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Belarus faces new sanctions over ‘state-sponsored’ piracy

A historical white-red-white flag of Belarus flies in Riga, Latvia May 24, 2021. — REUTERS/JANIS LAIZANS

BRUSSELS/KYIV — Western powers prepared to pile sanctions on Belarus and cut off its aviation links on Monday, furious after it scrambled a warplane to intercept a Ryanair aircraft and arrest a dissident journalist, an act one official denounced as ‘state piracy.’

In a video posted online, the detained blogger, Roman Protasevich, 26, said he was in good health, being held in a pretrial detention facility in Minsk, and acknowledged having played a role in organizing mass disturbances in the capital last year.

In the video on the Telegram messaging app, he wore a dark sweatshirt and clasped his hands tightly in front of him. The comments were immediately dismissed by his allies, including his father, as having been made under duress.

A Polish deputy foreign minister, Pawel Jablonski, told private broadcaster TVN24 that his government had heard from Mr. Protasevich’s mother about his being in poor health, but provided no details.

Belarus’ Interior Ministry said Mr. Protasevich was being held in jail and had not complained of ill health.

US President Joseph R. Biden on Monday condemned Belarus for its actions and said he had asked his advisers to give him options to hold those responsible to account.

US national security adviser Jake Sullivan, in a call on Monday with exiled Belarus opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, said the United States had “strong support for the demands of the Belarusian people for democracy, human rights, and fundamental freedoms,” the White House said.

European Union leaders meeting in Brussels called for Belarusian airlines to be banned from the 27-nation bloc’s airspace and urged EU-based carriers to avoid flying over the former Soviet republic, according to a joint statement.

They also agreed to widen the list of Belarusian individuals they already sanction and called on the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to urgently investigate Belarus forcing a Ryanair plane to land in Minsk on a Greece-Lithuania flight on Sunday.

“The reaction should be swift and be severe,” Belgian Prime Minister Alexander de Croo told journalists ahead of the EU summit.

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney, using language that was echoed by a number of other EU countries, said: “This was effectively aviation piracy, state sponsored.”

The EU and other Western countries also called for the release of Mr. Protasevich, who was detained when the plane landed.

His social media feed from exile has been one of the last remaining independent outlets for news about Belarus since a mass crackdown on dissent last year. Sofia Sapega, a 23-year-old student traveling with him, was also detained.

OPTIONS APPEAR LIMITED
Some airlines and countries did not wait for guidance on how to respond to the diversion of the Ryanair flight.

Britain said it was instructing British airlines to cease flights over Belarus and that it would suspend the air permit for Belarus’s national carrier, Belavia, with immediate effect. KLM, the Dutch arm of carrier Air France KLM, will temporarily halt flights, Dutch news agency ANP reported.

Still, the options for Western retaliation appear limited.

The Montreal-based ICAO has no regulatory power, and the EU has no authority over flights taking off and landing in Belarus or flying over its airspace, apart from direct flights that originate or land in Europe.

Belarus lies on the flight path of routes within Europe and between Europe and Asia, and skirting Belarus would slow flights down and cost airlines money.

The EU and the United States imposed several rounds of financial sanctions against Minsk last year, which had no effect on the behavior of authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko, who withstood mass demonstrations against his rule after a disputed election.

Mr. Lukashenko denies election fraud. Since the disputed vote, authorities rounded up thousands of his opponents, with all major opposition figures now in jail or exile.

‘BOMB THREAT’
NEXTA, a news service where Mr. Protasevich worked before setting up his own widely followed blog, ran an interview with his mother, who said that as soon as she heard reports of a bomb scare on a flight, she knew it was a plot to capture him.

“I just want to say that my son is simply a hero, simply a hero,” Natalia Protasevich said, weeping. “I truly hope that the international community will wake up for him.”

His father, Dzmitry Protasevich, said in an interview with Reuters: “This is total insanity, what is going on.”

Belarus says it acted in response to a false bomb threat written in the name of the Palestinian militant group Hamas. Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum denied his group had any knowledge or connection to the matter.

Belarus said its ground controlers had given guidance to the flight but had not ordered it to land. State media said the intervention was ordered personally by Mr. Lukashenko.

Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary, who referred to the incident as a state-sponsored hijacking, said he believed security agents had been on the flight.

Lithuanian authorities said five passengers never arrived, suggesting three others besides detainees Mr. Protasevich and Ms. Sapega had disembarked in Minsk.

Russia, which has provided security, diplomatic and financial backing to Mr. Lukashenko, accused the West of hypocrisy. — Reuters

Extreme climate displaced more people than conflicts in 2020

PIXABAY

THE number of new people forced to move within their own countries by climate disasters rose to the highest in at least a decade in 2020, more than three times those displaced due to conflict and violence.

People who migrated domestically due to extreme weather events rose to 30.7 million, or 75% of those uprooted within their borders, according to a report by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. A record 55 million people in total had been forced to move at the end of 2020, with the number of climate migrants likely to be significantly underestimated due to incomplete data.

Climate change is causing more frequent and intense weather events. Contrary to fears of mass cross-border migration, many of the displacements are small-scale and localized, according to the report, costing economies about $20.5 billion globally in 2020.

Densely populated countries like China, India, the Philippines and Bangladesh were hit by intense cyclones, monsoon rains and floods, while 1.7 million people were displaced within the US during the most active Atlantic hurricane season on record. These all-time high numbers were recorded even as the spread of coronavirus hampered humanitarian organizations’ ability to register and assist displaced people, the report said. — Bloomberg

US examines reports of early COVID-19 infections in Wuhan lab

WASHINGTON — US intelligence agencies are examining reports that researchers at a Chinese virology laboratory were seriously ill in 2019 a month before the first cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) were reported, according to US government sources who cautioned that there is still no proof the disease originated at the lab.

A still-classified US intelligence report circulated during former President Donald Trump’s administration alleged that three Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) researchers became so ill in November 2019 that they sought hospital care, sources familiar with US intelligence reporting and analysis said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

It remained unclear whether these researchers were hospitalized or what their symptoms were, one of the sources said. The virus first appeared in Wuhan and then spread worldwide.

“We don’t have enough information to draw a conclusion about the origins” of the coronavirus, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told a news briefing on Monday. “We need data. We need an independent investigation. And that’s exactly what we’ve been calling for.”

Information about the researchers was published in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday. China’s foreign ministry spokesman, Zhao Lijian, said on Monday it was “completely untrue” that three WIV staff members had fallen ill.

The origin of the virus is hotly contested. In a report issued in March written jointly with Chinese scientists, a World Health Organization-led team that spent four weeks in and around Wuhan in January and February said the virus had probably been transmitted from bats to humans through another animal, and that “introduction through a laboratory incident was considered to be an extremely unlikely pathway.”

The US intelligence community “hasn’t ruled out either theory,” one official US source said. Intelligence reporting about possible November infections among Wuhan Institute employees “can’t be dismissed” by US researchers, the source added.

The hypothesis that the virus escaped from a Chinese lab has been promoted on some conservative websites, and by some Republicans in the US Congress. US intelligence agencies have not reached their own determination on the cause.

The US State Department published a fact sheet on COVID-19 and the Wuhan lab on Jan. 15, 2020, five days before Mr. Trump left office, based in part on information in the classified report, sources said. Mr. Trump as president referred to the pathogen as the “China virus” and the “China plague.”

The Central Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency and defense intelligence components contributed to both the public fact sheet and classified report, the sources said. Both were assembled by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

The classified report is regarded as valid by current US government agencies, experts investigating the origins of COVID-19 and by officials in President Joseph R. Biden’s administration.

US agencies are concerned that World Health Organization (WHO) representatives have been unable to conduct independent investigations inside China into COVID-19’s origins, and are therefore wary of WHO findings, one US government source briefed on these investigations said.

“We continue to have serious questions about the earliest days of the COVID-19 pandemic, including its origins within the People’s Republic of China,” a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council said.

In their own report on the origins of COVID-19 issued last week, Republican members of the US House of Representatives intelligence committee asserted that there was “significant circumstantial evidence” suggesting COVID-19 “may have been a leak” from the Wuhan lab.

Such evidence included information indicating “several researchers” at the lab got COVID-19 symptoms in the fall of 2019, the report said.

The WHO, which opened its annual ministerial assembly on Monday, has not announced any follow-up to the Wuhan mission but member states may raise concerns in speeches to the week-long forum. US Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra is due to address it on Tuesday.

The pandemic has killed more than 3.4 million people worldwide. — Reuters

Olympic, SEAG-bound athletes to be vaccinated starting Friday

MEMBERS of Team Philippines seeing action in the Olympic Games and Southeast Asian Games later this year will be vaccinated beginning on Friday.

MEMBERS of Team Philippines seeing action in the Olympic Games and Southeast Asian Games (SEAG) later this year will be vaccinated beginning Friday, May 28.

This was announced by Philippine Olympic Committee  (POC) President Abraham Tolentino during the online Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum on Tuesday after they got the nod from the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID).

“The big announcement today is that the IATF has also approved the vaccination this Friday which will be exclusive for Olympic-bound and SEA Games-bound delegates,” said Mr. Tolentino.

The development came after the government approved the request of the POC and the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) last week that athletes bound for the Tokyo Olympics and 2021 SEA Games in Hanoi be prioritized for the vaccination against the coronavirus.

To be included in the vaccination are athletes, coaches, national sports association (NSA) officials, and journalists set to go to the high-level international competitions.

The vaccination will take place at the Manila Prince Hotel beginning at 9 a.m.

Mr. Tolentino, however, said the vaccination will only be partial as there are still athletes whose participation for the SEA Games is still to be determined with some national qualifiers yet to take place.

But those whose participation is already assured may proceed with the vaccination.

The POC is currently threshing out the details for the vaccination and coordinating with the different NSAs and pertinent government agencies as to how athletes outside of Metro Manila can have their vaccines without having the need to travel far.

The POC and the PSC batted for the prioritization of the national team to allow the athletes to train better and with less worries with the end view of having the best possible representation in the targeted sporting events.

It also geared towards adhering to the Vietnam SEA Games Organizing Committee’s “no vaccine, no participation” policy which will be in effect in the Hanoi Games.

Also approved by the IATF last week was the training of NSAs for the SEA Games but in adherence to guidelines set by the POC, PSC, Department of Health, and the Games and Amusements Board.

Mr. Tolentino encouraged members of Team Philippines to have their vaccines.

“I think there should not be doubts about it (vaccination) anymore.”

Nine Filipinos to date have qualified for the Olympics, namely, pole-vaulter EJ Obiena, gymnast Caloy Yulo, boxers Eumir Felix Marcial, Irish Magno, Nesthy Petecio and Carlo Paalam, weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz, rower Cris Nievarez, and taekwondo jin Kurt Barbosa.

Mr. Marcial has gotten two doses of the vaccines while he was in the United States while Ms. Diaz got her first shot in Malaysia two weeks ago.

The Olympics in Tokyo, Japan, happens from July 23 to Aug. 8

The POC, meanwhile, earlier said it intends to send 626 athletes competing in 39 sports in Hanoi, which will take place from Nov. 21 to Dec. 2. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Fil-Am Jordan Clarkson fulfills goal of becoming NBA Sixth Man of the Year

FILIPINO-AMERICAN guard Jordan Clarkson in the NBA Sixth of the Year for the 2020-21 season. — UTAH JAZZ FB PAGE

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo, Senior Reporter

TRUE to his word, Filipino-American National Basketball Association (NBA) guard Jordan Clarkson of the Utah Jazz went on to become a Sixth Man of the Year awardee.

The feat was announced on Tuesday (Manila time) by the league, making Mr. Clarkson, 28, the first Jazz player to win the award, given to the individual who excelled coming off the bench.

Mr. Clarkson received 65 first-place votes and 407 total points in winning the award, which saw him besting teammate Joe Ingles (34 first-place votes and 272 total points) and New York Knicks’ Derrick Rose (one first-place votes/77 total points).

Others considered for the award were Jalen Brunson and Tim Hardaway, Jr. (Dallas), and Montrezl Harrell (LA Lakers).

Winning the Sixth Man of the Year was a fulfilment of one of the goals Mr. Clarkson set for himself after re-signing with Utah in the offseason for $52 million for four years.

“One goal and achievement that I want to have under my belt is winning the Sixth Man of the Year award. I already feel I’m in the conversation for it a lot because I’ve been traded multiple places now, but just having that opportunity to be out there playing and just be with this organization — having the opportunity is going to be great for me,” Mr. Clarkson shared to Filipino sports journalists back in January in a media conference call.

Mr. Clarkson, who split time in Tulsa and Missouri in college, was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers in 2014. He was traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2018 before landing to Utah a year later.

In the 2020-2021 NBA Regular Season, the 2018 Asian Games campaigner for the Philippines was solid, producing numbers of 18.4 points (career-high), four rebounds and 2.5 assists in 26.7 minutes in 68 games (one start).

His scoring average of 18.3 points as a reserve was the highest in the NBA. Mr. Clarkson made a career-high 208 three-pointers overall (seventh in the NBA among all players) and a league-high 203 as a reserve. The 203 three-pointers were the fourth-highest single-season total off the bench in NBA history. He also ranked ninth in the NBA in free throw percentage this season (89.6).

His productive effort from the bench helped the Jazz in securing the best record in the NBA this season (52-20). They are currently battling the Memphis Grizzlies in the opening round of the playoffs.

In the media conference early this year, Mr. Clarkson said that more than continuing to improve as a player, he is also looking to repay the Jazz for the confidence the organization has given him.

“I’m gonna go out there and perform. I’m just gonna go out there and help the team win.”

The balloting for the NBA individual awards is tabulated by the independent accounting firm of Ernst & Young LLP.

Meanwhile, the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP) congratulated Mr. Clarkson for winning the Sixth Man of the Year Award, highlighting the hard work the player put in while also alluding to the Jazz player’s time with Gilas Pilipinas in the 2018 Asiad.

“In his short and sweet stint with Gilas Pilipinas, Jordan Clarkson showed us not only his world-class talent, but also gave us a glimpse of the hard work and dedication necessary to get to that level,” SBP President Al Panlilio said in a statement. “Once Gilas, always Gilas.”

Gilas Pilipinas 3×3 begins FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament campaign

GILAS PILIPINAS 3x3, bannered by Joshua Munzon, Alvin Pasaol, CJ Perez and Mo Tautuaa, is looking to nab one of three Olympic spots up for grabs in the five-day FIBA Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Austria which begins on May 26. — SBP

THE day of reckoning has arrived for the Philippine national men’s 3×3 team as it begins its International Basketball Federation (FIBA) Olympic Qualifying Tournament (OQT) campaign in Graz, Austria, on Wednesday, May 26.

Gilas Pilipinas 3×3, bannered by Joshua Munzon, Alvin Pasaol, CJ Perez and Mo Tautuaa, is looking to nab one of three Olympic spots up for grabs in the five-day qualifiers and become the first basketball team from the Philippines to take part in the Summer Games in nearly five decades.

The last time the country was represented in basketball in the Olympics was in 1972 in Munich, Germany, with a five-a-side team that boasted the likes of Bogs Adornado, Jimmy Mariano, Danny Florencio and Freddie Webb. The team finished with a 1-6 record, the lone victory coming at the expense of Senegal.

In the OQT, the nationals play in the tough Pool C, which also has Slovenia (Europe Cup 2016 winner), France (second at Europe Cup 2019), Qatar (2014 World Champ), and the Dominican Republic.

Tournament format calls for each team playing the other four in their respective pools. The top two teams from each pool qualify for the crossover quarterfinals and then play knockout games all the way to the semifinals.

The semifinals and the third-place games will be known in the FIBA 3×3 OQT as the Olympic Ticket games.

Gilas Pilipinas 3×3 will first play Qatar on May 26 at 8 p.m. (Manila time) to be followed by the game against Slovenia at 9:45 p.m.

It will take a break the following day before resuming its campaign on May 28 against the Dominican Republic at 6 p.m. and France at 8 p.m.

Notwithstanding the challenges presented by the pandemic to training, Gilas Pilipinas still managed to put in time and work under a “bubble” setup.

For nearly a month in the lead-up to the OQT, the Ronnie Magsanoc-coached 3×3 team practiced twice a day at the INSPIRE Sports Academy in Laguna, working on its collective game to have the best representation possible in the tournament.

The Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas (SBP) made sure that the team got the needed workout and training with the time and conditions it had on its lap.

The federation made the arrangements for the training and coordinated with pertinent authorities and sent in practice players Tonino Gonzaga, Greg Flor, Malik Diouf and Jason Brickman for the scrimmages of the team.

“We thank the SBP for giving us a safe training environment so we can devote all our focus on our preparation for the qualifiers,” said Mr. Magsanoc of the support they got from the SBP.

“There have been challenges along the way, but we’re happy that the team got to train.”

Zeroing in on their OQT bid, Mr. Perez admitted that they have their work cut out for them, especially overcoming their deficit in size, but they know what is at stake and is expected of them. He said that they are going to do everything they can in the tournament.

“It means a lot for my career if we make it to the Olympics, that’s a huge success for me,” he said. “It’s always an honor to represent my country.”

Gilas Pilipinas 3×3’s FIBA OQT matches can be seen live over the Samahang Basketbol ng Pilipinas’ Facebook page. — Michael Angelo S. Murillo

Milwaukee Bucks nail 22 treys in rout of Miami Heat in Game 2

GIANNIS Antetokounmpo scored 31 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the host Milwaukee Bucks to a wire-to-wire, 132-98 victory over the Miami Heat in Game 2 of their Eastern Conference first-round series on Monday night.

The Bucks used their most prolific 3-point shooting first half of the season to bury the Heat early and take a 2-0 lead in the series, which shifts to Miami for the next two games starting on Thursday night.

The Bucks’ scoring output was the most points the Heat ever allowed in a playoff game.

Milwaukee made 22-of-53 attempts from 3-point range, led by Bryn Forbes, who scored 14 of his playoff career-high 22 points in the first quarter while going 4-for-5 from long distance.

The Bucks made only 5-of-31 3-point attempts in Game 1.

Pat Connaughton also made 5-of-9 triples off the bench and finished with 15 points.

Milwaukee led by as many as 28 points in a first quarter in which they outscored the Heat (46-20) and set a franchise playoff record by making 15 triples in the first half. The Bucks’ 78 first-half points was also a postseason franchise record.

The Bucks made 10 3-pointers and 18-of-25 shots overall in the first quarter and shot 48.9 percent for the game. The Bucks also went 18-for-20 from the free throw line.

Antetokounmpo, who also had six assists and three steals, shot 12-for-23 from the field, and Jrue Holiday totaled 11 points and 15 assists. Khris Middleton finished with 17 points.

Dewayne Dedmon finished with 19 points and nine rebounds, and Goran Dragić scored 18 points off the bench to lead the Heat. — Reuters

Phil Mickelson vaults into top 50 world ranking, Ryder Cup

THE list of perks that come with winning the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) Championship continue to flow in for Phil Mickelson.

The newly-minted oldest major winner in history vaulted 83 spots to No. 32 in the Official World Golf Rankings and 36 spots to No. 16 in the United States Ryder Cup team rankings on Monday.

Being inside the top 50 in the world is the threshold for entry into all the premier tournaments, including majors and World Golf Championship events. Mickelson fell out of the top 50 in November 2019 for the first time in 26 years, a record streak of 1,353 weeks.

He briefly returned to the top 50, but by this March, he had fallen outside of the top 100 for the first time in 28 years, breaking another record streak of 1,425 weeks.

Mickelson dropped as low as 116th entering the PGA Championship, where he was considered an extreme longshot, having failed to post a top-20 finish in his previous 17 worldwide starts outside of the Champions tour.

With his victory at the PGA, the 50-year-old also launched himself back into the Ryder Cup conversation.

At No. 16, he is still unlikely to earn one of the top six automatic spots. However, Steve Stricker will also have six captain’s picks, and Mickelson has played on every US Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup team since 1994. — Reuters

UEFA projects €8 billion losses for top-flight clubs due to COVID-19

A report by European soccer’s governing body Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) said the continent’s top-flight clubs are expected to suffer losses of more than €8 billion ($9.78 billion) due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The report showed €4 billion were lost in gate receipts, €2.7 billion in sponsorship and €1.4 billion in broadcast revenue.

The losses led to a dip in the clubs’ expenditure on transfer deals, with spending in the January window down 56% compared to last year. The 2020 summer transfer window saw a 39% decrease from 2019.

English clubs made up 43% of global transfers, with the Premier League being the biggest spender in the 2020-21 campaign at more than €1.8 billion.

UEFA said reforms to its financial fair play rules were necessary and that transfer fees and wages “must be reduced to acceptable levels”.

The report also criticized the breakaway European Super League, saying a closed competition would have “devastating impacts on European football from a sporting, emotional and financial perspective”.

The breakaway league set up by 12 clubs was announced last month but fell apart after 48 hours following a huge backlash from fans, governing bodies and politicians.

The Super League had argued it would increase revenue for the top clubs in Europe and allow them to distribute more money to the rest of the game.

“A breakaway league cannot be the response to the pandemic, the report added.

“Restoring financial health and growth requires a process of financial discipline, careful management and long-term planning.

“It is only by respecting the pyramid and the principle of promotion and relegation on sporting merit that European football will be able to continue to grow.” — Reuters

Mbappe magic sets up PSG for French Cup victory

PARIS — Kylian Mbappe set up the first goal and grabbed one of his own as Paris St.-Germain (PSG) retained the French Cup with a 2-0 victory over Monaco in Wednesday’s final at the Stade de France.

Quick thinking by Mbappe to disposes Axel Disasi in his own penalty area, as the Monaco defender let a short pass from goalkeeper Radoslaw Majecki slip under his feet, set up a 19th-minute opener for Mauro Icardi.

Mbappe took the ball away and, displaying quick feet, passed square for Icardi to tuck the ball home from close range.

With team mate Neymar suspended and watching from the empty stands, Mbappe was able to dominate the contest with his talent and pace and added the second goal in the 81st minute.

Angel Di Maria set him up with a short through-ball and the World Cup winner lifted his finish over Majecki to make sure of the outcome.

Mbappe’s goal came a minute after he had hit the crossbar with a clever chip from outside the penalty area having spotted Majecki off his line.

It was one of few chances in a largely dour final, played behind closed doors, that only came alive in the last 15 minutes.

PSG retained their title and extended to 14 their record number of wins in the cup. Monaco had won five previous times but last in 1991. They were last in the final in 2010 when PSG also beat them.

“We work every day to experience this type of emotion, reward and recognition. The work of a whole group, the staff, and the supporters who could not be here. We think about them a lot, this title is also for them,” Mbappe said.

“When you play for PSG, one of the biggest clubs in the world, the biggest club in the country, every title counts to go down in history. We want to be part of this story, it’s a great step today.”

PSG defender Alessandro Florenzi had a powerful shot tipped over by Majecki in the first half while Monaco created the better opportunities after the break.

PSG goalkeeper Keylor Navas made two good saves from Wissam Ben Yedder and Krepin Diatta and saw an errant cross rebound back into play off his crossbar.

But any hopes of a comeback were swiftly ended by the pace and vision of Mbappe as he settled the outcome.

Both clubs now turn their attention to the end of the Ligue 1 season on Sunday where they hold out hopes of winning the title. PSG are second, one point behind leaders Lille, while Monaco are three points adrift. — Reuters

With Olympics looming, US advises against travel to Japan due to COVID-19

WASHINGTON — The US State Department on Monday urged against travel to Japan because of a new wave of coronavirus cases just two months before the Tokyo Olympics are set to begin.

The department also issued its “Level 4” warning against travel to Sri Lanka amid surging infections there. It saw a lower risk in visiting the Caribbean nation of Antigua and Barbuda , lowering the islands to a “Level 3 — Reconsider Travel” designation.

The US “Do Not Travel” advisory and guidance for Japan did not mention the Olympics specifically but warned against visiting the country now. A top Olympic official last week said the Games would start as planned on July 23 even under a state of emergency after being postponed in 2020 during the pandemic.

“Travelers should avoid all travel to Japan,” the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in new guidance. “Because of the current situation in Japan, even fully vaccinated travelers may be at risk for getting and spreading coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) variants and should avoid all travel to Japan.”

The US Olympic & Paralympic Committee, which oversees Team USA, said in a statement to Reuters that it has been made aware of the updated State Department advisory as it relates to Japan.

“We feel confident that the current mitigation practices in place for athletes and staff by both the USOPC and the Tokyo Organizing Committee, coupled with the testing before travel, on arrival in Japan, and during Games time, will allow for safe participation of Team USA athletes this summer,” the statement said. — Reuters

Nikola Jokić scores 38 as Nuggets pull even with Blazers

Nikola Jokić scored 38 points, Michael Porter, Jr. had 18 and the host Denver Nuggets beat the Portland Trail Blazers (128-109) in Game 2 of their Western Conference first-round playoff series on Monday.

The Nuggets evened the best-of-seven series 1-1 with help from Paul Millsap (15 points), Aaron Gordon (13), Monte Morris (12) and Facundo Campazzo (12).

Game 3 is Thursday night in Portland.

Damian Lillard scored 22 of his game-high 42 points in the second quarter and added 10 assists for the Trail Blazers. CJ McCollum scored 21, Norman Powell had 15 and Jusuf Nurkić grabbed 13 rebounds.

It was a testy game that featured four technical fouls and two flagrant fouls.

Denver led by 12 at half time and stretched the margin to 81-66 on a basket by Campazzo. The Trail Blazers got within 10, but the Nuggets scored seven straight to lead 91-74.

The hosts pushed the gap to 20 on a 3-pointer by Gordon late in the third, but the Trail Blazers hit two from deep in the final 30 seconds to get within 101-87 heading into the fourth.

Portland further cut into the deficit to claw within 11 early in the final period before Denver pulled away. Millsap hit two free throws and a layup, Porter drained a 3-pointer and then had a steal that led to a dunk for Shaquille Harrison during an 11-2 run that made it 114-94 with 7:41 left.

The Trail Blazers scored the next four points, but the Nuggets came right back and went ahead by 21 on a 3-pointer by Campazzo. Portland emptied its bench with 3:36 left.

The Nuggets led by six after the first quarter and opened up an 18-point lead early in the second, but Lillard brought the Trail Blazers back on his own. He hit four of his eight first-half 3-pointers in 3 1/2 minutes to cut the deficit to 65-61.

Denver scored the last eight points of the quarter to lead 73-61 at the break. — Reuters