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Chicago Blackhawks: Andrew Shaw deserves this Masterton honoron May 10, 2021 at 6:00 pm

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Chicago Blackhawks: Andrew Shaw deserves this Masterton honoron May 10, 2021 at 6:00 pm Read More »

The Bulls will need their version of a ‘Big Three’ for this stretch runJoe Cowleyon May 10, 2021 at 4:43 pm

The Bulls will need outstanding performances from Zach LaVine and Coby White during the final games of the season.
The Bulls will need outstanding performances from Zach LaVine and Coby White during the final games of the season. | AP

Zach LaVine, Nikola Vucevic and Coby White have been on a three-game tear, both offensively and defensively. If the Bulls want to have a chance at a play-in spot that trend will need to continue with just four games left in the regular season.

Labeling it a “Big Three’’ is a bit much.

Actually it’s way too much.

Even Zach LaVine wasn’t going to call what he, Nikola Vucevic and Coby White have done the last three games as the product of a “Big Three.’’

The Bulls guard is more into calling it “a pick your poison.’’

Whatever the label, it’s what the Bulls will have to lean on the final four games, as they try and pull off a late-season miracle and overtake Indiana or Washington for a final play-in spot in the Eastern Conference.

“They’re just going to have to pick their poison,’’ LaVine said, pointing out the latest example of how the trio went to work in the one-sided win in Detroit on Sunday night. “I got it going early, then they started doubling. My next instinct is to use me as a decoy — let them double me, hit ‘Vuch’ in the pocket, let him go to work. And eventually they start spraying out the threes for Coby. We’re scoring at all three levels, and once we got that going, it’s pretty much pick your poison.’’

Is it LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh from the “Heatles’’ days? Not even in the same league. Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and James Harden? Please.

What can’t be denied, however, is the numbers throughout the three-game winning streak. The trio has combined for 209 total points, led by Vucevic’s 25.3 per game. LaVine has put up 24.3 points, while White was 20 points per.

More importantly, two of the three showings came against playoff-bound teams like Charlotte and Boston.

But a “Big Three?’’ Not even coach Billy Donovan was going to feed that beast.

“I don‘t look at it that way,’’ Donovan said. “I get it. I’ve always believed that the more guys that are — you think about, there’s 100 possessions on the offensive end of the floor — but there’s a lot of shots that go up, and I think you’ve gotta be balanced because you never know what’s gonna happen. And if they’re gonna double-team ‘Vuch’ in the low post he’s been unselfish enough to move the ball. Same thing with Zach.’’

What also helps is that while LaVine is capable of get his own shot, seemingly whenever or from wherever he wants, White and Vucevic finally understand each other’s strengths and weaknesses, and how to best play off of each other.

Donovan and his staff have focused on making sure that when the ball goes into the post and Vucevic’s hands, White is set at the top of the key or ball side, leaving his defender the choice of having to leave White and help on the double-team of Vucevic, or leave the post defender on Vucevic Island by himself.

Fortunately for White, he’s been on a catch-and-shoot tear from the outside, so doubling down on the big man hasn’t been benefitting the opposing defense.

The Bulls will need that to continue if they want to get past the likes of two games against the Nets and another with Milwaukee.

Veteran forward Thad Young, however, has a different approach to the success of his “Big Three’’ teammates. The way Young sees it, yeah, the offense has been great from LaVine, Vucevic and White, but it’s been their defense that has, and will need, to carry the day if they want to play extra basketball this season.

That’s what Young is buying into.

“Defensively, they’re all getting better throughout the course of the season and they’re all continuing to compete,’’ Young said. “That’s what we need. When everybody sees our ‘Big Three’ competing, then it just brings everybody else along, and our defense is what it needs to be in order to win games.’’

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The Bulls will need their version of a ‘Big Three’ for this stretch runJoe Cowleyon May 10, 2021 at 4:43 pm Read More »

Pipeline hit by cyberattack could be back by week’s endAssociated Presson May 10, 2021 at 5:08 pm

In this Sept. 8, 2008 file photo traffic on I-95 passes oil storage tanks owned by the Colonial Pipeline Company in Linden, N.J.
In this Sept. 8, 2008 file photo traffic on I-95 passes oil storage tanks owned by the Colonial Pipeline Company in Linden, N.J. A major pipeline that transports fuels along the East Coast says it had to stop operations because it was the victim of a cyberattack. Colonial Pipeline said in a statement late Friday that it “took certain systems offline to contain the threat, which has temporarily halted all pipeline operations, and affected some of our IT systems.” | AP

Colonial Pipeline offered the update after revealing that it had halted operations because of a ransomware attack the FBI has linked to a criminal gang.

WASHINGTON — The operator of a major U.S. pipeline hit by a cyberattack said Monday it hopes to have service mostly restored by the end of the week.

Colonial Pipeline offered the update after revealing that it had halted operations because of a ransomware attack the FBI has linked to a criminal gang.

The ransomware attack on the pipeline, which the company says delivers roughly 45% of fuel consumed on the U.S. East Coast, raised concerns that supplies of gasoline, jet fuel and diesel could be disrupted in parts of the region if the disruption continues.

At the moment, though, officials said there is no fuel shortage.

The Colonial Pipeline transports gasoline and other fuel through 10 states between Texas and New Jersey, according to the company.

Colonial is in the process of restarting portions of its network. It said Sunday that its main pipeline remained offline, but that some smaller lines were operational. The company has not said when it would completely restart the pipeline.

“The time of the outage is now approaching critical levels and if it continues to remain down we do expect an increase in East Coast gasoline and diesel prices,” said Debnil Chowdhury, IHS Markit Executive Director. The last time there was an outage of this magnitude was in 2016, he said, when gas prices rose 15 to 20 cents per gallon. But the Northeast had significantly more local refining capacity at that time, potentially intensifying any impact.

Meanwhile, the FBI on Monday said the ransomware attack had been carried out by a criminal gang known as DarkSide, which cultivates a Robin Hood image of stealing from corporations and giving a cut to charity.

In response to the attack, the Biden administration loosened regulations for the transport of petroleum products on highways as part of an “all-hands-on-deck” effort to avoid disruptions in the fuel supply.

If the pipeline outage persists, the industry may want to turn to barges to transport fuel, but that could require a waiver of the Jones Act, a U.S. maritime law that requires products shipped between U.S. ports to be moved by American-flagged ships.

The pipeline utilizes both common and custom technology systems, which could complicate efforts to bring the entire network back online, according to analysts at Third Bridge.

Gasoline futures ticked higher Monday. Futures for crude and fuel, prices that traders pay for contracts for delivery at some point in the future, typically begin to rise each year as the driving season approaches. The price you pay at the gas pump tends to follow.

The average U.S. price of regular-grade gasoline has jumped 6 cents over the past two weeks, to $3.02 per gallon, which is $1.05 higher than it was a year ago. Those year- ago numbers are skewed somewhat because the nation was going into lockdown due to the pandemic.

The attack on the Colonial Pipeline could exacerbate the upward pressure on prices if it is unresolved for a period of time.

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Pipeline hit by cyberattack could be back by week’s endAssociated Presson May 10, 2021 at 5:08 pm Read More »

Hamas fires rockets at Jerusalem after worshippers targeted at mosqueAssociated Presson May 10, 2021 at 5:14 pm

Palestinians inside the Al-Aqsa mosque clash with Israeli security forces at the Al Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem’s Old City Monday, May 10, 2021.
Palestinians inside the Al-Aqsa mosque clash with Israeli security forces at the Al Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem’s Old City Monday, May 10, 2021. Israeli police clashed with Palestinian protesters at a flashpoint Jerusalem holy site on Monday, the latest in a series of confrontations that is pushing the contested city to the brink of eruption. Palestinian medics said at least 180 Palestinians were hurt in the violence at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, including 80 who were hospitalized. | AP

The early evening attack drastically escalated what already are heightened tensions throughout the region following weeks of confrontations between Israeli police and Palestinian protesters in Jerusalem that have threatened to become a wider conflict.

JERUSALEM — Hamas militants fired a large barrage of rockets into Israel on Monday, including one that set off air raid sirens as far away as Jerusalem, after hundreds of Palestinians were hurt in clashes with Israeli police at a flashpoint religious site in the contested holy city.

The early evening attack drastically escalated what already are heightened tensions throughout the region following weeks of confrontations between Israeli police and Palestinian protesters in Jerusalem that have threatened to become a wider conflict.

Shortly after the sirens sounded, explosions could be heard in Jerusalem. One rocket fell on the western outskirts of the city, lightly damaging a home and causing a brushfire. The Israeli army said there was an initial burst of seven rockets, one was intercepted, and rocket fire was continuing in southern Israel.

Gaza health officials said nine people, including three children, were killed in an explosion in the northern Gaza Strip. The cause of the blast was not immediately known. Meanwhile, Hamas media reported that an Israeli drone strike killed a Palestinian, also in the northern Gaza Strip.

The Israeli army said an Israeli civilian in the country’s south suffered mild injuries when a vehicle was struck by an anti-tank missile from Gaza.

Abu Obeida, spokesman for Hamas’ military wing, said the attack was a response to what he called Israeli “crimes and aggression” in Jerusalem. “This is a message the enemy has to understand well,” he said.

He threatened more attacks if Israel again invades the sacred Al-Aqsa Mosque compound or carries out planned evictions of Palestinian families from a neighborhood of east Jerusalem that have raised tensions.

Earlier, Israeli police firing tear gas, stun grenades and rubber bullets clashed with stone-throwing Palestinians at the iconic compound, which is Islam’s third-holiest site and considered Judaism’s holiest. Tensions at the site have been the trigger for prolonged bouts of violence in the past, including the last Palestinian intifada, or uprising. It was not clear if the current unrest would escalate or dissipate in the coming days.

More than a dozen tear gas canisters and stun grenades landed in the Al-Aqsa Mosque, as police and protesters faced off inside the walled compound that surrounds it, said an Associated Press photographer at the scene. Smoke rose in front of the mosque and the iconic golden-domed shrine on the site, and rocks littered the nearby plaza. Inside one area of the compound, shoes and debris lay scattered over ornate carpets.

More than 305 Palestinians were hurt, including 228 who went to hospitals and clinics for treatment, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent. Seven of the injured were in serious condition. Police said 21 officers were hurt, including three who were hospitalized. Israeli paramedics said seven Israeli civilians were also hurt.

In an apparent attempt to avoid further confrontation, Israeli authorities changed the planned route of a march by ultranationalist Jews through the Muslim Quarter of the Old City to mark Jerusalem Day, which celebrates Israel’s capture of east Jerusalem.

Monday’s confrontation was the latest after weeks of almost nightly clashes between Palestinians and Israeli troops in the Old City of Jerusalem, the emotional center of their conflict, during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The month tends to be a time of heightened religious sensitivities.

Most recently, the tensions have been fueled by the planned eviction of dozens of Palestinians from the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of east Jerusalem where Israeli settlers have waged a lengthy legal battle to take over properties.

Israel’s Supreme Court postponed a key ruling Monday in the case, citing the “circumstances.”

Over the past few days, hundreds of Palestinians and several dozen police officers have been hurt in clashes in and around the Old City, including the sacred compound, which is known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary.

An AP photographer at the scene said that early Monday morning, protesters had barricaded gates to the walled compound with wooden boards and scrap metal. Sometime after 7. a.m., clashes erupted, with those inside throwing stones at police deployed outside.

Police entered the compound, firing tear gas, rubber-coated steel pellets and stun grenades, some of which enterd the mosque.

Police said protesters hurled stones at officers and onto an adjoining roadway near the Western Wall, where thousands of Israeli Jews had gathered to pray.

The tensions in Jerusalem have threatened to reverberate throughout the region and come at a crucial point in Israel’s political crisis after longtime leader Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu failed to form a governing coalition last week. His opponents are now working to build an alternate government.

Before Monday’s rocket attack on Jerusalem, some 100 kilometers (60 miles) north of Gaza, Palestinian militants had fired several barrages of rockets into southern Israel. Protesters allied with the ruling Hamas militant group have launched dozens of incendiary balloons into Israel, setting off fires across the southern part of the country.

The rare strike on Jerusalem came moments after Hamas had set a deadline for Israel to remove its forces from the mosque compound and Sheikh Jarrah and release Palestinians detained in the latest clashes.

Hamas, an Islamic militant group that seeks Israel’s destruction, has fought three wars with Israel since it seized power in Gaza in 2007. The group possesses a vast arsenal of missiles and rockets capable of striking virtually anywhere in Israel.

The rocket strike on Jerusalem was a significant escalation and raised the likelihood of a tough Israeli response. Israel’s response thus far has come under growing international criticism.

The U.N. Security Council scheduled closed consultations on the situation Monday.

Late Sunday, the U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan spoke to his Israeli counterpart, Meir Ben-Shabbat. A White House statement said that Sullivan called on Israel to “pursue appropriate measures to ensure calm” and expressed the U.S.’s “serious concerns” about the ongoing violence and planned evictions.

Prime Minister Netanyahu pushed back against the criticism Monday, saying Israel is determined to ensure the rights of worship for all and that this “requires from time to time stand up and stand strong as Israeli police and our security forces are doing now.”

The day began with police announcing that Jews would be barred from visiting the holy site on Jerusalem Day, which is marked with a flag-waving parade through the Old City that is widely perceived by Palestinians as a provocative display in the contested city.

Just as the parade was about to begin, police said they were altering the route at the instruction of political leaders. Several thousand people, many of them from Jewish settlements in the West Bank, were participating.

In the 1967 Mideast war in which Israel captured east Jerusalem, it also took the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It later annexed east Jerusalem and considers the entire city its capital. The Palestinians seek all three areas for a future state, with east Jerusalem as their capital.

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Hamas fires rockets at Jerusalem after worshippers targeted at mosqueAssociated Presson May 10, 2021 at 5:14 pm Read More »

State, city to hold free COVID-19 vaccination clinics at commercial office buildingsFran Spielmanon May 10, 2021 at 5:38 pm

Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Monday, May 10, 2021, announcing vaccination clinics will open at 10 major office buildings, seven of them in downtown Chicago. The others will be in Rockford, with two locations, and Schaumburg. Clinics will be open during shift changes to capture the greatest number of employees.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot joined forces with Walgreens to announce that vaccination clinics will open at 10 major office buildings, seven of them in downtown Chicago. The others will be in Rockford, with two locations, and Schaumburg. Clinics will be open during shift changes to capture the greatest number of employees. | Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

Among the participating Chicago office buildings are the Merchandise Mart, the Wrigley Building, both of which will be open May 17, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. to tenants, staff and even walk-ins. Also announced were two locations in Rockford and one in Schaumburg.

Before the stay-at-home shutdown triggered by the coronavirus pandemic, more than 600,000 employees worked at Chicago’s impressive array of downtown office buildings.

They’re starting to trickle back to work, but the key to opening up the floodgates is getting even more employees vaccinated by bringing the vaccine to those workplaces.

On Monday, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot joined forces with Deerfield-based Walgreens on an innovative plan to do just that.

Vaccination clinics will be located in 10 major office buildings, seven of them in downtown Chicago. They’ll be held during shift changes to capture the greatest number of employees.

Participating Chicago office buildings are: the Merchandise Mart; the Harris Bank Building, 115 S. LaSalle; 540 W. Madison; the Wrigley Building, 400-410 N. Michigan; the Equitable Building, 401 N. Michigan; 150 N. Riverside Plaza and 311 S. Wacker.

The Merchandise Mart and Wrigley Building clinics will be open May 17 between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. to tenants, staff and even walk-ins.

Pritzker said some of the sites will be open this week, but details on exact dates and times were not available.

The three suburban office buildings are located at 308 W. State Street and 1111 S. Alpine Road in Rockford and 1061 American Lane in Schaumburg.

During a news conference in the lobby of the Harris Bank Building, Pritzker acknowledged Illinois has reached a vaccination plateau, as most people who are “immediately eager to get vaccinated have already been vaccinated.”

That’s why it’s time broaden the umbrella and bring vaccine directly to the state’s largest workplaces.

Chicago skyline.
Sun-Times file
Vaccination clinics will be opened in seven downtown Chicago office buildings, as well as three other locations, and if more building owners and managers across Illinois want to host similar events, the state will do it, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said Monday.

“Starting this week, if you work downtown in Chicago and in other cities across Illinois, work is quite literally where the vaccines will be. Our vaccination teams will be showing up to major commercial buildings here in Chicago and other Illinois business districts to offer accessible, free vaccination opportunities to people in the comfort of their own workplaces,” Pritzker said.

“Remote work is coming to an end. Having vaccine available where you work makes getting vaccinated very convenient. … I’m announcing this initiative … so those returning to these office buildings will be able to keep each other safe and keep their workplaces COVID-free. If you haven’t had a chance to get a vaccination yet or you weren’t sure if it was worth the trek, you can now get one right at your place of work.”

The initial wave of buildings is only the beginning, Pritzker said. If more building owners and managers across Illinois want to host similar events, the state will do it, he said.

“With a critical mass of people who need to be vaccinated, we will get you the staff, the supplies and the vaccine to make it happen. This is about making it as easy as possible for those who have not yet gotten vaccinated to do so,” the governor said.

Lightfoot said “more and more employers are already beginning to plan out or have already begun to welcome employees back into the office.” In fact, she’s in the final stages of arranging “staggered shifts” for city employees to reopen City Hall.

The city and state want to make that transition “as smooth as possible,” the mayor said.

“In-building vaccination sites provide an effective solution to this challenge because they will allow us to literally meet tenants and staff and employees where they are or where they will be in the future and provide them with a convenient place to get vaccinated,” Lightfoot said.

LaSalle Street in the Loop, with City Hall on the left and the Board of Trade building in the background.
Sun-Times file
Downtown Chicago office buildings will be home to seven coronavirus vaccination clinics, with at least some of them opening this week.

The mayor urged property owners, community organizations, not-for-profits, churches and owners of other buildings “where people congregate” to take advantage of the city’s offer to hold even more free vaccination clinics “as you welcome people back under your roof.”

“We need all of you to take part in our mission to fully vaccinate our residents, reopen our city and our state and finally put this pandemic in the rear-view mirror. … I’m excited about the prospects of what the summer will bring. … But, a lot of that and the pace of it depends upon how many more people we can get vaccinated. So taking advantage of these opportunities is critically important,” she said.

Farzin Parang, the former top mayoral aide now serving as executive director of the Building Owners and Managers Association of Chicago, noted that, prior to the pandemic, Chicago’s commercial office buildings “brought 600,000 people from all over our city and the region to work in our downtown.”

“The density of these office-goers made possible the restaurants, theaters and other businesses that power much of our hospitality arts and tourism industries. That infrastructure, in turn, makes our city more appealing to live in and promotes the retention and recruitment of the workforce that our businesses need to grow,” Parang said.

“It is imperative for our state and our city to recover and nurture that density. It is, both literally and figuratively, the core of what makes us a city and it is certainly what sustains our collective economy.”

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State, city to hold free COVID-19 vaccination clinics at commercial office buildingsFran Spielmanon May 10, 2021 at 5:38 pm Read More »

Hit by COVID, Senegal’s women find renewed hope in fishingon May 10, 2021 at 4:11 pm

BARGNY, Senegal — Since her birth on Senegal’s coast, the ocean has always given Ndeye Yacine Dieng life. Her grandfather was a fisherman, and her grandmother and mother processed fish. Like generations of women, she now helps support her family in the small community of Bargny by drying, smoking, salting and fermenting the catch brought home by male villagers. They were baptized by fish, these women say.

But when the pandemic struck, boats that once took as many as 50 men out to sea carried only a few. Many residents were too terrified to leave their houses, let alone fish, for fear of catching the virus. When the local women did manage to get their hands on fish to process, they lacked the usual buyers, as markets shut down and neighboring landlocked countries closed their borders. Without savings, many families went from three meals a day to one or two.

Dieng is among more than a thousand women in Bargny, and many more in the other villages dotting Senegal’s sandy coast, who process fish — the crucial link in a chain that constitutes one of the country’s largest exports and employs hundreds of thousands of its residents.

“It was catastrophic — all of our lives changed,” Dieng said. But, she noted, “Our community is a community of solidarity.”

That spirit sounds throughout Senegal with the motto “Teranga,” a word in the Wolof language for hospitality, community and solidarity. Across the country, people tell each other: “on es ensemble,” a French phrase meaning “we are in this together.”

Last month, the first true fishing season since the pandemic devastated the industry kicked off, bringing renewed hope to the processors, their families and the village. The brightly painted vast wooden fishing boats called pirogues once again are each carrying dozens of men to sea, and people swarm the beach to help the fishermen carry in their loads for purchase.

But the challenges from the coronavirus — and so much more — remain. Rising seas and climate change threaten the livelihoods and homes of those along the coast, and many can’t afford to build new homes or move inland. A steel processing plant rising near Bargny’s beach raises fears about pollution and will join a cement factory that also is nearby, though advocates argue they are needed to replace resources depleted by overfishing.

“Since there is COVID, we live in fear,” said Dieng, 64, who has seven adult children. “Most of the people here and women processors have lived a difficult life. … We are exhausted. But now, little by little, it’s getting better.”

Dieng and her fellow processors weathered the pandemic by relying on each other. They’re accustomed to being breadwinners — one expert estimated that each working woman in Senegal feeds seven or eight family members. Before the pandemic, a good season could bring Dieng $1,000. Last year, she said, she made little to nothing.

Dieng’s husband teaches the Quran at the mosque next door to their home, and the couple pooled their money with their children, with one son finding work repairing TVs. Other women got help from family abroad or rented out parts of their refrigerators for storage.

They survived, but they missed their work, which isn’t just a job — it is their heritage. “Processing is a pride,” Dieng said.

Most fishing in Senegal is small-scale, and carried out in traditional, generations-old methods, as old as the ways Dieng and other villagers process the fish. They refer to it as artisanal fishing. Once processed, the fish is sold to local and international buyers, and preserving it means it lasts longer than fresh and is cheaper for all who purchase it. In Senegal alone, the fish accounts for more than half of protein eaten by its 16 million residents — key for food security in this West African country.

Industrial fishing is carried out in Senegal’s waters as well, via motorized vessels and trawlers instead of the traditional pirogues, and more than two dozen companies also specialize in industrial processing in the country alongside fishmeal factories and canning plants. The fishmeal factories price women like Dieng out by paying more for the fish and depleting resources — 5 kilos of fish are needed for 1 kilo of fishmeal, a lower-grade powder-like product used for farm animals and pets.

Senegal’s government also has agreements with other countries allowing them to fish off the country’s coast and imposing limits on what they can haul in, but monitoring what these large boats from Europe, China and Russia harvest has proven difficult. The villages say the outsiders are devastating the local supply.

Dieng has become a local leader and mentor whose neighbors increasingly come to her for advice on everything from money woes to their marriages, and she and others are now part of a rising collective voice of women in Senegal working for change along the coast and beyond.

Senegal has designated land near Bargny as an economic zone in its efforts to invest in redevelopment. Dieng’s neighbor Fatou Samba is a town councilor and president of the Association of Women Processors of Fish Products, and she’s testified about the challenges in artisanal fishing. She hopes to stop much of the expansion of big industry as fishmeal companies scoop up fish and send the product to Europe and Asia.

“If we let ourselves be outdone, within two or three years, women will not have work anymore,” Samba said. “We are not against the creation of a project that will develop Senegal. But we are against projects that must make women lose the right to work.”

Samba also warns of the effects of climate change, with rising tides eroding Senegal’s coast and forcing fisherman to seek their catch further out to sea. Samba and Dieng have each lost at least half of their seaside homes as water gutted rooms during the rainy seasons of the past decade.

In addition to their laborious work processing fish, Samba and other women handle the bulk of the work at home.

“Especially in Africa, women are fighters. Women are workers. Women are family leaders,” Samba said. “Therefore, women must be empowered.”

Dieng, Samba and other women want to be heard — by the government, and by the companies building projects near them. They want better financing, protection of their fish and processing sites, and improved health regulations.

These women open their doors to family, friends, neighbors and even strangers who are eager to hear about the work they take such pride in, and which they want preserved — to help put food on the table for their families and to pay school fees for their children so they can have a future that might not involve fish. But while they’re happy to talk about the work, they hesitate to focus on themselves. Community is what they are most comfortable with.

Late last month, when word spread that fishermen were finally coming back to Bargny with catches, Dieng and others hurried to meet the pirogues, tethered by ropes to the beach. It was the longest Dieng had been away from the catch. She bought enough to have her haul carried by horse-drawn cart to the plot of land she and friends claimed along acres of black sand. Then she started the work she’s known for decades.

Once the fish were piled onto the ground, the women smoothed them out with a small, flat piece of wood. They covered them in light brown peanut shells, bought by the sack, and then lit embers in a bowl and placed those on the shells, which started to burn. Smoke billowed everywhere, a sign of progress. But it also made trying to breathe as brutal as toiling under the hot sun — even tougher during Ramadan, when the women are fasting.

The women stoked the fire, and after feeling confident it would smoke for hours, stepped away. After a day or so, they returned to turn the fish and let it dry in the sun. Another day passed, and the women returned to clean it. Finally, the fish was packaged in vast nets, sold and taken away in trucks.

The pandemic has taught villagers a crucial lesson: Money from fish may not always be there, so it’s important to try to save some of their earnings.

The pandemic also is not over, so Dieng and other women go door to door to raise awareness and urge people to get vaccinated. Like many other countries in sub-Saharan Africa, Senegal imposed strict measures at the start of the pandemic. The government was widely commended for its overall handling of the pandemic, and curfews have been lifted and restrictions largely eased. But the country has had more than 40,000 cases, and both volunteer and government campaigns aim to keep another wave at bay.

At the end of a long day of work, and before she goes home to break fast of Ramadan with her family, Dieng stands in front of her smoking fish and records a video she hopes will to motivate the women working in the industry.

“It’s our gold. This site is all, this site is everything for us,” Dieng said of the coast and its vital importance to Bargny. “All the women must rise up. … We must work, to always work and work again for our tomorrows, for our future.”

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This story is part of a yearlong series on how the pandemic is impacting women in Africa, most acutely in the least developed countries. AP’s series is funded by the European Journalism Centre’s European Development Journalism Grants program, which is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. AP is responsible for all content.

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Meet the women of Bargny: See the portrait series.

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Follow Carley Petesch on Twitter: https://twitter.com/carleypetesch

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Hit by COVID, Senegal’s women find renewed hope in fishingon May 10, 2021 at 4:11 pm Read More »

After pipeline cyberextortion attempt, gasoline ticks higheron May 10, 2021 at 4:18 pm

NEW YORK — Gasoline futures are ticking higher Monday following a cyberextortion attempt on a vital U.S. pipeline that carries fuel from the Gulf Coast to the Northeast.

The Colonial Pipeline transports gasoline and other fuel through 10 states between Texas and New Jersey. It delivers roughly 45% of fuel consumed on the East Coast, according to the company.

Colonial Pipeline said Saturday that it had been hit by a ransomware attack and had halted all pipeline operations to deal with the threat. Two people close to the investigation said that the shutdown had been carried out by a criminal gang known as DarkSide that cultivates a Robin Hood image of stealing from corporations and giving a cut to charity.

Futures for crude and fuel, prices that traders pay for contracts for delivery at some point in the future, typically begin to rise each year as the driving season approaches. The price you pay at the gas pump tends to follow.

The average U.S. price of regular-grade gasoline has jumped 6 cents over the past two weeks, to $3.02 per gallon, which is $1.05 higher than it was a year ago. Those year ago numbers are skewed somewhat because the nation was going into lockdown due to the pandemic.

The attack on the Colonial Pipeline could exacerbate that upward pressure on prices if it is unresolved for a period of time.

Futures jumped 1.5% Monday, the largest movement in about a week, with the potential for disruptions in fuel delivery still unknown.

Colonial is in the process of restarting portions of its network. It said Sunday that its main pipeline remained offline, but that some smaller lines were operational.

For the moment, seesawing prices may be felt mostly within the energy industry as suppliers adjust to potential shifts in the flow of gasoline.

More fuel may be sourced from East Cost refiners, J.P. Morgan said Monday, and an extended outage along the Colonial Pipeline would force suppliers to seek fuel from the Midwest, rather than the Gulf.

In response to the attack, the Biden administration loosened regulations for the transport of petroleum products on highways as part of an “all-hands-on-deck” effort to avoid disruptions in the fuel supply.

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After pipeline cyberextortion attempt, gasoline ticks higheron May 10, 2021 at 4:18 pm Read More »

City Hall’s secret emails: What we’ve learned since hack of Lightfoot officialson May 10, 2021 at 4:19 pm

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City Hall’s secret emails: What we’ve learned since hack of Lightfoot officialson May 10, 2021 at 4:19 pm Read More »

Police seek motive in shooting at Colorado birthday partyon May 10, 2021 at 4:21 pm

DENVER — Colorado authorities on Monday were investigating why a gunman opened fire at a weekend birthday party, killing his girlfriend and five other adults inside a home before killing himself.

The shooting happened just after midnight Sunday in Colorado Springs, police said.

Officers arrived at the trailer home to find the six people dead and a man with serious injuries who died later at a hospital.

The shooter was the boyfriend of a female victim at a birthday party attended by friends, family and children. He drove to the home, walked inside and opened fire before killing himself, police said.

A recording of a Colorado Springs fire dispatch call shows engine companies arriving at the scene and requesting additional backup, including ambulances, as the number of possible victims becomes clearer. The first to arrive near the scene are told to hold back because of possible gunfire, then are given an initial all clear an agonizing 8-plus minutes after the first engine was dispatched. Sirens can be heard in the background.

“Engine 11, sounds like more shots are still being fired — keep your distance,” the dispatcher says at one point. Twenty seconds later the engine crew responds: “Looking like we have multiple victims,” and asks for more ambulances. The dispatcher requests another engine to “2828 Preakness Way, possible multiple gunshot victims.”

More than eight minutes in, the dispatcher says that “police on scene are advising that there are four victims and that you are clear to go in.” Soon thereafter Engine 11 requests another ambulance; 13 minutes in the dispatcher says: “The sergeant on the scene is saying that medical is cleared to enter for all six patients. … They’re saying we have six.”

Neighbor Yenifer Reyes told The Denver Post she woke to the sound of many gunshots.

“I thought it was a thunderstorm,” Reyes said. “Then I started hearing sirens.”

Police brought children out of the trailer and put them into at least one patrol car, she said, adding that the children were “crying hysterically.”

The children, who weren’t hurt in the attack, have been placed with relatives, police said.

In their most recent update on the shooting on Sunday, investigators were still working to determine a motive, police said.

The names of the victims have not been released yet. Officials were still in the process of identifying them, Sandy Wilson of the El Paso County Coroner’s Office said Monday.

“My heart breaks for the families who have lost someone they love and for the children who have lost their parents,” Colorado Springs Police Chief Vince Niski said in a statement.

It was Colorado’s worst mass shooting since a gunman killed 10 people at a Boulder supermarket March 22.

“The tragic shooting in Colorado Springs is devastating,” Gov. Jared Polis said Sunday, “especially as many of us are spending the day celebrating the women in our lives who have made us the people we are today.”

Colorado Springs, population 465,000, is Colorado’s second-biggest city after Denver.

In 2015, a man shot three people to death at random before dying in a shootout with police in Colorado Springs on Halloween.

Less than a month later, a man killed three people, including a police officer, and injured eight others in a shooting at a Planned Parenthood clinic in the city.

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Police seek motive in shooting at Colorado birthday partyon May 10, 2021 at 4:21 pm Read More »

Mexican villages arm children in desperate bid for attentionon May 10, 2021 at 4:27 pm

AYAHUALTEMPA, Mexico — The children in this mountain village usually spend their days caring for goats or cows and playing with their dogs.

But on the rare occasions that the press comes to Ayahualtempa, the kids are lined up and handed guns.

They pull on the shirts of a community police force, cover their faces with handkerchiefs, grab their guns — fake wooden ones for the youngest — and line up in formation on the town’s basketball court to pose and march for the cameras.

The images have shocked people across Mexico and beyond. And that’s the point.

Few of those children actually wield guns on patrol, but such displays here and in other oft-forgotten communities are desperate attempts to attract the federal government’s help to fend off organized criminals.

“They are the poster children for a country at war that doesn’t speak of war,” said Juan Martin Perez, director of the Network for Children’s Rights in Mexico.

The remote region of Guerrero state is one of Mexico’s poorest and one of its most violent. It’s a key corridor for drug production and transit, especially heroin from opium poppies. Communities of the ethnic Nahua like Ayahualtempa are caught between warring criminal bands and suffer kidnappings, extortion and murders.

On a recent afternoon, four boys cared for goats and played with puppies on a slope looking out over mountaintops running to the horizon.

Asked about training with guns, the oldest, 12-year-old Valentin Toribio said now they only march “when the reporters are going to come and interview us.”

“It’s so the president sees us and helps us,” he said.

But there is at least some real training, too.

Valentin said he had liked learning to fire a gun and hopes to become a policeman when he gets older. His older brother taught him to shoot, though he normally only holds a gun for the performance. “When I’m older I’ll carry the gun because (now) it can be dangerous,” he said.

His 11-year-old cousin, Geovanni Martinez, is less interested in the performance because he is too busy. “I take care of the goats, then I go to my pigs and then to give water to Filomena,” his donkey, he said. If there’s any free time, he plays basketball. He yearns to return to school, closed for the past year by the pandemic.

Asked if he would shoot at an enemy, he issued a convincing, “No!”

A short time later, three of the four joined about a dozen others in a display for visiting reporters. They marched a bit and displayed firing positions from one knee, seated and flat on their stomachs.

Clemente Rodriguez, 10, didn’t participate because he said his mother would not approve. His only weapons were two slingshots dangling around his neck.

The day’s display was less militant than one a few weeks earlier, when some three dozen children marched out of town and fired weapons into the air while shouting slogans against the gang that terrorizes them — Los Ardillos, “the Squirrels.”

The town’s demands include more National Guard troops and help for orphans, widows and those displaced by violence that has cost 34 lives in several nearby communities over the past two years.

Only a few of the children in the village, which has more than 1,000 residents, actually take part. They are all boys; a girl who wanted to participate was barred from doing so. Most are sons or brothers of members of the town’s community police force, guarding the entrances to the town with old shotguns.

The threats residents fear are real, and regional authorities are often suspect. Guerrero is the state where 43 students from a teachers’ college disappeared in 2014 at the hands of local police and state and federal authorities working with a drug gang.

Around Ayahualtempa, the Ardillos gang is battling with Los Rojos — “the Reds” — and many communities have formed their own forces. But leadership disputes and gang infiltration have fractured those forces and many people struggle to identify who is on which side.

The result, says Abel Barrera, founder of local human rights group Tlachinollan, has set local people against one another while the government does nothing to stop the violence or solve other deep problems.

“We’ve normalized that these children don’t eat, are illiterate, are farm workers,” he said, and mocked the outrage that outsiders feel at seeing children carrying guns: “We’re used to the ‘Indians’ dying young, but, ‘How dare they arm them!'”

Bernardino Sanchez Luna, co-founder of a vigilante coalition, said authorities did nothing when gang members once attacked the community of Rincon de Chautla in the same region. That prompted the group to distribute a video in 2019 of children performing military-style drills with sticks.

Asked why, he said, “Because they didn’t pay attention!”

Sanchez Luna said the government wound up donating some housing material for the displaced, but the violence continued.

Another performance came in January 2020 in Alcozacan — a 30-minute drive from Ayahualtempa — prompted by the slaying of 10 musicians from the town. The victims, including a 15-year-old boy, were burned and their vehicles sent off a cliff.

After 17 children paraded for the cameras with real guns, the community was given scholarships for the victims’ orphaned children and houses for the widows.

But just two months later, a couple and their two young daughters were killed in a nearby community, infuriating residents again.

An April 10 display in Ayahualtempa – the more aggressive one in which children fired in the air – came just two months before major midterm elections in Mexico that could define the remaining three years of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s administration. It was an expression of concern about violence that often increases during political campaigns.

The president noticed. Lopez Obrador condemned the exploitation of children and said he believed Mexico had made a mistake in allowing self-defense for Indigenous communities. Criminals had taken advantage of the legalization of so-called community police forces to create their own armed groups, he said.

“The government has to guarantee public safety,” he said. “If there are gaps, they are filled,” but with the National Guard.

However, the government didn’t immediately send aid or bolster security, people in the village say.

International organizations have responded to the displays with condemnations of the “recruitment” of children and warned of the effects.

But Barrera, the rights activist, said of the communities: “They see that the issue of the children is effective for making people take notice and they think: If that’s what works, we’ll have to keep doing it.”

National Guard troops have a checkpoint on the road connecting the communities to Chilapa — the nearest sizable town — and the army has another nearby. Farther up the road, there are other armed men, whom locals identify as Ardillos.

Residents say that when the criminals are on the move, federal forces look the other way.

Three miles outside Ayahualtempa, the ghost village of El Paraiso de Tepila is a reminder of what can happen. All 35 families who lived there fled. More than two years later, no one has returned. The exterior of the school that faces the road is pocked with bullet holes.

Nearly two years ago, when Ayahualtempa itself was under siege, Luis Gustavo Morales couldn’t safely travel the half mile from home to his middle school. That was when his parents began to have him train with a gun.

Now 15, Luis Gustavo says he always carries a pistol. Chambering a bullet and unloading it in front of journalists, he appears comfortable with the weapon. He is the only boy who joins his father every 16 days for shifts guarding the town entrance.

Community police say teaching their children to defend their homes with guns is different from the exploitation of children by profit-seeking criminal gangs.

Luis Gustavo’s father, Luis Morales, said that at first it made him sad to train his son to defend the town, but now he is proud because the boy will know how. Still, he planns to send him back to school if Ayahualtempa becomes safe again.

The last march of armed children happened April 30 — Children’s Day in Mexico — in nearby Alcozacan.

Some 20 media outlets showed up, many of them international. But this time there were no guns — only toys and slogans about justice and demands for safety. Children also chanted against guns and drugs.

Satisfied, the local organizers smiled wryly. The media had turned up for the show, which unfolded without accusations from the government that the community is endangering its children.

But people in Ayahualtempa say they plan to keep displaying armed children until they feel safe. As young Valentin noted, “There are a lot of bad men who want to hurt us.”

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Mexican villages arm children in desperate bid for attentionon May 10, 2021 at 4:27 pm Read More »