Sabtu, 24 Agustus 2019
Trump meets with French President Macron - Fox News
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sW9urTjS0mU
2019-08-24 13:24:59Z
52780361645538
Hong Kong Erupts in Fresh Violence as Protesters, Riot Police Brawl - The Wall Street Journal
- Biography
- @srussolillo
- steve.russolillo
- Steven.Russolillo@wsj.com
- Biography
- @
- eun-young.jeong@wsj.com
HONG KONG—Protesters in helmets and gas masks clashed with riot police Saturday, as the city’s pro-democracy movement took a confrontational turn after nearly two weeks of relatively peaceful turnouts.
Tear gas engulfed the industrial neighborhood of Kwun Tong as protesters were more aggressive, blocking roads, surrounding the local police station and sawing down at least one video-surveillance pole, which protesters said could be used to spy on people.
Protesters with poles fought face to face with the charging police, knocking some to the ground and sending others scrambling back. Some threw rocks at the police. A small firebomb exploded amid the melee. Officers made a handful of arrests.
The action in this 12th straight weekend of protests followed a massive peaceful demonstration a week earlier and comments from the city’s leader, Carrie Lam, that she’d be open to talking to the community. In a post on her official Instagram account on Saturday—ahead of the latest violence—she said everyone was tired after months of protests and asked if “we can sit down and talk about it?” after a calmer week.
Saturday’s clashes were the latest in a campaign of demonstrations initially sparked in June by concerns over a bill that would have legalized extradition to China. They have since ballooned into a full-blown antigovernment protest movement. There have been divergences among the protest camp, with a hard-core group of campaigners more willing to directly confront police on the front lines.
“I’m not saying I support violence,” said one of the protesters Saturday, a 34-year-old freelance videographer who identified himself as Fung. “I support fighting back to protect.”
He showed two tattoos on his arm, one with the Chinese characters for “safe” and another in English: “Be strong to be useful.”
The latest clash came a day after thousands of Hong Kongers formed human chains throughout the city in a peaceful pledge of solidarity.
It was a much different scene on Saturday. Adding to the turbulence: The city’s subway operator stopped services at multiple stations. The MTR system has been the lifeblood of the protest movement, allowing demonstrators to move around the city with relative ease. But Chinese state media has criticized the subway operator, MTR Corp., for being soft on protesters.
Carrie Ng, a Hong Kong resident, got a notification from her MTR app Saturday morning saying some subway stations near the protest site would be closed. With such short notice, she rushed to get the last available train to her destination. “It is the government who is doing the uncooperative movement today,” said the 33-year-old Ms. Ng. “This is so disturbing.”
She said she suspected the MTR’s decision was motivated by the government’s attempt to discourage people from protesting. “If Carrie Lam was meant to mend fences, why would the MTR stations be shut down today?” Ms. Ng said. “This is just her excuse.”
In Mrs. Lam’s Instagram post, she said her administration wanted to take the opportunity to start a dialogue without division between class, color or age. “We must continue to listen to views with our hearts,” she said.
On Saturday, protesters gathered in Kwun Tong—across the harbor from Hong Kong island on the east side of Kowloon—through the afternoon, setting up barricades, digging out paving stones for ammunition, and donning gas masks and other equipment. Around 4:30 p.m. police held up a sign reading: “Stop charging or we use force.”
Shortly after, a glass bottle flew into the air and smashed on the pavement near the police. Within minutes, the police rushed into the crowd, moving protesters further away from the Ngau Tau Kok Police station. A few minutes later, police raised another sign warning of tear gas.
As the sun was setting, protesters pointed blue and white lasers at police officers, who continued firing tear gas into the crowd. Protesters scattered momentarily but repeatedly returned to hold their ground.
Many protesters focused on the new program of installing surveillance light posts and the backlash that has ensued from it.
“If they keep monitoring us, there’s no difference from China, and we’re not yet China,” said Ms. Chow, a 20-year-old student who declined to give her first name.
The smell of burned electrical wires hung in the air on Sheung Yuet Road, where protesters sawed down a smart lamp post and tore out its insides, along with the contents of about another dozen. They also burned one lamp post.
A 29-year-old protester with a tool kit said he was looking for any of the pole’s sensors that had been exposed to take home and examine, to determine what the poles do with the data they collect. But he was too late—all of the sensors had already been taken by police walking the street with evidence bags, or perhaps other protesters.
Lok, a part-time teacher in her 40s, handed out aluminum foil to protesters advising them to wrap their wallets to avoid being identified by their local IDs, which contain contactless chips.
Ms. Lok said she read online about the foil and decided to come out to the protest with two 130-meter rolls. “Wrap your whole wallet,” she told protesters.
Kwun Tong resident Kelvin Lee marched with protesters in a face mask and badminton racket on his way to play a match. He said locals were concerned about the new lamp posts equipped with cameras and were glad protesters were bringing attention to the program.
“Before it starts is a good time to raise your hand and say we have a problem with it” said the 40-year-old IT worker. He said he didn’t want to see protesters destroy the public infrastructure without giving the government a chance to respond, but “maybe if it’s a last resort, it will have to happen.”
—Natasha Khan and Joyu Wang contributed to this article.
Write to Steven Russolillo at steven.russolillo@wsj.com and Eun-Young Jeong at Eun-Young.Jeong@wsj.com
Copyright ©2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
https://www.wsj.com/articles/violence-erupts-as-hong-kong-protesters-and-riot-police-resume-hostilities-11566638414
2019-08-24 11:28:00Z
CAIiENJm46tqCcB3X2KbZATpeAQqFwgEKg8IACoHCAow1tzJATDnyxUw54IY
Jumat, 23 Agustus 2019
The Amazon is burning because the world eats so much meat - CNN


CNN's Arnaud Siad contributed to this report from London.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/23/americas/brazil-beef-amazon-rainforest-fire-intl/index.html
2019-08-23 14:30:00Z
52780358768310
Kamis, 22 Agustus 2019
Fires are raging in the Amazon forest. Here's how you can help slow all rainforest loss - CNN
Help reforestation and slow deforestation
Make sure products you buy are "rainforest safe"
Take steps to live sustainably
https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/22/us/iyw-how-to-help-amazon-forest-fires-trnd/index.html
2019-08-22 20:51:00Z
52780358768310
Wildfires rage in the Amazon: Live updates - CNN

As images and news of the fire spread, many activists are demanding accountability from Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
Here's why: When Bolsonaro was running for president, he made campaign promises to restore the economy by exploring the Amazon's economic potential. Now, environmental organizations say he has encouraged ranchers, farmers and loggers to exploit and burn the rainforest like never before with a sense of impunity.
(Remember: Environmental organizations and researchers say these wildfires were set by cattle ranchers and loggers who wanted to clear and utilize the land.)
The pro-business Bolsonaro has hamstrung Brazil's environmental enforcement agency with budget cuts amounting to $23 million — official data sent to CNN by Observatorio do Clima shows the enforcement agency's operations have gone down since Bolsonaro was sworn in.
What Bolsonaro is saying: Bolsonaro has dismissed accusations of responsibility for the fires. On Wednesday, he speculated that the Amazon fires could have been caused by nonprofit organizations who are suffering from lack of funding, to "generate negative attention against me and against the Brazilian government."
https://www.cnn.com/americas/live-news/amazon-wildfire-august-2019/index.html
2019-08-22 18:59:00Z
52780358768310
South Korea To End Intelligence-Sharing Agreement with Japan, Citing 'National Interest' - NPR
South Korea has announced it will withdraw from a 2016 military intelligence-sharing pact with Japan. Here, South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha, center, and Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono, trailing at left, walk in Beijing's Great Hall of the People on Thursday. HOW Hwee Young/AFP/Getty Images hide caption
Updated at 11:35 a.m. ET
South Korea plans to terminate a military intelligence-sharing agreement with Japan, prompting concerns about security cooperation between Seoul, Tokyo and Washington as North Korea's nuclear and missile threat looms over the Korean Peninsula.
It's the latest breakdown between Seoul and Tokyo: Earlier this month, Japan removed South Korea from its "whitelist" of favored trade partners, prompting a retaliation in kind.
The Blue House, South Korea's presidential residence in Seoul, announced Thursday that it will end the General Security of Military Information Agreement – a pact pushed by the Obama administration and signed in 2016 as a way for the two countries to exchange valuable information on potential threats posed by North Korea, China and Russia.
"The government of the Republic of Korea decided that maintaining this Agreement, which was signed to facilitate the exchange of sensitive military information, does not serve our national interest," Kim You-geun, deputy director of the country's National Security Office, said in a statement.
Seoul's decision was made public before a Saturday deadline that would have automatically renewed the agreement for another year. South Korea appeared to be preparing for an extension, but that changed after Japan abruptly dropped the country from its list of preferred trade partners.
On Thursday, Kim blamed Tokyo for altering their relationship through the downgrade, providing "no concrete evidence" for the decision. Japan has also imposed export controls on products that are essential to South Korea's booming technology industry.
Tokyo said the move was made on national security grounds. But the two countries' disputes also trace back to Japan's colonial occupation of Korea between 1910 and 1945. A South Korean Supreme Court ruling last year allowed Korean victims of forced labor during World War II to seek compensation from Japanese firms. South Korea also shut down a Japanese-funded foundation that supported Korean comfort women who were forced into sexual slavery during the war. Both actions incensed the Japanese government.
Japan's downgrading of trade ties with South Korea escalated tensions between the countries and triggered protests outside the Japanese Embassy in Seoul. South Korean President Moon Jae-in vowed that "we will never again lose to Japan." And the prospect of pulling out of the military intelligence-sharing agreement began.
According to South Korea's Joongang Daily newspaper, Seoul and Tokyo have communicated about military intelligence matters at least seven times this year. That includes exchanges on the North's recent spate of short-range missile tests, even after Tokyo's decision to downgrade its trade relationship with Seoul.
Last month, Japan's Foreign Minister Taro Kono said Tokyo would prefer to continue sharing intelligence, especially on North Korea. On Thursday, Taro said Seoul's decision "completely misreads the security situation in Northeast Asia," according to the Kyodo news agency.
South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha told reporters on Thursday that the decision amounted to a "trust issue." She said Seoul is preparing to explain the decision to both Japan and Washington — and that the decision is "a separate issue from the South Korea-U.S. alliance."
Washington has long sought to build accord between Seoul and Tokyo as another mechanism to confront North Korea and a burgeoning China.
Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Dave Eastburn told NPR that the Department of Defense encourages Japan and South Korea to work together to resolve their differences, and he said he hoped it could be done "quickly."
"We are all stronger — and Northeast Asia is safer — when the United States, Japan, and Korea work together in solidarity and friendship," Eastburn said. "Intel sharing is key to developing our common defense policy and strategy."
Both Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and special envoy on North Korea Steve Biegun have reportedly nudged America's allies to patch up their differences. But critics accuse Washington of letting the bad blood boil between Tokyo and Seoul for too long before intervening.
Foreign policy experts also note that the U.S. faces a challenge in countering the deep veins of nationalism that both Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and South Korean President Moon Jae-in have mined for their own political gains.
Whether or not there is an immediate response from North Korea, China or Russia, those countries are likely pleased with the growing rift inside the U.S. web of alliances.
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/22/753348880/south-korea-to-scrap-military-intelligence-sharing-agreement-with-japan
2019-08-22 15:11:00Z
52780360031881
British consulate employee detained for 'solicitation of prostitution,' Chinese state-run newspaper reports - CNN
CNN's James Griffiths contributed to this report.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/22/asia/hong-kong-staffer-china-prostitution-intl-hnk/index.html
2019-08-22 13:12:00Z
52780359734068


