United States of
America believes it is a chance Turkey will decide against buying a Russian air
defense system whose proposed purchase has strained relations between the NATO
allies, official sources said on Thursday.Washington has warned for months that
Turkey's adoption of the Russian S-400 missile system would endanger Western
defense and jeopardize Ankara's planned purchase of 100 of the US's F-35
stealth fighter jets.Asked if Turkey may ultimately change its mind on the
S-400, deputy US defense secretary Heather Wilson replied "it's
possible.""The diplomats are continuing the work on that," she
said, reiterating that the S-400 is "incompatible with having the
F-35."The US in April placed a freeze on a joint F-35 manufacturing
program with Turkey, and US law furthermore provides for sanctions on any
country concluding arms deals with Russian companies.Two of the planes were
delivered to Turkey in June 2018 but remain at a US Air Force base near
Phoenix, Arizona, officially so Turkish pilots can train on them."We're
continuing to train the Turkish pilots at Luke Air Force Base but we don't
think that we can deliver those aircraft into a country that has the
S-400," Wilson said. But Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said last month
that Turkey is aware of the US's concerns.Ankara says it won't reconsider
purchasing the S-400 air defense system and that delivery of the first of the
equipment may come as soon as June or July.
17 May 2019
16 May 2019
hidden world of doctors cuba sends overseas
Fidel Castro described the medics as Cuba's `army of white
coats`. Absolutely it was proved in many ongoing occasions. Cuba has long been
renowned for its medical diplomacy- thousands of its doctors work in health care
missions around the world, earning the country billions of dollars in cash. But
according to a new report, some of the doctors themselves say conditions can be
nightmarish - controlled by minders, subject to a curfew and posted to
extremely dangerous places said press reports. Dayli, now 31 years old, wanted
to be an intensive care specialist. She says that after graduating, she was
told that if she went on a medical mission to Venezuela, she would gain
experience in her chosen field and that it would count as her three years of
obligatory social service, which all graduates have to complete in Cuba before
gaining full-status posts.`I studied medicine out of vocation. I used to sleep
between three and four hours because I studied so hard. I worked hard in my
first year of practice, I took on a lot of extra shifts. And now here I am. I
cannot be a doctor in Cuba. It's very frustrating.` In October 2011, the young
doctor was posted to a clinic in the Venezuelan town of El Sombrero. `There
were many criminal gangs,` says Dayli. `When they fought, they brought their
injured to us, because the local Venezuelan hospital had a police presence, and
we didn't. These kids would bring in a patient with 12 or 15 bullets in his
body, point their guns at you and say you had to save him. If he died, you
would die. That kind of thing happened on a daily basis. It was routine.` The
wages on offer were another strong incentive for Dayli, who is originally from
the small Cuban city of Camagüey, to join up. Going from a doctor's salary on
the island of just $15 a month in 2011, she says she was paid $125 monthly for
the first six months in Venezuela, a figure that rose to $250 after six months
and $325 during her third year. Her family in Cuba also received a bonus of $50
a month. According to a report by Prisoners Defenders, a Spain-based NGO that
campaigns for human rights in Cuba and is linked to the Patriotic Union of Cuba
(UNPACU) opposition group, doctors on average receive between 10% and 25% of
the salary paid by the host countries, with the rest being kept by Cuba's
authorities.With more than 30,000 Cuban doctors currently active in 67
countries - many in Latin America and Africa, but also European nations
including Portugal and Italy. Cuba's authorities draw up strict rules in an
attempt to prevent citizens defecting once abroad.
15 May 2019
chinese dad trains pet dog to watch his daughter do homework
A good dog is now going viral in China after being taught by the
family’s father to watch over his daughter as she does her homework. The dog
was trained by the girl’s father, surnamed Xu, to put its front paws up on the
table and watch over her so that she doesn’t get distracted when she does her
homework every night, according to press reports. Xu decided to train the dog
when he noticed that his daughter often played on her smartphone instead of
doing her homework.In this particular video that’s been circulating on Chinese
social media, the good dog can be seen patiently watching over the girl. `I
trained it to guard food from the cat when it was young," says Xu Liang of
southwestern China's Guizhou province. "Then one day, I found my daughter
was naughty when she was doing her homework. I came up with an idea to let
Fantuan watch over its sister, supervise her to do her homework.`
14 May 2019
UN chief meets NZ mosque victims, decries online hate
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres visited the Al Noor mosque, one of
two Muslim centers in the New Zealand city where a self-described white
supremacist killed 51 people in a March 15
shooting that the attacker live-streamed on Facebook. He warned hate speech was
spreading online `like wildfire` at a meeting with victims of the Christchurch
mosque shootings Tuesday, vowing the world body will lead efforts to extinguish
the problem.Guterres The UN chief is traveling the South Pacific to highlight
the impact of climate change but said he also wanted to show his support for
Christchurch’s Muslim community during Ramadan.`I know there are no words to
relieve the hurt and sorrow and pain, but I wanted to come here personally to
transmit love, support and total and complete admiration,` he said.He told
victims of the worst mass shooting in modern New Zealand history that there had
been `a dangerous upsurge in hatred` as social media was exploited to promote
bigotry.`Hate speech is spreading like wildfire in social media. We must
extinguish it,` the Portuguese diplomat said.`There is no room for hate speech
— online or offline.`He highlighted a previously announced plan for his special
adviser on genocide prevention Adama Dieng to combat online extremism.He said
Dieng’s mission was to `bring together a United Nations team to scale up our
response to hate speech and present a global plan of action.`His remarks come
as New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, who hosted Guterres when he
arrived in Auckland on Sunday, embarks on her own quest to tame social media in
Paris this week. She has been highly critical of social media giants in the
wake of the Christchurch killings, saying they should be `taking ownership and
responsibility over their platforms.`Ardern will co-host a meeting of world
leaders and tech firms to promote a `Christchurch call` aimed at curbing online
extremism.
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