Ukrainian dam breach: What’s happening and what’s at stake
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The fallout from the breach of a river dam along a front line of Russia’s war in Ukraine continued to wreak havoc on lives, livelihoods and the environment on Wednesday. When the Kakhovka dam ruptured on Tuesday, it sent a torrent of water from Ukraine’s largest reservoir into streets and homes downstream on the Dnieper River where tens of thousands of people live — in the thick of a combat zone where shelling regularly takes place. It’s not clear what caused the breach: the structure had already been damaged in the war.Ukraine’s government, which controls the river’s western bank and the city of Kherson, has accused Russian forces of blowing up the facility. Officials in Russia, which controls the eastern bank for about the last 300 kilometers (about 185 miles) before the river reaches the Black Sea, has blamed Ukrainian military strikes.WHAT ARE THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS?Authorities and rescue workers on both sides stepped up effort...‘Home is like jail’: Afghan soldier who helped the US weathers injuries, uncertainty in asylum bid
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
HOUSTON (AP) — The April visit to a Houston clinic was just one of a never-ending assembly line of medical appointments Abdul Wasi Safi has had since his January release from an immigration detention center.The former Afghan soldier, called Wasi by family and friends, sat in a dental chair and conversed in Pashto with his older brother Sami as Carrie Underwood’s “Cowboy Casanova” played in the background. It was a scene thousands of miles from the places he’d been the past two years.After the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in August 2021, fear of retribution from the Taliban for sharing information with American soldiers while he was an intelligence officer drove Wasi Safi to flee to Brazil. The goal? Reaching the U.S. and applying for asylum.He eventually made it after crossing 10 countries, but the journey came at a high cost. A brutal beating by police officers in Panama severely damaged his teeth and jaw and left him with permanent hearing loss.Wasi Safi didn’t appear ne...Stock market today: Wall Street edges higher to edge of a new bull market
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street is drifting higher as the market continues to hover near the edge of a new bull market. The S&P 500 rose 0.2% early Wednesday. The U.S. stock market’s main benchmark is 20% above where it was in mid-October. If it holds those gains, it will mark the end to its painful bear market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 49 points, or 0.2%, and the Nasdaq composite was up 0.5%. Wayfair rose 3.5% after the home goods retailer said its revenue trends have been improving. Campbell Soup fell 8% after reporting weaker revenue than expected.THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.Markets were slow to gain traction again on Wednesday with scant market-moving news scheduled until next week’s inflation reports.Futures for the S&P 500 were up just 0.1%, while futures for the Dow Jones Industrials were essentially flat. Next week, the U.S. government will publish its latest monthly updates on inflation and the Federal Reserve wi...Ukraine rushes drinking water to flooded areas as officials wrestle with impact of major dam breach
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
KHERSON, Ukraine (AP) — Authorities on Wednesday rushed supplies of drinking water to flooded areas from a collapsed dam in southern Ukraine as officials weighed where they might resettle residents who relied on the breached reservoir on the Dnieper River that forms part of the front line in the 15-month war.More than 2,700 people have fled flooded areas on both the Russian and Ukrainian-controlled sides of the river, according to official tallies, but it was not clear whether the true scale of the disaster had yet emerged in an area that was home to more than 60,000 people.The Kakhovka hydroelectric dam and reservoir, essential for supplying drinking water and irrigation to a huge area of southern Ukraine, lies in a part of the Kherson region occupied by Moscow’s forces for the past year. It is also critical for water supplies to the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.Ukraine holds the western bank of the Dnieper, while Russia controls the eastern side...Andrew Young was at Martin Luther King’s side throughout often violent struggle for civil rights
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
ATLANTA (AP) — Andrew Young’s first thought when he heard the Voting Rights Act had been signed into law was not celebratory. It was strategic.“Where are we going to get the money to get the country mobilized to register these voters?” he recalled thinking at that momentous time nearly 60 years ago.Now 91, Young is one of the last surviving members of Martin Luther King Jr.’s inner circle. The two were together from their first meeting in 1957 at a fraternity symposium at Talladega College until King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968.But while King and fellow close adviser Ralph Abernathy were at the U.S. Capitol for the 1965 signing, Young was not.“That wasn’t my part of the movement,” he said. “I was maybe a field general.”Young would go on to become mayor of Atlanta, a congressman and the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.The journey to the Voting Rights Act was an arduous one, he recalled. In December 1964, Young and King headed to Washington to meet with Presi...Shell’s clean energy campaign is misleading, UK advertising watchdog says
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
LONDON (AP) — A marketing campaign by oil major Shell has been banned by the U.K.’s advertising watchdog Wednesday for implying a big proportion of its business was in low carbon energy even though fossil fuels make up the “vast majority” of its operations.A television commercial, a YouTube video and a poster campaign in Bristol, England, variously described providing large numbers of British homes with 100% renewable energy, installing electric vehicle charging points and driving the energy transition.In its written ruling the Advertising Standards Authority found consumers would interpret the marketing materials as making a “broader claim about Shell as a whole providing cleaner energy.”Although Shell does have a clean energy business, the company estimates its operations released almost 1.4 billion tons of heat-trapping carbon dioxide in 2021.In a statement, Shell spokesperson Tara Lemay said the company “strongly” disagrees with the ASA’s decision, “which could slow the U....Wildfire smoke blankets Ontario, Quebec, air quality plummets, affects activities
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
TORONTO — Poor air quality is forecast to persist into the weekend across parts of Ontario, as plumes of wildfire smoke blanket the province and prompt school boards to limit outdoor activities.Environment Canada has issued special air quality advisories for large swaths of Ontario and Quebec, warning of high levels of pollution from wildfires burning across both provinces.Ottawa, Belleville and Kingston registered some of the worst air pollution levels in the country, maxing out the air quality index at very high risk. Air quality index levels were forecasted to peak at high risk in many other Ontario cities, from Windsor through to Toronto and north to Sudbury. Toronto District School Board says all strenuous outdoor activities will be rescheduled, or moved indoors when possible, while school boards in York Region say they will hold recess inside. As of Tuesday, there were more than 200 forest fires burning across Quebec and northern Ontario. This report by The Canadian Press was ...Money wasted? Drivers speak out on newly rebuilt Gardiner on-ramp nobody can use
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
Our Speakers Corner report takes us to the intersection of Lake Shore Boulevard and Lower Jarvis Street, where there are daily traffic jams in nearly all directions.“It’s a mess morning, noon and sometimes late at night,” said Toronto driver Omid Ghiei.The issues can be traced back to 2021 when the city tore down the Gardiner Expressway’s on and off ramps at Logan Avenue. That forced traffic heading east off the Gardiner to exit at Lower Jarvis onto Lake Shore Boulevard.Drivers heading west to access the Gardiner had to use the expressway west on-ramp at Lower Jarvis. Mix in some road repairs being made to Lake Shore Boulevard, and drivers say it’s the perfect recipe to create daily headaches.“You sometimes have to wait 20 minutes on Lakeshore just to go a couple of blocks,” Ghiei said.Another ongoing problem has drivers scratching their heads. It’s for vehicles accessing the Gardiner Expressway East at Lower Jarvis. In 2021, that east...Voices from the violent civil rights era see attacks on voting rights as part of ongoing struggle
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
They are part of a small, vanishing group who lived at the epicenter of the struggle for voting rights six decades ago, an era driven by segregation, violence and the yearning for equality that eventually led to laws bringing the U.S. closer to its promise of democracy for all its citizens.As the country awaits a Supreme Court decision on whether one of those laws, the Voting Rights Act, will be reinforced or further eroded, they reflect on the times and their struggles, and why they are certain it all was worth it. Ten years ago this month, the court halted what many consider the heart of that landmark law — the ability of the Justice Department to enforce it in states and counties with a history of voter suppression. The justices now will decide how strongly to protect minority groups when they challenge political boundaries drawn through states’ redistricting.The stories from those on the front lines of history recount tragedy, racism, oppression and ultimately hope in seei...Statistics Canada reports merchandise trade surplus rose to $1.9B in April
Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 15:33:09 GMT
OTTAWA — Statistics Canada say the country’s merchandise trade surplus increased to $1.9 billion in April, helped by higher exports of gold, oil and cars and light trucks.The result followed a revised surplus of $231 million in March. The agency’s initial reading for March released last month had indicated a surplus of $972 million.Exports for April rose 2.5 per cent to $64.8 billion as exports of metal and non-metallic mineral products gained 13.6 per cent, lifted higher by a 46.0 per cent gain in unwrought gold.Exports of energy products gained 6.4 per cent as higher prices helped lift crude oil exports 7.1 per cent. Exports by the motor vehicles and parts sector rose 7.4 per cent as exports of passenger cars and light trucks gained 7.7 per cent and engines and parts added 9.9 per cent.Meanwhile, imports in April fell 0.2 per cent to $62.9 billion as imports of energy products fell 12.8 per cent with crude oil imports down 20.5 per cent, in part due to lower shipments ...Latest news
- 19 North Atlantic right whales get new names: Jagger, Kermit, Marilyn Monroe, Waldo among group
- 25 must-read books published in 2023 by independent presses
- Ticker: Mao-signed menu brings big bucks; Starbucks proposes restarting union talks
- Mexican immigration agents detain 2 Iranians who they say were under observation by the FBI
- Quebec man arrested in killing of child at home daycare northeast of Montreal
- Ukraine’s human rights envoy calls for a faster way to bring back children deported by Russia
- Saskatchewan’s methane emissions underestimated, rate of releases high: research
- ‘We are fixing the problem:’ Chow urges residents to take King streetcar
- Alberta finance minister says he has not ‘flip-flopped’ on proposed pension change
- A ‘soft landing’ or a recession? How each one might affect America’s households and businesses