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With at least 11 dead, inquiries start into missing Japan tourist boat

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Inquiries began into what caused the disappearance of a tour boat off Japan’s northern coast as search efforts intensified on Monday to find the vessel and its missing passengers, with the confirmed death toll rising to 11.

According to Reuters, the “Kazu I” left harbour on Saturday for a sightseeing trip when it ran into trouble off the Shiretoko peninsula on the island of Hokkaido. The boat was carrying 24 passengers, including 2 children, and two crew members. Only a few orange flotation devices bearing its name have been discovered adrift by a rocky area along the rugged coastline.

One child is among the dead.

The boat went missing on Saturday several hours after departing for a tour of the Shiretoko Peninsula, famous for its rugged coastal scenery and wildlife. The boat operator had called to report it was taking on water and listing at a 30-degree angle, local media reported, shortly before contact was lost.

Questions have arisen about why it took several hours after the boat’s first distress call for rescuers to arrive, but Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihiko Isozaki said the nearest military aircraft were based 150 km away and on patrol at the time.

The sea and weather conditions meant it took longer than normal from coast guard ships to arrive, Isozaki added.

Drift ice can be seen in area waters as late as March, and water temperatures now would be 2 to 3 degrees Celsius (36-37 Fahrenheit), local officials said.

“Just a few minutes in that sort of water would start clouding your consciousness,” a local fisheries official said.

Searching resumed on Monday using aircraft and patrol boats, with media saying local fishing boats from the port of Utoro had also been mobilised. Searchers also walked steep cliffs along the shoreline.

The Transport Ministry sent officials to the site on Sunday to coordinate operations, and Transport Minister Tetsuo Saito also visited, calling for every possible measure to be taken in determining what went wrong and preventing a recurrence.

Hiroaki Okuma, an investigator from the Japan Transport Safety Board investigator, told reporters they were collecting information from bad weather to conditions of the vessel to find out the cause, and questioning staff at the ship operator.

According to media reports, waves were high in the area on Saturday and fishing boats that departed early in the morning returned to port quickly because of the conditions.

The Kazu I was the first tour boat to operate in the area this season, Kyodo news agency said. It added that the same vessel had collided with a floating object in May 2021, injuring three people, and ran aground in shallow water shortly after leaving port in June.

The coast guard said it would be difficult to say what exactly had happened to the ship until more evidence or debris was found, but so far there are no hints of its whereabouts. The boat company could not be immediately reached for comment.

Russia warns US against sending more arms to Ukraine

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Russia told the United States to stop sending more arms to Ukraine, warning that large Western deliveries of weapons were inflaming the conflict and would lead to more losses, Moscow’s ambassador to Washington said.

According to Reuters, Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine has killed thousands of people, displaced millions more and raised fears of a wider confrontation between Russia and the United States – by far the world’s two biggest nuclear powers.

The United States has ruled out sending its own or NATO forces to Ukraine but Washington and its European allies have supplied weapons to Kyiv such as drones, Howitzer heavy artillery, anti-aircraft Stinger and anti-tank Javelin missiles.

Putin, who says Ukraine and Russia are essentially one people, casts the war as an inevitable confrontation with the United States, which he accuses of threatening Russia by meddling in its backyard and enlarging the NATO military alliance.

Ukraine says it is fighting an imperial-style land grab and that Putin’s claims of genocide are nonsense. Zelenskiy has been pleading with U.S. and European leaders to supply Kyiv with heavier arms and equipment.

Putin warned in February that there would be no winners in a conflict between NATO and Russia, which has the world’s biggest arsenal of nuclear warheads.

Anatoly Antonov, Russia’s ambassador to the United States, said such arms deliveries were aimed at weakening Russia but that they were escalating the conflict in Ukraine while undermining efforts to reach some sort of peace agreement.

“What the Americans are doing is pouring oil on the flames,” Antonov told the Rossiya 24 TV channel. “I see only an attempt to raise the stakes, to aggravate the situation, to see more losses.”

Antonov, who has served as ambassador to Washington since 2017, said an official diplomatic note had been sent to Washington expressing Russia’s concerns. No reply had been given, Antonov said.

“We stressed the unacceptability of this situation when the United States of America pours weapons into Ukraine, and we demanded an end to this practice,” Antonov said. The interview was replayed on Russian state television throughout Monday.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin visited Kyiv on Sunday.

They told Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskiy of more than $322 million in new military financing for Ukraine, taking total U.S. security assistance since the invasion to about $3.7 billion, a U.S. official said.

U.S. President Joe Biden pledged $800 million in more weaponry for Ukraine on Thursday and said he would ask Congress for more money to help bolster support for the Ukrainian military.

President Vladimir Putin says the “special military operation” in Ukraine is necessary because the United States was using Ukraine to threaten Russia and Moscow had to defend against the persecution of Russian-speaking people.

Georgia’s Best Public High Schools 2022

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Niche.com just released its 2022 rankings of the best public high schools in the country, and Georgia is represented among the top, according to Patch.com

Niche’s 2022 rankings factored in academic and student life data from thousands of schools across the country. The most important factor was academics, but Niche also looked at culture and diversity, teachers, clubs and activities, sports and more. You can read more about Niche’s methodology here.

Many more schools were listed among the best in Georgia. They are:

  1. Gwinnett School of Mathematics, Science & Technology, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  2. Northview High School, Fulton County Schools
  3. Alpharetta High School, Fulton County Schools
  4. Walton High School, Cobb County Schools
  5. Chattahoochee High School, Fulton County Schools
  6. Lambert High School, Forsyth County Schools
  7. South Forsyth High School, Forsyth County Schools
  8. Johns Creek High School, Fulton County Schools
  9. Milton High School, Fulton County Schools
  10. Columbus High School, Muscogee County Schools
  11. Cambridge High School, Fulton County Schools
  12. North Gwinnett High School, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  13. McIntosh High School, Fayette County Public Schools
  14. Buford High School, Buford City Schools
  15. Savannah Arts Academy, Savannah-Chatham County Public School System
  16. North Oconee High School, Oconee County Schools
  17. Starrs Mill High School, Fayette County Public Schools
  18. Brookwood High School, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  19. Denmark High School, Forsyth County Schools
  20. Wheeler High School, Cobb County Schools
  21. Kennesaw Mountain High School, Cobb County Schools
  22. Lassiter High School, Cobb County Schools
  23. Peachtree Ridge High School, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  24. Roswell High School, Fulton County Schools
  25. Pope High School, Cobb County Schools
  26. DeKalb School of the Arts, DeKalb County Schools
  27. Davidson Fine Arts Magnet School, Richmond County Schools
  28. Parkview High School, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  29. Decatur High School, City Schools of Decatur
  30. Mill Creek High School, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  31. Academy for Classical Education, Macon
  32. Hillgrove High School, Cobb County Schools
  33. Oconee County High School, Oconee County Schools
  34. Chamblee Charter High School, Dekalb County Schools
  35. Atlanta Classical Academy, Atlanta Public Schools
  36. Lakeside High School, Columbia County Schools
  37. Grady High School, Atlanta Public Schools
  38. Alliance Academy for Innovation, Forsyth County Schools
  39. Forsyth Central High School, Forsyth County Schools
  40. Harrison High School, Cobb County Schools
  41. Whitewater High School, Fayette County Public Schools
  42. West Forsyth High School, Forsyth County Schools
  43. Dunwoody High School, Dekalb County Schools
  44. Riverwood International Charter School, Fulton County Schools
  45. Duluth High School, Gwinnett County Public Schools
  46. Elite Scholars Academy School, Clayton County Schools
  47. Union Grove High School, Henry County Schools
  48. Allatoona High School, Cobb County Schools
  49. Centennial High School, Fulton County Schools
  50. Greenbrier High School, Columbia County Schools

You can see the full list of the best high schools in the country by clicking here.

The top-ranked public high school in the country was The Davidson Academy, located in Reno, Nevada. The best school in Georgia was Gwinnett School of Mathematics, Science & Technology, which placed No. 22 nationally.

It was the only Georgia school that made it into the top 50 best schools in the nation.

‘Penguin Post Office’ is hiring in Antarctica

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A remote post office in Antarctica is hiring. And if you’re good at sorting mail, selling postage stamps — and counting penguins — this could be the job for you.

The post office at Port Lockroy, also known as the “Penguin Post Office,” is a popular tourist destination on Goudier Island, just off the west side of the Antarctic peninsula. The historic site receives about 18,000 visitors each season. And the area is also filled with penguins, according to NPR.

A British Antarctic territory, Post Lockroy’s “Base A” — home to the post office — was established in 1944 and operated as a British research station. Now, it is managed by the UK Antarctic Heritage Trust, which operates the museum and gift shop. Profit from the shop supports renovations of other historic sites in Antarctica.

Living and working on the island is far from luxurious. On top of the cold temperatures — which can dip as low as 23 degrees Fahrenheit, and can feel colder with the wind chill — the accommodations are limited, according to an information packet for a job on the island.

The staff members share a single bedroom and there’s no flushing toilet. Instead, a camping toilet must be emptied daily.

There’s also no running water or showers. Visiting ships offer staffers showers every few days. In some cases, staff may go up to two weeks without showers.

Communication is also limited. There’s no internet access or cell phone reception, and satellite phone calls are costly. Staffers will have “very minimal communication with home,” according to the packet.

And in the the event of an emergency, medical evacuations to a hospital could take as many as seven days, according to the packet.

“Antarctica is a physically and mentally challenging place to work,” the packet reads.

The UKAHT team also monitors the impact of visitors in an environmental study, which includes counting the number of penguins — and penguin chicks — on the island. The study aids in the regulation of the number of visitors to the island, and informs guidelines “to ensure the environment is properly cared for,” according to the territory’s website.

Applications for the seasonal positions, which can run roughly from November to March, close Monday at 11:59 p.m. GMT.

GA picks contractor for $685.6 million I-285 interchange

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Georgia added fuel to a massive road-building binge in metro Atlanta on Thursday, selecting a contractor to rebuild the I-285 interchange at I-20 east of the city.

The State Transportation Board agreed to negotiate a final agreement with East Interchange Builders LLC, a team led by two of the largest transportation construction firms in Georgia: Archer Western Construction LLC and E.R. Snell Contractor Inc, according to AJC.

The contract is worth $685.6 million. The Georgia Department of Transportation received three proposals to do the work. It selected East Interchange Builders because it scored highest on its technical and financial proposals, GDOT Chief Engineer Meg Pirkle said.

The work will address what a trucking industry group has called one of the worst traffic bottlenecks in the country. According to the American Transportation Research Institute, the average speed through the I-285/I-20 east interchange is 46.6 mph. That falls to 41.4 mph in peak traffic.

The contractor will build new interchange ramps, add lanes on both highways and replace various bridges. GDOT says the work will smooth the flow of traffic through the interchange and decrease travel times.

The new interchange is one of a handful of major highway construction projects that will transform commuting in metro Atlanta in the coming years. GDOT is already rebuilding the I-285 interchange at Ga. 400. It’s also planning to build toll roads on the top half of the Perimeter and on Ga. 400 and rebuild the I-285 interchange at I-20 west of Atlanta.

Construction on the new I-285 interchange at I-20 east of Atlanta will begin in mid-2023 and finish in late 2026.

Singapore will remove most COVID curbs next week

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Singapore will remove most remaining COVID-19 restrictions from April 26 and ease its entry requirements for travellers, its health ministry said on Friday, in response to a decline in new daily infections.

The measures include removing limits on group sizes and allowing the full return of employees to workplaces, while lowering the Southeast Asian financial hub’s alert level for the first time since the pandemic started, reported by Reuters.

Some rules will remain, however, such as the mandatory wearing of face masks in indoor public settings and on public transport.

Many of the restrictions will remain in place for non-vaccinated individuals, however.

Singapore has inoculated 93% of its 5.5 million population, one of the world’s highest rates. It has also achieved one of the lowest COVID fatality rates.

Authorities also announced the scrapping of a requirement for vaccinated travellers to take a COVID test before departing for Singapore.

“With these changes, we can now have a well deserved breather, after two very difficult years of fighting the virus,” said Lawrence Wong, finance minister and co-chair of the government’s coronavirus taskforce.

“But let’s always remember, we are getting closer to the finish line, but the race is not over and the pandemic is certainly not over.”

Taiwan tells Kyiv mayor they both on ‘frontline’ resisting authoritarianism

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Taiwan’s foreign minister told the mayor of Ukraine’s capital on Friday their democracies stood on “the frontline of resisting” large authoritarian neighbours as he announced a donation of $8 million to Kyiv and Ukrainian medical institutions.

The war in Ukraine has garnered broad sympathy in Taiwan, with many seeing parallels between Russia’s invasion – which Moscow terms a “special military operation” – and military pressure from China, which views the democratically governed island as its own territory, Reuters

Wu said Taiwan would donate $3 million to Kyiv city and $5 million to six Ukrainian medical institutions.

He also tweeted a picture of himself talking to Klitschko, a former champion boxer, saying the mayor’s “fighting spirit” was admirable.

“Champ, we’ll continue to stand with you & your people. Freedom will prevail!” Wu added.

Taiwan has condemned Russia’s invasion, joined Western-led sanctions and donated $20 million for Ukrainian refugees, mostly raised from the public. China has not condemned Russia, and only donated 15 million yuan ($2.3 million) in humanitarian aid.

Speaking by video conference to Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko, Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said Taiwan and Ukraine were both democracies “on the front line of resisting the expansion of authoritarianism”, Wu’s ministry cited him as saying.

“The Taiwanese government and people also face a high threat from the authoritarian regime across the Taiwan Strait, and therefore feel the current situation faced by Ukraine as though it is happening to ourselves,” Wu added, referring to China.

Taiwan has not previously announced talks between senior Taiwanese and Ukrainian officials.

Taiwan has no diplomatic relations with Ukraine, and unlike in many European capitals Taiwan does not even have a representative office in Kyiv.

Indonesia to ban palm oil exports from April 28 to curb domestic prices

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Indonesia will effectively ban palm oil exports from April 28, until further notice, after President Joko Widodo on Friday announced a halting of shipments of cooking oil and its raw material to control soaring domestic prices.

In a video broadcast, Jokowi, as the president is popularly known, said the policy aimed to ensure availability of food products at home, according to Reuters.

In Indonesia, the retail price of cooking oil averages out at 26,436 rupiah ($1.84) per litre, up more than 40% so far this year. In some provinces across the country, the prices have nearly doubled in the past month alone, according to a price monitoring page.

Demonstrations by students have taken place in several cities across Indonesia in recent days over high cooking oil prices.

Indonesia’s government has set a cap of 14,000 rupiah per litre for bulk cooking oil, but Trade Ministry data showed that it was sold at more than 18,000 rupiah this month.

A government investigation is underway into alleged corruption in the issue of sought-after export permits. 

“I will monitor and evaluate the implementation of this policy so availability of cooking oil in the domestic market becomes abundant and affordable,” he said.

U.S. soyoil futures jumped more than 3% to a record high of 84.03 cents per pound after Indonesia announced the ban.

The move will hurt consumers not only in biggest buyer India but globally, as palm is the world’s most consumed oil, Atul Chaturvedi, president of trade body the Solvent Extractors Association of India (SEA), told Reuters.

“This move is rather unfortunate and totally unexpected,” he said.

Global prices of crude palm oil, which Indonesia uses for cooking oil, have surged to historic highs this year amid rising demand and weak output from top producers Indonesia and Malaysia, plus a previous move by Indonesia to restrict palm oil exports in January that was later lifted in March.

Meanwhile, global edible oil markets have also been roiled this year by Russia’s Ukraine invasion, which cut off shipments of sunflower oil from the region. Russian calls its action a “special operation”.

The Black Sea accounts for 76% of world sunoil exports and commercial shipping from the region has been severely affected since Russian forces entered Ukraine in February. 

“Sky would be limit for edible oil prices now. Buyers were banking on palm oil after sunoil supplies fell because of the Ukraine war,” a Mumbai-based dealer at a global trading firm said.

“Now they (buyers) don’t have any option as soyoil supplies are also limited.”

Indonesia counts for more than half of global palm oil supply.

Indonesia has since 2018 stopped the issuance of new permits for palm oil plantations, often blamed for deforestation and destroying habitats of endangered animals such as orangutan.

Palm oil industry association GAPKI said it was meeting about the president’s announcement.

“As citizens, we obey the decision by the president,” a spokesperson for GAPKI said in a text message.

US official visits Solomon Islands days after it signs China pact

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A senior U.S. official met the Solomon Islands leader on Friday, days after the Pacific island nation and China said they had signed a security pact that the United States and its allies fear will extend China’s military presence in the region.

Despite a flurry of calls from the United States and its allies not to go ahead with the deal, the Solomon Islands prime minister, Manasseh Sogavare, and China announced this week they had signed it, according to Reuters.

Brushing off the international concerns, Sogavare, told parliament on Wednesday it would not undermine peace. 

Kurt Campbell, President Joe Biden’s Indo-Pacific coordinator, met Sogavare after arriving in the capital, Honiara.

Nevertheless, U.S. allies Australia and New Zealand expressed concern the pact would disrupt regional security, allowing Chinese naval vessels to replenish in Honiara. New Zealand and Tonga have said they will raise the security deal at an upcoming meeting of Pacific Islands Forum leaders while Japan plans to send a vice foreign minister to the Solomon Islands this month over concerns about the security pact, the Kyodo news agency reported.

Campbell said in January the Pacific was likely to see “strategic surprise” in terms of basing arrangements, and the U.S. and allies Australia, New Zealand, Japan and France needed to step up in the region. 

The Solomons opposition leader also met Campbell and discussed building democracy in the region, the opposition party said in a statement.

Neither the U.S. embassy nor the government commented on the talks though a Solomons official said the opening of a U.S. Embassy in Honiara was on the agenda.

Campbell discussed the China-Solomon Islands agreement with neighbouring Fiji and Papua New Guinea over the past two days ahead of his Honiara visit, the U.S. embassy in Papua New Guinea said in a statement.

The security pact is a major inroad for China in the Pacific and Campbell had been expected to press Sogavare not to sign it.

Australian officials said Campbell’s visit likely prompted China and the Solomon Islands to announce it was a done deal.

The Solomon Islands occupy a strategic position in the Pacific and were home to some of the bloodiest fighting of that theatre of World War Two.

The country was rocked by riots last year in which four people were killed.

Also on Friday, Sogavare joined China’s ambassador, Li Ming, at the handover of an athletics field donated by China, one of the sporting facilities worth a total of $120 million that China has paid for to help the Solomons host the 2023 Pacific Games.

The Solomons switched diplomatic ties from Taiwan to Beijing in 2019 and Sogavare said in a speech at the ceremony that the decision had “placed the country on the right side of history”.

Li, in a livestreamed speech, defended the security pact.

“Development and security are two sides of a coin. Without safety and security countries cannot enjoy sustainable development and economic growth. This was demonstrated by the riot last year,” he said.

But for Australia, the security pact raises the prospect of a Chinese military presence less than 2,000 km (1,200 miles) from its shores.

Sogavare has ruled out hosting a Chinese military base, saying the pact, details of which have not been disclosed, will allow Chinese police to protect Chinese-funded infrastructure projects.

Kim Jong Un offers rare praise for South’s departing Moon

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has thanked South Korea’s outgoing president for trying to improve relations, a rare gesture of goodwill but one that analysts said may not be enough to head off growing tension between the two Koreas.

The warm words from North Korea to President Moon Jae-in came in an exchange of letters less than three weeks before Moon leaves office to be replaced by a conservative leader who has already signalled a tougher line on North Korea, according to Reuters.

Analysts were sceptical that North Korea’s message heralded a broader improvement in relations, and warned that the praise for Moon could be a bid to portray his successor, Yoon Suk-yeol, as responsible for any further deterioration in ties.

In 2020, the North spectacularly blew up a joint liaison office on the border, which Moon’s government had spent 9.78 billion won ($8.6 million) renovating.

The two leaders tried again to mend ties last year but little progress was made and Pyongyang then criticised Seoul’s “double standards” over weapons.

North Korea’s statement left open a possibility for Moon to play a role as envoy, but Christopher Green, a Korea specialist at Leiden University in the Netherlands, said it was unlikely to have a positive impact on his reputation.

The statement could stir controversy in the South by portraying Moon as “a deluded peacenik who, after all the weapons tests North Korea has conducted in the last eight months, is still writing convivial letters to Kim”, Green said.

North Korean state media was the first to report the exchange and the unexpected North Korean plaudits for the stalled effort by Moon and his liberal administration to engage.

“Kim Jong Un appreciated the pains and effort taken by Moon Jae-in for the great cause of the nation until the last days of his term of office,” North Korea’s KCNA state news agency reported.

The exchange of letters was an “expression of their deep trust”, it said.

The letters come against a backdrop of tension since a failed North Korea-U.S. summit in 2019, exacerbated last month when North Korea launched intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), ending a self-imposed 2017 moratorium.

Moon sent a letter on Wednesday and promised to try to lay a foundation for unification based on joint declarations reached at summits in 2018, despite the “difficult situation”, KCNA said.

Moon’s office confirmed that he had exchanged “letters of friendship” with Kim.

Moon said the “era of confrontation” should be overcome with dialogue, and inter-Korean engagement was now a task for the next administration, his spokeswoman told a briefing. Moon also expressed hope for the swift resumption of U.S.-North Korea denuclearisation talks.

Kim said in his reply on Thursday that their “historic” summits gave the people “hope for the future”, and the two agreed that ties would develop if both sides “make tireless efforts with hope”, KCNA reported.

The exchange came as U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Sung Kim was in South Korea for talks. The U.S. envoy has said he is open to sitting down with the North at any time without preconditions, but it was unclear whether Moon’s letter specifically proposed a meeting.

Analysts questioned the North’s true intentions.

“This looks more like another step in building the pretext to blame Yoon for more escalation from North Korea, rather than an olive branch to Yoon or Biden,” said Markus Garlauskas, a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council think tank and former U.S. national intelligence officer for North Korea.

Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul, said the letters could signal to Yoon that the door for cooperation was still open, and a potential seventh nuclear test by the North or any other future action would hinge on Yoon’s approach.

Yoon, who takes office on May 10, has said that he is open to dialogue but greater military deterrence and a stronger U.S. alliance are needed to counter the North’s “provocations”.

Kwon Young-se, Yoon’s nominee to oversee cross-border affairs, said the exchange of letters was a “good thing” and Kim offered “positive” views on inter-Korean ties.

“There was some content that the new government would want to hear,” he told reporters. “It was very positive that he does not negatively see trust and progress in relations.”

Tension escalated when North Korea last month conducted its first full ICBM test since 2017, and there are concerns that it is preparing to restart nuclear testing.

Moon staked his legacy on improving inter-Korean ties and helped arrange unprecedented meetings between Kim Jong Un and then U.S. President Donald Trump in 2018 and 2019.

Three summits Kim and Moon held in 2018 promised peace and reconciliation but relations have soured, with the North warning of destructive action and demolishing facilities built by South Korean firms for joint projects.