President Biden calls for Congressional support after bridge collapse


President Biden calls for Congressional support after bridge collapse – CBS News

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President Joe Biden has made it clear that he wants the full support of Congress to help Baltimore recover from the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. The state has already received $60 million in emergency relief funding.

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Putin exploiting German angst, former president says


Germans are being too fearful in their dealings with Russian President Vladimir Putin, former president Joachim Gauck has said in remarks published by the RND news agency on Saturday.

“Putin knows that many Germans are quicker to feel afraid than for example the Poles or French, and he is exploiting this tendency,” Gauck, who served as president between 2012 and 2017, said. “Fear is an aide to the aggressor.”

Gauck, a former Lutheran pastor in communist East Germany who played a key role as a rights activist in the run-up to German reunification in 1990, said fear made people unable to see possible solutions to problems.

He argued that Chancellor Olaf Scholz should reconsider his refusal to supply Ukraine with Germany’s long-range Taurus cruise missiles and rejected the view that this would draw Germany into the war in Ukraine.

He noted that experts in international law, military experts and many members of the ruling coalition did not share Scholz’s view on the issue. Kiev has appealed for Berlin to send the missiles, which are reported to have a range of 500 kilometres.

The issue has been the subject of intense debate, with Scholz expressing fears that targets deep inside Russia could be hit if Berlin surrendered control over targeting to Kiev. Moscow would theoretically be in range from northern Ukraine, as would the Crimean Bridge linking the peninsula to Russia.

Gauck enjoys considerable status as a voice of moral authority in Germany after serving as the government commissioner looking into the records of the Stasi, East Germany’s notorious Ministry of State Security.



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How President Joseph Boakai hopes to rid Liberia of its problems


He won power by promising to end corruption – but try telling that to the people begging him for jobs.

“A lot of people come into government believing they are there to enrich themselves,” says Liberia’s President Joseph Boakai.

“They don’t understand what public service is about.”

In the three months since he defeated President George Weah and took the reins, Mr Boakai says he has been “very selective” about who he brings along with him because he blames corruption ‘”for all the crises we’ve had”.

The 79-year-old is a former prime minister but does not hail from a political dynasty.

“I never really had a childhood,” he tells BBC Africa Daily in a wide-ranging interview. “My ambition was just to live a normal life”.

As one of five sons born to a disabled, poor mother and an absent father, he went on to work as a school janitor and rubber tapper.

It was gruelling work – causing him pain because he didn’t realise he was meant to carry rubber on his shoulders instead of his head – but it gave him the grit a politician needs, he tells the BBC.

Those early jobs paid for two pairs of smart trousers, two shirts and a one-way ticket to the capital city of Monrovia.

After gaining a place at the city’s College of West Africa, he could only see his mother one week each year as he had to work within the college to pay for his tuition and upkeep.

Now approaching his 80s, Mr Boakai acknowledges he’s the age of most of the electorate’s grandparents – but sees his role as rooting out deep-seated problems and handing over a well-managed Liberia to the next generation.

“I am here only to guide a process to bring this country to where it should be and then they can take it over.”

So how successful has he been so far?

“Liberians have heard this all before – where a head of state comes in and makes these large, far-ranging proclamations about the fact they’re going to make corruption public enemy number-one,” says author and activist Robtel Neajai Pailey.

However, she adds, President Boakai declared his own assets as soon as he came in and made his appointees do the same. Mr Boakai has also asked for an audit of the presidential office, and beefed up integrity institutions such as the General Auditing Commission and the Liberia Anti-Corruption Commission.

“This is a way of signalling to the Liberian people that it won’t be business as usual,” says Dr Neajai Pailey, “and now members of the judiciary and legislature are following suit”.

There is still a long way to go.

Liberians have lost patience over recent years and mounted mass protests – accusing the previous government of mismanaging funds and corruption while the cost of living has spiralled for normal people.

More than a fifth of the population lives on less than $2.15 (£1.70) a day.

Last year, when Mr Weah was still at the helm, Liberia was ranked 145th out of 180 countries on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index.

The ex-footballer’s time in office saw a number of scandals, with three government officials sanctioned by the US Treasury and subsequently resigning – they have still not been prosecuted.

President Boakai too has his critics.

A judge recently accused Mr Boakai of cronyism – claiming he favouring people from his home area of Lofa County for top jobs. The presidency tells the BBC this is not true.

“The president is not appointing based on tribe – he is putting competence above anything else,” says presidential press secretary Kula Fofana. Pressed to confirm how many officials were appointed from the president’s native Lofa, he declined to say, “because we are not appointing by counties”.

‘We can feed the world’

With his past on Liberia’s rubber plantations and a stint in the 1980s as agricultural minister, President Boakai sees huge growth opportunities in the county’s soil.

“In Africa, we’re not going to manufacture new aircraft or new automobiles but we can feed the world,” he tells BBC Africa Daily.

“We have the water, we have the soil, we have the land. We don’t need to import the amount of rice we’re importing. We can feed ourselves if we cut down corruption and use our resources properly – we can feed ourselves and even export.”

He also campaigned on a pledge to improve Liberia’s sorry road network.

“Based on my own experience, year after year, cars are stuck in the mud, people can’t move,” he says. “You know the impact that has on health, education, on people’s movement and the prices of goods.

“So what I’ve said is that in at least the first 100 days we should be able to make all vehicles move on our roads… That’s what I said and that’s what I’m working on.”

He has his work cut out for him, he knows, but still finds some moments to relax.

“I never have time for too much fun but I love all kinds of music – jazz, African music, and I’m a lover of sport.

“I’m an Arsenal fan – I’ve been to the Emirates twice and I get all their souvenirs!”

Additional reporting by Moses Kollie Garzeawu

More Liberia stories from the BBC:



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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warns Putin’s war could spread to NATO territory


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warns Putin’s war could spread to NATO territory – CBS News

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy tells CBS News’ Charlie D’Agata in an exclusive interview that, without more U.S. help “now,” Ukraine won’t be able to stop Vladimir Putin from pushing his war onto NATO soil.

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Guatemalan president calls on U.S. to invest more to deter migration


Guatemalan president calls on U.S. to invest more to deter migration – CBS News

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Migrants are coming to the U.S.-Mexico border in record numbers. Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo spoke with CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe about the issue.

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Full interview: Guatemala’s president on why migrants are coming to U.S., Trump and more


Full interview: Guatemala’s president on why migrants are coming to U.S., Trump and more – CBS News

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Guatemala’s new president Bernardo Arévalo discusses his recent talks with President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris about the “root causes” of migration to the U.S., his thoughts on former President Donald Trump’s run for a second presidential term, and more in an interview with CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe.

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Guatemala’s president says U.S. should invest more to deter migration


Washington — Nearly three years ago, Vice President Kamala Harris stood alongside the then-president of Guatemala in his palace and delivered a message to would-be migrants: “Do not come” to the United States. 

Her pleas didn’t work. Since June 2021, when Harris made those remarks, U.S. officials have tallied 709,305 encounters with migrants from Guatemala along the southern border, according to government data. More than 2 million migrants of all nationalities are expected to be apprehended along the border by the end of this fiscal year in September, which would be the third straight year of sustained foot traffic across the span.

Asked this week whether migrants have heeded Harris’ request from three years ago, Guatemala’s new president, Bernardo Arévalo, shrugged his shoulders and said, “Well, I don’t know. You do the numbers.”

Arévalo, who took office in January, came to Washington this week to meet with President Biden and Harris as the White House hopes to demonstrate progress on addressing border security and immigration, issues that remain top voter concerns. 

He told CBS News the president was “enchanting” and “very warm” in a brief Oval Office exchange captured by White House photographers. But in longer meetings with Harris, Arévalo said he told her Guatemala needs more U.S. economic investment — not just taxpayer-funded American relief — in order to encourage people to stay put.

“Cooperation is not sending money. Cooperation can be by creating conditions in which we can invite you to invest in Guatemala and establish factories, work that can begin to produce and create jobs. That’s fundamentally what we are most interested in,” he told CBS News.

Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo and Vice President Kamala Harris during a meeting in the Vice President's Ceremonial Office in Washington, D.C., on Monday, March 25, 2024.
Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo and Vice President Kamala Harris during a meeting in the Vice President’s Ceremonial Office in Washington, D.C., on Monday, March 25, 2024.

Ron Sachs/CNP/Bloomberg via Getty Images


“We have to work to allow people, what we call, ‘The right to stay.’ People have a right to remain in their places. People need to find opportunities,” Arévalo added.

Mr. Biden tasked Harris with addressing the “root causes” of migration early in their administration as the number of illegal border crossings spiked after four years of hardline border security policy under former President Donald Trump. But the Biden administration is now anticipating another busy spring along the U.S.-Mexico border, and officials tell CBS News the president is still considering taking executive action to curb the crossings if Congress fails to enact a bipartisan plan negotiated by senators last year.

As she personally wades back into the politically tricky issue, Harris on Monday announced another $170 million in economic development and security assistance for Guatemala. Arévalo welcomed the investments as a long-term solution to preventing his country’s citizens from leaving and signaled he’d prefer to see that kind of cooperation continue. But he also did not discount the possibility of working with a second Trump administration. 

“We are looking forward to working with whoever wins in the next election to support and work so that our citizens that are residents in the United States enjoy full rights,” Arévalo said. 

Asked whether he thought Trump’s preference for border walls works, he said, “I think that history shows they don’t. What we need to look for is integrated solutions to a problem that is far more complex than just putting a wall to try to contain.”

“Corruption is the most urgent problem”

Arévalo, 65, is a former diplomat and sociologist and the son of the late former Guatemalan president Juan José Arévalo, who was the country’s first democratically elected president from 1945 to 1951.

The younger Arévalo took office in January after running an underdog campaign on an anti-corruption platform and defeating several better-known, better-funded opponents backed by the country’s political and economic elite. His victory effectively put an end to the country’s long standing conservative political establishment. But rivals who control the country’s judiciary continue to try prosecuting him and his political party, accusing them of rigging the results of last year’s elections — accusations he strongly disputes.

“We believe that corruption is the most urgent problem,” Arévalo told CBS News. “But the most important problem is development. But if we do not fight corruption, we are not going to be able to get the development that we need so that people can flourish and stay.”

As he tries to revamp Guatemala’s government and restore democratic norms, Arévalo said he supports the release of journalist José Rubén Zamora, who was sentenced to six years in prison in 2023 on money laundering charges under the former President Alejandro Giammattei’s administration. 

Zamora’s newspaper, “El Periódico,” published countless stories about corruption within the Giammattei administration. It was forced to shut down after he was detained, due to a lack of resources and its journalists fleeing the country for fear of prosecution. Zamora’s case has earned international attention and condemnation from international journalists’ rights groups.

“We would hope for him to be released tomorrow,” Arévalo said of Zamora.

On his Inauguration Day, Arévalo said he sent the head of the country’s prison system to “transform” the torturous conditions under which Zamora was being held. While the president supports the journalist’s liberation, Arévalo could not specify a release date for the detained journalist because does not control Guatemala’s judiciary under the Guatemalan Constitution.

“We know that the accusations are just not serious,” he said. “But we cannot interfere with the Court of Justice, so we don’t know.”





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Guatemala president on U.S. immigration crisis, border walls


Guatemala president on U.S. immigration crisis, border walls – CBS News

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Guatemalan President Bernardo Arévalo says the immigration crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border requires more “integrated solutions” than building a wall. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe spoke to Arévelo about his concerns.

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U.S. business leaders meet with China’s president


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NBC News’ Janis Mackey Frayer reports from Beijing, where a number of U.S. business leaders, including the CEOs of Blackstone, Qualcomm, Bloomberg, Chubb and FedEx, met with the Chinese president



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Ukraine’s president replaces a top security official


KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has replaced one of the country’s top security officials in a reshuffle that comes as the war has dragged into a third year.

Zelenskyy dismissed Oleksii Danilov, who served as secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, thanking him for his service in a video address late Tuesday. He said without providing details that Danilov will be “reassigned to another area.”

Zelenskyy replaced Danilov with Oleksandr Lytvynenko, the former head of Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service. Zelenskyy didn’t announce the reasons behind the reshuffle.

The National Security Council is a policy coordination body that includes top officials and chaired by Zelenskyy.

Danilov’s dismissal comes as exhausted Ukrainian troops struggling with a shortage of personnel and ammunition are facing a growing Russian pressure along the front line that stretches over 1,000 kilometers (620 miles).

The reshuffle follows February’s decision by Zelenskyy to fire the country’s chief military officer, Gen. Valerii Zaluzhnyi, replacing him Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi. Tensions between Zaluzhnyi and the president grew after Ukraine’s much-touted 2023 counteroffensive failed to reach its goals.

Earlier this month, Zaluzhnyi was named Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Kingdom.

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Find more of AP’s coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine



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