Florida Condo Collapse Death Toll Continues to Rise

As rescue workers?searched?through?the rubble of the collapsed condominium?building?in South Florida, the death toll rose Monday evening bringing the?number of people who lost their lives to 28?and the number?of people?still unaccounted for?to?117.

Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue Chief Alan Cominsky told reporters Monday that search-and-rescue crews are “moving full speed ahead” and are now able to safely access all sections of the rubble pile after the remaining portion of the building was imploded Sunday night.

Cominsky said crews are having to be cautious with lightning and wind gusts kicking up debris as the outer bands of Tropical Storm Elsa affect the region.

The National Weather Service said intermittent storms with some heavy rains and gusty winds are expected through the day Tuesday with conditions starting to gradually improve Tuesday evening as the storm moves farther north.

The search-and-rescue crews have been working since the condominium building in Surfside partially collapsed June 24. No one has been found alive since the earliest hours of the search, but Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava continued to describe the operations as a rescue effort as she addressed a Monday briefing.

Levine Cava described the immense scope of the work, saying crews have removed 2.1 million kilograms of concrete from the site. She said she was in awe of their work through difficult and dangerous conditions.

“For 12 days, fire, smoke, and now wind and torrential rain, they are continuing the mission and the search of the collapse area,” Levine Cava told reporters Monday evening.

Search operations were paused Saturday and Sunday amid concerns that the remaining portion of the building was too unstable and could collapse, especially given the approach of a tropical storm.

Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said at the Monday evening briefing that since the rest of the building was taken down, the “site is busier and move active now than I’ve seen it since we began.”

He said heavy equipment that was unable to move around certain parts of the site in the earlier days of the search is now able to operate without limits.

The search for people, he said, “will continue 24 hours a day for the indefinite future until everybody is pulled out of that site.”

Source: Voice Of America

Unvaccinated Americans Put Communities at Risk, Biden Warns

As 10 U.S. states see a spike in coronavirus cases, President Joe Biden warned on Tuesday that “millions of Americans are still unvaccinated and unprotected and, because of that, their communities are at risk.”

In his latest broadcast appeal for people to get vaccinated against COVID-19, the president said the delta variant of the virus, which is more transmissible and potentially more dangerous, is already responsible for half of the cases in many parts of the country.

The states of Kansas and Missouri, in particular, are reporting double-digit percentage surges in infections due to the delta variant.

To respond to further outbreaks anticipated among the unvaccinated, Biden said the federal government is mobilizing COVID-19 surge response teams, staffed with experts from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other agencies.

Those teams will help states with “particular problems [to] prevent, detect and respond to the spread of the delta variant among unvaccinated people in communities with low vaccination rates,” Biden said in a speech from the White House South Auditorium.

“We can’t get complacent now,” the president warned.

Vaccine skeptics

Shortly before Biden spoke, the leader of the opposition Republicans in the U.S. Senate, Mitch McConnell, said in Kentucky, where only about 43% of residents are fully inoculated, “there’s no good reason not to get vaccinated.”

Targeting his remarks at vaccine skeptics, McConnell said while the vaccines do not guarantee one will not get infected from COVID-19 “it almost guarantees you don’t die from it if you get it.”

Vaccine hesitancy, especially among Republicans, is blamed for the Biden administration falling short of?its goal to have?70% of?American?adults?at least partially inoculated against COVID-19?by July 4.?

Only 45% of Republican have received their first dose, according to a?Washington Post-ABC News poll.?The same poll showed 86% of Democrats and 54% of independents had received at least one vaccine shot. Some minority groups are also lagging in getting vaccinated.

The president on Tuesday said that within a few days there will be “160 million fully vaccinated Americans, up from roughly 3 million when we took office five months ago.”

According to the CDC,?about?67% of Americans had?received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine and 47% had received two doses just prior to the Independence Day holiday.

There is a stark regional contrast in vaccination rates.?In the Northeast, more than half of adults are fully vaccinated.??

By contrast,?Southern states are performing poorly.?In Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi, 35% or less of adults have received full doses, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.??

If not in all parts of the United States, there is a desperate demand for those doses in other countries.

Donating vaccines

Biden’s administration on Tuesday announced shipments of Moderna vaccine doses to Guatemala and Vietnam after it fell short of its target of donating 80 million doses to the rest of the world by the end of June.?

All the doses have been allocated, but there have been logistical challenges, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said when asked on Tuesday about the shortfall.

“Sometimes we have to work through legal barriers, we have to work through regulatory barriers. There are issues as it relates to materials needed to distribute these vaccines. And there are also even transportation issues with refrigeration needed as well,” Psaki said during the daily White House briefing prior to the president’s remarks.

“Countries need to be ready to receive them on the ground. And there is no past precedent for this. So, there are certainly lessons that we have learned,” she said.

At a time when vaccine supplies are still limited, there is a need to “figure out what we have excess supply of and how quickly we can export those doses. And in many cases, they may be mRNA vaccines like Pfizer or Moderna, as opposed to the Johnson & Johnson, or even AstraZeneca, that we have some supply of in the U.S. even though it’s not authorized here yet,” said Dr. Krishna Udayakumar, director of the Global Health Innovation Center at Duke University. “There’s a huge amount of country-level planning and country ownership that’s required for this to be successful.”

The 80 million doses pledged by the United States out of the 1 billion promised by the Group of Seven nations will be inadequate for global demand.

Only about 1% of the population in Africa has received any doses, according to the World Health Organization.

“We have locked up in the United States and the G-7 and other EU countries the global supply of the very thing to end this pandemic,” said Tom Hart, acting chief executive officer of the ONE campaign, a group fighting extreme poverty and preventable disease.

“We need 11 billion doses to reach global herd immunity,” Hart added.

Source: Voice Of America

Huya-owned Nimo TV Wins Arbitration Award against Moroccan Livestreamer’s Contractual Breach

GUANGZHOU, China, July 5, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — Nimo TV, HUYA Inc.’s (“Huya”, NYSE: HUYA) international live streaming platform, recently initiated an emergency arbitrator (EA) procedure at the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) against a Moroccan streamer for breaching an Exclusive Cooperation Agreement with Nimo TV. As a result, an interim injunction has been issued to the streamer by the SIAC. By taking swift legal action, Huya has demonstrated that the Chinese Internet company is determined and capable of defending its interests when going global.

The injunction by the SIAC directs that the Moroccan streamer is restrained from carrying out live streaming on platforms, websites, and applications that are not operated by Nimo TV. Additionally, the streamer is prevented from participating in any commercial or promotional activities by any competing platform, including Nonolive, Douyu’s overseas live streaming branch, and the alternative platform that the streamer threatened to switch to. The streamer is also responsible for tens of thousands of dollars of fees, which include the EA fees and Nimo TV’s legal fees.

The international live streaming industry often faces issues when streamers breach contracts by switching platforms. As transnational legal procedures are typically complicated, costly and difficult to execute, many international streamers take advantage of such situations and view their Exclusive Cooperation Agreements as non-binding. Once streamers are offered a higher price, they’ll risk breaching the contracts without worrying about the legal consequences. Contrary to this belief, live streaming platforms, including Nimo TV, highly value the commercial potential of streamers and view them as important partners in content production. In that regard, when going global, it’s crucial for live streaming platforms to ensure that streamers of different nationalities honor their obligations and do not breach contracts.

The EA procedure initiated at the SIAC represents an important milestone for Nimo TV. It only took 14 days from filing the relevant documents to receiving the interim order, which may deter future streamers from breaching their agreements. In addition, the injunction against the Moroccan streamer is likely the first case from the live streaming industry that the SIAC has processed and could provide insights for international live streaming platforms when dealing with the breach of contracts. Nimo TV is now seeking recognition and enforcement of the arbitration decision in the court of Morocco, the streamer’s home country, to secure its interests by legal means.

Biden Will Continue COVID Vaccination Appeal

WASHINGTON – After his administration fell short of its Independence Day vaccination goal, U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday will again appeal to uninoculated Americans to get the shots to protect themselves and others against the coronavirus, especially the latest worrying variant.

Biden is scheduled to make remarks at the White House on the COVID-19 response and the vaccination program as concern increases about the delta variant of the virus spreading across the country.

The Biden administration aimed to have 70% of American adults at least partially vaccinated against COVID-19 by July 4. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Protection said Friday that 67% have received one dose of a COVID vaccine; 47% have received two doses.

The president declared a partial victory during Independence Day festivities Sunday evening at the White House, where he and first lady Jill Biden personally greeted many of the 1,000 invited first responders, essential workers and military service members.

“We’re back traveling again. We’re back seeing one another again. Businesses are opening and hiring again,” Biden told the attendees during a 15-minute speech in which he declared near independence from the pandemic. “Today, all across this nation we can say with confidence: America is coming back together.”

The president cautioned, however, the battle against the virus – which has killed more than 600,000 Americans, is not yet over.

“Don’t get me wrong — COVID-19 has not been vanquished,” said Biden. “We all know powerful variants have emerged. But the best defense against these variants is to get vaccinated.

Getting the shot, the president said, is the “most patriotic” thing that can be done.

There is a stark regional contrast in vaccination rates. In the Northeast, more than half of adults are fully vaccinated.

In contrast, Southern states are performing poorly. In Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi, 35% or less of adults have received full doses, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

There is also a political divide.

Only 45% of Republicans have received their first dose, according to a?Washington Post-ABC News poll.??

Those who hesitate to get vaccinated, for whatever reason, need to reassess their thinking, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, the president’s chief medical advisor and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

“We’re dealing with a historic situation with this pandemic and we do have the tools to counter it,” said Fauci on Sunday during an appearance on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press.’ “So for goodness sake, put aside all of those differences and realize the common enemy is this virus and we do have the tool, a highly effective tool, against this virus.”

Fauci said 99% of recent coronavirus deaths in the United States involved unvaccinated people.

Amid the spread of the delta variant of the virus, believed to be more infectious, the federal government is preparing to send surge response teams to Southern and Western states seeing outbreaks.

“The federal government stands ready with a whole-of-government effort to work with local officials to increase vaccinations, to provide increased testing and also therapeutics to ensure that people don’t get sick who have contracted the disease,” said White House COVID-19 response coordinator Jeffrey Zients on the CBS program “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

Source: Voice of America

Suspected Ransomware Group Demands $70 Million

Hackers suspected of being behind a massive ransomware attack have made a demand of $70 million in cryptocurrency in exchange for unlocking all of the affected systems.

The demand appeared Sunday on a dark web site used by the Russia-linked REvil gang.

The cyberattack Friday hit the systems of hundreds of companies and public agencies across the world.

It involved a breach of the Miami-based software company Kaseya, which called the attack “sophisticated.”

Kaseya said in a statement it had a detection tool available for customers to see if their systems were infiltrated, and that it hoped to begin bringing its data centers back online by the end of Monday.

The FBI said REvil was responsible for a late May ransomware attack that shut down the operations of JBS, the world’s largest meat processing company.

U.S. President Joe Biden on Saturday referred to his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin last month, suggesting the United States would hold Russia responsible if it were linked to the attack.

“If it is, either with the knowledge of and/or a consequence of Russia, then I told Putin we will respond,” Biden told reporters.

Source: Voice of America

Coronavirus Variants, Vaccination Rate Challenges Loom as US Hits ‘Summer of Joy’

The COVID-19 narrative in the United States a year ago was one of hospitalizations, shifting state-by-state regulations, and hoping and waiting for vaccines to emerge, as the country was on the upswing of a second surge of infections.

It would be a long wait, and a painful one, with millions more cases and hundreds of thousands of deaths to come.

The story of 2021, on the other hand, is about vaccinations and variants of the virus, two related and competing forces set to shape American life.

Dr. William Schaffner, a professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, told VOA that while the United States has seen a substantial reduction in cases, progress has flattened out, and the delta variant is “now picking off unvaccinated people.”

“A very telling statistic is that if you look at who’s being hospitalized today, who are the people getting so sick with COVID that they need to come into the hospital, 90-plus percent of them are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated,” Schaffner said. “In other words, the vaccines are keeping vaccinated people out of the hospital. They’re doing their job. But there are so many unvaccinated people that the virus keeps finding them, making them sick and admitting them to the hospital, all of which is preventable.”

Tale of two holidays

July 4, 2020, saw a relatively subdued celebration of the Independence Day holiday, with cities and towns canceling their annual fireworks celebrations and people opting to stay home instead of attending picnics and parties.

Roughly 500 people were dying each day in the United States. The country was a few days away from tallying its 3 millionth confirmed case of COVID-19.

To listen to President Donald Trump speak at a White House celebration that day, the situation was not that bad.

“We’ve made a lot of progress. Our strategy is moving along well,” Trump said. “It goes out in one area and rears back its ugly face in another area. But we’ve learned a lot. We’ve learned how to put out the flame.”

The surge found its peak a few weeks later, claiming 1,100 lives on an average day and infecting 68,000 more people. The president thanked frontline medical workers in attendance on the South Lawn of the White House and touted the government’s shipments of ventilators to other nations in need.

Independence Day this year is shadowed by a grim past, with more than 600,000 dead in the U.S. — the most of any country — but a brighter present, with new cases at levels lower than those seen in the early days of the outbreak. Medical workers who scrambled last year to figure out how to combat a new and deadly disease now have extensive experience doing so.

“The major change is that we have vaccines, of course, but also we have a sense of how to treat patients with COVID-19,” said Dr. Taison Bell, assistant professor of medicine in the divisions of infectious disease and pulmonary/critical care medicine at the University of Virginia. “I wouldn’t say that we completely feel comfortable taking care of patients, because this still is a relatively new disease, but we still have a sense of what we should do.”

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized three COVID-19 vaccines for emergency use — those made by Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson — with everyone age 12 and older eligible to get the shots.

Those vaccines, the culmination of a U.S.-government-backed program that was only seven weeks old this time last year, have been a major focus of the administration of President Joe Biden, who pledged to get 100 million doses in arms during his first 100 days in office.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention achieved more than double that amount. The CDC now says the United States has administered 324 million doses, with about 154 million people, including 57% of adults, fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Biden in recent months has pointed to July 4 as a milestone for the nation, and despite falling short of his aim to have 70% of adults receive one vaccination dose by Independence Day, he says the country is heading into what he calls a “summer of joy.”

But while the White House is hosting what press secretary Jen Psaki calls “a party for frontline workers and men and women who served our country,” administration and health officials have expressed unease about the number of people who remain unvaccinated.

“The truth is that deaths and hospitalizations are drastically down in places where people are getting vaccinated,” Biden said in mid-June. “But unfortunately, cases and hospitalizations are not going down. So even while we’re making incredible progress, it remains a serious and deadly threat.”

Variant challenges

That threat has become even more deadly because of virus variants, including the delta variant that the CDC says spreads more easily and may cause more serious forms of the disease.

Bell said the current vaccines provide very good protection against the delta variant, but he emphasized the risk of allowing new variants to develop.

“Could there be another variant down the road that could potentially have the mutation that could help it escape vaccines, and then we have to go back to the drawing board for square one? That certainly is possible, but I hope that with ongoing vaccination efforts we can keep the number of circulating virus down, and that’s really the risk factor for increasing variants,” Bell said.

As it did last year, the U.S. government is turning over some excess COVID-19 treatment supplies to help other countries deal with global shortages. And there is an effort to get supplies of vaccines out to boost access in low- and middle-income countries and mitigate the spread of variants that could undermine the progress the United States has made.

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said this week that there have been encouraging signs from vaccine-producing nations committing to share doses, but that the vaccine needs to arrive faster.

“More than 77% of all vaccine doses have been administered in just 10 countries,” he told attendees at the Small Island Developing States Summit for Health. “Meanwhile, most lower-income countries still do not have enough vaccine to cover their most vulnerable and at-risk populations, let alone the rest of their populations.”

Schaffner said people in the United States need to be reminded that the pandemic classification means it is not restricted to the U.S. and that it “will not be over until we can do something about the entire world’s population.”

“We really have an interest, not just the humanitarian interest, but we have a self-interest in curtailing this pandemic around the world,” Schaffner said.

Source: Voice of America

50 Years After his Death, Fans Honor Jim Morrison in Paris

PARIS – Paris on Saturday was the only place to be for die-hard Jim Morrison fans.

Fifty years after his death at age 27, rock music lovers from France and across the world came to the Pere-Lachaise cemetery in eastern Paris where The Doors’ frontman is buried. Many brought candles and pictures, and some burned incense sticks near his grave as police watched nearby.

“Jim and The Doors have been heroes of ours since we were kids. It’s an honor to be here and celebrate the 50th anniversary of his death today,” said Dutuar Platzek.

The 50-year-old fan made the trip from Halle, Germany with his childhood friend Mathias Barthel. The two had not been back to the Pere-Lachaise cemetery in over 25 years.

Year after year, the place has become a pilgrimage for fans of Morrison, known for his dark lyrics, wavy locks, leather pants, steely gaze and theatrical stage presence. He propelled The Doors to several major hits between 1965 and 1971, including “Light My Fire,” “Hello I Love You,” “Touch Me” and “Riders on the Storm.”

Michelle Campbell was 21 when Morrison died in 1971, living in Texas and studying photography. Her first “July 3rd” — the anniversary of Morrison’s death — was in 1989. Back then, the grave was unmarked and a fan had crafted a wooden cross.

She’s since moved to Paris and has been coming to Pere-Lachaise almost every year, taking photographs of Morrison’s grave and his fans, many of whom have become friends.

“[It’s like] people sitting around on couches in someone’s apartment, rather than a grave’s, just talking and meeting each other,” she recalled. “It was really lovely … I still come as much as I can because it’s just always so wonderful.”

Colleen Amblard drove seven hours from her hometown of Domancy, in the French Alps, to visit the grave. The 21-year-old student told The Associated Press “It’s very emotional to be here, to remember Jim Morrison … to show that he’s not forgotten.”

“We acknowledge his talent and the fact that he was a brilliant person, he was really a genius,” she said.

Like many other fans, Amblard was planning to visit other sites Morrison spent time in while living in Paris, from his apartment to the former nightclub where some say he died of an heroin overdose.

Born in 1943 in Melbourne, Florida, Morrison was the son of a U.S. Navy officer and moved constantly as a child, growing up in Florida, Virginia, Texas, New Mexico and California.

He said he witnessed the aftermath of a terrible car accident on a Native American reservation as a child, an event that loomed large in his later lyrics and poetry. An avid reader, he was heavily influenced by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, the poet Arthur Rimbaud and the surrealist dramatist Antonin Artaud.

In 1965, while living in Los Angeles’ bohemian neighborhood of Venice Beach and frequently taking LSD, he and keyboardist Ray Manzarek, a fellow UCLA film student, founded The Doors. Guitarist Robby Krieger and drummer John Densmore joined soon after.

Morrison and The Doors would burn brightly, releasing albums “The Doors” and “Strange Days” in 1967, “The Soft Parade” in 1968 and “Morrison Hotel” in 1970. Morrison’s dynamic stage presence was on full display during appearances on “The Ed Sullivan Show” and at the Hollywood Bowl.

But the band would burn out quickly as Morrison sank into alcoholism. He was twice arrested for his on-stage antics, including a Miami concert that saw him convicted of indecent exposure and profanity. He received a posthumous pardon in 2010.

Morrison made his final album with The Doors, “L.A. Woman,” in 1971, and moved to Paris soon afterwards.

There, on July 3, 1971, he was found dead in a bathtub. No autopsy was performed and accounts of what caused his death are disputed.

He was one of several rock stars — including Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain and the Rolling Stones’ Brian Jones — to die at 27.

His status as a mythic figure for rock fans has never waned. On the 20th anniversary of his death in 1991, the Oliver Stone-directed biopic “The Doors” was released, starring Val Kilmer as Morrison.

Source: Voice of America

Major Swedish Supermarket Chain Hit by Cyberattack

STOCKHOLM – One of Sweden’s biggest supermarket chains said Saturday it had to temporarily close around 800 stores nationwide after a cyberattack blocked access to its checkouts.

“One of our subcontractors was hit by a digital attack, and that’s why our checkouts aren’t working any more,” Coop Sweden, which accounts for around 20 percent of the sector, said in a statement.

“We regret the situation and will do all we can to reopen swiftly,” the cooperative added.

Coop Sweden did not name the subcontractor or reveal the hacking method used against it beginning on Friday evening.

But the attack comes as a wave of ransomware attacks has struck worldwide, especially in the United States.

Ransomware attacks typically involve locking away data in systems using encryption, making companies pay to regain access.

Last year, hackers extorted at least $18 billion using such software, according to security firm Emsisoft.

US IT company Kaseya on Friday urged customers to shut down servers running its VSA platform after dozens were hit with ransomware.

In recent weeks, such attacks have hit oil pipelines, health services and major firms, and made it onto the agenda of US President Joe Biden’s June meeting with Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.

Source: Voice of America