With FBI Reportedly Investigating DeJoy, House Democrat Says 'He Should Be Fired Now'

The FBI has reportedly launched an investigation into whether Postmaster General Louis DeJoy violated federal campaign finance laws during his tenure as the top executive at New Breed Logistics.

News of the probe, first reported Thursday by the Washington Post, prompted fresh calls for DeJoy’s immediate termination as head of the U.S. Postal Service, which has seen dramatic performance declines since DeJoy took over the agency last June. Only the USPS Board of Governors—which appointed DeJoy last May—has the authority to remove the postmaster general.

“DeJoy is corrupt to the core,” said Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.). “He should be fired now.”

According to the Post, “FBI agents in recent weeks interviewed current and former employees of DeJoy and the business, asking questions about political contributions and company activities.”

“Prosecutors also issued a subpoena to DeJoy himself for information,” the Post reported, citing unnamed people familiar with the ongoing probe.

In a statement to the Post, DeJoy spokesperson Mark Corallo confirmed the postmaster general is under investigation but insisted that DeJoy “has always been scrupulous in his adherence to the campaign contribution laws and has never knowingly violated them.”

The FBI investigation follows bombshell reporting by the Post last year detailing DeJoy’s alleged involvement in a straw-donor scheme under which New Breed Logistics employees were reimbursed for making political donations.

“Louis was a national fundraiser for the Republican Party. He asked employees for money. We gave him the money, and then he reciprocated by giving us big bonuses,” David Young, who served as human resources director at New Breed Logistics, told the Post in September. “When we got our bonuses, let’s just say they were bigger, they exceeded expectations—and that covered the tax and everything else.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Click Here: china factory direct sale

Verstappen leads Ferrari duo in first practice in Baku

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen clocked in fastest in first practice for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, the Dutchman edging Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc by just 0.043s.

Carlos Sainz confirmed the Scuderia’s street circuit form as he completed the top three, while Mercedes enjoyed a slow start to its Baku weekend with Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas concluding their morning session P7 and P10 respectively.

After Monaco, F1 takes to the streets of Baku, but save for a few tight and twisty corners there is little in common between the two urban venues, although Red Bull is determined to pick up where it left off in Monte Carlo.

F2 practice raised the curtain on Friday morning, allowing for a handy clean-up of the dusty circuit, but Baku’s tarmac was still fairly ‘green’ when drivers were given the green light for FP1.

And there was no hanging about as 17 out of the field’s 20 drivers sprung into action at the outset, with Verstappen, Bottas and Hamilton joining the action later than their colleagues.

Aero checks were also in order early on, with several cars sporting flow-vis paint jobs or test rigs, including McLaren’s chargers which reverted to their papaya livery.

Charles Leclerc positioned himself at the top of the time sheet as he set the session’s first benchmark time, but the Ferrari driver was quickly overhauled by Hamilton.

But as he pressed on, the Briton, running on the soft tyre, lowered the fastest lap to a 1m43.893 that comfortably cleared Verstappen and AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly.

Halfway through the session, Hamilton remained on top, with Leclerc and Norris in tow, but Daniel Ricciardo then suddenly leapfrogged the group to go fastest by 0.161s.

Norris was then on course for a dynamite lap, but the McLaren charger threw it away with a 180-degree spin at turn 16, contrary to Leclerc and Sainz who promptly dispatched Ricciardo at the top by half a second!

In the meantime, Hamilton indulged in a rare mistake when he locked up and was caught out at Turn 15, but fortunately with no other consequence than a set of burned up rubber.

Down the road, Verstappen expressed his frustration over the radio with the inattentive Nikita Mazepin after his flyer was ruined by the Haas rookie.

But the Dutchman, now free of traffic, charged on and duly snatched P1 with a 1m43.184s that edged Leclerc by 0.043s.

A series of lock-ups in Turns 15 and 16 prompted several local yellow flags that disrupted the final minutes of the session and prevented any improvements.

Verstappen thus remained on top from Leclerc and Sainz, with Ferrari emulating early on its Monaco form. Perez, Ricciardo and Gasly rounded off the top six while a few botched laps left Hamilton down in P7, in front of Norris, Alpine’s Fernando Alonso and Bottas.

Both Alfa Romeo and Aston Martin pairs concluded the morning in the second half as did Yuki Tsunoda and Esteban Ocon, while the Williams and Haas drivers brought up the rear.

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Click Here: baby knitted accessories

GOP-Backed Global Gag Rule Is Still Harming Women and Must Be Permanently Revoked: Report

Former U.S. President Donald Trump’s aggressively anti-choice global gag rule may be a thing of the past for now, but it is still causing “immense harm” to women around the world and should be permanently revoked.

“The Trump administration is gone but the harm from this policy continues to impact access to healthcare, particularly for the most marginalized women and girls around the world.”
—Shannon Kowalski, IWHC

So says a report published Wednesday by the International Women’s Health Coalition (IWHC), which documented the policy’s harmful effects on women in four countries. 

The IWHC report (pdf), entitled Care Denied: Year Three Impact of Trump’s Global Gag Rule, studied the effects of the global gag rule—which blocks foreign organizations that provide information, referrals, or services for abortion, or advocate for decriminalization or expanding access, from receiving U.S. funding—on women in Kenya, Nepal, Nigeria, and South Africa. 

Formally known as the Mexico City Policy, the global gag rule first went into effect during the administration of then-President Ronald Reagan in 1985. Every Democratic president since then has revoked the policy, while all Republican presidents—most recently Donald Trump in 2017—have reinstated it. Trump, who expanded the policy to cover all U.S. international healthcare aid, sought to further broaden it in 2020. President Joe Biden rescinded the policy in January.

Click Here: Borussia Dortmund soccer tracksuit

Reseach has shown that the global gag rule has had the opposite effect of what its proponent intended—it has been linked to increased pregnancies and abortions in countries that accept U.S. aid.

The new IWHC report found that although the global gag rule has been revoked, it “continues to exacerbate existing barriers to healthcare access,” with “services including comprehensive abortion care, contraceptive services, and HIV/AIDS testing and treatment” becoming less accessible, according to an executive summary.

That’s because it takes months or even years following the lifting of the policy for organizations to draft and deliver funding proposals to U.S. aid agencies, and groups know that all their hard work may have been in vain due to the possibility of a future Republican administration reinstating the global gag rule. 

The report’s summary says the Mexico City Policy “continues to be harmful to the health and well-being of women and marginalized groups such as young people, people living in rural areas, and poor communities,” and “creates funding gaps” while continuing “to fragment health services and halt critical health programs.”

Additionally, the global gag rule is “shrinking civil society spaces, silencing voices, and creating distrust amongst collaborators and partners. Partnerships and coalitions are becoming fractured due to the policy, thereby limiting civil society’s ability to work effectively and hold their governments accountable.”

“The policy continues to embolden regressive actors and is creating new opportunities for such players to expand their influence,” the summary states. “It has also been providing an excuse to hinder progress on sexual and reproductive health for individuals who do not support comprehensive sexual and reproductive health and rights within their professional capacities.”

“Governments of countries receiving large amounts of U.S. global health funds have remained largely silent regarding the consequences of the policy on the health of their own people and have failed to take significant steps to mitigate its effects,” it adds. 

IWHC recommends the following steps to mitigate the ongoing impact of the global gag rule:

  • The U.S. Congress should permanently end the Mexico City Policy through passage of the Global HER Act, proposed legislation led by Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) that would permanently repeal the global gag rule;
  • Congress should also repeal other abortion restrictions in U.S. law including the Helms Amendment and similar restrictions on the use of American foreign assistance funds; and
  • Donor governments and organizations should seek to close the funding gap by increasing funding to groups affected by the global gag rule, while prioritizing local and community-based organizations.

“The research is clear that the global gag rule is a deadly policy and will have far-reaching implications on global healthcare for years to come,” said IWHC advocacy and policy director Shannon Kowalski in a statement introducing the report. “The Trump administration is gone but the harm from this policy continues to impact access to healthcare, particularly for the most marginalized women and girls around the world. And the threat of future harm is still very much a concern.”

“We are encouraged by the Biden administration’s action so far to remove this policy,” Kowalski added. “Now, it is time for U.S. policymakers to pass the Global HER Act and end the global gag rule for good. Women’s health and lives are at stake.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Verstappen: Hamilton experience ‘doesn’t mean he’s more complete’

Max Verstappen says that Lewis Hamilton’s vast experience in F1 does not necessarily make him the more complete driver.

The titanic battle between Red Bull and Mercedes’ leading contenders will resume this weekend at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.

However, for the first time ever in his career, Verstappen is leading the drivers’ championship, with a four-point advantage over Hamilton.

The tight battle pits the two best teams in Grand Prix racing against each other, but also two drivers with very different levels of experience.

Verstappen was just 10-years-old when Hamilton made his F1 debut with McLaren in 2007. Since, the Briton has put 271 races under his belt, as well as a record 98 wins and seven world titles.

However, Verstappen insists that experience does not imply that Hamilton is necessarily the more complete driver, although one would be very hard pressed to single out a relative weakness in Hamilton’s sturdy armor.

“I don’t agree. But that’s my opinion,” Verstappen told Sky Italia. “Yes, he’s more experienced. But that doesn’t mean he’s more complete.

“It’s my opinion and there’s no need for anyone else to agree with me.”

The Red Bull driver and twelve-time Grand Prix winner was also asked whether he was envious of his rival and his impressive track record.

Click Here: warriors rugby jersey

“No and I don’t envy anyone for anything,” he answered. “I’m very happy with who I am. I’m lucky to be in F1 and the life I live. And I’m not jealous or envious of anyone. I’m happy if someone has a life.”

Only time will tell how the season will pan out and if Verstappen can beat Hamilton to the title, but at the very least, the Red Bull charger hopes 2021 will be a year to remember.

“I hope 2021 can be remembered as a good year,” he said.

“Obviously I hope to finish ahead of everyone, but I’m not the only one who dreams of that. You have to live in the present, I know I have to be fast and we will have to work hard throughout the season.

“I know a lot of people are already working for 2022, but we have a good opportunity this year and we will have to give everything.”

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Jets’ Robert Saleh plans to develop young cornerbacks, doesn’t shut door on signing free agent

It has seemed impossible filling all of the holes on the Jets roster after the 2020 season. After coming off a 2-14 year, the club still has a need at cornerback, but there aren’t many options.

The Gang Green cornerback room currently has: Bryce Hall, Lamar Jackson, Javelin Guidry, Bless Austin, Isaiah Dunn, Brandin Echols, Jason Pinnock, Corey Ballentine, Justin Hardee, Zane Lewis and Michael Carter II.

That’s an inexperienced group. Other than Hardee, none of those cornerbacks have been in the NFL longer than three years. And only Austin has double digit starts (16).

The questions are justified as the group is a clear weak point on the defense and head coach Robert Saleh knows it.

“There’s a lot of work to be had obviously,” Saleh said. “They’re young, they’ve got great mental demeanor, they’ve got great content, they want to learn, they want to do good.”

The best bet, and main option, is to ride with the young players and develop them. There will be some rough moments because they’re raw and inexperienced, but the Jets can hope a few will turn into quality starters.

There’s also been discussions about the Jets bringing in a veteran to improve the position. But Saleh thought that would impede the development of the young players.

“We’ve got a lot of time,” Saleh said. “The easy answer right now is to bring in a veteran, but a veteran will probably just eat up reps and not give us an ability to look at all these young guys who are just starving for an opportunity. And we’ve got time and we’ve got a lot of opportunities for them to showcase who they are and what they’re capable of. On the coaching side we’ve got a lot of time to help these young men get better.”

Most Read
Playoff bust leaves Knicks with some unpleasant questions about current roster

‘What took me 20 years to earn they took away from me in five minutes’: former NYC jail warden demoted by Correction Department seeks answers

‘Face/Off’ actress Romy Walthall dead at 57

When asked specifically about bringing in a veteran, Saleh didn’t completely dismiss it: “Right now, the focus completely is on the guys we have. We’re excited about the group that we have, we really are, and we’re excited to work with them. We’ll cross that bridge with progressive veterans when, when we get to that bridge but right now the sole focus is just on our guys.”

Click Here: Gws Giants Guernsey

Here’s the issue: there aren’t any realistic free agent veteran options that will significantly improve the group. The one name that surfaces is Richard Sherman, but the pairing is unlikely since Sherman wants to play only two more seasons and wants to be on a title contender. The Jets aren’t in that realm yet.

The other available options are Steven Nelson, Nickell Robey-Coleman, Gareon Conley, Bashaud Breeland, Darqueze Dennard and D.J.Hayden. Those choices aren’t making a significant contribution on the field. None of them have made a Pro Bowl, but they can be solid (so can some of the youngsters, it just won’t be as soon). And they’ll be able to provide some veteran leadership and experience to teach the young corners on the roster how to be NFL corners.

The Jets chose not to draft a cornerback earlier in the draft because they were focused on adding offensive talent to build around their franchise quarterback Zach Wilson. They also didn’t address the cornerback spot during free agency. They spent money on the defensive line because a strong defensive line will be the staple of their 4-3 attacking scheme.

The Jets probably will add a veteran cornerback eventually, because it’ll help the maturation process for their young players. But there aren’t many options that will significantly improve the group.

Recommended on Daily News

Brigitte et Emmanuel Macron : Week-end studieux et très discret à Brégançon

Contrairement à son prédécesseur, Emmanuel Macron apprécie tout particulièrement le fort de Brégançon, résidence d’Etat utilisée comme lieu officiel de villégiature depuis que Charles de Gaulles y a séjourné une nuit en 1964. Brigitte et Emmanuel Macron ont fait leur retour à Bormes-les-Mimosas (Var), mercredi 29 mai 2019, en fin de journée. Le couple présidentiel s’y repose en toute discrétion.

Comme le notent nos confrères de Var-Matin, pas une photo n’a été prise de Brigitte et Emmanuel Macron depuis leur arrivée. Il n’y a pas eu de bain de foule comme le week-end précédent au Touquet où le couple a voté pour les européennes. “Pour autant, il y avait de l’animation autour du fort toute la journée d’hier [vendredi, NDLR]. Entre les curieux et autres intéressés, ils étaient quelques-uns à vouloir apercevoir Emmanuel et Brigitte Macron. En vain…“, écrit Var-Matin.

La Provence note la présence de “policiers en short et T-shirt devant l’ultime portail d’entrée qui mène au fort, d’autres à vélo qui patrouillent dans l’enceinte et deux Zodiac qui font la navette autour de l’îlot et contrôlent les embarcations qui s’approchent de trop près“. On peut s’interroger : Brigitte et Emmanuel Macron se sont-ils tout de même offert une balade en tête-à-tête (sans compter bien sûr les agents chargés de leur protection) comme ils l’avaient lors de leur visite éclair à Saint-Tropez, en décembre ? Pour l’instant, tout semble indiquer qu’ils restent à l’abri du fort pour se reposer un peu.

Un peu seulement…

Comme le confirmait le communiqué de l’Elysée, le président “travaille au calme“, en ce long week-end de l’Ascension, à Brégançon. Ce dimanche 2 juin, il a rompu le silence pour rendre hommage au philosophe Michel Serres dont on apprenait la mort. Emmanuel Macron salue un “grand intellectuel” dans un nouveau communiqué du palais : “Le monde perd un grand intellectuel, qui fit briller la tradition philosophique française au-delà de nos frontières. Les Français perdent un visage familier qui sut mettre son érudition au service de tous, et qui, jusqu’au seuil de sa vie, chercha à éclairer de son savoir et de son intelligence la vie de notre Nation. [Il] fut parmi les premiers faire de la Terre un objet philosophique à part entière, prélude à la prise en compte, sur le plan philosophique et politique, de l’enjeu décisif de préservation de la biosphère.” Le président ajoute que “tel Hermès, le Dieu-messager sujet de nombreuses de ses publications, Michel Serres s’attacha toujours à se tourner vers d’autres champs, à jeter des ponts entre les arts et les disciplines, et à chercher à ouvrir le savoir au plus grand nombre“. Michel Serres avait 88 ans.

Click Here: custom injection moulding

Sophie Turner et Joe Jonas : Mariés complices avec Jennifer Lawrence

Sophie Turner et Joe Jones filent le parfait amour ! Le couple enchaîne les apparitions publiques depuis son mariage à Las Vegas. Mardi soir, l’actrice et son époux ont retrouvé Jennifer Lawrence et Jessica Chastain à l’avant-première de X-Men: Dark Phoenix.

Le film sort en France ce mercredi 5 juin 2019 et aux États-Unis le vendredi 7. L’héroïne du film (et de la série Game of Thrones) Sophie Turner en a fêté l’arrivée en salles mardi 4 juin au cours d’une nouvelle avant-première à Los Angeles. L’événement a eu lieu au TCL Chinese Theatre. Sophie Turner s’y est rendue accompagnée de son mari, le chanteur Joe Jonas, et entièrement habillée en Louis Vuitton.

Click Here: Pumas UNAM soccer tracksuit

L’actrice avait repéré sa robe lors du défilé Louis Vuitton croisière 2020, le 8 mai dernier à l’aéroport JFK, à New York.

Dark Phoenix premiere @wellahairusa #AskForWella #WellaHair #ad @wellahair #xmenmovies

A post shared by Sophie Turner (@sophiet) on

Grant Gustin (The Flash) : Les fesses à l’air en pleine escapade au soleil

Grant Gustin a profité d’un peu de temps libre loin des plateaux de tournage pour se reposer et bronzer. Sur son compte Instagram, il a posté une photo inattendue, jeudi 6 juin 2019. Le charmant acteur de 29 ans y apparaît les fesses à l’air.

Prenant la pose, sans maillot de bain, dans une piscine d’hôtel avec une vue à couper le souffle sur la mer et un beau ciel bleu, l’acteur de la série The Flash (qui incarne le personnage de Barry Allen) a commenté sa mise à nue en légende. “Triste de tout laisser derrière“, a-t-il écrit, indiquant que les vacances touchaient à leur fin. Une photo qui a beaucoup amusé ses sept millions d’abonnés sur Instagram.

Click Here: Maori All Blacks Store

Grant Gustin, que les téléspectateurs connaissent également pour avoir interprété le rôle de Sebastian Smythe dans la série télévisée Glee, avait choisi de s’offrir une escapade au Mexique. Il avait ainsi posé ses valises en compagnie de sa femme Andrea Thoma au très chic hôtel cinq étoiles Las Ventanas al Paraiso, A Rosewood Resort à San José del Cabo.

Nul doute que les amoureux, dont on avait appris les discrètes fiançailles en 2017, ont passé un très bon moment en mode sea, sex and sun

Sad to leave it behind.

Une publication partage par Grant Gustin (@grantgust) le

Fine like this.

Une publication partage par Grant Gustin (@grantgust) le

Despite Risks, Climate Activists Lead Fight Against Oil Giant's Drilling Projects in Uganda

Climate campaigners in Africa and around the world on Friday continued demonstrations against Total, with activists accusing the French oil giant of ecocide, human rights violations, and greenwashing in connection with fossil fuel projects in Uganda. 

On the 145th week of Fridays for Future climate strike protests, members of the movement in Uganda global allies drew attention to the harmful effects of fossil fuel development on the environment, ecosystems, communities, and livelihoods. 

Friday’s actions followed protests at Total petrol stations in Benin, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Togo, and Uganda on Tuesday—celebrated each year as Africa Day—against the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP), now under construction, and the Mozambique Liquefied Natural Gas project. 

“Total’s fossil fuel developments pose grave risks to protected environments, water sources, and wetlands in the Great Lakes and East Africa regions,” said Andre Moliro, an activist from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, during Tuesday’s pan-African protests.

“Communities have been raising concerns on the impact of oil extraction on Lake Albert fisheries and the disastrous consequences of an oil spill in Lake Victoria, that would affect millions of people that rely on the two lakes for their livelihoods, watersheds for drinking water, and food production,” he added. 

In Uganda, opposing oil development—an expected multi-billion-dollar boon to the landlocked nation’s economy—can be risky business. On Monday, police in Buliisa arrested Ugandan human rights defender Maxwell Atuhura and Italian journalist Federica Marsi. 

According to Energy Voice, Atuhura—who works with the African Institute for Energy Governance (AFIEGO), one of half a dozen NGOs that have pursued legal action against Total—and Marsi were about to meet with local community members when they were apprehended.

Marsi was released Monday and reportedly told to leave the oil region “before bad things happen.” She was briefly rearrested later in the day. Atuhura remains in police custody. The World Organization Against Torture has issued an urgent appeal for intervention in his case. 

United Nations special rapporteurs and international human rights groups have previously expressed serious concern over abuses perpetrated against land defenders and journalists in Uganda. Despite the risks, actions against EACOP and the related Tilenga Development Project continue. 

“We cannot drink oil. This is why we cannot accept the construction of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline,” Ugandan climate justice activist Vanessa Nakate, founder of the Rise Up Movement, said during the Africa Day action. “It is going to cause massive displacement of people [and the] destruction of ecosystems and wildlife habitats.”

“We have no future in extraction of oil because it only means destroying the livelihoods of the people and the planet,” Nakate added. “It is time to choose people above pipelines. It is time to rise up for the people and the planet.”

If completed, the $3.5 billion, nearly 900-mile EACOP will transport up to 230,000 barrels of crude oil per day from fields in the Lake Albert region of western Uganda through the world’s longest electrically heated pipeline to the Tanzanian port city of Tanga on the Indian Ocean.

In partnership with China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) and the Uganda National Oil Company (UNOC), Total is also leading the Tilenga Development Project, which involves the drilling of 400 wells in dozens of locations, including iniside the richly biodiverse Murchison Falls National Park.

Click Here: Maori All Blacks Store

Total says the project will “generate a positive net impact on biodiversity,” a claim vehemently rejected by environmentalists. 

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT

“Imagine a tropical version of the Alaskan oil pipeline,” environmental author Fred Pearce wrote of EACOP last year. “Only longer. And passing through critical elephant, lion, and chimpanzee habitats and 12 forest reserves, skirting Africa’s largest lake, and crossing more than 200 rivers and thousands of farms before reaching the Indian Ocean—where its version of the Exxon Valdez disaster would pour crude oil into some of Africa’s most biodiverse mangroves and coral reefs.”

Although Total claims it chose the EACOP route to “minimize the number of residents relocated,” local residents and international NGOs say the pipeline’s impact will be anything but minimal.

According to Mongabay, more than 12,000 families will be displaced from their ancestral lands to make way for the pipeline, two-thirds of which will pass through agricultural zones. Farmers in the pipeline’s path and the Lake Albert oil region have joined civil society groups and international organizations in voicing their opposition to the EACOP and Tilenga projects. 

The #StopEACOP coalition, which is made up of local and international activists and organizations, is attempting to block funding of the project by appealing to banks, investors, and insurance companies. A March open letter signed by more than 250 groups urged 25 commercial banks to not finance the pipeline. 

In 2017, WWF Uganda published a report warning that the pipeline “is likely to lead to significant disturbance, fragmentation, and increased poaching within important biodiversity and natural habitats” that are home to species including chimpanzees, elephants, and lions. 

Wildlife forced from natural habitats by oil development has in turn caused severe disruptions to farming families. 

“We have always had a problem of human-wildlife conflict in this village, but with drilling and road construction across the park, the invasions are more frequent,” Elly Munguryeki, a farmer living just outside Murchison Falls National Park, told South Africa’s Mail & Guardian earlier this month.

“We keep reporting the losses to park authorities but nothing happens,” said Munguryeki. “Each night a herd of buffalo, baboons, and hippos from the park would invade my farm and neighbouring plots and eat our crops until dawn. Whatever they left would be eaten by baboons and wild pigs during the day, forcing us to harvest premature crops.” 

A 2020 Oxfam report (pdf) noted the EACOP “will cross poor, rural communities in both Uganda and Tanzania that lack the political and financial capital of the project stakeholders.”

“The lopsided complications of this power dynamic are well-documented in similar extractive industry projects,” the report stated. “Powerful companies are often able to hide their operations behind local contractors and permissive government authorities. Often the only hope that local communities have for remediation or justice is through local government bodies that are often weak, fragile, or captured by corporate and national interests.”

Mary, an Ugandan farmer in Rakai near the Tanzanian border who was interviewed for the report, said that “when this pipeline project came, they promised us too many things. Up to now they have done nothing.” 

“What makes me worried is that they took my land but I have not yet been compensated,” she claimed. 

A community member from Rujunju village, Kikuube District in Uganda told the report’s authors that “the government and oil companies have not informed us about the negative impact that the EACOP will have on our well-being. All they tell us are good things that the EACOP will bring like roads and jobs. We also want to know the negative impact of the pipeline so that we can make informed decisions.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Letizia d’Espagne ressort sa robe à fleurs de Pâques pour les Prix de l’UNICEF

Très en vue le 1er juin 2019, spectaculaire dans sa robe rouge confectionnée par la créatrice sévillane Ana Cherubina à l’occasion de la Journée des forces armées, Letizia d’Espagne s’est ensuite faite plus discrète, à la faveur d’un agenda dégarni.

Sobrement vêtue d’un haut mango et d’un pantalon à boutons Hugo Boss sombres le 6 juin pour prendre part à une réunion du Comité directeur des résidences étudiantes, la reine est réapparue mardi 11 juin pour présider à la cérémonie de remise des Prix du comité espagnol de l’UNICEF 2019. Pour cette occasion, l’épouse du roi Felipe VI avait décidé de réutiliser la robe à fleurs bleu marine Massimo Dutti qu’on l’avait vue porter au mois d’avril lors de la messe de Pâques à Majorque.

Au siège du Conseil supérieur de la recherche scientifique, qui accueillait dans le nord de Madrid l’événement, Letizia d’Espagne, accompagnée sur scène par la ministre de la Santé María Luisa Carcedo et par le président du comité Gustavo Suárez Pertierra, a remis leurs distinctions aux trois lauréats de cette édition 2019 : le penseur et pédagogue Francesco Tonucci (Prix UNICEF Joaquín Ruiz-Giménez), pour sa contribution à la défense des droits de l’enfance, la Fondation Pablo Horstmann (Prix UNICEF Transforma), qui s’efforce de réduire la mortalité infantile et d’améliorer la santé des jeunes mères en Ethiopie, et l’émission radio Cinco Continentes (Prix UNICEF Comunica), qui aborde la situation des enfants défavorisés dans le monde.

La reine Letizia d’Espagne doit se déplacer mercredi 12 juin dans la province de Soria pour la clôture d’un séminaire de journalistes et de professionnels de la communication axé sur les moyens d’aider à repeupler les campagnes espagnoles, avant de se joindre à son mari le lendemain pour session plénière de l’Académie royale espagnole et de recevoir en audience au palais de la Zarzuela le Conseil international du Théâtre royal.

Click Here: factory direct toddler products