Steel beams from Key Bridge being cut as cleanup effort continues


Steel beams from Key Bridge being cut as cleanup effort continues – CBS News

Watch CBS News


Crews began cutting through steel beams as cranes prepared to lift debris from the collapsed Francis Scott Key bridge off the cargo ship that brought it down. The cleanup effort is key to reopening the port of Baltimore. Nicole Sganga has the latest.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

Barrage of Russian attacks aims to cut Ukraine’s lights


In central Kharkiv you hear the rattle of generators on every street.

Ten days ago, Ukraine’s second city was plunged into darkness by a massive, targeted Russian missile attack on the energy system – it was the biggest since the start of the full-scale war.

As Kharkiv works to restore power, there has been a wave of additional strikes across the country targeting the energy supply.

Volodymyr Zelensky has condemned what he calls Russia’s “missile terror”.

The Ukrainian president has also renewed his calls to his country’s allies for more air defence systems as protection.

The authorities in Odesa on the Black Sea in the south of the country say the energy system there was the latest to be hit overnight, with missiles and drones, causing partial blackouts.

In Kharkiv to the north, the damage is more serious.

Kharkiv’s mayor, Igor Terekhov, has said it will take weeks to restore full supply and that is if Russia’s armed forces don’t strike the same targets again.

The initial attack on the city’s energy supply even knocked out the air raid siren. There is now a screeching noise that comes straight to people’s mobile phones instead.

There can be hours of those missile warnings in the city each day – during one on Saturday night, the blast wave from a strike blew out dozens of windows in a block of flats.

But the Russians have increasingly been aiming at the power grid.

“The damage is very serious,” Mr Terekhov told the BBC.

“We need time to repair it,” he added, suggesting that meant a couple more months at least.

Russia’s defence ministry confirms that its latest strikes have been focused on Ukraine’s power supply. It says the aim is to disrupt the work of the country’s defence industry and claims that “all aims of the strike were achieved”.

The ministry has a long history of disinformation.

But the Kharkiv mayor did tell the BBC that the city’s manufacturing sector, which requires significant power, has been affected by the blackouts. There are no further details.

Blackout periods

The impact on civilian life is more obvious.

Blackout periods have been introduced in order to conserve energy, and there is a schedule for the city. On Saturday those power cuts lasted six hours, but by Sunday they had been reduced to four hours.

The timings can slip.

“They were supposed to cut the power to my area at 09:00, so I got up especially early to charge everything,'” a friend messaged. “Then I got in the lift and got stuck. They’d cut the power early!”

A hair salon in a Kharkiv back street is one of many small businesses with a generator whirring noisily outside the door. On Saturday it was on for seven hours, allowing the salon to keep operating.

The same goes for cafés and companies throughout the city centre, although many have sheets of wood over their windows to cover a gap where the glass has already been shattered or to protect it from future blasts.

Some of the boards are painted with birds and flowers.

“We’ve been working on generator power since Monday,” salon owner Natalia told the BBC. “Of course it’s really hard, especially because we’re all women and when we finish work late at night it’s so dark!”

Russia has attacked Ukraine’s power grid before, in the first winter of the full-scale war.

As engineers scrambled to perform emergency repairs then, residents shivered in the dark in their homes or headed for central “invincibility points” for warmth and power.

Hope for a ‘quiet night’

It is much warmer now but the impact is still significant; when night falls, whole areas of Kharkiv remain pitch dark.

That affects people’s mood as much as it makes life awkward.

“The Russians have got new weapons,” a student called Liza worries, in one of Kharkiv’s central squares.

There’s a lot of chatter here about whether new, gliding bombs used by Moscow might bring even more devastation to Ukraine.

“People are depressed and thinking about leaving Kharkiv for a while. We notice that our army is struggling.”

The city authorities are determined to keep spirits up, as much as possible.

Within hours of the latest missile strike this weekend, dozens of workmen were clearing up the mess around the apartment block and sawing wood to seal windows.

The city metro is already running and electric trolleybuses and trams have been replaced by regular buses.

In Odesa, two districts were in partial blackout on Sunday morning. By early afternoon, power had been restored.

“A few days ago we had a total blackout, that was major,” Odesa resident Masha told the BBC. “Yesterday there were no traffic lights in the city centre and limited streetlights, to save power.”

On Sunday, she said, there were people out and about in town as usual. Officials say consumption restrictions have now been lifted all over the country.

When I asked Kharkiv salon owner Natalia whether she was worried by the latest attacks, she quoted her city’s reputation.

“We are invincible,” she joked.

She then wished us a “quiet night,” meaning one with without explosions.

In Kharkiv, nowadays, that is increasingly rare.



Source link

Workers begin to cut and remove Key Bridge debris


Workers begin to cut and remove Key Bridge debris – CBS News

Watch CBS News


Workers began the dangerous job of cutting the destroyed Francis Scott Key Bridge into pieces, the first step in the urgent effort to reopen Baltimore’s blocked port. Nicole Sganga has more.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

Malaysia’s Plan to Cut Subsidies This Year Hits a Speed Bump


(Bloomberg) — The Malaysian government’s long-awaited plan to cut fuel subsidies this year and tighten its finances has hit a major speed bump: Most citizens aren’t cooperating.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Less than half of Malaysians have updated their income details in a government database that will enable authorities to determine where handouts should be directed once the nation limits subsidies on the cheapest form of gasoline. Economy Minister Rafizi Ramli said this week he expects the number of registrations to increase to 10 million — or about 50% of the population aged 21 and above — by the March 31 deadline.

The low take-up rate — fueled in part by worries over data security — is a cause for concern. Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim needs to undo hefty subsidies to boost investors’ confidence in the country, with the Malaysian ringgit languishing near a 26-year low. The government estimates savings of at least $1 billion to $2 billion dollars a year from a shift to handouts that target only the needy.

“The situation is not ideal for the government and could result in more teething issues,” said Lavanya Venkateswaran, an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp.

As of Wednesday, about 40% of the target group had signed up with the Economy Ministry’s consolidated database, known as Padu. Policymakers need sufficient data to decide who would be eligible for government aid.

Anwar rose to power in late 2022, promising to improve investor confidence by cutting down on wastage and leakages. But economic growth last year undershot official estimates and the prime minister’s approval ratings have already taken a hit.

The government currently has limited fiscal space and “needs to implement fiscal reforms so that it rests on a sustainable and intact foundation,” Anwar said in a post on X on Wednesday.

Such reforms will focus on targeted subsidies and expanding the revenue base to improve the people’s welfare, he said. Malaysia intends to narrow its budget deficit to 4.3% of gross national product this year, from 5% last year.

Trust Deficit

Padu’s hiccups risk exacerbating the government’s woes. Rafizi said he will rely on existing data from other government agencies for Malaysians who failed to sign up by the end of the month, adding that this ran the risk of using out-of-date information.

But even that may not be enough.

“The precise subsidy distribution channel is still largely unknown, so there is a greater risk of mis-targeting without a completed Padu database,” said Firdaos Rosli, chief economist at Ambank M Bhd. “That said, the government could mitigate this by clarifying the ceiling of the subsidy bill they intend to spend this year.”

Malaysia spent about 81 billion ringgit ($17 billion) on subsidies last year.

Security fears have emerged as a major reason for the public’s lukewarm response toward Padu. When the database first launched in January, social media users raised concerns over various bugs and vulnerability issues that Rafizi was quick to address. Two months on, the database is still facing a trust deficit — including among state government leaders.

International Islamic University Malaysia’s Syaza Farhana Mohamad Shukri said there are two groups who have yet to sign up: urban, tech-savvy people concerned about data sharing, and those who oppose the government and whatever it does. The latter group see their actions as a form of protest, a way to show their general distrust and dislike toward the government — though their stance may change once they see cash assistance coming in, said the associate professor of political science.

Despite all the risks, the government appears to have little choice but to continue with its plan. The sooner, the better. The fiscal math accounts for about an 18% drop in government spending on subsidies and social assistance, and this seems critical for it to reach its fiscal deficit target of 4.3% of GDP this year, according to OCBC’s Lavanya.

Ensuring the Padu database reaches at least a minimum level of completion “will go a long way in ensuring a smoother and more complete adoption to the new mechanism over time,” she said.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.



Source link

Diabetes and weight loss drug Wegovy could also cut cardiovascular risk


Diabetes and weight loss drug Wegovy could also cut cardiovascular risk – CBS News

Watch CBS News


The maker of diabetes and weight loss medication Wegovy said a trial found that the drug can also cut the risk of cardiovascular disease by 20%.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

Putin is likely counting on Trump or another Republican to win the 2024 election in hopes that the US will cut support to Ukraine, officials say


  • US officials are concerned Putin is prolonging efforts in Ukraine in hopes Trump wins in 2024, CNN reported.

  • Putin likely believes Trump in the White House would mean dwindling US support for Ukraine.

  • But whether Putin can maintain his war effort for another 15 months is increasingly questionable.

Western officials are increasingly worried that Russian President Vladimir Putin is prolonging his efforts in Ukraine in the hopes that former President Donald Trump or another Republican candidate will take the White House in 2024 and cut US funding to Ukraine, CNN reported this week, citing four US officials.

The US has not received specific information about whether Putin is factoring the 2024 election into his long-term plans in Ukraine, government officials told the outlet, but the coming election is nonetheless top-of-mind for national security officials and diplomats.

“Putin knows Trump will help him. And so do the Ukrainians and our European partners,” one unnamed source told CNN. “So even though we haven’t seen anything explicitly to that effect, you have to assume, I believe, that everyone is thinking it.”

Another US official told CNN they have “no doubt” that Putin is “trying to hold out” until the next election, while a European official said they think allowing the war to wage on until the election is “exactly Putin’s plan.”

As Ukraine continues to execute its much-anticipated counteroffensive to slow and stunted effect, there are no indications that the war is slowing. Some analysts have projected that the conflict could continue in some way for years.

If Putin is waiting on Trump, or a like-minded politician to win in November 2024, that means he is planning on seeing Russia through at least 15 more months of war. But that strategy in reality could be logistically challenging given Russia’s mounting manpower problems, the growing dysfunction within its depleted ranks, and Putin’s own waning power following the Wagner Group uprising earlier this summer.

Still, officials told CNN they believe Putin may see another Trump presidency as a saving grace for Russia, a likely safe bet given Trump’s repeated defenses of Putin in the year-and-a-half since Russia invaded Ukraine. Following the invasion, Trump called Putin’s justification for beginning the conflict “genius,” and later blamed the US for the war, accusing American politicians of “almost forcing” Putin to invade.

Polls suggest Trump is the clear GOP frontrunner despite his myriad legal troubles, which included a third criminal indictment handed down this week. The former president has not definitively said whether he would continue to support Ukraine should he win, but he called on Republican lawmakers this week to withhold military aid to the country until President Joe Biden agrees to congressional probes into his son Hunter Biden.

“The election next year complicates things because the Russians think they have a light at the end of the tunnel. It encourages Putin to think that they can outlast the Americans because political support for Ukraine will be compromised if Trump wins,” Daniel Fried, a former US ambassador to Poland, told CNN.

Putin’s possible long-game makes ongoing US assistance to Ukraine all the more important in the meantime, officials told the outlet.

But a CNN poll conducted by SSRS and released this week suggested support for Ukraine is dwindling among the American electorate. Fifty-five percent of the Americans polled responded that they believe Congress should not approve more funding to support Ukraine.

The Biden administration, however, has no plans to stop supporting Ukraine anytime soon, US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said in comments last month, telling NBC’s Meet the Press that Putin will be disappointed if he hangs his hopes on the 2024 election.

“If in fact, he is betting on American resolve to falter or fail, he is going to continue losing that bet,” Sullivan said.

Read the original article on Business Insider



Source link

The UN cut their food aid this summer. These Palestinians now struggle to find their next meal


JENIN, West Bank (AP) — Except for a small bag of lentils and the orange juice she reserves for guests, there is no food in Ashwaq Abu al-Wafa’s house in the northern West Bank city of Jenin.

Ever since the U.N. cut her food aid in June, she has fallen behind on rent. All her money now goes to feeding her three children, she said.

“The fridge is empty,” al-Wafa said from her apartment on Thursday. “I can barely hold all of this stress in my heart.”

Thousands of families like al-Wafa’s across the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip go through the day not sure where they will get their next meal now that the World Food Program has halted aid to 200,000 people, 60% of beneficiaries, its largest-ever cuts in the Palestinian territories.

The agency has made cuts across the world, from war-torn Yemen to West Africa, a region gripped by its worst hunger crisis in years.

The WFP’s deputy executive director, Carl Skau, announced last week that the agency has raised just $5 billion of the $20 billion it needs to operate fully, forcing it to suspend aid to 38 of its 86 countries where it operates.

Zekriat Karram, who also lives in Jenin, said that her family has survived by racking up debt at local groceries. Now, shopkeepers demand payback. When Karram was recently hospitalized, her six children, ranging in age from 3 to 16, scraped together meals of olives and bread.

The cuts come at a particularly bad time for Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, which is witnessing a surge in violence unseen in nearly two decades.

Al-Wafa and Karram’s homes have smashed doors and cracked windows, scars from recent stepped-up military raids into the flashpoint city, the latest of which marked the most intense in nearly two decades and left 12 Palestinians and one Israeli soldier dead. Israel says the raids are meant to thwart future attacks.

Al-Wafa’s 14-year-old son, Ammar, was shot in the chest during a January raid, she said, adding to her family’s expenses and squeezing their food budget. Her husband’s income depends on whether he can pass through Israeli military checkpoints to take produce into Jenin. When the Israeli army closes the roads, his work dries up and his family skips meals.

“Food insecurity here is a symptom of something larger,” said Samer Abdeljaber, WFP country director for the Palestinian territories. “Conflict, access and movement restrictions and the barriers to everyday life have led to soaring unemployment and poverty.”

The WFP said it suspended aid to those who could earn additional income or get other assistance, like the Palestinian Authority’s cash transfer program for poor families.

Only the most vulnerable, 150,000 people in the West Bank and Gaza, continue to receive aid from WFP. Their aid will be cut if donors don’t provide more funding by November, the agency recently warned. Meanwhile, more than 1 million Palestinian refugees in the West Bank and Gaza receive other kinds of assistance from a U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees and their descendants.

The Palestinian Authority, in the midst of a financial crisis, has said it can’t fill the shortfall.

Already, the WFP cuts have hurt small businesses in the territories, which once bustled with customers using WFP vouchers.

Palestinian shop owner Anas Eqteit has seen sales plunge by 70%. He laid off three of his four workers. Before June, his mini-market in Jenin served 50 families with WFP vouchers a week. Now, it serves five.

“The families who were suspended from the aid still come in every day to ask for food,” Eqteit said. “Am I supposed to turn them away?”



Source link

U.N. warns food assistance for millions could be cut as hunger problem grows


U.N. warns food assistance for millions could be cut as hunger problem grows – CBS News

Watch CBS News


The U.N. is warning it may need to cut food assistance for millions of people in dozens of nations due to declining donations. Experts worry this will exacerbate the world’s growing hunger problem. Nearly 10% of the global population faced hunger in 2022. Lana Zak has more on the issue.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Source link

Blasts at power station fire cut off electricity in much of scorching Iraq


Power was cut off in large swaths of southern and central Iraq for much of Saturday during scorching summer heat and observances of the Shiite holy day of Ashoura after a fire broke out at a power station in the southern city of Basra.

The fire at the Al-Bkir substation in Basra resulted in the separation of transmission lines linking the southern and central regions, leading to a complete shutdown of the electrical system in the area, Iraq’s Ministry of Electricity said in a statement. It said the fire was accidental.

The power outage came as the electrical system faces other challenges, including fuel shortages and surging demands for electricity during a major heat wave. On Saturday, temperatures reached 116.6 degrees Farenheit.

Also on Saturday, the company that handles electricity transmission in the north reported that the northern transmission line in a remote area outside the city of Haditha in western Iraq had been sabotaged. Three towers were hit by improvised explosive devices, putting the line out of service, the statement said.

It did not say who was responsible for the attack.

Staff were not initially able to repair the damage on Friday due to security issues, the statement said. Islamic State cells and other armed groups are active in the remote desert area. On Saturday, workers were able to access the site with the help of security forces and begin repair work.

The Ministry of Electricity ordered the formation of committees to investigate both incidents.

The power blackout had a domino effect on other services, with Baghdad Municipality attributing a disruption in tap water supply to the outage caused by the fire in Basra. The municipality said it was trying to run water pumps using generators to limit the impact on citizens.

Earlier this month, Iraq signed a $27 billion deal with TotalEnergies that many hope will help resolve Iraq’s longstanding electricity crisis, attract international investors and reduce its reliance on gas imports from neighboring Iran.



Source link

Power station fire, explosions cut off power in much of Iraq in scorching summer heat, officials say


BAGHDAD (AP) — Power was cut off in large swaths of southern and central Iraq for much of Saturday during scorching summer heat and observances of the Shiite holy day of Ashoura after a fire broke out at a power station in the southern city of Basra.

The fire at the Al-Bkir substation in Basra resulted in the separation of transmission lines linking the southern and central regions, leading to a complete shutdown of the electrical system in the area, Iraq’s Ministry of Electricity said in a statement. It said the fire was accidental.

The power outage came as the electrical system faces other challenges, including fuel shortages and surging demands for electricity during a major heat wave. On Saturday, temperatures reached 47 degrees Celsius (116.6 degrees Farenheit).

Also on Saturday, the company that handles electricity transmission in the north reported that the northern transmission line in a remote area outside the city of Haditha in western Iraq had been sabotaged. Three towers were hit by improvised explosive devices, putting the line out of service, the statement said.

It did not say who was responsible for the attack.

Staff were not initially able to repair the damage on Friday due to security issues, the statement said. Islamic State cells and other armed groups are active in the remote desert area. On Saturday, workers were able to access the site with the help of security forces and begin repair work.

The Ministry of Electricity ordered the formation of committees to investigate both incidents.

The power blackout had a domino effect on other services, with Baghdad Municipality attributing a disruption in tap water supply to the outage caused by the fire in Basra. The municipality said it was trying to run water pumps using generators to limit the impact on citizens.

Earlier this month, Iraq signed a $27 billion deal with TotalEnergies that many hope will help resolve Iraq’s longstanding electricity crisis, attract international investors and reduce its reliance on gas imports from neighboring Iran.



Source link