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Nepali mountaineer scaled Everest for the 26th time

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Nepali mountaineer Kami Rita Sherpa made history Saturday after summiting Mount Everest for the 26th time. Sherpa was already a world record holder, having broken the record for summiting Everest five times in four years.

On Saturday, 52-year-old mountain guide broke the previous world record of 25 ascents of the world’s tallest mountain, which he set last May.

Kami Rita’s life has been tied to the mountain since he was a child. His father, Mingma Tshering Sherpa, was one of the first professional guides on Everest when Nepal began allowing international climbers in 1950. And Kami Rita had worked as a porter transporting gear to Everest’s base camp since he was 12.

Mount Everest is part of the Himalayan Mountain Range in Central Asia’s Tibetan Plateau, nicknamed the “Roof of the World.” Everest reaches to about 29,032 feet above sea level, though that number can change.

The first people on record to conquer the mountain were New Zealand mountaineer Edmund Hillary and his Nepali partner Tenzing Norgay in 1953. Several thousand have now summited Everest in the nearly 70 years since. The mountain has also claimed the lives of over 300 adventure seekers.

The same day Kami Rita broke his record, Russian climber Pavel Kostrikin died at Camp I Saturday night, The Kathmandu Post reported, marking the second death of the season.

Kami Rita has set and broken the world record for Everest ascents almost every spring for the past four years.

With more than 35 years of mountaineering experience, Kami Rita is a world-renowned climber. He first set the record for Everest summits at 22 in May 2018, after having shared the 21-summit record with two other climbers.

He broke that the following year when he conquered Everest a 23rd time on May 15, 2019, according to Guinness World Records. Kami Rita broke his own record six days later with his 24th summit.

It’s possible that Kami Rita could have achieved an even higher summit count by now had it not been for the COVID-19 pandemic. Nepal and China canceled the 2020 climbing season. When Everest reopened the following year, Kami Rita broke his record once again, with his 25th successful summit.

Kami Rita didn’t make it to the top on his first attempt in 1992, he told Guinness. He did, however, finish the climb two years later.

Beijing loyalist John Lee elected as Hong Kong’s next leader

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John Lee, a hard-line security chief who oversaw a crackdown on Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, was elected as the city’s next leader on Sunday in a vote cast by a largely pro-Beijing committee, reported by AP.

Lee was the only candidate and won with over 99% of the vote in which nearly all 1,500 committee members were carefully vetted by the central government in Beijing.

More than 150 people have been arrested under the security law, which outlaws secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces in the city’s affairs. Almost all prominent pro-democracy activists have been jailed, with others fleeing abroad or being intimidated into silence.

Thousands of residents have left the city of 7.4 million people amid the 2019 protests and subsequent harsh pandemic restrictions, including many professionals and expatriates.

In his election campaign in the weeks leading up to Sunday’s polls, Lee pledged to enact long-shelved local legislation to protect against security threats and vowed to increase housing supply in the world’s most expensive real estate market.

He also said he would improve the city’s competitiveness and set a firm foundation for Hong Kong’s development.

He will replace current leader Carrie Lam on July 1. Her five-term was marked by huge pro-democracy protests calling for her resignation, a security crackdown that has quashed virtually all dissent, the recent COVID-19 wave that had overwhelmed the health system — events that have undermined Hong Kong’s reputation as an international business hub with Western-style freedoms.

“I look forward to all of us starting a new chapter together, building a Hong Kong that is caring, open and vibrant, and a Hong Kong that is full of opportunities and harmony,” Lee said in his victory speech.

Lam congratulated Lee in a statement and said she would submit the election results to Beijing.

The election followed major changes to Hong Kong’s electoral laws last year to ensure that only “patriots” loyal to Beijing can hold office. The legislature was also reorganized to all but eliminate opposition voices.

The elaborate arrangements surrounding the predetermined outcome speak to Beijing’s desire for a veneer of democracy. The committee members voted in a secret ballot, and Lee’s 1,416 votes were the highest support ever for the city’s top leadership position.

Without opposition, Lee would likely have easier time governing Hong Kong compared to Lam, said Ivan Choy, a senior lecturer at the Chinese University of Hong Kong’s Department of Government and Public Administration.

“A major reason for easier governance is that the electoral system has changed,” he said. “In the legislature and the election committee, there is almost no political opposition and the political spectrum is concentrated towards the pro-establishment camp.”

“With no democrats, it will be easier for the chief executive to govern as there are fewer checks and balances,” he said.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that Lee’s election “violates democratic principles and political pluralism in Hong Kong.”

“Selection process is yet another step in the dismantling of the ‘one country, two systems’ principle,” Borrell tweeted.

The Chinese government’s liaison office in Hong Kong congratulated Lee and said the election was conducted in a “fair, just and orderly manner in accordance with laws and regulations.”

Mainland China’s Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office of the State Council said in its congratulatory note that the “successful election” proved that the city’s new electoral system is “good” and in line with the “one country, two systems” framework that Hong Kong is governed by.

Critics say freedom of speech and assembly that Hong Kong was promised to keep for 50 years when it was handed over by Britain to China in 1997 has vanished as Beijing exerts greater control over the territory.

On Sunday morning, three members of the League of Social Democrats, a local activist group, protested the election by attempting to march toward the election venue while displaying a banner demanding universal suffrage that would allow Hong Kongers to vote both for the legislature and the chief executive.

“Human rights over power, the people are greater than the country,” the banner read. “One person, one vote for the chief executive. Immediately implement dual universal suffrage.”

One protester was handing out flyers before police arrived and cordoned them off. Police also searched the protesters’ belongings and took down their personal details, though they made no immediate arrests.

The pro-democracy camp in Hong Kong has long demanded universal suffrage, which they say is promised in its mini-constitution, the Basic Law. It was also a key demand during massive protests in 2014 and 2019.

Lee’s role as Hong Kong’s next leader has sparked concern that Beijing could further tighten its grip. He spent most of his civil service career in the police and security bureau, and is a staunch supporter of a national security law imposed on Hong Kong in 2020 to stamp out dissent.

As security secretary during 2019 clashes between police and demonstrators, he oversaw the use of tear gas and rubber bullets and arrests that snuffed out further protests.

Asian Games in China postponed because of spread of COVID

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Less than three months after Beijing hosted the Winter Olympics and Paralympics, the Olympic Council of Asia said Friday that this year’s Asian Games in China are being postponed because of concerns about the spreading omicron variant of COVID-19 in the country.

According to AP, the OCA said it had not picked new dates but said they would be announced “in the near future” after talks with local organizers and the Chinese Olympic Committee.

The OCA statement said local organizers were “very well prepared to deliver the games on time despite the global challenges. However, the decision was taken by all the stakeholders after carefully considering the pandemic situation and the size of the games.”

The strict “zero-COVID” policy has been closely identified with President Xi Jinping, the head of the ruling Communist Party, and was strongly reaffirmed at a meeting of the party’s all-powerful Politburo Standing Committee on Thursday.

“Relaxation will undoubtedly lead to massive numbers of infections, critical cases and deaths, seriously impacting economic and social development and people’s lives and health,” the the official Xinhua News Agency said in its summary of the meeting’s conclusions.

The meeting “stressed the importance of unswervingly adhering to the dynamic zero-COVID policy and resolutely fighting any attempts to distort, question or dismiss China’s anti-COVID policy.”

China on Friday reported a total of 4,628 new COVID-19 cases, the vast majority of them asymptomatic and detected in Shanghai, China’s largest city which lies about 177 kilometers (110 miles) east of Hangzhou.

The postponement reflects a growing concern among the Chinese leadership about rapidly spreading outbreaks from Shanghai to Beijing in an important political year. The ruling Communist Party is holding a major meeting this fall and doesn’t want any signs of instability, pandemic-related or not.

China is staying with a “zero-COVID” strategy of lockdowns and other restrictions despite the economic costs and the fact that many other countries around the world are loosening up and trying to live with the virus.

China’s state-run television also reported the Asian Games postponement in a brief statement, but did not specify anything about rescheduling.

The Asian Games were to take place from Sept. 10-25 in the eastern city of Hangzhou and would involve more than 11,000 athletes — more than the typical Summer Olympics. The last edition was in 2018 in Jakarta, Indonesia.

The World University Games, another major multi-sport event, have also been postponed, organizers said Friday. They were scheduled for last year but were postponed until 2022. They were to take place this year from June 26-July 7 in the western city of Chengdu. About 6,000 athletes were believed to be involved.

The Switzerland-based International University Sports Federation, which runs the games, said they would be held in 2023 but gave no date or details.

“Continued uncertainty over conditions has made rescheduling the sensible choice,” FISU president Leonz Eder said in a statement.

Both events were expected to take place using the “closed-loop” system that was in place for the Beijing Olympics and Paralympics. It kept athletes and media isolated from the general population of Beijing and required daily tests and frequent temperature checks for everyone involved.

The Winter Olympics were a relatively small event with only 2,900 athletes. The Winter Paralympics had about 700.

The spread of the omicron variant in Shanghai and Beijing seems to have made holding both events impossible, even though just a few weeks ago organizers said both events would go ahead. Much of Shanghai — a finance, manufacturing and shipping hub — has been locked down, disrupting people’s lives and dealing a blow to the economy.

The OCA also announced that the Asian Youth Games, which were scheduled for Dec. 20-28 in Shantou, China, would be canceled. The youth games, which had already been postponed once, will next be held in 2025 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

Two international track meets scheduled to be held in China this year were also called off.

The Diamond League meets in Shanghai and Shenzhen were taken off the calendar “due to travel restrictions and strict quarantine requirements currently in place for entry into China,” organizers said in a statement.

Organizers said a substitute event will be held in Chorzow, Poland, on Aug. 6.

US economy adds 428K jobs in April, beating forecasts

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America’s employers added 428,000 jobs in April, extending a streak of solid hiring that has defied punishing inflation, chronic supply shortages, the Russian war against Ukraine and much higher borrowing costs, according to NYPOST.

Friday’s jobs report from the Labor Department showed that last month’s hiring kept the unemployment rate at 3.6%, just above the lowest level in a half-century.

The economy’s hiring gains have been remarkably consistent in the face of the worst inflation in four decades.

Employers have added at least 400,000 jobs for 12 straight months.

Yet it’s unclear how long the jobs boom will continue.

John Lynch, the chief investment officer for Comerica Wealth Management in Charlotte, sounded a cautiously optimistic tone, saying that the jobs report could be a sign of “easing inflation fears.”

“Today’s report is balanced and may prove to dampen the extreme volatility of recent days,” he said.

“We’re still not out of the woods, yet a clearing is visible.”

unemployment rate
Friday’s jobs report showed that last month’s hiring kept the unemployment rate at 3.6%.

The Federal Reserve this week raised its key rate by a half-percentage point — its most aggressive move since 2000 — and signaled further large rate hikes to come.

As the Fed’s rate hikes take effect, they will make it increasingly expensive for consumers and businesses to borrow, spend and hire.

In addition, the vast economic aid that the government had been supplying to households has expired.

And Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has helped accelerate inflation and clouded the economic outlook. Some economists warn of a growing risk of recession.

The latest jobs report indicates that unemployment is at 3.6% -- just above the lowest level in 50 years.
The latest jobs report indicates that unemployment is at 3.6% — just above the lowest level in 50 years.

“There’s no getting away from the fact that the payrolls number could and would likely be higher, perhaps substantially higher, if employers were having more success finding the workers they want and needed,” Mark Hamrick, a senior analyst with Bankrate, told The Post.

“In other cycles, restraint on payrolls growth would be seen as indicative of weak demand. As with so many things, the pandemic has turned the world upside down.”

Hamrick said that the 428,000 jobs added “is in line with expectations.”

“Labor force participation, or the gauge of those either working or looking for work, remains below pre-pandemic levels, depriving employers of candidates to fill jobs,” he said.

The strong jobs numbers come just days after the Fed raised its key rate by a half-percentage point.
The strong jobs numbers come just days after the Fed raised its key rate by a half-percentage point.

Amber Heard and Johnny Depp almost came face to face in court

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Amber Heard and Johnny Depp almost came face to face in court after her harrowing testimony Thursday.

Heard, 36, was getting off the stand for a court recess after she broke down in sobs as she attempted to describe Depp, 58, allegedly abusing her with a bottle, reported by NYPOST.

Depp, who is blind in his left eye and nearsighted in his right, seemed to walk up to the stand in Heard’s direction — when the former couple appeared to nearly make eye contact.

Depp, who was left with a severed finger after the incident, trashed the mansion while never going to sleep that night, writing on the walls of the home with blood from his fingertip, Heard told the jury.

“As Mr. Depp’s counsel correctly predicted in their opening statements last month, Ms. Heard did indeed deliver ‘the performance of her life’ in her direct examination,” a spokesperson for Depp told The Post in a statement.

Heard, looking frightened, took a step back from her ex-husband before a court officer put his hand toward Depp’s chest.

The “Edward Scissorhands” actor appeared to shrug and turn away as a female court officer escorted Heard back to her seat, while Depp went out the back of the courthouse for a smoke during a 15-minute break.

The “Pirates of the Caribbean” star has been keeping his eyes away from Heard since their bombshell defamation trial began on April 11.

Depp has been taking notes throughout the trial, and was spotted holding a notebook that read “Built To Last” with a drawing of a green figure with a crown on its head.

Depp approached the stand as the court went to recess.
Depp approached the stand as the court went to recess.
Heard testified about a 2015 fight in Australia she had with Depp where she claimed he penetrated her with a liquor bottle.
The 2015 fight is when Depp severed his finger.

He is suing Heard for defamation over her 2018 op-ed in the Washington Post in which she described herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” Depp was never mentioned by name in the piece, but he claims it clearly referenced him.

During Heard’s direct examination, she described a traumatic fight in March 2015 while the then-married couple was staying in Australia as Depp worked on the fifth “Pirates of the Caribbean” film.

Heard said in her dramatic testimony the couple argued over Depp’s drinking before he held a broken bottle of booze to her face and threatened to cut her up. She said he ripped off her clothes and penetrated her with a bottle during the massive fight.

Texas high schooler charged with murdering fellow student inside their high school bathroom

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Caysen Tyler Allison mugshot.
Caysen Tyler Allison was arrested off campus about 20 minutes after the fight.Belton Police Department

According to NYPOST, a Texas teenager was charged with murder for allegedly fatally stabbing a fellow student inside their high school bathroom this week, police said.

Caysen Tyler Allison, 18, is accused of killing Jose Luis “Joe” Ramirez Jr. after the two got into a fight at Belton High School on Tuesday morning, the Belton Police Department said.

The deadly violence had triggered a lockdown at the high school, after which students were released one by one to parents, reports KWTX.

“It’s too close to home. You hear it all the time, but when it actually happens at home, it’s shocking because you start thinking about the community and you think of the people you work closely with that also have children going here,” said parent Sarah Lopez.

Ramirez was taken to the hospital and died from his injuries.

Allison was arrested off campus about 20 minutes after the fight. He was charged with murder on Wednesday and booked into the Bell County Jail with a $1 million bond.

All classes at Belton High School were canceled Thursday.

Tokyo consumer prices rise at fastest pace in seven years

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Core consumer prices in Tokyo, considered a leading indicator of Japanese price trends, rose 1.9% in April from a year earlier, marking the fastest annual pace in seven years, government data showed on Friday.

The increase in inflation, driven mostly by food costs and the dissipating effect of past cellphone fee cuts, underscores a common view among economists that Japan will see price rises accelerate to the central bank’s 2% target in coming months, reported by Reuters.

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) last week raised its forecast for this year’s inflation rate but kept its ultra-loose monetary policy unchanged, stressing its resolve to maintain massive stimulus until inflationary pressures were accompanied by wage rises and stronger demand.

“By looking at the core-core CPI, Japan’s price inflation stands at a fairly high level compared to its past trends, so in theory the BOJ should naturally shift its monetary policy to the direction of tightening,” said Takahide Kiuchi, executive economist at Nomura Research Institute.

“There is an increasing risk of a downward (economic) spiral to kick off, where consumption is dragged down by a weak yen and rising prices, which decrease workers’ real wages.”

“The nationwide (core) inflation may rise above 2% in April-June…as the picture has been the same in recent months – food price hikes have been widening,” said Takumi Tsunoda, senior economist at Shinkin Central Bank Research Institute.

“Meanwhile, it may not keep accelerating further as the pace of the energy price inflation is slowing.”

The rise in the Tokyo core consumer price index (CPI) was faster than a median market forecast for a 1.8% gain and followed a 0.8% increase for March. The index excludes fresh food, which is a volatile factor, but includes energy items.

That marked the fastest gain since March 2015, when the index rose 2.2%.

In the overall reading, which includes fresh food costs, Tokyo CPI increased 2.5% in April from a year before, the fastest growth since October 2014.

The fading effect of cellphone fee cuts last year pushed up the overall CPI by 0.80 points, while non-fresh food prices drove it up by 0.17 points, the data showed.

To-go sushi packages, hamburgers and breads saw the biggest price hikes among food items in April, according to a government official.

Energy prices in Tokyo rose 24.6% year-on-year in April, slower than in March, thanks to the government’s fuel subsidy programs to lower gasoline and other energy costs.

The so-called core-core CPI in Tokyo excluding fresh food and energy items rose 0.8% in April, posting the first increase since March 2021.

Philippines presidential election a rematch of late dictator’s son and rights lawyer

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Philippine voters head to the polls on Monday in a presidential election shaping up as a rematch between the son and namesake of the country’s late dictator and the human rights lawyer who narrowly beat him in the 2016 vice presidential contest.

Opinion polls in the days ahead of the vote showed Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr comfortably ahead of his rivals, giving him a real chance at turning the tables on Vice President Leni Robredo, who is running second in the polls, reported by Reuters.

“It is very seldom that elections are really decided by rational calculations, by the scrutiny of a candidate’s public record,” said retired political professor Temario Rivera. “There’s a lot of emotion involved and that is why the narratives you are most comfortable with normally are decisive.”

Other candidates running for president include former boxing champion Manny Pacquiao, Manila Mayor Francisco Domagoso and Senator Panfilo Lacson, though they are currently well behind in the polls. 

Incumbent president Rodrigo Duterte has not endorsed a presidential candidate, but his political party is backing Marcos, and his daughter, Sara Duterte-Carpio, is Marcos’s running mate.

Duterte-Carpio remained the top choice for vice president in recent polls, a position elected separately from the president, and could be key to a Marcos victory if she succeeds in rallying her supporters behind him.

Whoever wins the elections will face the daunting task of rebuilding the economy, which before the pandemic was one of Asia’s fastest. Taming inflation and charting a foreign policy amid a burgeoning China-U.S. superpower rivalry in Southeast Asia will also be key.

The 64-year old Marcos, whose baritone voice is strikingly similar to his father’s, has homed in on a single message all throughout his campaign – unity.

“Bongbong Marcos will be the president of Filipinos regardless of your political colour, race or creed,” a spokesperson said.

A victory for Marcos, who has maintained his lead while largely avoiding debates with key contenders, would complete a once-unthinkable rebranding of his family name, 36 years after a “people power” uprising toppled his father and drove his family into exile.

Robredo, 57, who describes the 1986 uprising as her political awakening, is confident of another victory over Marcos. Her campaign, built on a promise of an honest and transparent government, appears to have gained more momentum in recent weeks attracting big crowds to rallies.

Pink-wearing supporters of Robredo, the only female candidate in a field of 10 presidential contenders, have gone house-to-house in a bid to woo more voters.

“In 2022, the last man standing will still be a woman,” she said early in the campaign.

China to send vice president to S. Korea president’s inauguration

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According to Reuters, China’s Vice President Wang Qishan plans to attend the inauguration of South Korean President-elect Yoon Suk-yeol next week, Yoon’s team announced on Friday, as Beijing tries to expand its influence in the region.

Wang’s planned attendance comes as Yoon has vowed to strengthen South Korea’s alliance with the United States in the face of growing nuclear and missile threats from North Korea, and as Washington pushes to keep Beijing’s growing influence in check.

From Japan, Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi plans to attend the inauguration.

“The Japan-South Korea relations are in a tough situation … but I don’t think we should leave it as it is,” Hayashi told reporters. “Based on Japan’s consistent position, I think I will communicate closely with the next (South Korean) administration starting with the next president Yoon.”

Yoon takes office amid myriad challenges, with North Korea conducting weapons tests ahead of his inauguration.

The North last fired a ballistic missile on Wednesday, days after leader Kim Jong Un vowed to develop the country’s nuclear forces “at the fastest possible speed.”

The United States is sending Douglas Emhoff, the husband of Vice President Kamala Harris, as the head of its delegation to the ceremony, slated for Tuesday in Seoul, according to the president-elect’s team.

Senior foreign affairs and security officials were not included in the U.S. delegation; President Joe Biden plans to visit Seoul the following week for talks with Yoon.

Wang is attending the ceremony as the special representative for President Xi Jinping, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said.

“China and South Korea are and will remain close neighbours and important partners for cooperation. We … hope to bring the friendly cooperation between China and South Korea to a higher level,” Zhao said.

BTS reveal release date and track details for new anthology album ‘Proof’

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BTS have revealed the details for their next album, ‘Proof’. View the teaser video for their new anthology record below.

The upcoming album was first teased at the last of the band’s recent four-night sold-out Las Vegas residency, when a date of “2022.06.10” – June 10 – came up on screen at the end of the show, alongside the tagline: “We are bulletproof.”

The statement went on to add that ‘Proof’ would “reflect the thoughts and ideas of the members of the past, present and future of BTS”.

Pre-order for the anthology begins tomorrow (May 5).

The K-pop behemoth’s last studio album was 2020’s ‘BE‘. Since then, BTS has released multiple singles, including ‘My Universe’ with Coldplay,  ‘Permission To Dance’, and their Grammy-nominated track, ‘Butter’.

According to BTS’ label Big Hit, the three-CD collection will feature three new tracks alongside songs from the band’s discography.

“After ceaselessly springing forward since 2013, BTS is celebrating their ninth anniversary this coming June,” a statement on BTS’ Weverse fan community said.

“The BTS anthology that embodies the history of BTS will be released as they begin a new chapter as an artist that has been active for nine years to look back on their past endeavours.”

In a four-star review of the deluxe album, NME’s Rhian Daly called it “the most accurate musical encapsulation of the rollercoaster that is pandemic life so far; one minute brimming with joy, the next listless and miserable, another swinging slowly back to a neutral baseline.”

Daly added: “Much of ‘BE’ finds the band trying to find something to cling onto, clutching at small moments of happiness wherever it can find them”

Meanwhile, K-pop icon Psy recently credited BTS with having achieved the “unfulfilled dreams” of his 2012 hit single ‘Gangnam Style’.

Psy became the highest-charting Korean pop act on the Billboard Hot 100 with the track peaking at Number Two. Since then, only BTS have gone on to best his record, hitting Number One six times since 2020.

“If they continue like this, though they’re not doing music for the sake of raising national prestige, I think they’re giving [Korea] a lot of proud moments,” Psy said during a press conference. “I feel very proud that I had a role in being that trigger. BTS have thanked me for that part several times, so I’m proud of it.”