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North Korea’s build up its missile capability to boost its ‘bargaining position’

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Pyongyang said “the missile made a 120 km lateral movement in the flight distance of the hypersonic gliding warhead” before it “precisely hit a set target 700 km away,” the Korean Central News Agency reported.

North Korea is seeking to build up its missile capability in order to boost its “bargaining position,” says one political analyst, who pointed to the country’s latest attempt last week to test-fire a hypersonic missile, according to CNBC.

On Thursday, state media claimed the country had test-fired a “hypersonic missile” the previous day.

“You start the new year and North Korea does this type of test that shines the light back on it,” John Park, director of the Korea Project at the Harvard Kennedy School, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Monday.

“This goes all the way back to February of 2019. That was the last major summit between Kim and Trump,” Park pointed out, referring to the second nuclear summit between then President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, which was cut short when no agreement could be reached.

“From that perspective, [North Korea] is building up the capabilities to have a stronger bargaining position is one interpretation that is growing in terms of popularity right now.”

Hypersonic weapons have both speed and accuracy, according to the Royal United Services Institute. They combine the advantages of ballistic missiles — which are fast but travel along a predictable trajectory — and cruise missiles, which are slower but have greater accuracy, according to analysts from the independent think tank.

South Korea’s Defense Ministry on Friday dismissed North Korea’s claim that it tested a hypersonic missile, saying instead that the regime likely fired a conventional ballistic missile.

“We believe that North Korea’s report dated Jan. 6 on the firing range of their hypersonic missile as well as its capabilities have been exaggerated,” said a defense ministry official in a background briefing.

“The missile [North Korea] claimed as hypersonic was, in fact, a ballistic missile, which precision technology has been upgraded. Our assessment is based on intelligence offered by the U.S. and Japan, in addition to our assessment,” it added.

This was the second reported North Korean test of a hypersonic gliding missile to date — following one in September last year. Pyongyang is seeking to add the sophisticated weapon to its arsenal despite international sanctions and condemnation.

“Hypersonic weaponry represents the most significant advancement in missile technology since ICBMs,” according to an October report by RUSI analysts, who were referring to intercontinental ballistic missiles.

“Thanks to their extreme speed and ability to manoeuvre, hypersonic weapons are on their way to undermining nuclear deterrence postures and creating cracks in strategic stability by the mid-2020s,” the an independent think tank said.

The United Nations Security Council have imposed sanctions on North Korea’s nuclear programs and banned all ballistic missile and nuclear tests from Pyongyang.

“The key thing right now… if you look at the responses and the menu of choices how to respond to what North Korea claims are hypersonic missile tests — those response tools are limited,” noted Park.

A fire swept through a Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh

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A fire swept through a Rohingya refugee camp in southeastern Bangladesh on Sunday, destroying hundreds of homes, according to officials and witnesses, though there were no immediate reports of casualties, according to Reuters

The blaze hit Camp 16 in Cox’s Bazar, a border district where than a million Rohingya refugees live, with most having fled a military-led crackdown in Myanmar in 2017.

Mohammed Shamsud Douza, a Bangladesh government official in charge of refugees, said emergency workers had brought the fire under control. The cause of the blaze has not been established, he added.

A general view of the fire that broke out at the Balukhali rohingya refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, January 9, 2022. REUTERS/Stringer NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES
A general view of the fire that broke out at the Balukhali rohingya refugee camp in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, January 9, 2022. REUTERS/Stringer

devastating fire last March swept through the world’s biggest refugee settlement in Cox’s Bazar, killing at least 15 refugees and burned down more than 10,000 shanties.

China’s Tianjin starts partial lockdown after omicron found

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The first two cases confirmed in Tianjin were a 10-year-old girl and a 29-year-old woman working at an after-school center. Both were infected by the omicron variant. In subsequent testing of close contacts, 18 others tested positive and 767 tested negative as of Saturday night, according to AP.

Those infected include 15 students from 8 to 13 years old, the after-school center staff member and four parents. The citywide testing is to be completed over two days. Tianjin has also closed some subway stations on two lines to try to prevent further spread.

China had reported about a dozen omicron cases previously, most among people who had arrived from abroad and were isolated. In one case in mid-December, the infection was not detected until after the person had completed two weeks of quarantine, and it spread to a few close contacts in the southern city of Guangzhou.

State broadcaster CCTV said the government has divided Tianjin and its 14 million residents into three levels of restrictions, starting with lockdown areas where people are not allowed to leave their homes at all. In control areas, each household is allowed to have one family member leave to buy groceries every other day, while in prevention areas, people must remain inside their immediate neighborhoods.

Buses and trains from Tianjin to Beijing have been suspended and people are being told not to leave the city unless they have pressing business.

The city began mass testing of all its residents on Sunday after a cluster of 20 children and adults tested positive for COVID-19, including at least two with the omicron variant. Another 20 people tested positive on Sunday, bringing the total to 40. Officials said earlier that the virus has been circulating so the number of cases could rise.

China has stepped up its strict zero tolerance strategy in the runup to the Olympics, which open Feb. 4. The Chinese capital is 115 kilometers (70 miles) northwest of Tianjin and many people regularly travel back and forth by car or on a high-speed rail link that takes less than one hour.

Elsewhere, millions of people are being confined to their homes in Xi’an and Yuzhou, two cities that are farther away but have larger outbreaks traced to the delta variant. Residents of Xi’an have been under lockdown for more than two weeks, but the number of new cases in the city of 13 million fell to just 15 on Monday in a sign that restrictions could soon be lifted. Yuzhou is a city of about 1.1 million people in neighboring Henan province.

Another 60 cases were reported Monday in Henan, two of them of the omicron variant, found in the city of Anyang and apparently brought from Tianjin by a college student on Dec. 28, state media outlet The Paper reported. The provincial capital of Zhengzhou has been conducting mass testing and closed its schools. Another 24 cases were reported in the city on Monday.

Doraville Mayor Joseph Geierman Appointed to NLC Leadership Position

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Geierman Will Serve on Transportation & Infrastructure Services Committee

DORAVILLE – Doraville Mayor Joseph Geierman has been appointed Vice Chair of the National League of Cities (NLC) 2022 Transportation & Infrastructure Services (TIS) Federal Advocacy Committee. Geierman was elected to a one-year term and will provide strategic direction and guidance for NLC’s federal advocacy agenda and policy priorities. The appointment was announced by NLC President Mayor Vince Williams of Union City, Georgia.

“Doraville has deep experience with nearly every form of transportation, including trains, commuter rail, cars, and even airports,” said Geierman. “We also have renewed our focus on pedestrian and bike safety to make our city a leader in multimodal transportation. As a member of this committee, I’m now able to take what I have learned from our experiences in Doraville and share that knowledge with our federal leaders to drive our nation’s cities into the future.”

As committee vice chair, Geierman will play a key role among a diverse group of over 50 local leaders in shaping NLC’s policy positions and advocating on behalf of America’s cities and towns before Congress, with the President’s administration, and at home.

“NLC’s federal advocacy committees are a key tool for gathering insights directly from the communities that our members serve,” said NLC President Mayor Vince Williams of Union City, Georgia. “I am excited to have Mayor Geierman’s leadership on the Transportation & Infrastructure Services Committee and look forward to working with him to fulfill the promise of America’s cities, towns and villages.”

The full leadership of this year’s committee will consist of Chair Elaine Clegg, Council President, Boise, ID; Vice Chair Dr. Barbara Odom-Wesley, Council Member, Arlington, TX; and Vice Chair Joseph Geierman, Mayor, Doraville, GA.

For more information on NLC’s federal advocacy committees, visit: www.nlc.org/advocacy/committees.

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The National League of Cities (NLC) is the voice of America’s cities, towns and villages, representing more than 200 million people. NLC works to strengthen local leadership, influence federal policy, and drive innovative solutions.

Myanmar’s Suu Kyi faces 6 years in jail after new sentences

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A court in military-ruled Myanmar on Monday sentenced ousted leader Aung San Suu Kyi to four years in jail on charges including possession of unlicensed walkie-talkies, a source familiar with the proceedings said, according to Reuters.

The latest sentencing in legal proceedings that rights groups have criticised as a farce and a “courtroom circus” means she faces a six-year jail term after two convictions last month.

She is on trial in nearly a dozen cases that carry combined maximum sentences of more than 100 years in prison. She denies all charges. read more

Nobel laureate Suu Kyi, 76, appeared calm when the verdict was read out on Monday in a court in the capital, Naypyitaw, said another source with knowledge of the court proceedings.

Suu Kyi was detained on the day of the Feb. 1 coup and days later, police said six illegally imported walkie-talkies were found during a search of her home.

The court handed her a two-year sentence for breaching an export-import law by possessing the handheld radios and one year for having a set of signal jammers. The two sentences will run concurrently, said the source.

She was also sentenced to two years on another charge of breaching a natural disaster management law related to coronavirus rules, the source said.

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the coup against Suu Kyi’s democratically elected government led to widespread protests and signalled the end of 10 years of tentative political reforms that followed decades of strict military rule.

On Dec. 6, she received a four-year jail sentence for incitement and breaching coronavirus rules.

That sentence, which was later reduced to two years, was met by a chorus of international condemnation.

Rights group Amnesty International said on Twitter on Monday the new convictions were “the latest act in the farcical trial against the civilian leader”

It called for her release along with thousands of others “unjustly detained” since the coup.

“The latest verdict against Aung San Suu Kyi is a politically motivated verdict. Aung San Suu Kyi continues to be the leading champion of democracy in Myanmar,” Berit Reiss-Andersen, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, told Reuters.

“The Nobel Committee is deeply concerned about her situation,” she added.

Clinton Portis sentenced to prison for health care fraud scheme

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Former NFL running back Clinton Portis has been sentenced to six months in prison, with an additional six months of home confinement, after pleading guilty to defrauding a health care program for retired players, according to NYPOST.

Portis agreed to pay back the full amount of $99,264 as part of his guilty plea. He had faced up to 10 years in prison.

Portis, who played nine seasons in the league for the Broncos and Washington Football Team, pleaded guilty in September for defrauding the program of nearly $100,000, filing false claims for medical equipment.

The next player to be sentenced will be ex-Chiefs receiver Tamarick Vanover, set to occur on Jan. 22, per ESPN.

The University of Miami product was drafted by the Broncos in 2002, and rushed for over 3,000 yards in his first two seasons in the NFL. After the 2003 season, he was traded to Washington, where he had a successful stretch that included a Second Team All-Pro selection in 2008.

Fifteen players have now pleaded guilty to participating in the $3.4 million scheme, including former Saints receiver Joe Horn – who was sentenced to three years probation – and former Eagles running back Correll Buckhalter, who received 10 months in prison.

Japanese will have a small serving of McDonald’s fries as it faces shipping snags

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Global shipping operations continue to be severely affected by a mix of factors including COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, extreme weather and a rapid recovery in demand.

Japanese customers will have to settle for a small serving of McDonald’s fries for the next month or so after the fast-food chain said it was limiting portions due to shipping problems, according to Reuters.

McDonald’s Holdings Company Japan said in a statement on Friday that the impact of flood damage on the port of Vancouver and other disruptions since last year would delay an expected shipment of potatoes from North America.

As a result, McDonald’s said that from Sunday it would sell only S-sized fries for about a month “to make sure we have plenty of inventory and our customers can enjoy McDonald’s fries without interruption.”

The fast-food chain took the same step for a week at the end of December at its roughly 2,900 branches in Japan.

Kazakhstan leader orders security forces to ‘kill without warning’ to crush the violent protests

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Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has ordered security forces to “kill without warning” to crush the violent protests that have paralyzed the former Soviet republic and reportedly left dozens dead, according to CNN

In a defiant public address Friday, Tokayev said the unrest that began earlier this week as protests against rising fuel prices had been masterminded by well-trained “terrorist bandits” from both inside and outside the country. Kazakh state media reported Friday that 18 security personnel and 26 “armed criminals” had been killed in violent protests. More than 3,000 people have been detained.

Tokayev said the situation had “stabilized” in Kazakhstan’s largest city, Almaty, and that the “introduction of a state of emergency is yielding results.”

“But terrorists continue to damage state and private property and use weapons against citizens,” he said. “I gave the order to law enforcement agencies and the army to open fire to kill without warning.”

The speech attempted to undermine the narrative that the demonstrations were a product of popular unrest that turned increasingly destructive and deadly. Tokayev said the violence was the product of a well-organized enemy, armed with sleeper cells carrying out “terrorist attacks” and “specialists trained in ideological sabotage, skillfully using disinformation or ‘fakes’ and capable of manipulating people’s moods.”

“Their actions showed the presence of a clear plan of attacks on military, administrative and social facilities in almost all areas, coherent coordination of actions, high combat readiness and bestial cruelty,” Tokayev said. “They need to be destroyed.”

However, several protesters who spoke to international media rejected that characterization.

“We are neither thugs nor terrorists,” one woman said. “The only thing flourishing here is corruption”

Another man told CNN that people “want the truth.”

“The government is rich, but all of these people here have loans to pay. We have our pain, and we want to share it,” he said.

The demonstrations are the biggest challenge yet to the autocrat’s rule, with initial public anger over a rise in fuel prices expanding to wider discontent with the government over corruption, living standards, poverty and unemployment in the oil-rich nation — all of which has been exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, experts say.

“This is a government that is highly detached from the reality of what happens on the ground. It’s a country where there are no institutions through which to protest; the only route is on the streets,” Paul Stronski of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace told CNN.

Child playing with lighter near Christmas tree may ignited deadly Philadelphia fire

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Fast-moving flames were devouring a second-floor kitchen and climbing a stairway connecting the second and the third floors when firefighters, alerted by a 911 call, arrived at the three-story building at 869 N. 23rd St. around 6:40 a.m. Wednesday.

It took about 50 minutes to get the blaze under control, and firefighters were able to rescue a child, authorities said. But the child did not survive.

Two people remained in critical condition Thursday, authorities said. One was taken to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the other to Temple University Hospital, officials said.

“We are devastated by the tragic loss of life — several of whom are children — and my thoughts are with the families and loved ones of the victims. I cannot express how unimaginable this is for loved ones,” Mayor Jim Kenney said Wednesday.

According to NBC, investigators are looking into whether a child playing with a lighter near a Christmas tree ignited the inferno in a Philadelphia row house that left a dozen people dead.

The revelation that “a child age 5 or under” may have been involved in one of the city’s deadliest fires in decades was included in a search warrant application filed in Common Pleas Court after the blaze Wednesday morning.

Details of the warrant were first reported by The Philadelphia Inquirer.

“I can confirm that this detail was included in the warrant that was submitted,” Jane Roh, a spokeswoman for the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office, told NBC News.

“But this is not a criminal investigation. All we did was submit paperwork that would allow investigators access to the scene. This is an investigation that is being led by the Philadelphia Fire Department and the ATF,” Roh said, referring to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The row house in the city’s Fairmount section, which is owned by the Philadelphia Housing Authority, was divided into two apartments, the agency said.

Nichole Tillman, a spokeswoman for the Housing Authority, referred all questions to the Philadelphia fire marshal’s office, which is leading the investigation and has not yet officially determined the cause of the blaze, which killed eight children.

Special Agent Matthew Varisco, who heads the ATF’s office in Philadelphia, said at a news conference earlier Thursday that investigators “haven’t ruled anything out.”

Investigators said they are also looking into why none of the battery-powered smoke alarms in the row house were working.

A search of available property records turned up no reports of code violations at the building, which was built in 1920.

Zhengzhou, iPhone City in China, required all employees be tested

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Hundreds of thousands of workers at iPhone maker Foxconn Technology Group and Huawei Technologies Co. are being tested for Covid-19 as China’s latest outbreak shows no signs of easing, with cases cropping up across the country and technology hub Shenzhen on high alert, according to Bloomberg.

The government in the eastern metropolis of Zhengzhou, known to locals as iPhone City, required that all residents be tested on Friday, including hundreds of thousands of employees on the local Foxconn campus. Huawei’s research campus in Dongguan, meanwhile, started mandatory Covid testing Friday afternoon for all employees, along with staff from at least one manufacturing site in the southern city.

The moves came as Shenzhen discouraged people from leaving the city after separately reporting two new infections, according to a statement from local authorities. Those who need to exit will be required to provide a negative Covid test result starting Saturday. 

China’s National Health Commission on Friday reported 116 new domestically-transmitted cases for the previous day, including 57 in the city of Xi’an and 56 in central Henan province. Three asymptomatic infections were found in Shanghai. 

Still, officials expressed confidence that they would able to maintain China’s resolute Covid Zero stance. “Though we might expect more cases to keep coming, the risk of a substantial rebound in the outbreak has been largely contained,” Li Qun, an official with the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, was quoted as telling state-backed media about Xi’an’s flareup.