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Halep falls to Badosa in return from doping ban, Sabalenka waits

MIAMI — Paula Badosa spoiled Simona Halep’s return from a doping ban, fighting back to claim a gritty 1-6 6-4 6-3 win on Tuesday to move into the second round of the Miami Open and set up what is sure to be an emotion-packed match with Aryna Sabalenka.

Ms. Halep had been the player in the spotlight coming into Miami after accepting a wild card when her four-year suspension was cut to nine months by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

But the focus quickly shifted to Ms. Sabalenka after the world number two’s long-time boyfriend, Belarusian former pro ice hockey player Konstantin Koltsov, died in what police said on Tuesday was an “apparent suicide.”

While Ms. Halep was getting ready to face Ms. Badosa, posts on social media showed Ms. Sabalenka, who has a first round bye, at work under a hot sun on a Hard Rock Stadium practice court, with the Belarusian scheduled to be on center court on Thursday or Friday.

Playing her first match since a first round loss at the 2022 US Open, Ms. Halep displayed few signs of rust against the 80th ranked Spaniard in a rampaging opening set that saw her break a misfiring Ms. Badosa three times as a small but excited crowd chanted “Si-Mon-ah. Si-Mon-Ah.”

The 32-year-old Romanian spark plug showed she can still make all the shots and had lost none of her trademark terrier like determination running down ball after ball.

But 18 months away from competition was always going to exact a toll. In the second set it was Ms. Badosa taking the initiative as Ms. Halep began to show the first signs of fatigue and needed her shoulder massaged at a changeover while the Spaniard held steady to level the match.

The third set turned into a dog fight with Ms. Badosa again getting the early break to go ahead 2-1 only to have a battling Ms. Halep immediately break back.

But Badosa would continue to apply pressure and break the Wimbledon and French Open winner a second time, the effort leaving the exhausted Romanian slumped over her racquet at the baseline.

With little in reserve, Ms. Halep’s resistance melted and Ms. Badosa moved in for the kill finishing off her opponent with another break. The spotlight now shifts back to Ms. Sabalenka following her boyfriend’s death.

The Miami-Dade police department confirmed on Tuesday that they had responded to a call at a Miami resort about reports of a man jumping off a balcony.

“At approximately 12:39 a.m., Bal Harbour Police and Fire Rescue were dispatched to the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort in reference to a male that jumped from a balcony,” the police said.

“The Miami-Dade Police Department, Homicide Bureau, responded and has taken over the investigation of the apparent suicide of Mr. Konstantin Koltsov.

“No foul play is suspected.”

The former forward, who was 42, played for the Belarus national team in the 2002 and 2010 Olympics and spent parts of three seasons with the National Hockey League’s Pittsburgh Penguins between 2003 and 2006.

Ms. Sabalenka and Mr. Koltsov were first linked in June 2021, according to People magazine, and she has frequently posted photos of them together on her Instagram account. — Reuters

Taiwan warns of ‘enormous’ Chinese bases near its S.China Sea holding

A NAVY miniature is seen in front of displayed Chinese and Taiwanese flags in this illustration taken April 11, 2023. — REUTERS

— Taiwan’s foreign minister said on Wednesday that China has built “enormous” military bases on three islands surrounding Taiwan’s main holding in the South China Sea, but Taipei is not looking to further escalate tensions in the strategic waterway.

Both Taiwan and China claim most of the South China Sea as their own territory, but Taiwan only controls one islet in the contested Spratly Islands deep in the southern part of the sea called Itu Aba, which Taiwan refers to as Taiping.

Some lawmakers from both the ruling and main opposition parties have called on President Tsai Ing-wen to visit Itu Aba before she steps down in May to assert Taiwan’s sovereignty and view a newly renovated harbor that can take larger ships.

Both her predecessors visited the island but she has yet to do so while in office.

Asked by reporters about calls for Tsai to go to Itu Aba, Taiwan Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said there was no doubt the island belonged to Taiwan and the government would defend their sovereignty over it.

China and the Philippines have been involved in a dangerous stand-off in the South China Sea of late, but the situation around Itu Aba is also tense, Mr. Wu said.

“China has already created very enormous South China Sea military bases on the three islands surrounding Taiping – Subi Reef, Fiery Cross Reef and Mischief Reef – and these are all quite close to our Taiping,” Mr. Wu said.

“As the dispute continues to intensify, we in Taiwan must consider how to use peaceful means to resolve the South China Sea issue, and not let others think we are creating difficulties.”

If there is an opportunity, Taiwan will use the “best way” to demonstrate its sovereignty over Itu Aba, he added without elaborating.

Itu Aba has a runway long enough to take military re-supply flights from Taiwan, but is lightly defended compared to the nearby Chinese-controlled islands. Chinese forces generally leave Itu Aba alone.

China has carried out extensive land reclamation on its South China Sea islands, building major air force and other military facilities, causing major concern in Washington and around the region.

China says it has every right to build on and defend what it considers its territory.

Taiwan also controls the Pratas Islands in the northern part of the South China Sea, and both China’s air force and navy regularly operate nearby to assert Beijing’s territorial claims over Taiwan, which the government in Taipei rejects.

Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei claim other parts of the South China Sea in dispute with both China and Taiwan. — Reuters

Thai PM Srettha halts overseas travel for two months after criticism

Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin speaks at a press conference at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, March 13, 2024. — REUTERS

BANGKOK — Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said on Wednesday that he will halt overseas travel for two months as public criticism of his tours abroad grows.

“I acknowledge your comments and concerns. From March 14 to May 15, I will not travel abroad,” he posted on X.

Mr. Srettha has spent about a third of his six months in office overseas to promote investment in Thailand, most recently at a tourism expo in Berlin. But his globe-trotting has drawn flak for not focusing on domestic issues like urban pollution.

“A new record, 6 months as prime minister, abroad in 16 countries,” Senator Somchai Sawangkarn posted on X this month. “Are there any results? Fly here, fly there.” — Reuters

Second British royal photo involving Kate was digitally altered — Reuters

Princess of Wales Kate Middleton following Britain’s King Charles’ coronation ceremony, in London, Britain May 6, 2023. — ANTHONY UPTON/POOL VIA REUTERS

LONDON — A second royal photograph issued to the media by Kensington Palace, the office of Prince William and his wife Kate, was digitally altered in eight places, Reuters said on Tuesday after an analysis of the picture by the news organization’s photo editors.

The picture, released in April last year to mark what would have been the 97th birthday of the late Queen Elizabeth, showed the former monarch surrounded by some of her grandchildren and great grandchildren.

It had been taken by Kate, 42, at the Scottish royal residence Balmoral Castle the previous summer, Kensington Palace said at the time.

Earlier on Tuesday, Getty Images flagged to its clients that the Balmoral picture had been “digitally enhanced at source,” without giving further details.

“Getty Images is undertaking a review of handout images and in accordance with its editorial policy is placing an editor’s note on images where the source has suggested they could be digitally enhanced,” a spokesperson said.

While Getty, Reuters and other news organizations did not at the time spot any issues with the handout, the examination of the photograph by Reuters photo editors has found that there were eight places where the picture had been clearly altered by digital cloning. Reuters could not immediately establish why the alterations were made.

Digital cloning involves copying pixels to either move or mask objects or areas in a photo.

Kensington Palace has declined to comment on the photograph.

A Reuters spokesperson said: “Reuters is updating its procedures related to vetting images from Kensington Palace after confirming a second altered photograph. Consistent with the Thomson Reuters Trust Principles, Reuters requires that photos meet its editorial standards for image quality, accuracy and reliability.”

Earlier this month, Reuters and several other leading news organizations withdrew a photograph of Kate with her three children which was issued by the palace to mark Mother’s Day after post-publication analysis showed it did not meet their editorial standards.

The following day, Kate issued an apology for any confusion.

“Like many amateur photographers, I do occasionally experiment with editing,” she said in a statement on X. “I wanted to express my apologies for any confusion the family photograph we shared yesterday caused.”

The issue with the edited photographs comes amid widespread speculation on social media about Kate’s health since she underwent abdominal surgery in January.

On Monday, she appeared on footage for the first time since her operation in a video posted by the Sun newspaper. — Reuters

Mothers ban outdoor fun as air pollution worsens in Vietnam capital

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Quang Nguyen vinh from Pixabay

HANOI — Nga Trang has nearly stopped going out in the evening and forbids her kids to play outdoors after school because air pollution from burning trash gets worse in her neighborhood in Hanoi in the late afternoon.

A Hanoian by birth, Ms. Nga, 44, is one of many residents of Vietnam’s capital whose daily routine is altered by heavy air pollution, which a global report released on Tuesday said is worsening.

The annual report by IQAir, an air quality technology company, found Hanoi was one of the world’s worst capital cities last year for air quality.

The World Health Organization (WHO) in a statement to Reuters said under a conservative estimate around 60,000 deaths in the 100-million-people nation are related annually to air pollution. Experts warn that pollution also impacts tourism and the whole economy.

Ms. Nga collected dozens of signatures earlier this month to stop the burning of waste at a site near her apartment in a densely populated district.

“This affects us more directly than other sources of pollution as we can smell and see it every day,” she said.

Vehicle emissions, industrial activities and poor waste management practices including the burning of rubbish are among Hanoi’s main sources of pollution, said WHO’s representative in Vietnam, Angela Pratt, urging Vietnam to consider setting maximum acceptable levels of air pollutants.

Vietnam’s health and environment ministries and Hanoi authorities did not reply to requests for comment and data about the incidence of pollution-related diseases in the city of over 8 million people.

In a 2021 report, the environment ministry said respiratory diseases accounted for 11% of deaths in Vietnam, with healthcare-related costs estimated at around $81 million annually in Hanoi alone.

The city has frequently topped IQAir’s daily global list of most-polluted cities this year. Last year it recorded an average concentration of small and hazardous airborne particles, known as PM 2.5, nearly nine times higher than limits recommended by the WHO, according to IQAir.

That made it the eighth-worst capital city out of 114 monitored.

BLOW TO ECONOMY
Beyond health, the smog is also having a negative impact on tourism, which accounted for over 6% of Vietnam’s gross domestic product last year, according to the environment ministry.

Travel medicine doctor Amornphat Kitro, who has studied health risks for tourists in Southeast Asia, said foreign arrivals to the northern Thai city of Chiang Mai fall in the months with most pollution, while resident expats often leave in those periods.

Giovanna Macchi, 48, an Italian national who has lived in Hanoi for seven years, said she limits her children’s outdoor activities, leaves the city whenever she can and tells friends not to visit the city in the periods of worst pollution.

“We are considering to move out of Hanoi because of the air pollution,” she said. — Reuters

GCash sets sights on further international expansion

Left to right: Ren-ren Reyes, President and CEO of G-Xchange; Ernest L. Cu, Chairman of the Board of Mynt, and President and CEO of the Globe Group; Martha Sazon, President and CEO of GCash; and Paul Albano, General Manager for GCash International

Rolls out services for Filipinos in 16 markets around the globe

GCash, the Philippines’ leading finance app and largest cashless ecosystem, has announced the availability of GCash Overseas to Filipinos in 16 key markets globally.

With GCash Overseas, Filipinos in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Germany, Qatar, Kuwait, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Australia can now download and use the GCash app, whether they have Philippine SIMs or local mobile phone numbers in the countries or territories where they live.

“We recognize the financial needs of over 10 million Filipinos living abroad. With GCash now available beyond the Philippines, we are responding to the needs of global Filipinos in these cashless digital economies, providing them with a safe, secure, and efficient fintech solution to send money back home,” explained Paul Albano, General Manager of GCash International.

Paul Albano, General Manager for GCash International

The availability of GCash in the 16 key markets worldwide allows overseas Filipinos to: send money to loved ones anytime anywhere; pay bills and be in complete control of where the money is going, including household utilities, tuition, and taxes, among others; and purchase mobile phone load for loved ones to stay connected via chat or video calls. 

Beyond enabling Filipinos around the world with a secure platform to transfer money back home, GCash is also offering them other digital financial services, including savings, gifting vouchers, and online payments.

To reach more Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs), GCash is teaming up with Ikon Solutions Asia, Inc., a licensed recruitment agency, to ensure OFWs are equipped with much-needed digital financial services through the app.

The Philippine fintech leader has also partnered with global payments platform Alipay+. With Global Pay, GCash is now a viable channel to pay over 3 million Alipay+-enabled merchants in 17 countries and territories around the world, including Japan, South Korea, and Singapore in the Asia-Pacific region; Qatar and United Arab Emirates in the Middle East; Italy, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom in Europe; and in the United States — all with the benefits of low foreign exchange rates and zero service fees. Moreover, the service was recently integrated with the national QRs of Malaysia and South Korea, making scanning to pay even more seamless in these countries.

The company has also partnered with international payments giant Visa, providing GCash users with another cashless payment method outside of the Philippines. The new GCash Visa card offers another payment option anywhere in the world. 

“We’ve enabled access to Finance through a service that’s enjoyed currently by 94 million Filipinos, and our international expansion allows us to serve millions more. We’re confident that our innovation and strategic partnerships will allow us to provide seamless financial services to Filipinos anywhere in the world. This is only the first step as we grow our presence internationally,” stated Albano.

 


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Pioneer Insurance powers car-sharing startup DOON

Photo shows Pioneer VP for Motor Insurance Iluminado Garcia III with DOON Founder and CEO Enrique Martin Hormillo and DOON COO Miguel Locsin.

Pioneer Insurance has recently partnered with DOON as its official insurance provider. DOON is a peer-to-peer car-sharing company that pulls together a network of car owners so they can rent out their vehicles to anyone in need of short-term car service.

As DOON’s official insurer, Pioneer provides comprehensive coverage for every car booking which benefits both the car owner and the renter.

The conventional comprehensive motor insurance policy offers one-year coverage and does not include vehicles used in rent-a-car business.

Pioneer VP for Motor Insurance Iluminado Garcia III revealed that by becoming the official insurance provider for DOON’s car hosts and renters and offering bite-sized insurance that’s specifically crafted to cover only the days these vehicles are booked, it exemplifies the company’s drive to innovate and passion for service.

“Pioneer will give car owners peace of mind every time they rent out their vehicles because of the protection we are providing through this partnership with DOON,” Garcia said.

With this initiative, Pioneer covers own damage, theft, acts of nature, third-party damage and bodily injury, and personal accident for the driver and passengers.

“Thanks to Pioneer Insurance, we can assure our car hosts, who are our key stakeholders, of a worry-free partnership knowing that their vehicles are in good hands while they generate passive income,” DOON Founder and Chief Executive Officer Enrique Martin Hormillo said.

“We are also giving our customers the confidence to drive a rented insured car,” Mr. Hormillo added.

The car-sharing app, which has a similar business model to Airbnb, allows car owners to monetize their idle vehicles at home while providing customers with a cost-efficient alternative to go about their trips, be it for business or leisure. The coverage provided by Pioneer is thus seen to encourage business since car owners will be more willing to rent out their vehicles.

Mr. Hormillo also shared that DOON has become the first fully insured car-sharing marketplace because of its partnership with Pioneer.

Pioneer, which has been lighting the path forward for Filipinos for 70 years through its innovative products and services, has once again proven that innovation is key in responding to the changing needs of Filipinos. 

“This policy is a game-changer and a proof of how Pioneer stays true to its commitment, one innovation at a time,” Mr. Garcia said.  

DOON is available for download in Google Play for Android users and App Store for IOS users to start booking a car.

 


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European Union, UN criticize new Hong Kong security law

CITYSCAPE view of the Victoria Harbour region in Hong Kong. —MANSON YIM-UNSPLASH

 – The European Union and the United Nations said Hong Kong’s new national security bill was deeply worrying and could erode fundamental freedoms in the China-ruled city.

“It is alarming that such consequential legislation was rushed through the legislature through an accelerated process, in spite of serious concerns raised about the incompatibility of many of its provisions with international human rights law,” said United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk in a statement released on Tuesday.

The comments came the same day Hong Kong lawmakers unanimously passed the new bill only two weeks after it was first presented, fast-tracking a major piece of legislation that critics say further threatens the city’s freedoms.

The package, known as Article 23, punishes offenses including treason, sabotage, sedition, the theft of state secrets, external interference and espionage with sentences ranging from several years to life imprisonment.

The legislation follows a China-imposed national security law passed in 2020 after violent street protests a year earlier.

Since the law was imposed, scores of pro-democracy activists have been jailed and the legislation also triggered sanctions from the United States, including against Chief Executive John Lee and other senior government officials.

Turk’s statement said that broadly defined and vague provisions in the bill could lead to the “criminalization of a wide range of conduct protected under international human rights law, including freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and the right to receive and impart information.”

For it to be passed without a “thorough process of deliberation and meaningful consultation is a regressive step for the protection of human rights in Hong Kong,” he said.

The European Union said in a separate statement on Tuesday it was concerned about the “potential impact on the rights and freedoms of the people of Hong Kong” and the bill had the potential to “significantly” affect the work of the EU’s office as well as organizations and companies in Hong Kong.

“This also raises questions about Hong Kong’s long-term attractiveness as an international business hub,” it said.

It called on the special administrative region to strengthen confidence in the “high degree of autonomy” granted under the “one country, two systems” formula made when Hong Kong returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

Britain said the legislation would impact Hong Kong’s reputation as an international city that respects the rule of law, has independent institutions and protects its citizens’ freedoms.

China on Wednesday urged the United Kingdom to stop making “groundless accusations” about the Article 23 legislation, according to a statement by its embassy in Britain.

China’s State Council Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office, said the law would “secure Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability” as well as safeguard the interests of overseas investors, democracy and freedom. – Reuters

Canada’s big banks say sustainable finance pledges may not curtail emission growth

Image via Aaron Davis/CC BY-SA 4.0/Wikimedia Commons

 – Some of Canada’s biggest banks have for the first time said their green financing efforts may not necessarily curtail emissions growth, after years of pressure from activists to improve transparency in their climate goals.

Canadian banks, said to be one of the biggest fossil fuel financiers globally, have drawn criticism from climate activists and investors over using sustainability-linked financing (SLF) merely for the pretense of a lower carbon footprint rather than take meaningful steps in that direction.

In their latest annual climate reports released during the past week, many Canadian banks have pledged billions of dollars in sustainable financing to decarbonize high-emitting sectors, while highlighting major challenges to meeting their goals.

“The question for regulators will be whether it’s enough for the banks to insert these brief disclaimers deep in their ESG reporting or whether they need to do a better job telling their investors and the public that these huge financial numbers they promote as green aren’t necessarily adding up to emissions reductions at all,” said Matt Price, executive director of Investors for Paris Compliance.

In January, the group urged securities regulators to investigate major Canadian banks on their climate-related claims and alleged misleading disclosures.

The complaint gave climate activists more fuel in their fight, which is part of a broader international push for accountability on corporate climate pledges.

Mr. Price said the latest revelations were not enough to obviate an investigation.

Canada is the world’s fourth-biggest oil producer, and its energy sector contributes about 5% to the country’s GDP. Despite the influence of the oil sector, the federal government has set out aggressive emissions goals that include pushing companies to cut emissions up to 38% from 2019 levels by 2030.

Bank of Nova Scotia has given C$132 billion ($97 billion) since 2018 toward its target of C$350 billion in climate-related finance by 2030, but said that climate-related projects “may — or may not — lead to reductions in overall emissions.”

The bank’s chief sustainability and communications officer, Meigan Terry, said it aims “to be transparent and support a clear understanding” about its climate-related financing target.

Scotiabank’s climate-related finance framework, released last year, includes broader categories such as biodiversity, sustainable agriculture and circular economy, which are not necessarily measured in emissions reductions.

CIBC said “sustainable financing may involve eligible green activities… but do not necessarily curtail the growth of their absolute emissions.”

TD said the greenhouse gas emissions impact of its business activities cannot be “reliably measured at this time.”

Royal Bank of Canada, Canada’s No. 1 bank, said that the target of limiting global temperatures to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels would be a key challenge and that just 2% of its clients have plans aligned with that goal.

The bank’s plans this year include tripling lending for renewable energy projects to $15 billion and boosting low-carbon energy lending to $35 billion by 2030.

In a recent report, think tank InfluenceMap said between 2020 and 2022 the big five Canadian banks steadily increased their fossil fuel financing exposure to an average of 18.4% in 2022 from 15.5% in 2020. That compares with an average of 6.1% for leading US banks and 8.7% for European banks across the same period.

Several global banks have committed to “net-zero financed emissions” by 2050 but have drawn doubts from many investors, due to concerns over the lack of a defined goal.

Regulators in the Americas and Europe have increasingly been worried about greenwashing, in which companies exaggerate their environmental credentials. – Reuters

UK to introduce bill to phase out smoking among young people

FREEPIK

 – The British government will introduce a bill in parliament on Wednesday to fulfill its promise to phase out smoking among young people by banning tobacco sales for future generations.

The Tobacco and Vapes Bill, if passed unamended, will be one of the world’s toughest anti-tobacco laws and prevent children turning 15 this year or younger from ever being able to be legally sold tobacco.

The government said smoking itself would not be criminalised, therefore anyone who can legally buy tobacco now will not be prevented from doing so in future.

“If we want to build a better future for our children we need to tackle the single biggest entirely preventable cause of ill-health, disability and death: smoking,” Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said in a statement.

Critics say the move is “unconservative”, and former prime minister Liz Truss is one of several members of the governing party to say they will vote against the legislation.

Despite the opposition, the legislation is expected to pass with the opposition Labour Party suggesting it would support the measure.

Last month, a similar law introduced by New Zealand banning tobacco sales to those born after Jan. 1, 2009 was repealed by the country’s new coalition government.

The British government said smoking costs its National Health Service and economy an estimated 17 billion pounds ($21.63 billion) a year.

A sharp rise in vape use by non-smokers and young people has forced the British government – a proponent of vaping as a way to reduce the harms of smoking – to consider tougher controls.

Under the proposed legislation, there will also be new powers to change how vapes are displayed in shops, restrict vape flavors and packaging intentionally marketed at children to combat the rise in youth vaping. – Reuters

US Supreme Court lets Texas border enforcement law take effect

FREEPIK

 – The US Supreme Court on Tuesday let a Republican-backed Texas law take effect that allows state law enforcement authorities to arrest people suspected of illegally crossing the US-Mexico border, rejecting a bid to block it by President Joe Biden’s administration.

The court has a 6-3 conservative majority, and its three liberal justices dissented, saying Tuesday’s action turns immigration enforcement – typically the province of the federal government – on its head.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the Texas law will “sow chaos and confusion at our southern border.” Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott called the court’s action “clearly a positive development.”

The administration had asked the justices to freeze a judicial order allowing the law to take effect while its challenge to the statute proceeds in lower courts.

The Justice Department sued in January to block the measure, originally set to take effect on March 5. The administration said the law violates the US Constitution and federal law by interfering with the US government’s power to regulate immigration as well as running afoul of a 2012 Supreme Court precedent.

Mr. Abbott last December signed the law, known as SB 4, authorizing state law enforcement to arrest people suspected of entering the US illegally, giving local officers powers long delegated to the federal government. Abbott said the law was needed due to Mr. Biden’s failure to enforce federal laws criminalizing illegal entry or re-entry.

“Today, the court invites further chaos and crisis in immigration enforcement,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in a dissent joined by fellow liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. Liberal Justice Elena Kagan wrote a separate dissent.

Republicans have sharply criticized the Democratic president’s handling of the record numbers of migrants caught illegally crossing the US-Mexico border. Mr. Abbott and other Republicans favor the restrictive policies of former President Donald Trump, their party’s candidate challenging Mr. Biden in the Nov. 5 US election.

 

STATE CRIMES

The Texas law made illegal entry or re-entry into Texas a state crime, with penalties ranging from 180 days in jail to 20 years in prison. It requires Texas magistrate judges to order migrants to return to Mexico, with up to 20-year sentences for those who refuse to comply.

Conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote an opinion concurring in Tuesday’s decision, explaining the justices were being asked to upend a lower appeals court’s “administrative stay” of a judicial decision blocking the law – a measure that is meant to be short-lived.

Ms. Barrett, who was joined by conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh, said Mr. Biden’s administration could file another application to the Supreme Court if the New Orleans-based 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals does not issue a ruling “soon.”

Ms. Kagan wrote that the 5th Circuit’s use of an administrative stay rather than another mechanism “should not spell the difference between respecting and revoking long-settled immigration law.”

The 5th Circuit acted fast on Tuesday after the Supreme Court ruling, scheduling oral arguments for Wednesday on the motion to stay the case pending appeal.

Texas-based US District David Ezra on Feb. 29 sided with the administration and agreed to preliminarily block Texas officials from enforcing the law, saying it “threatens the fundamental notion that the United States must regulate immigration with one voice.”

But the 5th Circuit paused Mr. Ezra’s ruling in an order that would have let the law take effect on March 10, prompting the administration to file an emergency request to the Supreme Court. Justice Samuel Alito, acting for the Supreme Court, on March 4 had halted the 5th Circuit ruling – and thus the law – from taking effect, giving the justices more time to consider the matter.

Texas has tried to deter people who cross illegally under its Operation Lone Star using measures including deploying National Guard troops to the border, blocking migrants with concertina wire and installing a floating barrier over a stretch of the Rio Grande.

Ms. Jean-Pierre called the Texas law “just another example of Republican officials politicizing the border while blocking real solutions.”

Mexico’s foreign ministry issued a statement calling the Texas law “anti migrant” and said it would foment “family separation, discrimination and racial profiling.” The statement also said “Mexico will not accept, under any circumstances, repatriations by the state of Texas.”

Republicans in February scuttled a bipartisan US Senate deal that would have bolstered border security and tightened immigration laws after Trump pushed members of his party to reject it.

Opinion polls reveal acute voter concern over the situation along the border. Reuters/Ipsos polling showed Mr. Biden’s public approval level at 37% as of Feb. 28. – Reuters

Social media platforms must face lawsuits claiming they enabled Buffalo mass shooter

DOLE777-UNSPLASH

 – Several social media companies were ordered by a New York state judge to face four lawsuits seeking to hold them responsible for helping enable the avowed white supremacist who killed 10 Black people in 2022 at a Buffalo, New York grocery store.

Justice Paula Feroleto of the Erie County Supreme Court ruled on Monday that the more than 40 plaintiffs could try to prove that Meta Platforms’ Facebook and Instagram, Reddit, Google’s YouTube and other platforms were designed to addict and radicalize users like the shooter, Payton Gendron.

The plaintiffs included relatives or representatives of people who died in Mr. Gendron’s racially motivated mass shooting at Tops Friendly Markets on May 14, 2022, as well as store employees and customers who witnessed it. Mr. Gendron was 18 at the time.

In seeking dismissals, Meta, Reddit, YouTube and other defendants said they merely hosted third-party content and were not liable under a federal law governing such content, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, or the US Constitution’s First Amendment.

But the judge said the plaintiffs could try to prove that the defendants owned them a duty because their platforms were defective and led to injuries.

She also said the mental distress that many witnesses suffered from the “horrific” attack was a “special circumstance” justifying the pursuit of negligence-based claims.

In a statement, Reddit said hate and violence “have no place” on its platform. It also said it constantly evaluates means to remove such content, and will continue reviewing communities to ensure they are upholding its rules.

The decision’s timing appeared unrelated to Reddit’s initial public offering, which is expected this week.

YouTube spokesperson Jose Castaneda said that the platform disagreed with Ms. Feroleto’s decision and will appeal.

YouTube had “deepest sympathies” for attack victims and their families, and tries to find and remove extremist conduct while also working with law enforcement, he said.

Meta and its lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The lawsuits seek unspecified civil damages.

“We must hold accountable every single bad actor that prepared and equipped the shooter to target and kill members of Buffalo’s Black community,” said Eric Tirschwell, executive director of the gun control advocacy group Everytown Law, which filed two of the lawsuits.

Other defendants in the lawsuits include Alphabet, Google, Snap, retailers that allegedly sold firearm equipment and body armor to Mr. Gendron, and Mr. Gendron’s parents.

Mr. Gendron pleaded guilty to charges including murder and terrorism motivated by hate, and was sentenced in February 2023 to life in prison without parole.

He also faces federal charges, and the US Department of Justice said in January it plans to seek the death penalty. – Reuters