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Inter Miami moves to US Open Cup play versus FC Cincinnati

LIONEL MESSI and Inter Miami will play in a major semifinal for the second time in eight days when they visit FC Cincinnati on Wednesday night in the US Open Cup.

Mr. Messi and the Herons will be only four days removed from their remarkable run to win the inaugural 2023 Leagues Cup, defeating Nashville SC on penalties following a 1-1 draw in Saturday night’s final.

The lone Miami goal in regulation came from Mr. Messi, his 10th of the tournament, as he started his sixth consecutive match after making his debut for his new club off the bench in the tournament opener.

Despite a heavy workload for Mr. Messi, Herons manager Tata Martino says the Argentine superstar will still be in the starting lineup Wednesday.

The seven-time Ballon d’Or winner, to signify the top player in the world each year, has delivered a dynamic and busy start to his Inter Miami tenure after previously playing for top clubs like FC Barcelona and Paris St. Germain.

“We said that at some point he would have to rest because of the load of minutes played,” Martino told reporters Monday, according to a translation from ESPN FC. “Clearly, Wednesday is not going to be that day. If he does not tell me he wants to rest, he will continue to play.”

It will be Miami’s third consecutive road match and Cincinnati may represent, arguably, its toughest opponent yet.

FC Cincinnati currently leads the race for the MLS Supporters’ Shield, awarded at the end of the season to the team with the best regular-season record. They have taken an impressive 34 out of 36 points possible in 12 home league games, being held to a draw only by New England on July 1.

Another Argentina product — Luciano Acosta — currently leads Cincinnati and is tied for second in MLS with 12 goals.

But the Orange and Blue are actually facing a shorter turnaround than the Herons, following a 3-0 loss at Columbus in their return to league play Sunday after the conclusion of Leagues Cup.

Cincinnati is looking to avoid back-to-back losses in all competitions this season.

“There’s no relief after a performance like that,” Cincinnati manager Pat Noonan said. “You try to use some of the things that we saw (against Columbus) in a negative way to build and have a better overall team performance on Wednesday.” — Reuters

Maui wildfire victims fear land grab threatens Hawaiian culture

THE SHELLS of burned houses and buildings are left after wildfires driven by high winds burned across most of the town in Lahaina, Maui, Hawaii, US Aug. 11. — HAWAI’I DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES/HANDOUT VIA REUTERS

KAANAPALI — Deborah Loeffler felt she could not lose much more after a wildfire destroyed the home in Maui where five generations of her family have lived, and a son died the same day on the US mainland.

Grieving and overwhelmed, Ms. Loeffler was soon beset by emails with unsolicited proposals she sell the Lahaina beachfront plot in Maui where her grandfather built their teal-green wooden home in the 1940s.

“It felt like we had vultures preying on us,” said Ms. Loeffler, 69, a retired flight attendant, sitting in the brown-carpeted hotel room in Maui to which she was evacuated, an untouched container of cooked powdered egg and cold potato by her bedside.

Her experience will be familiar to people in places such as Paradise, California, or northern New Mexico, where buyers moved in to try to obtain distressed property after blazes in 2018 and 2022.

Ms. Loeffler fears a land grab on Maui would mean the loss of Hawaiian culture.

In Hawaii, the fire exacerbated a chronic shortage of affordable housing, potentially accelerating a drain of multi-generational families from the US state looking for places they can afford to live. The population of Native Hawaiians in the state dropped below the number living on the US mainland over the last decade, according to US Census data.

Before Lahaina was destroyed by the most deadly US wildfire in a century, its average home price was $1.1 million, three times the national average, according to the real estate site Zillow.

In Maui County, where around 75% the population is Asian, Hispanic, Native Hawaiian or of mixed race, the median household income is $88,000, just 24% above the US average, according to census reports.

Affordable housing advocates such as Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action (HAPA) are calling for a moratorium on foreclosures.

HAPA along with the state government is documenting unsolicited purchase offers in Lahaina, the early 19th century capital of the kingdom of Hawaii before its overthrow in a US-backed 1893 coup.

Hawaii’s Office of Consumer Protection warned of people making below-market offers, playing on fears of foreclosure and the cost of rebuilding. The office declined to comment on how many such offers had been reported.

“We will be making sure we do all we can to prevent that land from falling into the hands of people from the outside,” Hawaii Governor Josh Green, who has proposed a ban on Lahaina land sales, said at an Aug. 15 press conference.

Reuters saw two emails sent by The EMortgage in Oklahoma City, one linking to a site called Cash Offer USA. The emails claimed to represent local buyers seeking sellers, offering all-cash deals and no closing costs for homes as-is — “no need to make any repairs.” The EMortgage did not respond to emails from Reuters seeking comment.

Florida investor Marlena Dates operates a site that uses the name Cash Offer USA but she said her site was different from the one in the email and she would remove the name from hers so the two were not mistaken.

“We have not at this time received any leads from, or made any offers to, property owners in Lahaina,” Ms. Dates said in a statement. “I’d love to buy something there, but that has not been an opportunity presented to us as of yet.”

Many long-term resident families who lost homes in the Lahaina fire did not have insurance, either because their homes had no mortgage or did not meet building codes, said Sterling Higa, director of Housing Hawaii’s Future which seeks to end the state’s workforce housing shortage.

How long residents can hold out against property offers may depend on the type of transitional housing they get as they wait to rebuild, said Mr. Higa.

“There has to be real support for them in terms of housing, in terms of financial support,” said Higa, whose wife grew up in Lahaina.

Disaster response experts expect temporary housing to be provided through a mix of hotel rooms and condos, conversion of rentals, mobile home encampments and possibly some family transfers to Honolulu, the state’s largest city.

“Keeping people nearby and engaged in recovery is a good first step to preserving the population,” said Andrew Rumbach, a specialist in disasters, climate and communities at the Urban Institute in Washington.

At stake is the survival of Hawaiian culture, said Kaliko Baker, an associate professor at the University of Hawaii.

“If people buy land and build their own Lahaina does that include Hawaiian language schools?” said Baker, in reference to one such school that burned down next to an historic Lahaina church.

Ms. Loeffler, now sheltered with her husband a few miles from their destroyed home, deleted the email offers she received in disgust. She is mourning her son, Sam, whose death was unrelated to the Maui fire, and all that her community has lost.

She escaped with her purse and a book by a friend of her late son. She said she owes her life to her tenant who saw the fire coming and went door-to-door telling people to flee.

Ms. Loeffler plans to rebuild her plantation-style family home with insurance money so Lahaina can again “look like Lahaina.” She wants her grandchildren to keep their connection to an island their Japanese-German-Hawaiian family has lived on for about a century.

“I’m not selling it, if I have to go live there in a tent, I’m doing it.” — Reuters

China economic data less transparent in recent months — White House

Official White House Photo by Cameron Smith

THE UNITED STATES on Tuesday criticized China for reducing the transparency of its reporting on basic economic data in recent months, and for cracking down on firms in China that had been providing such data, calling its behavior irresponsible.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the US had seen less openness and transparency in China’s reporting of youth unemployment and other data, while preventing other firms from publishing information on the “puts and takes in the Chinese economy.”

“These are not, in our view, responsible steps,” he said. “For global confidence, predictability and the capacity of the rest of the world to make sound economic decisions, it’s important for China to maintain a level of transparency in the publication of its data.”

Mr. Sullivan’s comments came hours after news that Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo would travel to Beijing, the third member of President Joseph R. Biden’s cabinet to do so in recent months, a move he said underscored Washington’s desire to maintain communications with Beijing.

Mr. Sullivan also took aim at what he called China’s “coercive” lending practices under its Belt and Road infrastructure initiative. He said Mr. Biden would push to boost the lending capacity of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to provide a ‘credible alternative’ at the upcoming Group of 20 leaders summit in India.

Mr. Biden’s request to Congress for supplemental budget funding for both institutions would help leverage nearly $50 billion in lending for middle income and poor countries from the United States alone, and up to $200 billion around the world, Mr. Sullivan said.

He said the US was not staking a claim that these multilateral institutions were Western institutions, but said they could provide a “positive, affirmative alternative to what is a much more opaque, more coercive method, which is the Belt and Road Initiative.”

He acknowledged China is a major shareholder in both the World Bank and IMF, and that did not stand in the way of them working to aid low and middle-income countries.

“It’s about being for an affirmative vision of high standards, transparent, sustainable financing,” he said.

Mr. Sullivan said Ms. Raimondo would carry the message that the United States was not seeking to decouple from China, but it focused on “protecting our national security and ensuring resilient supply chains alongside our allies and partners while we continue our economic relationship and our trade relationship.” — Reuters

Pakistan cable car ordeal ends with all on board, mostly children, rescued

REUTERS

PESHAWAR/ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistani rescuers pulled seven children and one man to safety after their cable car became stranded high over a remote ravine on Tuesday, ending an ordeal lasting more than 15 hours.

“It was a unique operation that required lots of skill,” the military said in a statement.

The high-risk operation in the north of Pakistan was completed in the darkness of night after the cable car snagged early in the morning, leaving it hanging precariously at an angle all day.

“All the kids have been successfully and safely rescued,” caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said in a post on messaging platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

“Great teamwork by the military, rescue departments, district administration as well as the local people.”

A military helicopter rescue operation was called off as night fell after two children had been pulled to safety. Flood lights were installed, and a ground-based rescue continued.

A security source said that cable crossing experts had been trying to rescue the children one by one by transferring them on to a small platform along the cable.

Before the helicopter rescue was called off, TV footage showed one child being lifted off the cable car in a harness, swinging side to side, before being lowered to the ground.

The rescue effort transfixed the country, with Pakistanis crowded around television sets, as media showed footage of an emergency worker dangling from a helicopter cable close to the small cabin, with those onboard cramped together.

“An extremely difficult and complicated operation has been successfully completed by the Pakistan military,” the military said in a statement.

“All stranded persons were safely evacuated and moved to a safe place… Civil administration and locals also actively came forward to participate in this operation.”

A video shared by a rescue agency official showed more than a dozen rescuers and locals lined up near the edge of the dark ravine, pulling on a cable until a boy attached to it by a harness reached the hillside safely to cries of “God is great.”

“It is a slow and risky operation. One person needs to tie himself with a rope and he will go in a small chairlift and rescue them one by one,” said Abdul Nasir Khan, a resident.

One of the cable lines carrying the car snapped at around 7 a.m. (0200 GMT) as the students were traveling to school in a mountainous area in Battagram, about 200 km (125 miles) north of Islamabad, officials said.

The cable car got stuck half way across the ravine, about 275 meters (900 feet) above ground, Shariq Riaz Khattak a rescue official at the site, told Reuters.

The helicopter rescue mission had been complicated by gusty winds in the area and the fact that the helicopters’ rotor blades risked further destabilizing the lift, he said.

“Our situation is precarious, for god’s sake do something,” Gulfaraz, a 20-year-old on the cable car, told local television channel Geo News over the phone. He said the children were aged between 10 and 15 and one had fainted due to heat and fear. — Reuters

Air Koryo to fly between Beijing and Pyongyang thrice a week

BEIJING — China’s civil aviation authority has granted Air Koryo approval to fly between Pyongyang and Beijing on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday from March 26 to Oct. 28, the authority said on Wednesday in a response to Reuters queries.

Chinese state carrier Air China, which also used to fly between the two cities, has not applied to resume flying China-North Korea routes, it said. The regulator grants flight approvals by season.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, there were usually about 3-5 Air Koryo flights between Beijing and Pyongyang a week, depending on season and demand, as well as flights to Shanghai and Shenyang, said Simon Cockerell, general manager at Beijing-based Koryo Tours.

An Air Koryo flight from Pyongyang landed in Beijing early on Tuesday for the first time since pandemic lockdowns began in 2020 as North Korea cracks open its border to passenger travel.

It wasn’t immediately clear who was aboard the flight, but Western tour companies that operate in North Korea said it appeared to be a special flight that would carry back North Koreans who had been stuck in China by the years of border closures.

Cargo train and ship traffic has slowly increased over the past year, but North Korea has only just begun to allow some international passenger travel. — Reuters

Number of US children killed by guns hit record high in 2021 — study

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Rudy and Peter Skitterians from Pixabay

CHILD gun deaths in the United States have hit a record high, according to a new study published by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

Using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s mortality database, the study published on Monday in the AAP’s journal Pediatrics found that 4,752 children died from gun-related injuries in 2021, the latest year for which data was available, up from 4,368 in 2020 and 3,390 in 2019.

Gun violence has been the number one cause of death for children in the United States since 2020.

The study was published as Tennessee lawmakers opened a special session on public safety after a Nashville school shooting earlier this year that killed three children and three teachers.

Annie Andrews, a South Carolina pediatrician and gun violence prevention researcher who was not involved in the study, said that when she became a doctor, “I never imagined I would take care of so many children with bullet holes in them.

“But the fact of the matter is, in every children’s hospital across this country, there are children in the pediatric intensive care units suffering from firearm injuries.”

The study further showed that Black children accounted for around 67% of firearm homicides while white children made up about 78% of gun-assisted suicides.

Iman Omer, a junior at Vanderbilt University in Nashville and an anti-gun violence advocate with Students Demand Action, said the study’s findings were devastating but unsurprising.

“Every year, I know that 128 children and teens in Tennessee die by guns,” Ms. Omer said as she headed to the state’s capitol Tuesday to join protesters who have been demanding tougher gun laws.

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, who knew two of the teachers killed in the Nashville shooting, had asked lawmakers in the special session to bolster so called red flag laws aimed at keeping firearms out of the hands of people deemed to be a threat. He has faced resistance from his fellow Republicans, who control the statehouse.

In a statement Tuesday, the Tennessee Firearms Association expressed concern that “while some Republican legislators have said that no Red Flag laws will pass, far fewer have stated that no laws that would have any negative impact on 2nd Amendment protected rights would pass.” — Reuters

GCash waives QR transaction fees for micro-merchants

GCash, the Philippines’ #1 financial super app, waives the QRPH transaction fees or merchant discount rates (MDRs) for micro-merchants who use the scan-to-pay service, until the end-of-2023.

In addition to this, micro-merchants have access to an increased wallet limit of up to P500,000 per month. Moreover, the 1.5% transaction fee is waived up to P100,000 in gross sales.

E-wallets and other payment platforms charge fees as high as 2% for the use of their cashless transaction services such as QR-based and card payments.

“For GCash, making this service free means micro-entrepreneurs can earn a little extra for their families through safe cashless transactions. We are committed to working with our micro-entrepreneurs to achieve their business goals in the digital economy,” said Ren-Ren Reyes, president and CEO of G-Xchange, Inc., the mobile wallet operator of GCash.

Micro-merchants are those with businesses that are smaller in scale, such as sari-sari store owners, public market vendors, and online sellers.

Making use of GCash’s scan-to-pay enables faster tracking of payments received for merchants without imposing any additional cost, even for their customers.

“We are one with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, in its goal of bringing more micro-merchants into the digital economy. Together with our partners, we will equip micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) with the right tools and products so they can grow their businesses safely and conveniently,” Reyes said.

To date, GCash has been empowering 845,000 small-scale community merchants with various digital financial solutions.

 


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JobStreet’s ‘upskilling’ app now targets Filipinos, certifications eyed

JobStreet said on Wednesday that it anticipates Filipinos keen on retraining to use its in-app learning platform seekMAX.

The job-seeking platform is also studying to offer certifications through its partners, said Chook Yuh Yng, chief growth officer at SEEK Asia, JobStreet’s parent company, during a briefing.

JobStreet does not intend to compete with established educational platforms like Coursera and Udemy, which offer paid certifications, she told BusinessWorld. Instead, seekMAX, currently accessible for free, sets itself apart by providing content intentionally curated for job seekers, she noted.

Citing its own report, JobStreet said that 75% of Filipinos willing to retrain prefer self-study and 65% use digital learning platforms. 

The top five in-demand skills in the Philippines are digital literacy, adaptability, interpersonal skills, multitasking efficiency, and time management, according to the platform.

“Candidates need to continue upskilling not only for professional growth but also for honing their soft skills which is what most industries look out for nowadays more than the candidate’s proficiency in their technical skills,” said Dannah Majarocon, JobStreet Philippines’ managing director.

According to JobStreet, the top 10 in-demand jobs in the Philippines are customer service representatives, teachers, administrative officers, call center operators, nurses, software engineers, team leaders, business analysts, sales associates, and engineers.

In June, the unemployment rate reached a three-month high due to lower job quality. 

According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the rate increased to 4.5% in June from May’s 4.3%, representing the percentage of jobless Filipinos in the labor force. This was still lower than the 6% recorded in June 2022.

Around 2.33 million Filipinos were unemployed in June this year, up by 159,000 from May, yet notably down by 663,000 compared to June 2022’s 2.99 million unemployed individuals.

“Initially launched in Indonesia in 2022, seekMAX successfully reached over 2.5 million users who have consumed 6.5 million minutes of content on the platform,” JobStreet said.

The top content categories include job search tips, career guidance, salary advice, and self-improvement, it noted. — Arjay L. Balinbin

UK energy minister in Kyiv announces $245M for Ukraine nuclear fuel purchases

The British union flag flutters on the Victoria Tower at the Houses of Parliamen, in London, Britain Dec. 30, 2020. — REUTERS/TOBY MELVILLE

KYIV — Britain will guarantee a 192 million-pound ($245 million) export finance deal for Ukraine to buy nuclear fuel from producers including British companies, British energy minister Grant Shapps announced during a visit to Kyiv.

Ukraine’s energy system was severely damaged by a massed campaign of Russian air strikes last winter, making it more reliant on its ageing nuclear power stations, which supplied about half the country’s power before the war.

“This guarantee that we will be providing is to help Ukraine ensure that … their nuclear fuel doesn’t have to come via Russia in future,” Shapps told Reuters.

“This money will guarantee that it will come from much more secure sources.”

He said that one of those sources would be Urenco, a part-British nuclear fuel consortium.

Ukraine currently controls three of its four active nuclear plants.

The fourth, in the southern region of Zaporizhzhia, was captured by Russia last March, after Russia’s Feb. 22, 2022, invasion. Both sides have since repeatedly accused each other of endangering the facility’s safety. — Reuters

McDonald’s, CEO must face ex-security executive’s race bias claims

A federal judge in Chicago on Tuesday refused to dismiss a lawsuit accusing McDonald’s Corp. of pushing out a Black executive after he criticized CEO Chris Kempczinski for appearing to blame the parents of a girl shot in a McDonald’s drive-thru for her death.

U.S. District Judge Linsday Jenkins said that while plaintiff Michael Peaster did not explicitly mention race during a 2021 meeting with Kempczinski and other company officers, the context surrounding his comments made clear that he was addressing racially charged conduct.

“It is reasonable to infer that Peaster was attempting to speak up for African American employees,” Jenkins wrote.

Jenkins denied a motion by McDonald’s and Kempczinski to dismiss Peaster’s race discrimination and retaliation claims. The judge did dismiss claims that McDonald’s had created a hostile work environment and intentionally caused Peaster emotional distress.

McDonald’s did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Carmen Caruso, a lawyer for Peaster, said he looks forward to bringing the surviving claims to trial.

Kempczinski in 2021 sent text messages to then-Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot referencing the shooting of a 7-year-old girl at a Chicago McDonald’s and another shooting of a child in the city. “With both, the parents failed those kids which I know is something you can’t say,” Kempczinski wrote, according to court filings.

Kempczinski later publicly apologized and said the texts “reveal my narrow worldview that I have to work hard to correct.”

At a 2021 meeting at McDonald’s corporate headquarters, Peaster, the company’s vice president of global safety, security, and intelligence, said Kempczinski’s response to the incident had been insufficient.

According to the lawsuit, Peaster at the meeting said that “we have to have empathy and compassion for the majority of families who live in tough communities,” among other comments.

Peaster claims that following the meeting, Kempczinski and other executives retaliated against him by refusing to meet with him and making it impossible for him to do his job. He was ultimately fired last November for alleged performance issues, according to his lawsuit.

Peaster is seeking damages for the loss of his job and emotional distress, along with punitive damages. — Reuters

Thailand’s jailed ex-PM Thaksin hospitalized after return from exile

FORMER Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra — REUTERS

BANGKOK — Thailand’s former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra was moved to hospital overnight, officials said on Wednesday, over concern about his heart and high blood pressure on his first night in jail following his historic return from self-exile.

The latest condition of 74-year-old Thaksin, the billionaire founder of the populist juggernaut Pheu Thai, was not clear on Wednesday and his representatives did not immediately respond to a request from Reuters for comment.

The Corrections Department said in a statement Thaksin had felt chest tightness and high blood pressure and he was referred to Bangkok’s police hospital at around 2 a.m. on Wednesday.

Thaksin made his homecoming on Tuesday and was escorted to jail in dramatic scenes that stole the spotlight from political ally Srettha Thavisin, who was elected prime minister in a parliamentary vote later in the day.

The Pheu Thai Party’s Srettha was confirmed as prime minister having received royal endorsement, a parliament official said on Wednesday.

Police said Thaksin was hospitalised because the prison was unable to guarantee he would get the right care.

“The prison has assessed the situation and saw that it lacks doctors and medical equipment that can take care of the patient,” Assistant National Police Chief Lieutenant General Prachuab Wongsuk told Reuters.

The Supreme Court confirmed on Tuesday that Thaksin would have to serve eight years in prison after convictions for abuse of power and conflicts of interest.

Thaksin was accompanied by eight prison guards when he was transferred during the night, Ayuth Sintoppant, director general of the Corrections Department told Reuters.

The return of Thailand’s most famous politician was met with celebrations by his supporters and with blow-by-blow media coverage of arrival in Bangkok on his private jet, and his transfer to prison soon after.

His return and Srettha’s surprisingly smooth ascent to the top job will add to speculation that the influential Thaksin had struck a deal with his foes in the military and political establishment for his safe return and, possibly, an early release from jail. Thaksin and Pheu Thai have denied that. — Reuters

South Korea to hold first nationwide military drills in 6 years amid North threats

SOUTH KOREAN soldiers salute in front of a huge national flag in Pohang, South Korea, Sept. 30, 2021. — LEE JIN-MAN/POOL VIA REUTERS

SEOUL — South Korea is set to hold its first nationwide air defence drills in six years on Wednesday amid North Korea’s growing nuclear and missile threats, with pedestrians required to take shelter and drivers asked to pull over in some areas.

The drills are a key element of the annual Ulchi civil defence exercises, held alongside the Ulchi Freedom Shield drills, which South Korean and U.S. troops began on Monday, to improve responses to a North Korean attack or other contingencies.

At 2 p.m., an air-raid siren will sound, calling for people to get off the streets for about 15 minutes before the alert is eased, according to the interior and safety ministry.

Pedestrians must go directly a designated shelter or nearby underground space, while drivers in about 200 areas nationwide must pull to the side of the road. People in nearly 500 supermarkets, movie theatres and other public facilities will be guided to evacuate.

Medical institutions and public transportation will operate normally.

Some community centres near apartment complexes in Seoul announced the planned drills with loudspeakers on Tuesday, asking residents to follow instructions, which will be aired on the radio.

“The drills are meant to effectively respond to an actual air raid. Don’t be surprised and please find a nearby shelter,” the announcement said.

In some regions bordering North Korea, residents are expected to face additional scenarios, including chemical, biological and radiological training, wearing a gas mask and using emergency food rations, the ministry said.

The Ulchi civil defence exercises were launched in 1969 in the wake of a raid by North Korean commandos into the presidential compound in Seoul. There are about 17,000 shelters installed across the country of 52 million.

But the air defence training has not taken place since 2017.

In late May, Seoul came under fire after it issued a false air raid alarm and evacuation warning following North Korea’s failed satellite launch, even though the capital was far off the rocket’s trajectory, triggering panic among some residents. — Reuters