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PVL semifinals herald potential Petro Gazz, Choco Mucho clash

CHOCO MUCHO FLYING TITANS — FACEBOOK.COM/PREMIERVOLLEYBALLLEAGUE

Games Today
(PhilSports Arena)
4 p.m. — Petro Gazz vs Creamline
6 p.m. — Chery Tiggo vs Choco Mucho

IN THE next few days, the Premier Volleyball League’s (PVL) skies will have the same two teams that have been dominating it recently—the Petro Gazz Angels and the Choco Mucho Flying Titans.

And both Petro Gazz and Choco Mucho will have a chance to arrange that intriguing PVL All-Filipino Conference title showdown if they hurdle Creamline and Chery Tiggo, respectively, today in a pair of critical semis matchups at the PhilSports Arena.

Both the Angels and the Flying Titans gained the early upper hand in the race to the best-of-three finals with the former swooping down on the Crossovers in a 20-25, 25-21, 25-15, 25-18 win and the latter outlasting the Cool Smashers in an epic 13-25, 19-25, 25-21, 25-20, 18-16 win Tuesday.

If both squads hurdle their foes by at least four sets, they would arrange a showdown between teams hungry to claim the most sought after title of all — the All-Filipino Conference crown.

Game time is at 4 p.m. for Petro Gazz, which is eyeing its first AFC plum after its pair of Reinforced Conference triumphs, while Choco Mucho, which will be gunning for its breakthrough title, goes for it at 6 p.m.

“Every team wants to win, it’s really about who wants it,” said Petro Gazz star Brooke Van Sickle, who unleashed a match-high 21 points in that emphatic win over Chery Tiggo.

For Choco Mucho skipper Maddie Madayag, who broke a 12-game losing streak against Creamline, it is going to be all about collective effort. “Teamwork lang talaga,” she said.

It isn’t over though for Creamline and Chery Tiggo, which could get back on their feet with much-needed victories.

There is also a chance that Creamline’s Tots Carlos and Chery Tiggo’s Mylene Paat could return after missing the first semis duel to attend the Korean league’s rookie combine the last three days.

Minus the two, the Cool Smashers and the Crossovers played like they lost a limb with the former blowing a two-set lead and the latter wasting a one-set edge that sent them crashing to painful defeats. — Joey Villar

Benilde on brink of sweeping NCAA women’s volleyball, poised to earn direct finals berth

COLLEGE OF ST. BENILDE LADY BLAZERS — FACEBOOK.COM/NCAA.ORG.PH

Games Tomorrow
7:30 a.m. — AU vs EAC (men)
10 a.m. — AU vs EAC (women)
2 p.m. — LPU vs Mapua (women)
5 p.m. — LPU vs Mapua (men)

THE COLLEGE of St. Benilde (CSB) Lady Blazers had to know going in that their dynastic National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) reign has to end sometime.

But not just yet. CSB appears to be making sure its run will be memorable after extinguishing University of Perpetual Help, 25-14, 25-18, 25-7, on Wednesday to move to the brink of sweeping the NCAA Season 99 women’s volleyball finals at the Filoil EcoOil Arena.

The win was the Lady Blazers’ eighth straight in as many matches.

If CSB hurdles Lyceum of the Philippines (LPU) the former’s finals rival a season ago, Saturday, it will leapfrog straight to the best-of-three championship round for the third straight season with a chance at an amazing threepeat. It was also the school’s 37th win in a row that started in the pandemic-halted 2020 season. But everything could come to an end next year as CSB is set to lose four of the pillars of that magnificent run—Cloanne Mondonedo, Michele Gamit, Jade Gentapa and Gayle Pascual.

And that is why CSB coach Jerry Yee is trying to give the young guns equal time to flourish as they navigate the transition period.

Ganun naman ako, you see it in pre-pandemic nung nag transition time,” said Mr. Yee. “Mabibigat mawawala, we try to give playing time sa mga papasok.”

The Lady Altas dropped to 4-3 to a three-way tie for No. 4 with the Arellano University Lady Chiefs and the Mapua Lady Cardinals. — Joey Villar

Tyrese Maxey-led 76ers rally late, stay alive with OT win over NY Knicks

TYRESE MAXEY scored a playoff career-high 46 points, including the tying 35-foot 3-pointer with 15.3 seconds left in regulation, and Kelly Oubre, Jr. converted the tiebreaking layup with 1:02 remaining in overtime (OT) as the visiting Philadelphia 76ers avoided elimination with a 112-106 victory over the New York Knicks in Game 5 of their Eastern Conference first-round series.

Game 6 is Thursday in Philadelphia and if the 76ers can extend the series again, the teams will play a seventh game Saturday in New York.

Jalen Brunson led New York with 40 points. The Knicks were 28.9 seconds away from closing out the series after Miles McBride’s 14-footer put them up 96-90. Following a timeout, Mr. Maxey converted a 4-point play with 25.4 seconds.

After New York’s Josh Hart split two free throws with 15.3 seconds left, Mr. Maxey buried a 35-foot 3-pointer with 8.5 seconds left for a tie at 97 and the game reached overtime when Nicolas Batum blocked Mr. Brunson’s 10-footer right before the horn. Mr. Brunson scored the first five points of overtime but the Sixers countered with nine straight points for a 106-102 lead on Mr. Embiid’s 3-point play with 1:40 left.

After Mr. Embiid was called for a flagrant one foul, Mr. Brunson split two free throws and sank a 3-pointer with 1:14 left.

Mr. Oubre got the ball from Mr. Batum and hit a well-contested layup to snap the tie and Mr. Brunson missed a layup with 42.5 seconds left. After the teams traded turnovers, Tobias Harris and Mr. Maxey converted at the line in the final 15.8 seconds to keep the series going.

Mr. Maxey made 17-of-30 shots and hit seven 3-pointers for the Sixers, who survived Mr. Embiid hobbling through the game.

Mr. Embiid added 19 points, 16 rebounds and 10 assists after missing the morning shootaround with a migraine.

Mr. Harris contributed 19 and Oubre finished with 14 as the Sixers shot 46.2% and were 15 of 39 from 3-point range. Hart added 18 points and OG Anunoby chipped in 17 for New York, which shot 46.5% but was just 10 of 36 from behind the arc.

The third quarter featured 12 lead changes and Hart’s jumper in the lane with 1:03 left put New York ahead 70-69 entering the fourth.

Mr. Batum hit an uncontested 3 for a 74-70 Philadelphia lead 40 seconds into the fourth, resulting in a New York timeout. A Maxey 3 put the Sixers up 77-72 with 8:58 left and following consecutive turnovers by Philadelphia, baskets by Mr. Anunoby and Mr. McBride put the Knicks ahead 80-77 with 6:15 to play.

Mr. Brunson’s three-point play made it 85-79 with 5:03 left. The Knicks took a 91-86 lead when Mr. Anunoby dunked over Mr. Maxey with 1:39 left and Mr. Brunson’s 14-footer over Mr. Batum pushed the lead to 93-88 with 1:12 remaining. — Reuters

Despite missing stars, Bucks rout Pacers to stay alive

KHRIS MIDDLETON and Bobby Portis scored 29 points apiece and the injury-riddled Milwaukee Bucks stayed alive with a 115-92 victory over the visiting Indiana Pacers in Game 5 of their first-round series in the Eastern Conference.

Mr. Portis made 14 of 24 field-goal attempts and collected 10 rebounds. Mr. Middleton had 12 rebounds and five assists as Milwaukee cut its deficit to 3-2 in the series.

The Bucks controlled the contest despite both Giannis Antetokounmpo (calf) and Damian Lillard (Achilles) sitting out. Mr. Antetokounmpo has missed the entire series and Me. Lillard has sat out the past two games.

Tyrese Haliburton scored 16 points and Myles Turner added 13 for Indiana. Pascal Siakam and Andrew Nembhard had 12 apiece.

Game 6 is Thursday night in Indianapolis.

Malik Beasley scored 18 points and joined Mr. Middleton in making four 3-pointers. Patrick Beverley recorded 13 points and 12 assists, and Brook Lopez had 12 points for the Bucks.

Milwaukee outscored Indiana 64-36 over the two middle quarters to take control. The Bucks shot 52.4% from the field, including 11 of 29 from 3-point range.

Milwaukee opened the third quarter with nine straight points to turn a five-point advantage into a 62-48 lead on Mr. Middleton’s driving hoop. Indiana moved within nine on Mr. Nembhard’s layup with 6:46 left in the quarter.

Mr. Lopez scored the Bucks’ next four points and Mr. Portis later added a layup to give Milwaukee a 72-57 lead with 5:25 remaining.

Later in the quarter, Mr. Beasley knocked down two 3-pointers in a span of 27 seconds as Milwaukee opened up an 82-63 lead with 2:09 left.

The Bucks led 87-67 entering the final stanza and received a 3-pointer from Beasley and a layup from Mr. Lopez to push the lead to 25 with 11:07 left in the game.

Indiana went on a 9-2 run to move within 18 with 8:42 remaining, but Mr. Beasley answered with a 3-pointer to give Milwaukee a 97-76 lead with 8:21 remaining.

Mr. Portis later scored six points during an 8-0 burst that saw the Bucks push the lead to 107-80 with 4:27 to play.

The Pacers made 44.4% of their attempts and hit 12 of 38 from behind the arc. Mr. Middleton scored 17 points in the first half as Milwaukee led 53-48 at the break.

Mr. Haliburton scored 11 in the half for the Pacers.

Indiana led by as many as 10 in the opening quarter before settling for a 31-23 lead. The Bucks outscored the Pacers 30-17 in the second quarter, with Mr. Beverley leading the way with 12 points. — Reuters

Cavaliers edge Magic on late block, take 3-2 lead

EVAN MOBLEY blocked Franz Wagner’s attempted layup with five seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, helping the host Cleveland Cavaliers secure a 104-103 win over the Orlando Magic in Game 5 of their Eastern Conference first-round series.

Cleveland’s Donovan Mitchell erupted for 28 points, and Darius Garland scored 17 of his 23 points in the first quarter.

Max Strus had 16 points and Mr. Mobley collected 14 points and 13 rebounds for the fourth-seeded Cavaliers.

Cleveland has won all three of its home games to take a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series. Game 6 is in Orlando on Friday

Marcus Morris Sr. added 12 points off the bench to help a Cleveland team that was without Jarrett Allen, who was ruled out due to a right rib contusion he sustained in Game 4.

Mr. Allen averaged 17.0 points and 13.8 rebounds in four games this series. Orlando’s Paolo Banchero recorded 39 points and eight rebounds after being limited to just nine points on 4-of-14 shooting from the floor in Game 4.

Mr. Wagner collected 14 points and six assists and Jalen Suggs added 13 points for the fifth-seeded Magic, who have lost seven straight road games dating back to the regular season.

Mr. Banchero sank a pull-up jumper to stake Orlando to a 98-97 lead before Mr. Mobley answered on the next possession with an emphatic one-handed dunk. Mr. Mitchell added a free throw and Mr. Mobley converted a nifty feed from Garland for an easy layup to give Cleveland a 102-98 advantage with 40.6 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter.

Mr. Wagner made a layup to halve the deficit before his attempt at a driving layup was blocked by Mr. Mobley. Mr. Mitchell made a pair of free throws before Banchero sank a 3-pointer to cap the scoring.

Mr. Suggs made one of two free throws to give Orlando a 64-63 lead, but Cleveland answered with a 12-6 run to end the third quarter. Mr. Strus highlighted that surge by sandwiching 3-pointers around a driving layup. — Reuters

Adidas decided not to match Nike offer for German football federation — CEO

LONDON —  Adidas chief executive officer  (CEO) Bjorn Gulden said the German brand decided not to match Nike’s offer for Germany’s national football federation sponsorship after the US company beat Adidas on its home turf last month to end its 70-year partnership with the federation.

Nike outbid Adidas to become the official supplier for the German Football Association (DFB) and will supply all national teams from 2027 to 2034.

“I’m not annoyed at all,” Mr. Gulden said in response to a question during a press conference. “We are a company that needs to balance cost and revenue, and the price that is quoted in the press that our competitor paid is not something that we will pay.” Asked about media reports that Adidas has signed a kit deal with Liverpool, taking over from Nike, Mr. Gulden said there was nothing to announce.

Adidas, Nike, and other sports brands are constantly vying for kit deals with the biggest and best teams, as replica shirts can boost their revenue, especially during big tournaments like the World Cup or the Euros.

But core products like footwear are ultimately a bigger driver of the business. “All these sponsorship deals are about brand recognition and brand sentiment,” said Tom Scott, CEO of sports-focused communications consultancy Trippant in London. “(But) market share is not driven by which shirts you are sponsoring, it’s about which sneakers you are selling week in and week out.” — Reuters

Fairwork Philippines calls for reform on working conditions for Filipino platform workers

FREEPIK

An action research firm in their recent report on gig workers in the Philippines finds a ‘critical gap’ in government regulation and platform policies that cause subpar working conditions in the country.  

“Addressing the safety concerns and policy gaps in the platform-based ride-hailing and delivery sector in the Philippines that go beyond compliance is urgent and requires a collaborative effort from the government, platform companies, and worker representatives,” Fairwork Philippines said in their 2023 report on ‘Protecting Worker Health, Safety, and Security in the Philippine Platform Economy’. 

The organization defined platform workers as independent contractors in digital labor platforms, such as ride-hailing and delivery sectors. 

The results released by the organization were based on its five principles of fairness: 

  • Fair pay 
  • Fair conditions 
  • Fair contracts 
  • Fair management 
  • Fair representation 

Despite efforts from the government and the market to promote platform work as a viable livelihood opportunity, Fairwork Philippines said “most workers cannot meet the basic minimum wage while also facing dangerous working conditions, a lack of safety nets, and long-term financial insecurity.” 

The organization pushes for reforms to improve the quality of work for digital platforms. According to their 2022 and 2023 reports, there were no improvements in the workers’ health, safety, and security. 

Evaluated in the 2022 ratings were Angkas, Borzo, GrabCar, GrabFood/GrabExpress, Foodpanda, Joyride, Lalamove, TokTok, and Transportify. Meanwhile, Joyride Car and Maxim replaced Transportify in the 2023 data. 

GrabCar, GrabFood/GrabExpress, Angkas, and Lalamove continue to be the only platforms that have received points from Fairwork Philippines for two consecutive years.Almira Louise S. Martinez

Extreme heat is closing schools, widening learning gaps worldwide

A STUDENT refills a water bottle at a school in Manila on April 2, 2024. — PHILIPPINE STAR/ RYAN BALDEMOR

HENA KHAN, a grade nine student in Dhaka, has struggled to focus on her studies this week as temperatures surpassed 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in the capital city.

“There is no real education in schools in this punishing heat,” she said. “Teachers can’t teach, students can’t concentrate. Rather, our lives are at risk.”

Ms. Khan is one of more than 40 million students who have been shut out of classrooms in recent weeks as heatwaves have forced school closures in parts of Asia and North Africa.

As the climate warms due to the burning of fossil fuels, heatwaves are lasting longer and reaching greater peaks as average temperatures rise. In turn, government authorities and public health experts across the world are grappling with whether to keep students learning in hot classrooms, or encourage them to stay home and keep cool.

Either decision has consequences. About 17% of the world’s school-aged children are already out of school, according to United Nations data, but the proportion is much larger in developing countries, with nearly a third of sub-Saharan Africa’s children out of school compared to just 3% in North America. Children’s test scores in the developing world also lag far behind developed countries.

Heat could make that worse, widening learning gaps between tropical developing nations and developed countries, experts told Reuters, and even between rich and poor districts in wealthy countries. But sending children to overheated schools could make them sick.

South Sudan already this year shuttered its schools to some 2.2 million students in late March when temperatures soared to 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit). Thousands of schools in the Philippines and in India followed suit in late April.

Meanwhile, Bangladesh continues to waver between opening and closing schools for some 33 million students amid pressure to prepare pupils for exams — even as temperatures climb to dangerous levels.

Many of the country’s schools “don’t have fans, the ventilation is not good, and they might have tin roofing which does not provide good insulation,” said Shumon Sengupta, Bangladesh country director for nonprofit Save the Children.

On Monday, one day after reopening schools which had been closed last week due to heat, Bangladeshi authorities again closed all primary schools and educational institutions in nearly half of all districts as temperatures reached 43ºC (109ºF).

HOTHEADS
Even if students continue attending classes during heatwaves, their education is likely to still suffer.

High temperatures slow down the brain’s cognitive functions, lowering pupils’ ability to retain and process information.

US high schoolers, one May 2020 study found, performed worse on standardized tests if they were exposed to higher temperatures in the year leading up to the exam.

The research, published in the American Economic Journal, found that a 0.55ºC (1ºF) warmer school year reduced that year’s learning by 1%.

Much of that impact disappeared in schools that had air conditioning, said study co-author Josh Goodman, an economist at Boston University.

Somewhere between 40% and 60% of US schools are thought to have at least partial air conditioning, according to various surveys.

Schools that do not are typically found in lower income districts which already lag behind their wealthier counterparts academically. In the US the average performance of the lowest income students is about four years behind the highest income students, according to a 2019 study in the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Mr. Goodman and his colleagues found a similar learning pattern when they looked at standardized test data in other countries.

“When [students in] these places experience a year with more heat, they appear to have learned less,” he said.

That is worrying, Mr. Goodman added, because as the world warms already hot countries moving to an extremely hot climate will suffer more than temperate countries.

“Climate change will widen the learning gaps between hot and cool countries,” Mr. Goodman said.

Some research suggests excessive heat in the tropics can impact a child’s education even before birth.

Children in Southeast Asia exposed to higher-than-average temperatures in utero and early in life obtained fewer years of schooling later in life, a 2019 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found.

With many people in the region dependent on farming, high temperatures could hurt food production and household incomes, said study author Heather Randell, a sociologist at the University of Minnesota.

If crops are damaged by heat, young children may not get enough to eat which can stunt their development, she said, and a family may no longer be able to afford school fees, or could pull children out of school to help on farms.

SCHOOL RULES
The number of days that schools are closed for extreme heat have been ticking up in the US, but few countries track such data.

US schools are now canceling class for an average of six to seven school days each year for heat, compared with about three to four days a decade ago, said Paul Chinowsky, a civil engineer who led a 2021 study on schools and rising temperatures for the firm Resilient Analytics, which consults for governments and NGOs.

In Bangladesh, “last year, schools were closed for 6 to 7 days,” said Save the Children’s Mr. Sengupta. “But this year, they are saying it might be closed for 3 to 4 weeks.”

May is generally the warmest month of the year in South Asia.

More closures worry him, Mr. Sengupta said. When children are not in school, they are more vulnerable to child labor and child marriage, according to NGO reports.

Bangladesh Education Minister Mohibul Hasan Chowdhury said on Tuesday that schools would be kept open on weekends if needed to complete the curriculum.

Decisions on school closures, he added, will no longer be a national directive but are to be made at the district level. — Reuters

El Niño, water management issues blamed for snarling Panama Canal

A container ship crosses the Gulf of Suez towards the Red Sea before entering the Suez Canal, April 24, 2017. — REUTERS

SAO PAULO — The El Niño climate phenomenon, not climate change, drove lower rainfall last year that reduced the Panama Canal’s water levels and contributed to shipping restrictions that disrupted global trade, a study released on Wednesday found.

Prioritizing water for human consumption rather than for the canal also played a role in shipping restrictions, according to the study by research consortium World Weather Attribution.

Panama experienced its third-driest year on record in 2023, leading the canal authority to restrict the size and number of vessels crossing the waterway that connects the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and serves as a vital route for maritime trade. At times, more than 100 ships at a time lined up and waited up to 21 days to use the canal, which is responsible for about 5% of global shipping.

Panama has faced demand peaks for the canal in recent months since shippers began seeking alternative routes due to attacks by Houthi militants against vessels going through the Red Sea toward the Suez Canal, the world’s busiest waterway.

Scientists with World Weather Attribution, which analyzed the causes of the low rainfall, said that the canal should be able to return to normal operations this year as El Niño ends and the rainy season arrives as usual.

“We expect the canal system will be fully recharged by the end of the year and shipping should be back to normal sometime several months before then,” said Steven Paton, a study co-author and researcher at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama.

The study concluded that it was El Niño, not climate change, that was the key driver for rainfall falling to 26% lower than average last year in Panama.

El Niño is a naturally occurring warming in the Eastern Pacific Ocean that disrupts weather patterns globally on average every two to seven years. The latest El Niño began in mid-2023.

Mr. Paton said El Niño has ended, with Australia’s weather bureau making the same call last month. The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has yet to say El Niño is over.

Water management was also a factor in the water levels, according to World Weather Attribution.

The canal’s locks draw on a reservoir called Lake Gatun that also provides drinking water for half of Panama’s population. Authorities decided to restrict ship traffic in 2023, rather than rationing drinking water as they did in 2016 following another drought, the study said. — Reuters

Binance crypto founder Zhao sentenced to four months in prison

REUTERS

SEATTLE — Changpeng Zhao, the former chief executive of Binance, was sentenced on Tuesday to four months in prison after pleading guilty to violating US laws against money laundering at the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange.

Once considered the most powerful crypto industry figure, Mr. Zhao, known as “CZ,” is the second major crypto boss to be sentenced to prison.

The sentence imposed by US District Judge Richard Jones in Seattle was significantly shorter than the three years sought by prosecutors, and below the maximum 1-1/2 years recommended under federal guidelines.

It was also much lighter than the 25 years behind bars that Sam Bankman-Fried received in March for stealing $8 billion from customers of his now-bankrupt FTX exchange. Mr. Bankman-Fried is appealing his conviction and sentence.

Still, prosecutors cheered the outcome of what had been a years-long investigation into Binance and Mr. Zhao, a billionaire who had been living beyond US reach in the United Arab Emirates.

“This was an epic day,” US Attorney Tessa Gorman told reporters outside the courthouse. “Incarceration was critical in this case and we’re pleased with the result.”

Before handing down the sentence, Mr. Jones faulted Mr. Zhao for making Binance’s growth and profitability a higher priority than complying with US laws.

“You had the wherewithal, the finance capabilities, and the people power to make sure that every single regulation had to be complied with, and so you failed at that opportunity,” he said.

Mr. Zhao, 47, did not visibly react upon hearing his sentence.

He wore a navy blue suit and tie in the courtroom, with his mother and several other family members in attendance. Defense lawyers had requested probation.

“’Crime pays’ is the message sent today,” Dennis Kelleher, head of the financial reform advocacy group Better Markets, wrote in an email, noting Mr. Zhao will still get to keep his vast wealth.

‘I’M SORRY’
Prosecutors said Binance employed a “Wild West” model that welcomed criminals, and did not report more than 100,000 suspicious transactions with designated terrorist groups including Hamas, al-Qaeda and Islamic State.

They also said Mr. Zhao’s exchange supported the sale of child sexual abuse materials and received a large portion of ransomware proceeds.

Binance agreed to a $4.32-billion penalty, and Mr. Zhao paid a $50 million criminal fine plus $50 million to the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

“I’m sorry,” Mr. Zhao told the judge before being sentenced.

“I believe the first step of taking responsibility is to fully recognize the mistakes. Here I failed to implement an adequate anti-money laundering program … I realize now the seriousness of that mistake.”

Much of Binance’s misconduct, including its weak money laundering controls, was first reported by Reuters.

Mr. Zhao will surrender voluntarily to serve his sentence, most likely at a detention center near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

“Not prioritizing compliance is a few shades below criminal intent. It’s bad, but it’s below the usual requirement of specific intent” that would justify a years-long sentence, said Robert Frenchman, a lawyer specializing in white-collar crime.

But given the scale of Binance’s violations and the massive fines imposed, he should not have expected probation or home detention, Mr. Frenchman added.

NOT A MONSTER
Prosecutors had told the judge a tough sentence would send a clear signal to other would-be criminals.

“We are not suggesting that Mr. Zhao is Sam Bankman-Fried or that he is a monster,” prosecutor Kevin Mosley said.

Mr. But Zhao’s conduct, he said, “wasn’t a mistake. This wasn’t a regulatory ‘oops.’”

Mr. Zhao stepped down as Binance’s chief in November, when he and the exchange he founded in 2017 admitted to evading money-laundering requirements under the Bank Secrecy Act.

In seeking probation, defense lawyers said others who admitted to similar wrongdoing, including BitMEX founder Arthur Hayes, were not locked up.

Mr. Zhao “wanted to make a difference in the world,” but made mistakes, defense lawyer Mark Bartlett said.

Mr. Jones said the three-year sentence requested by prosecutors was inappropriate because they did not show that Mr. Zhao knew in advance about illegal activity.

“It’s always the case the government asks for more than they think they’ll get,” said Mr. Frenchman. “Going that much above guidelines for a pleader is unusually aggressive.”

Several other crypto moguls are also in the crosshairs of US authorities after the collapse of crypto prices in 2022 exposed fraud and misconduct across the industry. — Reuters

Breast cancer screening should begin at age 40, US panel says

ANGIOLA HARRY-UNSPLASH

NEW YORK — Women at average risk for breast cancer should get screening mammograms every other year starting at age 40, the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) said on Tuesday, cementing insurance coverage for the procedure for that age group under the law.

The USPSTF’s influential recommendation, published in JAMA, reverses its controversial 2009 guidance that breast cancer screening should begin at age 50.

Its updated guidelines bring it in line with other major organizations that say women at average risk of breast cancer should start screening at age 40.

Those organizations include the American Cancer Society, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

A 2016 update from the USPSTF had said women could start screening at age 40 if they and their doctors so desired, but that update led “to widespread confusion for both physicians and patients,” said Dr. Evita Singh, Director of Breast Imaging at Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit.

US insurers are already required by law to fully cover mammograms for women over age 40 who want them, but the USPSTF’s recommendation will now ensure the continuity of that coverage under the Affordable Care Act beyond next year.

By lowering the age to start biennial screening to 40, the USPSTF is acknowledging evidence that more women under the age of 50 are now getting diagnosed with breast cancer.

Black women, in particular, stand to benefit from earlier screening, experts say. Breast cancer mortality is 40% higher among Black women than among white women, and Black women are more likely to get breast cancer at younger ages, the USPSTF report noted.

“There should hopefully be less confusion on the ‘right’ age to consider screening for average risk people,” said Deirdre Saulet, vice president of cancer care at Carrum Health, a digital marketplace for employers to purchase bundled healthcare services.

“I would anticipate that a greater proportion of the primary care doctors in the country would be recommending starting at age 40 for women of average risk,” said Dr. Carol Mangione, chair of the USPSTF.

Nearly half of all women have dense breasts, which increases the risk for breast cancer, but the task force says there is not yet enough evidence to recommend for or against additional screening with breast ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging in these individuals.

The 16-person USPSTF is appointed by the secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services to independently develop clinical practice guidelines. It is composed of medical professionals serving four-year terms. — Reuters

Bird flu may infect cows outside the US, says WHO

UNITED STATES MISSION GENEVA

GENEVA — There is a risk that the H5N1 bird flu virus, present in many wild birds, may infect cows in countries beyond the United States as they migrate, a World Health Organization (WHO) official said on Tuesday.

US officials are seeking to verify the safety of milk and meat after confirming the H5N1 virus in 34 dairy cattle herds in nine states since late March, and in one person in Texas.

“With the virus carried around the world by migratory birds, certainly there is a risk for cows in other countries to be getting infected,” Wenqing Zhang, head of WHO’s Global Influenza Programme, said at a news briefing in Geneva.

The virus is widespread among wild birds in the United States and sometimes infects poultry and even outdoor cats, but up until now, has been rare in cows.

Zhang reiterated that the U.N. agency deems the overall public health risk posed by the virus to be low but urged vigilance, especially among farm workers.

While the virus is not thought to be able to spread through milk, Zhang repeated long-standing WHO advice to only consume pasteurized milk.

Asked to evaluate U.S. transparency on the outbreak so far, Zhang said the global body had received regular updates and praised a decision to share the virus’ genetic sequence early.

“I do think the collaboration with U.S. CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and the information we’ve received so far enables us to monitor the situation and to update the preparedness measures,” she said. — Reuters