Category: WORLDS
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Serena Williams ‘out of line’ in US Open final but umpire ‘blew it’, says Billie Jean King
Billie Jean King: ‘Williams out of line’ -
Lula turns himself in after police stand-off
Video Lula turns himself in after police stand-off -
Brazil’s Lula still has power to influence politics
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Lula is lifted by supporters at the steelworkers’ union building in Sao Paulo
Brazil’s former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s surrender on Saturday capped a dramatic few days in Brazil. But the political spectacle is likely to continue as the country heads towards presidential elections in October.
“We are going to return to the time where just a few people have a lot of money, and a lot of people have nothing,” Lula supporter Gisele Veloso says.
She was on the verge of tears as she stood outside the steelworkers’ union in the early hours of Thursday morning. It was just after the Supreme Court ruled that Lula had to start serving his 12-year prison sentence for corruption and tensions were running high.
Spectacular fall from grace
For many, Lula still holds a special place. He was Brazil’s first working-class president and helped lift millions out of poverty. He promised change in a country known for its gaping inequalities.
But it has been a stunning fall from grace for a man who was once the most popular leader in Brazilian history. Convicted and jailed for corruption and money laundering, he now has a less flattering claim to fame as the country’s most famous criminal.
Media playback is unsupported on your deviceMedia captionLula forced his way through crowds of his supporters to turn himself in
For millions, including those who had voted for him in the past, he turned out to be just as corrupt as the politicians who came before him. There are now plenty of people who are eager to see him locked up.
Messy months ahead
Even so, it’s unlikely that this is the last we will hear of Lula. Leaders in the Workers’ Party (PT) have already said he remains their candidate for October’s elections.
It is possible for Lula to campaign behind bars – for now. So the next few months will be messy and emotional.
Parties have to put forward names of their preferred candidates by 15 August. The Electoral court then has until mid-September to analyse them.
Lula: Only death will take me off streets A quick guide to Brazil’s scandals
Because of what is known as the “Clean Sheet” law, which was introduced in 2010, anybody with a criminal conviction is banned from public office for eight years. At that point, Lula’s nomination is expected to be thrown out.
But that means for several months, we could have a convicted criminal attempting to be the country’s next leader. This is Brazil and politics is nothing if not complicated – and at times unbelievable.
An act of rejection
For Thiago de Aragão, a partner at political consultancy Arko Advice, this is the end of an era – one that Lula’s Workers’ Party was warned about.
“They knew that this would happen,” he says, adding that they have lined up possible candidates to replace him, including the former mayor of São Paulo, Fernando Haddad.
“From within the Workers’ Party, breaking with Lula is not an option,” he says, adding that Lula has in the past few years become bigger than the party he founded.
“Because of that, a candidate from the party that is not fully endorsed or linked to Lula does not stand a chance,” he adds.
They have a strategy and that, according to Mr de Aragão, is to keep pushing Lula as a candidate until the last moment. When the electoral court throws his candidacy out, that’s when they’ll put forward another candidate.
“They will make this an act of rejection,” he says. “The energy from that moment will then be transmitted to the candidate that will be chosen to run on Lula’s behalf.”
From far-left to far-right
Brazilian politics is increasingly polarised. Trailing behind leftist Lula in the presidential polls is far-right candidate Jair Bolsonaro. So could he become number one?
Many experts doubt it.
“The existence of a candidate like Bolsonaro is a product of the existence of Lula,” says Mr de Aragão.
If that’s the case, then it throws the elections wide open. There is a great deal of uncertainty as to the political future of this country. Ask a Brazilian who to vote for and many just shrug their shoulders – they have no idea.
One thing is certain though, Lula’s influence is here to stay.
“He will still be able to do politics even through his silence,” says João Paulo Orsini Martinelli, a criminal lawyer in São Paulo. “His existence will still be there and he’s still a gravitational force within Brazilian politics. He’s a player.”
Additional reporting by Anna Jean Kaiser
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Brazil election: Jailed ex-leader Lula pulls out
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Lula had a huge lead over all other candidates
Former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has pulled out of next month’s presidential election, allowing his running mate to stand in his place.
Workers’ Party leader Gleisi Hoffman announced the decision outside the police headquarters where the 72-year-old is serving a 12-year sentence.
Brazil’s top electoral court barred Lula’s candidacy less than two weeks ago due to his corruption conviction.
Fernando Haddad will now be the party’s candidate.
What happened?
A letter written by Lula in his prison cell was read out to his supporters who have been camping outside the jail for five months demanding he be freed.
Image copyright AFP Image caption Supporters of Lula have been camped outside the police headquarters where he is jailed In it, the former president, who governed from January 2003 until December 2010, said he would not run in the election scheduled for 7 October.
He also named Mr Haddad as the man to step into the breach.
Why did he finally give up?
The decision comes after a lengthy legal battle which culminated on 31 August when the Superior Electoral Court (TSE) ruled that he was “ineligible” to run for the presidency.
Lula’s legal team and the Workers’ Party have appealed against the decision and the Supreme Court is still due to rule on it.
Up until Monday night, the Workers’ Party strategy had been to keep Lula’s name on the ticket for as long as possible.
Lula left office with record approval ratings and despite being jailed almost 40% of people asked by polling firm Datafolha said they would vote for him.
Fernando Haddad, on the other hand, is a former education minister who has little name recognition outside of São Paulo, where he served as mayor.
Lula’s legal team asked the Supreme Court to extend the deadline for registering candidates for the presidency from end of business Tuesday to Monday 17 September to buy itself more time.
Typical of the high drama which has characterised the election campaign, Lula and his party decided to change tack after the Supreme Court rejected their request to extend the deadline.
Why was Lula barred?
Lula was barred from running for the presidency under a 2010 law dubbed “Clean Slate”. It prohibits those who have a criminal conviction which has been upheld on appeal from running for public office.
In July 2017, Lula was found guilty of accepting an upgrade to a beachfront flat as a bribe from an engineering firm involved in a major corruption scheme.
Lula has always denied any wrongdoing and appealed against the verdict.
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Lula was barred after being convicted on corruption and money laundering charges In January, an appeals court upheld the conviction and increased the sentence from the original nine-and-a-half years to 12 years.
Lula and his legal team tried to argue he should stay out of jail while further appeals were under way.
But in April, he was given 24 hours to turn himself in. After a tense, two-day stand-off he surrendered to police and was taken to the federal police headquarters in the city of Curitiba, where he has been held since.
Why has he remained so popular?
While he was in office, from January 2003 to December 2010, Brazil experienced its longest period of economic growth in three decades, allowing his administration to spend lavishly on social programmes.
Tens of millions of people were lifted out of poverty thanks to the initiatives taken by his government and many of them remain loyal supporters.
Many poor Brazilians could also relate to Lula in a way that they could not relate to other Brazilian politicians.
Image copyright Reuters Image caption When Lula handed himself in to police, he had to wade through a sea of supporters Born in 1945 into a poor family in the north-east of Brazil, his family moved to São Paulo to find work by the time he was seven.
He did not learn to read until he was 10 and started working in a car factory aged 14.
A charismatic leader, he soon became the president of the metalworkers’ union and then founded the Workers’ Party.
He served two consecutive terms as Brazil’s president before helping his protégé, Dilma Rousseff, be elected.
Who will take over his mantle?
The Workers’ Party has chosen Fernando Haddad to replace Lula as its presidential candidate. Mr Haddad was the minister of education during Lula’s presidency and is thought to enjoy his trust. He was Lula’s vice-presidential running mate until now.
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Fernando Haddad has not performed well in the polls so far From 2013 to 2017, the 55-year-old, who has degrees in economics and philosophy, also served as mayor of São Paulo, Brazil’s most populous city. He faced mass demonstrations against bus fare rises during his time as mayor.
Mr Haddad, who has Lebanese roots, is not well known outside of São Paulo and has done poorly in the polls so far.
Only 9% of those asked for a Datafolha poll on Monday said they would vote for him. But the Workers’ Party hopes people who had been planning on voting for Lula will switch their votes to Mr Haddad.
The party hopes the boost he is expected to get will be enough to get him through to the run-off scheduled for 28 October.
But Mr Haddad is facing legal problems of his own. Prosecutors allege that during his campaign for mayor his team received a loan from a construction firm which stood to benefit from contracts once he was elected. He has denied any wrongdoing.
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Bill Leak dies: A brilliant cartoonist who polarised Australia
Image copyright News Corp Australia Image caption Bill Leak has been celebrated for his wit and distinctive style
Loved and loathed, he was to his admirers a genius of wit and originality who confronted tough topics, while to his detractors he fuelled race tensions and polarised a nation.
Bill Leak, who created some of Australia’s most recognisable and inflammatory cartoons, has died of a suspected heart attack in hospital. He was 61.
Last year, his caricature of an indigenous man with a beer can who could not remember his son’s name was labelled “disgusting” and “discriminatory” by Aboriginal leaders. The artist had also faced death threats and was forced to move out of his home after publishing an image of the Prophet Muhammad following the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris.
“[He was] a giant in his field of cartooning and portraiture and a towering figure for more than two decades,” said Paul Whittaker, editor-in-chief of The Australian newspaper, where Mr Leak worked.
The cartoonist was born in Adelaide but raised near Sydney, where he trained at the Julian Ashton Art School in the city’s historic Rocks district. He would later travel to Europe to soak up the region’s art, and it was in the early 1980s that he got his big break with The Bulletin magazine.
Image caption Bill Leak’s most controversial cartoon sparked a racial discrimination complaint last year “He had terrific control over the pen. He also had a mind which seemed uncontrollable. It would go in any direction and he was totally unpredictable, so it was combination of his drawing skills and his quirky sense of humour,” Mr Foyle told the BBC.
“I don’t think Bill was ever surprised about the controversy he caused. He enjoyed it and on many occasions tailored his cartoons to cause a stink. Bill enjoyed being in the limelight.”
Mr Leak won nine Walkley awards that recognise journalistic excellence in Australia, and had worked for Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp Australia newspapers since 1994.
His distinctive style won many fans, but he often drew intense criticism for his views – particularly in recent years. Last year’s depiction of the indigenous man sparked a complaint to Australia’s Human Rights Commission, with a claim it had violated a controversial race discrimination law.
One indigenous advocacy group at the time called the “disgusting, disrespectful, and hurtful”, adding: “Those involved in publishing such a clearly racist cartoon should be ashamed and should issue a public apology to all Australians.”
Emotional reactions
Tributes on social media have praised his fearlessness, lamenting the loss of an artist who was “supremely talented, principled, brave, witty & decent”, and “a true warrior for freedom of speech”.
Others, though, had far more brutal assessments. Several posts after his death did not just attack Mr Leak’s views, but the cartoonist personally – demonstrating how polarising he had become within sections of the community. Others swiftly condemned the critical posts.
Image copyright @annabelcrabb
Image copyright @JacquiLambie Those close to Mr Leak say while he made a career rattling cages, an avalanche of criticism of his work in recent years had become too heavy a burden.
“Basically he was hounded to his death. He’s had the most incredibly stressful couple of years,” Spectator Australia editor and long-time friend Rowan Dean told the BBC.
“There were death threats after he did a cartoon that showed the Prophet Muhammad, which led to him having to move his house. He was Australia’s version of Salman Rushdie for a while.”
‘Racist’ cartoon draws praise and criticism The racial discrimination law dividing Australia
“He did a very poignant but accurate cartoon about Indigenous Australians, disadvantage and the lack of parenting amongst Indigenous Australians and for that he was hounded mercilessly by our Australian Human Rights Commission. The pressure that he was under was just enormous.”
Defending his cartoon at the time, Mr Leak wrote: “I was trying to say that if you think things are pretty crook for the children locked up in the Northern Territory’s Don Dale Youth Detention Centre, you should have a look at the homes they came from.”
Image caption Leak’s final cartoon accused education minister Rob Stokes of ignoring radicalisation in Australian schools Many of his fellow cartoonists share the thought that Mr Leak was pilloried to the point of submission.
Mark Tippett, a Sydney-based caricature artist, told the BBC that his death was a terrible reminder of the battles they often face.
“What do we do as satirists if we can’t satire anymore?” he asked. “Do we have to ask permission before we can put pen to paper? It just can’t go on this way. It [his death] makes us more defiant. We can’t go into a shell.”
“What he was trying to do is make his messages as simplistic as possible for many people to understand. His style would appeal to the masses because it was so clean and recognisable. You just don’t see that every day.”
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has remembered his friend of more than 30 years.
“I can’t believe that Bill Leak is dead,” Mr Turnbull posted on Facebook. “Who had more life, more energy than him? So many more cartoons to draw, paintings to paint, politicians to satirise.”
Image copyright ABC Image caption Mr Leak in a recent interview on Australian television Indigenous leader Warren Mundine said Mr Leak “was just an incredible cartoonist”. He told the Australian Broadcasting Corp: “I’m just in shock. I was only with him the other night at his book launch and had a beer with him.”
Left behind are the cartoonist’s wife Goong, his stepdaughter Tasha and his sons Johannes and Jasper.
His friends have remember a gifted man.
“Bill was an absolute genius,” said Mr Dean. “Here was a man who was one of Australia’s greatest political talents. Probably one of the world’s greatest satirists, certainly a brilliant cartoonist and also a brilliant portrait painter.”
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Trump marks NINE/ELEVEN anniversary at Pennsylvania memorial
“America’s long term is not written via our enemies. America’s long run is written through our heroes,” Mr Trump stated in Shanksville on Tuesday.
Image copyright Reuters Another plane, United Airlines Flight NINETY THREE, crashed in a box in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.
It’s believed hijackers have been making plans to try that airplane at the US Congress or White Space in Washington DC prior to it went down, killing all FORTY other people aboard.
Cockpit voice recordings of the hijackers and cell phone calls from those aboard to loved ones indicate passengers attempted to battle their manner into the cockpit to regain regulate earlier than the plotters nosedived the airplane.
Image copyright Getty Images Symbol caption The Tower of Voices memorial has been erected at the Flight 93 crash site Senator John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, used to be among folks that cited that is the first yr that Americans born after the attacks will probably be sufficiently old to enlist in the us military.
During remarks on the Pentagon, Vice-President Mike Pence informed audience contributors they “must learn the lessons of 9/ELEVEN and remain ever vigilant”.
Symbol copyright Reuters Image caption A soldier honours a victim on the memorial in Ny Town The rite in New York was once attended through New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, US ambassador to the United International Locations Nikki Haley and Mayor Invoice de Blasio, besides as his predecessors Michael Bloomberg and Rudy Giuliani.
Relatives of victims read out the names of the dead, and moments of silence have been seen at 08:FORTY SIX and 09:03 to mark the times whilst passenger jets struck the two skyscrapers.
Symbol copyright Getty Images Symbol caption A visitor wipes a tear at the The Big Apple memorial in the years for the reason that attacks, most cancers instances in decrease New York – especially among first responders who dug during the toxic rubble – have larger.
The 9/11 Victims’ Compensation Fund has paid out $4bn (£3.1bn ) to fund scientific bills for survivors of the terror attacks.
Symbol copyright Reuters Nearly 10,000 of them have had a few form of cancer, in line with the world Trade Heart Well Being Program.
Tens of heaps of individuals inhaled fumes in the days after the attack, and the collection of sufferers coming ahead with tumours has larger in contemporary years, in keeping with the fund.
Image copyright Getty Pictures Symbol caption White Space personnel held a second of silence on Tuesday -
Marshall Islands warned towards adopting virtual currency
Image copyright Getty Pictures Image caption The Marshall Islands encompass greater than 1,000 islands and islets within the Pacific Ocean
The Republic of the Marshall Islands has been warned in opposition to adopting a digital currency as a second form of felony soft.
The International Financial Fund (IMF) said the country, which is composed of loads of islands within the Pacific Ocean, should “severely reconsider”.
Currently, best the us greenback counts as legal smooth within the islands.
A legislation to adopt a digital currency named “Sovereign” alongside the greenback was once passed in February.
The first digital coins are because of be issued to individuals of the public by means of an preliminary coin providing (ICO) later this yr.
Then Again, IMF directors stated the potential advantages of the transfer had been so much smaller than the possible costs of “economic, reputational and governance risks”.
“Marshall Island authorities will have to critically rethink the issuance of the virtual forex as felony delicate,” wrote the directors of their report, which was once first spotted by way of cryptocurrency information web site Coindesk.
There is just one family business bank in the united states of america and it is in peril of losing its most effective correspondent banking courting with some other bank within the US.
That courting permits the Islands to switch bucks in and out of the rustic.
It highlighted the Marshall Islands’ dependence on overseas help, and the truth that the rustic is susceptible to natural screw ups in addition as sea level upward thrust associated with local weather modification.
Adopting a virtual foreign money as an respectable form of legal gentle might threaten both financial integrity and the nation’s key relationship with the united states financial institution. the result could be disruption to overseas help, in keeping with the IMF.
Media playback is unsupported to your instrumentMedia captionBitcoin explained: How do cryptocurrencies work?
the global monetary enterprise used to be expressing concern as it was aware of conventional banks’ wariness around digital currencies, said David Gerard, creator of Assault of the 50 foot Blockchain.
Those banks would possibly, for instance, associate crypto or digital currencies with criminal activity, together with cash-laundering, since the virtual forex networks have been designed to move cash or tokens round at great speed.
“you simply can not control the stuff,” Mr Gerard instructed the BBC. “Tokens are really, actually liquid, that’s the entire element.”
this would provide the us correspondent financial institution lead to to reconsider its relationship with the Marshall Islands, he explained.
“The IMF isn’t robust-arming the Marshalls, what they are doing is describing what is going to obviously happen if they proceed – the massive correspondent financial institution can be somewhat worried,” he introduced.
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Labrador saves US guy from wrongful intercourse abuse prison time period
Symbol copyright Jenny Coleman/Oregon Innocence Undertaking Image caption Mr Horner was freed with the assistance of the Oregon Innocence Undertaking after he appealed for their assist at the same time as in jail
a man from Oregon has been freed from a 50-yr prison time period after his case unravelled following the discovery of a labrador canine he allegedly killed.
Joshua Horner, FORTY TWO, used to be convicted in 2017 for alleged child sexual abuse.
The complainant in the case had said Mr Horner shot the labrador in entrance of her so as to deter her from reporting his crimes to the police.
however the dog was discovered alive residing with new house owners via the Oregon Innocence Challenge, who have been reviewing his case.
The authentic trial had not had a unanimous verdict and the non-profit prison supplier mentioned their evaluate of the trial evidence had raised “a couple of pink flags”.
Symbol copyright Jenny Coleman/Oregon Innocence Undertaking Symbol caption The Gang had been in a position to monitor down the canine at Mr Horner’s request “She was drinking a bowl of water and sitting in colour underneath a porch. We performed together with her. Petted her. It used to be superb,” Lisa Christon, a volunteer for the felony enterprise, mentioned.
The canine’s identity was reportedly established thru her distinctive appearance and evidence about her custody.
“Lucy the canine used to be not shot. Lucy the dog is alive and neatly,” the district legal professional’s administrative center stated in its movement to disregard.
“My investigator and the investigator from the Oregon Innocence Project tracked down Lucy the dog, demonstrated her identity, spent much time along with her, and took photos of her.”
a choice on the state’s Courtroom of Appeals allowed Mr Horner to be freed first of all in August, and a brand new trial was once ordered.
Makes An Attempt were made to speak to the complainant about her testimony, however she allegedly didn’t happen for conferences and ran away from district lawyer group of workers while approached, the AP news agency reviews.
It used to be then confirmed there could be no second trial and Mr Horner was capable of stroll loose alongside his spouse Kelli.
In an announcement launched through the Oregon Innocence Project, he thanked its volunteers and the district attorney for co-running with the staff.
He mentioned he and his wife have been now “ready to select up the pieces of our lives” following his free up.
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Serena Williams: Bring In Sun front web page defends caricature
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Serena Williams, pictured after shedding to Naomi Osaka through the US Open, used to be the topic of a newspaper cool animated film widely criticised as racist and sexist
An Australian newspaper which found itself at the centre of a race row over its cartoonist’s depiction of Serena Williams has doubled down on its give a boost to for the artist.
The Herald Solar has hit out at individuals who criticised Mark Knight’s drawing, which displays Williams leaping over a damaged racquet subsequent to a baby’s dummy.
Critics said the caricature used racist and sexist stereotypes.
But that did not forestall the newspaper reprinting the image on its entrance web page.
Underneath the headline “Welcome to PC world”, the newspaper wrote: “If the self-appointed censors of Mark Knight get their means on his Serena Williams cool animated film, our new politically proper lifestyles might be very boring indeed”.
Symbol Copyright @damonheraldsun @damonheraldsun
Knight’s unique drawing, revealed within the Herald Solar on Monday, referenced Williams’s outburst through the US Open final at the weekend, appearing the umpire asking Japan’s Naomi Osaka: “Can You simply permit her win?”
It led folks, together with creator J. K. Rowling, to accuse the newspaper of racism.
“Neatly done on lowering one among the best sportswomen alive to racist and sexist tropes and turning a second great sportswoman into a faceless prop,” Rowling wrote on Twitter.
Serena Williams and ‘angry black women’ Cartoonist denies US Open depiction is racist
Some also mentioned Knight had “whitewashed” Osaka, whose father is Haitian and mother Eastern. She was drawn as a white lady with blonde hair.
The cartoonist denied it used to be racist, announcing he had meant to depict only the tennis player’s “negative behaviour”.
Herald Solar editor Damon Johnston also jumped to Knight’s defence, announcing in a tweet that the cool animated film “rightly mocks bad behaviour by way of a tennis legend… Mark has the entire support of everyone”.
Symbol copyright Mark Knight/AFP Image caption Mark Knight’s authentic cool animated film sparked outrage He later shared a picture of the front page, which integrated a series of alternative cartoons the newspaper used to be suggesting may offend the “self-appointed sensors”.
It once again provoked a reaction on social media – with many pointing to the irony of the Bring In Sun having its personal “tantrum”.
“I Am in truth embarrassed for you,” Julie Stoddart mentioned in a tweet, at the same time as Ken McAlpine tweeted: “Negative little newspaper needs a hug.”
Others, however, sponsored the newspaper’s stance.
“this will trigger the eternally angry,” tweeted @RohanCT.
Rants, jeers and tears – ‘most ordinary match’? ‘Sexism doesn’t excuse Williams’ behaviour’
Some Other Twitter consumer, Paul Pellen, added: “Outrage for the sake of shock! Lefties palms must be bleeding! @Knightcartoons, stay it up. There are nonetheless a few of us who enjoy humour.”
Knight’s social media bills, in the meantime, have disappeared.
The cartoonist said on Tuesday that “the world has simply long past crazy”, telling the Australian Broadcasting Organisation it “was near to Serena at the day having a tantrum”.
Knight additionally rejected a proposal that he wouldn’t draw an analogous image of a person. As proof, he tweeted his contemporary caricature of tennis player Nick Kyrgios.