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The US House Intelligence Committee received a classified briefing Tuesday on Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP) and Unidentified Flying Objects (UFO) for the first time in a half-century to address potential foreign threats to the nation.
“The intelligence community has a serious duty to our taxpayers to prevent potential adversaries such as China and Russia from surprising us with unforeseen new technologies,” said congressman Rick Crawford, who is on the House Intelligence Committee.
UFO and UAP sightings have been around for decades but the intelligence community now wants to take a proactive approach to get ahead of any threats from potential adversaries.
“The intelligence community must balance addressing known threats to our national security with preventing technical surprise,” said Crawford. “The challenge associated with UAP is that they are completely unknown and require a more expansive collection and analysis effort.”
Lawmakers say it is important for the American public to know that the government is investigating unknown potential threats and while they cannot disclose all the classified details, lawmakers want to make sure the public understands the measures are for their benefit.
“When we spot something we don’t understand or can’t identify in our air space, it’s the job of those we entrust with our national security to investigate and to report back,” said committee chairman Adam Schiff.
“What are UAP? Put simply, UAP are airborne objects that when encountered, cannot be immediately identified,” said Ronald Moultrie, Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.
He said the intelligence committee is collecting data and conducting scientific analysis on any potential threat that might be out there, large or small.
“Any object that we encounter can likely be isolated, characterized, identified, and if necessary, mitigated,” said Moultrie.
He said the goal is to remove the stigma of UFOs and UAPs so the military can address their significance to protect national security.
“Service members have encountered unidentified aerial phenomena, and because UAPs pose potential flight safety and general security risks, we are committed to a focused effort to determine their origins,” he said.
Intelligence officials said they want the public to know that the US will respond to any and every potential unknown risk to national security, especially those they do not fully understand.
“To facilitate the identification of previously unknown or unidentified airborne objects in a methodical, logical, and standardized manner,” added Moultrie./agencies
China's strict COVID-19 measures to curb omicron-driven outbreaks, particularly in the financial hub Shanghai, have taken a toll on the world’s second-largest economy.
In the last six months in China, mass tests, curfews, travel restrictions and quarantine measures have hit economic activities as well as social life due to epidemics in metropolitan cities such as Shanghai, Beijing and Xinjin, where the population is dense.
It remains unclear how China will adapt its combat strategy over time, while other countries have largely normalized.
Economic performance, measured in many fields, fell to its lowest levels since the first months of the pandemic, when the first cases were seen in Wuhan, China.
Due to the restrictions, industrial production and retail sales in the country recorded their sharpest declines since the beginning of the pandemic.
According to the data of the National Bureau of Statistics (UIB), the industrial production, which calculates the value-added output of industrial enterprises with an annual turnover of more than 20 million yuan (about $2.94 million), dropped by 2.9% year-on-year in April.
This was the sharpest drop since February 2020, when the effects on production were first felt at the beginning of the pandemic.
The industrial production increased by 5% in March.
The Manufacturing Industry Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), which measures the economic activity in the manufacturing sector in China, decreased by 2.1 points to 47.4 in April -- the lowest level recorded since February 2020.
Values above 50 in the PMI index indicate a rise in economic activities, while values below indicate a drop.
Inflation
In China, consumer prices rose 2.1% year-on-year, and producer prices increased 8% in April.
The rise in consumer prices was affected by the disruptions caused by their restrictions in supply chains.
Unemployment
The unemployment rate in Chinese cities increased by 0.3% in April compared to the previous month and reached 6.1%.
According to UIB data, 4.06 million jobs were created in the first four months of the year, while the unemployment rate in the country's 31 largest cities rose to 6.7%.
China aims to create more than 11 million new jobs in cities this year, keeping the unemployment rate below its target annual growth rate of around 5.5%.
Retail sales
Restrictive measures implemented in many cities, especially in Shanghai which has a population of over 26 million, also negatively affected the consumption.
The retail sales decreased by 11.1% in April compared to the same period last year.
The decrease was the sharpest one recorded after the 15.8% drop in March 2020, when the first effects of the COVID-19 pandemic were felt.
Auto sales
The auto sales in China fell to 1.18 million units in April, down 47.6% compared to last year, according to data from the China Automobile Manufacturers Association.
The volume of sales decreased by 12% in the first four months of this year compared to the same period last year.
The number of cars put on the market has also decreased due to the cessation of production in the factories and the problems experienced in the supply of parts.
According to data from the China Automobile Dealers Association, the number of cars produced decreased by 41.1% in April compared to last year.
Fixed capital and real estate investments
The fixed capital investments, including investments in infrastructure, real estate, machinery and equipment, increased by 6.8% in the first four months. The increase remained below the 9.3% increase in the first quarter.
On the other hand, investments in the real estate sector decreased by 2.7% in the first four months of the year compared to the same period last year. This is the first annual reduction since the outbreak emerged in Wuhan.
Real estate investments decreased by 3.3% in the first four months of last year./aa
Bearing the brunt of the war, Ukraine’s Pidhaine village has turned into ruin after Russian airstrikes.
Pidhaine, home to almost 200 people, has become one of the places which suffered most from Russia’s war on Ukraine.
The Russian army entered the village from the Chornobyl region near the Belarusian border, and its planes dropped bombs on Pidhaine. By mid-March, 80% of the houses in the village were damaged.
Almost all of the houses in Pidhaine, which looks now like a ghost village, are abandoned, as bombs have destroyed infrastructure and residential places.
Nina, one of the Pidhaine residents who survived the Russian attacks, told Anadolu Agency about her experiences during the war.
She said two missiles hit her courtyard.
“Our houses were bombed on March 14. Nobody had expected this. The windows and doors of my houses were smashed.
“I was injured too. I still have scars on my face. I run away (from bombs) and went to my neighbor’s house to save my life. Soon afterwards, a second missile hit my house. It is no longer usable,” said Nina, who was referred only by her name for security reasons.
Nina said that they took refuge in a cellar for a few days and that Ukrainian soldiers helped them get out of the village on March 20.
She said many residents of the village are old people like herself.
“I don’t understand what the Russian soldiers want from our village. Young people left our village. Only the middle-aged and old people live here.”
Aleksandr, another Pidhaine resident who is referred only by his name for security concerns, said he had taken his family to a neighboring city before the attacks started.
“When I returned to the village, I found my house razed. There were only the ruins of my house. I spent my life building it.”
He said his grandfather fought in the ex-Soviet army against the Nazis in World War II, adding: “Those who once fought against the Nazis are now attacking our lands and killing civilians. I can’t understand it.”
On Tuesday, the Ukrainian military said some 27,900 Russian soldiers have so far been killed in Ukraine during the war.
At least 3,668 people have been killed and 3,896 injured in Ukraine since Russia began its war on Feb. 24, according to UN estimates. The true toll is believed to be much higher.
Over 6.2 million people have fled to other countries, with some 7.7 million people internally displaced, according to the UN refugee agency./aa
US President Joe Biden on Tuesday called a mass shooting at a supermarket in the state of New York "domestic terrorism."
"What happened here is simple straightforward; terrorism, domestic terrorism," Biden said at a news conference in Buffalo where a gunman killed at least 10 people Saturday in a racially-motivated attack. "Violence inflicted in the service of hate and a vicious thirst for power that defines one group of people being inherently inferior to any other group."
His remarks came after meeting families of the victims of the shooting at Tops Supermarket. Biden recalled mass shootings in Charleston, South Carolina, El Paso, Texas and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
"Last year in Atlanta, this week in Dallas, Texas, and now in Buffalo, New York. White supremacy is a poison. It's a poison running through our body politic," he said.
"The ideology of white supremacy has no place in America," said Biden. "In America evil will not win. I promise you. Hate will not prevail, and white supremacy will not have the last word."
Law enforcement said Monday that the gunman had sought to drive through the city to kill additional Black people.
Payton Gendron, the alleged gunman, told police he wanted "to drive out of here and continue driving down Jefferson Ave. looking to 'shoot more Black people,' as he put it, and possibly even going to another store location," Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia told ABC News./aa
The International Criminal Court (ICC) sent a 42-member team to Ukraine on Tuesday to investigate alleged war crimes there since the start of Russia's war on that country.
"I can confirm that today my Office has deployed a team of 42 investigators, forensic experts and support personnel to Ukraine to advance our investigations into crimes falling into the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court," ICC prosecutor Karim Khan said in a statement.
He noted that it is the "largest ever" single field deployment by the ICC.
Khan said the team will focus on collecting testimonial accounts relevant to military attacks that may constitute Rome Statute crimes.
The ICC team will be in contact with Ukrainian authorities and other representatives in the country "to ensure continuity and continuation of work with respect to the identification of remains, ballistics analysis and the storage and preservation of forensic evidence," he added.
At least 3,668 people have been killed and 3,896 injured in Ukraine since Russia began its war Feb, 24, according to UN estimates. The true toll is believed to be much higher.
More than 6.2 million people have fled to other countries, with 7.7 million internally displaced, according to the UN refugee agency./aa
PARIS (AA) - The decision by another French city to allow women to wear head-to-toe swimwear at public pools – dubbed burkinis – has once again reignited the contentious debate over religious clothing in France.
Grenoble in southeastern France became the second city in the country to allow the wearing of burkinis – worn by some Muslim women – following a modification to swimwear rules for public pools late Monday. The vote on the local city council was close, 29-27, following two-and-a-half hours of fierce debate, BFMTV news reported.
The changes do away with restrictions on non-standard clothing, thereby letting women swim either in burkinis or, alternately, bare-breasted.
Most city councils prohibit burkinis and bathing topless at public swimming pools, citing hygiene reasons. Rennes, in the northwestern region of Brittany, is the only other city to allow burkinis in public places.
While there is no nationwide ban on the wearing of burkinis, the swimwear has evoked the ire of far-right lawmakers, who consider its wearing in public places “submission” to what they call “extreme Islam.” After several mayors on the famed French riviera attempted to impose a ban, in 2016 the Council of State authorized the wearing of burkinis on French beaches.
Erick Piolle, Grenoble’s ecologist mayor who proposed modification to the swimwear, said of the swimwear rules: “Only health and safety rules (should) count.”
Piolle defended the right for everyone to “dress or undress” as they wish as long as hygiene and safety are respected. In an interview with the non-profit association La Libre Pensee, he said the issue doesn’t concern only Muslim women but also trans people who are uncomfortable wearing bikinis. He cited the example of Norwegian beach volleyball players who protested their bikini shorts uniform during the 2021 European Championship.
But the city council decision also attracted criticism, accusing Piolle of pandering to a so-called “separatist ideology.” Laurent Wauquiez, president of the Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes region, where Grenoble is located, threatened to cut financial subsidies to the council for breaking away from “secularism and values of the republic.”
Far-right lawmaker Erick Ciotti, who has introduced a bill to impose a nationwide ban on burkinis at public swimming pools, said Grenoble’s decision underlines the need to guard against what he called France’s “submission to Islamo-leftism.”
Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Rally and loser in last month’s presidential election, said that her party's representatives will defend the ban on burkinis as “Piolle wants to subject the republic to Islamic pressure.”/aa
Despite concerns over stable energy supplies, Japan on Tuesday ruled out building any new nuclear power plants.
“Taking into account the Ukraine crisis and concerns over a power supply crunch, we will make the most of what we have, including nuclear power,” Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Koichi Hagiuda told a news conference in Tokyo.
Japan has 36 nuclear power plants, with only 10 of them operational.
“Efforts will also be directed at developing a new type of nuclear reactor as well as talent,” he added.
However, Hagiuda said Japan is “not considering building any new nuclear power plants despite mounting energy security concerns,” Kyodo News reported.
Japan has imposed punishing sanctions on Russia over its war on Ukraine. It has, however, refused to shut supplies of energy from Russia from where it imported around 3.6 % of its crude oil and 8.8% of its liquefied natural gas last year.
Last month, Hagiuda said Japan limited resources, and “it is difficult for us to immediately align ourselves with the EU.”
His comments came after the EU said it was also mulling a ban on all oil imports from Russia by the end of this year.
Meanwhile, calling for “swift resumption” of idled nuclear reactors, the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry has asked the government “to clarify the status” of nuclear power in the government’s energy strategy.
After the devastating earthquake and tsunami that wreaked havoc at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex in March 2011, Japan’s Agency for Natural Resources and Energy introduced stricter safety regulations.
More so, many nuclear reactors are approaching their 40-year operating limits, which means they will have to undergo new regulatory checks, making it difficult for their possible new operations.
Japan aims to generate 20% to 22% of its total power generation from nuclear plants by 2030./aa
The Ethiopian government and the World Bank have signed a financing agreement amounting to $300 million in support of the reconstruction and recovery of conflict-affected areas.
The $300 million financing accord, which was made in the form of a grant, was signed by Ethiopia’s Finance Minister, Ahmed Shide and the World Bank’s country representative to Ethiopia, Ousmane Dione, the Ethiopian Finance Ministry disclosed in a statement issued on Monday.
The resource will be used to finance activities designed to support communities in conflict-affected areas to re-access basic services of education, health and water supply, according to the Ministry.
The Ministry said the funding will include special support to survivors of gender-based violence within the areas affected by conflict. The fund in particular will finance activities of rebuilding and improving access to basic services and community infrastructure and support the strengthening of short and medium-term gender-based violence response services for the survivors in the targeted regions, Xinhua news agency reported.
The project will be implemented in selected districts of Ethiopia’s conflict-affected Amhara, Afar, Tigray, Oromia and Benishangul-Gumuz regional states, the Ministry added.
The Ministry said in high conflict areas, the project will be implemented by a selected third-party institution on behalf of the Ethiopian government based on an agreement with the government./ Mangalorean
Minister of Commerce and Industry Fahad Al-Shariaan has affirmed that his ministry is closely monitoring prices of commodities due to the expected price hikes in light of the Russian- Ukrainian crisis and the recent decision of the Republic of India to ban wheat exports, reports Al-Anba daily.
In an exclusive statement to the daily, Al- Shariaan pointed out that India is the second largest wheat exporter in the world. Previously, studies were conducted to address the global crisis through the formation of committees in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry; particularly those in charge of control, business and consumer protection procedures, he disclosed.
Al-Shariaan added: “We have completed all the necessary preparations for this global crisis. We hope the crisis will not be prolonged.” Meanwhile, a source from the ministry confirmed the shortage of some food products, especially wheat. He said this requires an increase in the budget for subsidized goods to help citizens cope with the rising prices. The source revealed the Cabinet and the relevant committees will soon discuss steps taken by the ministry regarding the strategic stockpile; which will cover the needs of the people for 8-10 months, as well as some aspects related to India’s ban on the export of wheat./AT
Navigation to and from Kuwait International Airport was temporarily halted on Monday due to a dust storm that ebbed visibility throughout Kuwait. Flights have been affected with the current weather conditions, said Imad Al-Jalawi, Deputy Director General for Air Navigation Services at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, in a statement to KUNA.
Flights’ scheduled will be reviewed and regular aviation will resume once visibility has been improved, Al-Jalawi added. He added that Kuwait is currently affected with low visibility along with strong winds reaching more than 50 km/h./KUNA