate income by 11.8%, between 2018 and 2021. Tolerance towards bears has increased by 50% according to the same report, based on a survey conducted in 2019, where they found that only 10% of cattle deaths were attributed to the bear. Aguirre, San Lorencito's biggest livestock farmer, has taken a proactive role to avoid conflict with the bear, by planting pastures in an area where he can have control of his livestock. "I try to avoid free-ranging animal husbandry, because I know the bear is there and I would be taking the cattle to its door," he says.The success of the programme led the ACCP to introduce their conservation initiative in two other areas in the inter-Andean dry forest this year. Velez-Liendo says the project can be replicated in other areas, but only if communities are willing to participate.She says one of the biggest limitations the programme has found is the lack of conservation professionals in the region. This means that agronomists, veterinarians and sociologists have been brought in from different cities, which hinders the continuity of the work, she says. Similar other initiatives are being implemented across Bolivia, addressing not only human-bear conflict, but also landscape conservation."We have published a study identifying the main strongholds for the conservation of the Andean bear in both Peru and Bolivia, and the good news is that they are relatively large areas," says Robert Wallace, a senior conservation scientist for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) in the Andes, Amazon and Orinoco regions. The Andean bear is a landscape species, which means that it needs large spaces to have viable populations, Wallace says. "It needs between 11.5 sq miles (30 sq km) and 38.6 sq miles (100 sq km) per individual, although they can overlap." The same study revealed that there were larger populations of Andean bears in the country's protected areas in western Bolivia, leading the WCS to focus its work on supporting local authorities and communities there. Another conservation initiative is being implemented in the municipality of Tiquipaya in Cochabamba in central Bolivia, by Andrea Fuentes Arze, who works for the environmental non-profit Vida Silvestre. She runs the Jucumari programme that aims to reduce conflict with the Andean bear, by providing the local community with an alternative economic activity to livestock farming.Here the focus is artisanal weaving, rather than beekeeping. The Jucumari programme trains women in different weaving techniques, to create handicrafts such as small woven Andean bears, loom woven blankets and table runners that are later sold in towns. The sale of these woven items provides about 15% of the women's total income, says Fuentes Arze. The project has not only helped reduce conflict with the bear, but also empowered local women and provided an alternative income for their families, she says. "There is a greater tolerance for conflict in the communities where we work. We can see their frustration when they lose a cow, but at least the women can now get over this bitter pill, with a little more vision." For Velez-Liendo, the key is finding ways for humans and bears to coexist, while improving people's livelihoods and protecting bear strongholds in the Andes. "Bears have lived in these forests for thousands of years, even before the arrival of the human species in the Andes. Today, bears and humans share the same landscape," she says. "A bear does not kill cows as revenge to humans for taking their forest." "We are focused on increasing people's tolerance towards bears, and providing economic alternatives to livestock, so next time a bear kills a cow or steal some maize, people will simply say: 'cheeky bear'."Correction: This story originally stated the bear was also found in Argentina. This was corrected on 23 August, as the bear is not found in this country. Source:BBC EARTH


Type:Event
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Japan hit by one of strongest typhoons in decades
Catagory:News
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

Typhoon Shanshan made landfall in Japan at 08:00 local time today (23:00 GMT) and has left at least three people dead since developing off the coast earlier this week. Three people have been confirmed dead after their home was damaged late on Tuesday. At least 84 have been injured, according to Japan’s national broadcaster NHK. More than five million people have been advised to evacuate – it’s not known how many have done so. More than 700 flights have been cancelled, and two high speed railways suspended. More than 80 sections of highway were also suspended. Meanwhile, over 230,000 homes were without electricity this morning and 90 without water. One woman told a local TV station she didn’t think she could live through the strong winds, “I just wanted to survive”, she said. A man described a tornado as “out of this world”, adding that it was “spooky” to look at. In a news conference this morning, Japan’s chief cabinet secretary warned the “slow” moving typhoon could mean large amounts of rainfall. Since then, Japan’s weather agency has predicted 1,200mm (43in) rain in southern Kyushu by tomorrow morning. As for the typhoon itself – it’s heading northwards.


Type:Social
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Trump says insurance or government should pay for IVF
Catagory:News
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has said that in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatments will be paid for by insurance companies or the government if he returns to the White House. “I was always for IVF. Right from the beginning, as soon as we heard about it," he told NBC News on Thursday. The new campaign pledge comes after his Democratic rival, Vice-President Kamala Harris, and other members of her party have alleged that Republican-led abortion restrictions in some states could further threaten access to fertility treatments. Trump's announcement could put him at odds with some conservative anti-abortion activists who want to ban IVF for discarding unused human embryos. But he committed to the new position on Thursday in the interview with NBC. "Under the Trump administration, we are going to be paying for that treatment," Trump told the news outlet. "Or we're going to be mandating that the insurance company pay." IVF treatments can be very expensive - often around $20,000 (£15,000) per round - and are rarely covered by insurance in the US. Trump did not explain how this new policy would work or be put into effect. The Harris-Walz campaign was quick to respond to the former president's new policy position, blaming him for the US Supreme Court's decision to overturn the landmark 1973 abortion case - Roe v Wade - which eliminated the national right to abortion. State governments can now decide Americans' access to abortion, and at least 14 have banned or put severe restrictions on the procedure. "Because Trump overturned Roe v. Wade, IVF is already under attack and women’s freedoms have been ripped away in states across the country," said Harris campaign spokeswoman Sarafina Chitika in response to Trump's comments on Thursday. Trump has previously bragged about appointing three of the six conservatives on the Supreme Court who backed overturning the abortion access law. "I was able to kill Roe v Wade," the former president posted online in May 2023. But Trump has attempted to distance himself from his record on abortion, as Harris capitalises on voter concerns about how Republicans could affect reproductive rights. In his interview, Trump - a Florida resident - also said he planned to vote against a Florida state ballot measure that would prohibit abortion after six weeks, with some exceptions. "I think the six-week [ban] is too short. There has to be more time," he said. "I am going to be voting that we need more than six weeks." IVF became a new political lightning rod in America's debate over abortion access in February. That's when the Republican-controlled Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos created through IVF are considered children under state law. At the time, Trump called on Alabama lawmakers to "quickly find an immediate solution to preserve the availability of IVF in Alabama". They passed a law protecting IVF in March. The ruling was a political headache for Republicans, forcing several leaders to put out statements objecting to the Alabama ruling that had the possibility of damaging their prospects in an election year. Forty-two percent of Americans have either used IVF treatments or known someone who did, according to a Pew Survey last year. That percentage rises with increased earnings - 45% among middle-income Americans and 59% for those with high-incomes. Those individuals are more likely to be white Americans who vote Republican, and many are ones whom Trump hopes to bring back into the political fold after losing their support in 2020. Trump told supporter about his new position at a rally in Michigan on Thursday. "Your government will pay for, or your insurance company will be mandated to pay for, all costs associated with IVF treatment," he said. But Democrats continued to reject that a Trump administration would adopt such a policy on Thursday night. "Americans have seen with their own eyes how Donald Trump overturned Roe v Wade and paved the way for extreme Maga Republicans to restrict IVF and pass cruel abortion bans across the country, hurting women and families," Democratic National Committee Spokesperson Aida Ross said in a statement. "When voters head to the ballot box this November, they will vote for the Harris-Walz ticket to protect our freedoms - not Trump and Vance’s all-out assault on our basic rights.”


Type:Technology
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Members of ENDF paid ultimate sacrifice in Somalia to ensure peace in the region – Mission Chief
Catagory:News
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

Commander of Ethiopian National Defense Forces (ENDF) Peacekeeping Center, Major General Adamneh Mengste, said that the sacrifice of the 48th Motorized Peacekeeping Battalion in Somalia played an integral role to ensure peace in the Horn of Africa region. He disclosed that the 48th Motorized Peacekeeping Battalion, which has been deployed in Somalia under ATMIS, has successfully completed its mission. The members of the African Union Transitional Mission (ATMIS) in Somalia duly completed their duties and returned to the Hurso Contingent Training School and the commander conveyed a welcome message. The 48th Motorized Peacekeeping Battalion has returned from their duty by creating stable peace in the neighboring country of Somalia, it was indicated. Major General Adamneh Mengste underscored that the sacrifice made by the Ethiopian Defense Forces in Somalia is a comprehensive contribution to ensure sustainable peace in the countries of the Horn of Africa. He stressed that the returning peacekeepers should carry out their duties in their next deployments with honesty and bravery in the spirit of service.


Type:Social
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Oropouche: The mysterious 'sloth virus' with no treatment
Catagory:Education
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

Until recently, Oropouche virus was a relatively-unknown disease largely confined to within the Amazon basin in South America. But since late-2023, the virus has been spreading beyond its usual range. It has already caused more than 8,000 cases of the disease – often known by its nickname "sloth fever" – in five countries during the first seven months of 2024. The virus also recently caused the deaths of two women in Brazil and the potential deaths of two unborn children. The rapid increase in cases of Oropouche, which is spread by biting insects, led the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to issue a health advisory alert to doctors in the US. The first cases of the virus in Europe were detected in June and July 2024 in travellers who had been infected while visiting Brazil and Cuba. What is this mysterious virus, where did it come from and why is it causing concern?What is Oropouche virus? Oropouche is a virus endemic to the Amazon region of South America that is spread by biting insects. The virus causes a feverish disease in humans but is also found in a number of animals including howler monkeys, marmosets and sloths, along with a number of different insects.How does the virus spread? Oropouche is transmitted when a person or animal is bitten by insects carrying the virus. It is thought to be spread most commonly by the pinhead-sized midge species Culicoides paraensis, which are abundant across large parts of the Americas. But the virus may also be spread through bites by the Culex quinquefasciatus and Ochlerotatus serratus mosquitoes. Direct human-to-human transmission of the virus has not been observed. Once in the blood stream it can quickly spread around the body, and can cross the blood-brain barrier to get into the central nervous system. It appears to particularly accumulate within both the brain and liver.The virus itself carries a single strand of genetic material known as RNA that is encapsulated within a protective protein shell. It is thought to employ a "Trojan-horse" approach once in the bloodstream, getting inside immune cells known as phagocytes, allowing it to then pass undetected around the body to reach the tissues and organs it targets, where it then infects cells and replicates. The effects of climate change are meaning the virus is likely to continue expanding beyond its historic range in South America Where does Oropouche come from? The virus gets its name from the village where the first case was recorded. In 1955, the virus was isolated from the blood of a feverish 24-year-old forest worker in the community of Vega de Oropouche in Trinidad and Tobago. Since then, the virus has been responsible for sporadic outbreaks across the Brazilian Amazon, with some reported to reached up to 100,000 cases. In total, researchers estimate that more than 500,000 cases have been diagnosed, but this number may be an underestimate due to misdiagnosis, as many of the symptoms are similar to other fever-causing illnesses. From the late-1980s, outbreaks of the virus began to be reported in Panama, Peru and Ecuador. But since 2000, the number of countries reporting the virus has increased to include Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and French Guiana.What has led to the most recent outbreaks? In late-2023, large outbreaks began to occur in the Amazon basin, where the virus was already endemic, and in new areas of South America. In June 2024, Cuba confirmed cases of the virus. Between 1 January and 20 July 2024, the World Health Organization recorded 8,078 cases of Oropouche. The majority – 7,284 including the two deaths – were in Brazil, with Bolivia recording 356, Peru reported 290, Colombia with 74 and Cuba with 74.Most worryingly for public health officials, a growing number of cases are now occurring in non-Amazonian areas, and they have been documented in 10 states outside of the Amazon region in Brazil, as well as Cuba. Recent unpublished analysis of the virus behind the latest outbreaks suggests its genetic code has undergone some reshuffling that led to it replicating more efficiently in the cells of infected individuals. This means the virus can produce far higher numbers of itself once it infects a cell and hijacks the cellular machinery.This would not only allow the virus to potentially cause more severe disease in infected individuals, it also increases the chances of biting insects picking up the virus when feeding and passing it on. While the virus's ability to hide within immune cells means it could remain relatively hidden from the body's defence system, there are some signs the virus may be more resistant to the immune response of people previously infected with Oropouche. Scientists also believe that increased urban development into areas that were once forest may also be playing a role in the new outbreaks. They say that the effects of climate change are increasing the number of areas where the insects that spread the virus can live, meaning the virus is likely to continue expanding beyond its historic range in South America. What are the symptoms of Oropouche? The virus causes a flu-like fever in infected people, along with a headache, muscle aches, stiff joints, nausea, chills, sensitivity to light and vomiting. In severe cases it can cause meningitis. In general, the symptoms are similar to other mosquito-borne diseases like dengue, chikungunya, Zika and malaria. According to the CDC, symptoms typically start three to 10 days after being bitten and last for three to six days. Symptoms can reoccur a few days or weeks later in up to 60% of patients, and tend to be similar on relapse. It is not clear what causes these relapses; it could be the same infection re-emerging, or people living in areas with a high prevalence of virus-carrying insects being re-infected.How deadly is Oropouche fever? On 25 July, authorities in Brazil recorded the known first deaths from Oropouche fever. The two women were aged 21-years-old and 24-years-old, with neither having any pre-existing health conditions. A report by the Brazilian Ministry of Health has also suggested that the virus could be transmitted from pregnant women to their foetuses, and reported the death of one unborn child. It has also reported a miscarriage associated with Oropouche infection. Four cases of newborns with microcephaly – a birth defect where the baby's head is smaller than expected – were also reported to be associated with the virus. However, the effects of Oropouche on pregnancies and unborn children remains unproven and is being investigated. Why is it known as sloth fever? While the first wild animals found to carry the virus were howler monkeys, in 1960 it was also isolated from a pale-throated sloth in Brazil.But the main wild host of the virus has yet to be identified. A number of wild animals have been found to carry the virus, including a number of primates and three-toed sloths. However, a number of other wild animals are also thought to carry the virus. And the main wild host of the virus has yet to be identified. What treatment is available? An article in the academic journal The Lancet Microbe classifies outbreaks of Oropouche fever as "an emerging threat to global health" and warns of the lack of research into new treatments. Other researchers have underlined the "urgent need for effective vaccines" against Oropouche. While vaccines are being tested in animal models, there aren't any yet available or known to be effective in humans. There are currently no specific treatments for the disease. The Pan American Health Organization recommends rest, fluids and painkillers as the best treatment for symptoms. Brazil's Ministry of Health says that "patients must rest, with symptomatic treatment and medical monitoring". Anyone infected should also continue to use insect repellents, to reduce the likelihood of their being bitten by insects, which could then transmit the virus to other people. Can Oropouche be prevented? Without vaccines to control infections, the best way people can protect themselves against Oropouche is to avoid being bitten by midges and mosquitoes. Health authorities suggest using fine mesh nets on doors and windows. As the midge that carries the disease is smaller than mosquitoes, standard mosquito nets are thought to be less effective. Wearing clothing that covers arms and legs and using insect repellents can also help to protect against bites. SOURCE:PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION


Type:Education
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Harris defends White House record in high-stakes first interview
Catagory:News
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

US Vice-President Kamala Harris defended her shifts on policy, President Joe Biden, and her time in the White House in her first interview since becoming the Democratic nominee. Ms Harris argued that the Biden administration was able to reduce illegal border crossings in recent months and "recover the economy" after the pandemic. She called the White House's policies a "success", specifically pointing to a decline in prescription drug costs and the unemployment rate: "That's good work. There's more to do." Ms Harris appeared in the pre-recorded CNN interview with her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. It was her first as a presidential candidate. The vice-president was forced to defend the White House's economic track record, as inflation and high cost-of-living prices continue to sting American pocketbooks. Polls have regularly suggested that voters would prefer Republican candidate Donald Trump's handling of the economy. But the most tense exchanges between Ms Harris and CNN interviewer Dana Bash centred on the assertion that the Democratic nominee's policy positions had undergone "changes" during her time as vice-president and as a presidential candidate. "I think the most important and most significant aspect of my policy perspective and decisions is my values have not changed," she said when asked why her positions shifted in recent years. Trump had already dismissed the vice-president's first interview, which lasted 27 minutes, before its release because it was pre-taped and included Mr Walz. He used a single-word in his review after it concluded. "BORING!!!" the former president wrote on Truth Social.Ms Harris referred to her effort to address climate change and support of the Green New Deal, a Democratic proposal to reduce reliance on fossil fuels, as something that remains a steadfast value when pressured about her shifting policy positions. "I have always believed, and I've worked on it, that the climate crisis is real, that it is an urgent matter," she said. The vice-president pointed to the Biden administration's work on the Inflation Reduction Act, which funnelled hundreds of billions of dollars to renewable energy and electric vehicle tax credit and rebate programs. "We have set goals for the United States of America, and by extension the globe, around when we should meet certain standards for reduction of greenhouse gas emissions." Ms Harris did not explain her reversal on banning fracking - a technique for recovering gas and oil from shale rock used by an industry that is particularly strong in the battleground state of Pennsylvania. Ms Harris had said that "there is no question I'm in favour of banning fracking" during a CNN town hall in 2019. But she has backpedalled on that view since becoming vice-president - even casting the tie-breaking vote in the Senate on new fracking leases. In the CNN interview on Thursday, she said: "As president, I will not ban fracking." Brian Fallon, a campaign spokesperson, said on social media that the Biden administration's "clean energy investments have proven the ability to make progress on climate without those past stances".Ms Harris once held more progressive immigration views as a senator and in her campaign for president in 2020. She had previously advocated for the closure of immigration detention centres and the decriminalisation of illegal crossings. But on the subject of "securing our border" Ms Harris said "my values have not changed" and referenced her time "prosecuting transnational, criminal organisations" as California attorney general. Earlier this year, the vice-president supported a hardline bipartisan border security deal that would have included hundreds of millions of dollars for border wall construction. Trump pressured Republicans in Congress to kill the deal, but Ms Harris has promised to "sign it into law" if elected. She committed to passing it again during the CNN interview. To explain her moderated immigration view, the Democratic nominee told CNN that her travels across the country as vice-president had made her "believe it is important to build consensus, and it is important to find a common place of understanding of where we can actually solve problems". Along those lines, Ms Harris committed to include someone "who was a Republican" in her presidential cabinet. She said it would fulfill her promise to be a president “for all Americans”. "I have spent my career inviting diversity of opinion. I think it’s important to have people at the table when some of the most important decisions are being made that have different views." Ms Harris also was asked about the war in Gaza, and re-iterated the White House's position that both Israel and Hamas must "get a deal done" and that the Palestinians deserve to have their own country neighbouring Israel. "This war must end, and we must get a deal that is about getting the hostages out," she said. She would not commit to an arms embargo on Israel, as some on her party's left flank have demanded.Mr Walz, who served for decades in the US National Guard, was asked to clarify a comment he in made in which he said he "carried" an assault rifle in "war". The campaign has clarified that Mr Walz was never in a war zone. In the interview, the governor said he wore "his emotions on his sleeve" and was "speaking passionately" about the subject of gun crime in schools when he made the inaccurate statement. That "passion" also extended to his incorrect assertion that his wife had received in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatments - which have become a political lightning rod in the US debate over abortion access - to conceive their children. She received intrauterine insemination, not IVF, though doctors have said that the two fertilisation treatments are often referred to interchangeably. Mr Walz said his record speaks for itself. He said he did not believe that Americans were "cutting hairs" between the two. The Minnesota governor was also asked about his son, Gus, who went viral when he proudly proclaimed "That's my dad" at the Democratic National Convention. "It was just such a visceral, emotional moment that I'm grateful I got to experience it - and I'm so proud of him."Ms Harris described the moment that President Biden called her to share that he had decided to end his re-election bid in July. She said her family was visiting her when she received the phone call. They had just eaten pancakes and bacon and were working on a puzzle. "My first thought was not about me, to be honest with you, my first thought was about him," Ms Harris said when asked whether she asked for his endorsement. The vice-president also maintained that the president could have served again. "He is so smart, and I have spent hours upon hours with him being in the Oval Office and in the situation room. He has the intelligence, the commitment and judgment and disposition that I think the American people rightly deserve in their president." She said Trump, by contrast, had none of those qualities.Ms Harris has faced criticism from Republicans and some pundits for refusing to hold a press conference or an on-the-record, in-depth interview until now. Her critics argued that she was avoiding having her record challenged.Mr Biden's disastrous performance in that debate was widely seen as what sparked the effort for the president to withdraw from the race.


Type:Technology
👁 :
Maktub Paulo Coelho Dedicated to Nha Chica PART 12
Catagory:Fiction
Author:
Posted Date:08/30/2024
Posted By:utopia online

point in your life,” she said. “But, as you see, everything happened -and nothing.” “There was something missing from your talk about the Road to Santiago ,” said a pilgrim to the wanderer as they were leaving the conference together. “I have noticed that the majority of pilgrims,” she said, “whether on the Road toSantiago or on their paths through life, always seek to follow the same pace as the others. At the beginning of my pilgrimage, I tried to walk at the same pace as my group. I got tired, I demanded more of my body than it could deliver, I was tense, and I wound up with problems in the tendons of my left foot. It was impossible for me to walk for two days, and I learned that I would be able to get to Santiago only if I went at my own pace. It took me longer than the others, and I walked alone for many stretches along the road. But it was only because I respected my own pace that I was able to walk the entire road. Since then, I have applied that lesson to everything I do in my life.” Croesus, the king of Lydia , had made the decision to attack the Persians, but nevertheless wanted to consult with a Greek oracle. “You are fated to destroy a great empire,” the oracle said. Happily, Croesus declared war. After two days of battle, Lydia was invaded by the Persians, its capital was sacked, and Croesus was taken prisoner. Revolted, he asked his ambassador to Greece to go back to the oracle and tell him how wrong he had been. “No, it was you who were wrong,” said the oracle to the ambassador. “You destroyed a great empire: Lydia .” The master says: “The language of signs is there is before us, to teach us the best way to act. But many times we try to distort those signs so that they “agree” with what we wanted to do in the first place. Buscaglia tells the story about the fourth of the Magi, who also saw the star shining over Bethlehem . But he was always late in arriving at the place where Jesus might be, because along the way, the poor and needy stopped him to ask him for help. After thirty years of following in Jesus's footsteps, through Egypt , Galilee and Bethany , the magus reached Jerusalem , but was again too late. The child Jesus was now a man, and the magus had arrived on the day of the crucifixion. The king had brought pearls to give to Jesus, but had sold everything in order to help those whom he had met along the way. Only one pearl remained, but the Saviour was already dead. “I have failed in the mission of my life,” the king thought. And then he heard a voice: “Contrary to what you are thinking, you have been with me all your life. I was nude, and you dressed me. I was hungry, and you fed me. I was imprisoned, and you visited me. I was in every poor soul along the way. Thank you for so many presents of love.” A science fiction story tells of a society where almost everyone is born ready to perform a function: technicians, engineers or mechanics. Only a few are born without any skills: these are sent to an insane asylum, since only crazy people are unable to make a contribution to society. One of the insane rebels. The asylum has a library, where he attempts to learn everything there is to know about the arts and sciences. When he feels that he knows enough, he decides to escape, but he is captured and taken to a research center outside the city. “Welcome,” says one of the people in charge of the center. “It is those who have been forced to make their own way that we admire most. From now on, you may do as you please, since it is thanks to people like you that the world is able to progress.” Before leaving on a long trip, a businessman was saying good-bye to his wife. “You have never brought me a present that was worthy of me,” she said. “You ungrateful woman, everything I have given you cost me years of work,” the man answered. “What else can I give you?” “Something that is as beautiful as I am.” For two years, the woman awaited her present. Finally, her husband returned. “I was able to find something that is as beautiful as you,” he said. “I wept at your ingratitude, but I resolved that I would do as you asked. I thought all this time that there couldn't be a present as beautiful as you, but I found one.” And he handed her a mirror. The German philosopher, F. Nietzsche, once said: “It's not worthwhile to spend time discussing everything; it is a part of the human condition to err from time to time.” The master says: “There are people who insist that they be right about even minor details. They often do not permit themselves to make a mistake. What they accomplish with that attitude is a fear of moving ahead. Fear of making a mistake is the door that locks us into the castle of mediocrity. If we are able to overcome that fear, we have taken an important step in the direction of our freedom.” A novice asked the Father Superior Nisteros at the monastery at Sceta: “What are the things I should do in order to please God?” Father Nisteros answered: “Abraham accepted strangers, and God was happy. Elijah did not like strangers, and God was happy. David was proud of what he did, and God was happy. The Roman publican, before the altar, was ashamed of what he did, and God was happy. John the Baptist went into the desert, and God was happy. Jonah went to the great city of Ninevah , and God was happy. Ask your soul what it wants to do. When your soul is in agreement with your dreams, it makes God happy.” A Buddhist master was traveling on foot with his disciples, when he noted that they were discussing among themselves who was the best. “I have practiced meditation for fifteen years,” said one. “I have been charitable ever since I left my parents' home,” said another. “I have always followed the precepts of Buddha,” said a third. At noon, they stopped under an apple tree to rest. The branches of the tree were loaded down with fruit, to the point that its branches reached to the ground. “When a tree is laden with fruit, its branches bend to touch the ground. The truly wise is he who is humble. When a tree bears no fruit, its branches are arrogant and haughty. The foolish man always believes that he is better than others.” Antonio Machado says: “Blow by blow, step by step, Pathfinder, there is no path, The path is made to be walked. By walking, the path is made, And if you look back, All you will see are the marks Of footsteps that one day Your feet will once again take. Pathfinder, there is no path, The path is made to be walked.” At the Last Supper, Jesus accused -with the same gravity and using the same phrase -two of his apostles. Both had committed the crimes foreseen by Jesus. Judas Iscariot recovered his senses and condemned himself. Peter also recovered his senses, after denying three times everything he had believed in. But at the decisive moment, Peter understood the true meaning of Jesus' message. He asked forgiveness and went on, humiliated. He could have chosen suicide, but instead he faced the other apostles and must have said: “Okay, speak of my error for as long as the human race exists. But let me correct it.” Peter understood that Love forgives. Judas understood nothing. A famous writer was walking with a friend when a boy started to cross the street in front of an oncoming truck. The writer, in a fraction of a second, threw himself in front of the truck and was able to save the boy. But, before anyone could praise him for his act of heroism, he slapped the boy across the face. “Don't be fooled by appearances, my boy,” he said. “I saved you only so that you couldn't evade the problems you will have as an adult.” The master says: “Sometimes we are afraid of doing good. Our sense of guilt always tries to tell us that -when we act with generosity -we are merely trying to impress others. It is difficult for us to accept that we are good by nature. We mask our good acts with irony and indifference, as if live were synonymous with weakness.” Jesus looked at the table before him, wondering what would be the best symbol of his passage on Earth. On the table were pomegranates from Galilee, spices from the deserts of the south, dried fruits fromSyria and Egyptian dates. He must have extended His hand to consecrate one of them, when suddenly he recalled the message that he brought was for all men everywhere. And perhaps pomegranates and dates did not exist is some parts of the world. He looked about him, and


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