Ashley Cornell, email: [email protected]

Ashley is best described by the two C’s: calm and compassionate. She was adamant about becoming a doctor when she was younger. That is, until she was accepted into medical school. She realized after two years of university that she wasn’t quite cut out for the job. She abruptly discontinued her studies and decided to pursue a career as a writer instead. She is still interested in medicine, but prefers to remain a distant observer and recorder of medical advances and innovations. She currently works as Senior editor with S Chronicles, where she primarily writes about health and science, as well as co-authoring books on the side.Contact email: [email protected]

Ashley Cornell, email: ashley.cornell@spamchronicles.com
Washington sanctions senior Liberian officials for corruption

Washington sanctions senior Liberian officials for corruption

The United States announced Monday that it has imposed corruption sanctions on senior Liberian officials, including a close associate of President George Weah.

• Also read: Liberia: The Finnish judiciary acquits the ex-rebel accused of war crimes

• Also read: Liberia: 29 dead in mass movement at religious gathering

The sanctions specifically target Nathaniel McGill, Secretary of State for Presidential Affairs and Secretary-General to President Weah. He is accused of “abusing his position to undermine the integrity and independence of Liberia’s democratic institutions … for personal gain,” according to a statement by State Department spokesman Ned Price.

A separate Treasury Department statement said he “received bribes” as part of government contracts.

Two other senior officials will also be sanctioned: Sayma Syrenius Cephus, Liberia’s Attorney General, and Bill Twehway, who heads the National Ports Authority.

These sanctions mainly consist of freezing their assets in the United States.

Liberia is the oldest republic in sub-Saharan Africa, founded in the 19th century at the instigation of the United States for freed black slaves.

Washington sanctions senior Liberian officials for corruption Read More »

Escape two new targets for Benoit Roberge

Escape: two new targets for Benoît Roberge

Benoît Roberge makes his mea culpa. After years of touring Europe and France, the curious and greedy host travels to Belgium for the first time, in a new series that expires Tuesday on Evasion.

• Also read: Evasion: Four new shows from here, including three this fall

In Benoît chez les Belges, Benoît Roberge and his team have traveled all over Belgium, making the country almost a character in its own right. Its postcard landscapes, its well-kept secrets, its history and its culinary identity are highlighted, as well as the places that are a little “unloved” or lesser known.

Brussels, Liège, Namur, Bruges, Antwerp, La Panne and even Tournai, the birthplace of the humorist Bruno Coppens, with whom Benoît had a good time, the time of an episode, are presented there during the season. .

Escape: two new targets for Benoît Roberge

PHOTO COUR TESY Quebecor Content

Similarities with Quebec

Benoît Roberge, who was often asked by French people if his accent was Belgian without really knowing why, found many similarities between Quebecers and Belgians during his trip overall, such as humor, culture, language problems and a fondness for partying, spoke in an interview with the agency QMI.

“I’ve never seen people celebrate like that. We would have to face them against the residents of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean if we had a competition,” added the host with a smile on his face. “You have to say that it was the end of the hygiene measures, maybe there was something in it, but I still have the impression that in normal times it’s a serious party. [en Belgique]. With ‘normal’ life resuming, it’s like everything is an excuse to celebrate, even children and teenagers took part,” he said.

Thailand, “A Tour of Thai”

The travel-loving host will also star in another fall release from Évasion, Tour de Thaï.

With his longtime friend Jean-Michel Dufaux he went to Thailand, where he was completely guided by him. “Jean-Michel was often in Asia and wanted to take his friends, but that’s not on the doorstep and it never worked. But this time it’s fitting that the first time I go there with him we do this series,” he explained, pointing out that this trip came exactly 20 years after one of their first projects; Europe Express.

“I let Jean-Michel guide me completely. He lets me discover what he likes about this country. I really have the beautiful role. I wasn’t told what the activities were in advance. I loved it and it was my biggest change of scenery,” said Benoît Roberge, who really fell in love with the country but also took a lot of joy living it with his boyfriend.

“People are so happy and so polite,” he continued.

Both in seven episodes, “Benoît chez les Belges” begins this Tuesday at 9pm while “Tour de Thaï” arrives on Évasion from October 4th.

Escape: two new targets for Benoît Roberge Read More »

Ex Green Beret who helped evacuate Afghans slams government betrayal for

Ex-Green Beret who helped evacuate Afghans slams government ‘betrayal’ for leaving allies behind

Almost exactly a year ago to the day, the last US soldiers left Kabul. Veterans who worked tirelessly to get their Afghan allies out of the war-torn country feel the federal government left them and their partners behind.

Retired Lt. Col. Scott Mann, who served in the Middle East as the US Army’s Green Beret, told he had a “very deep sense of betrayal” that the Biden administration and military leaders had not done more to help to help those who did fought alongside Americans in Afghanistan for two decades.

“When I look at the moral injuries inflicted on our people, our veterans, our volunteers, and the national security implications of this task at every level, it really makes me — I really want to see some responsibility,” Mann said.

“I feel like the Biden administration was really trying to just get over it.”

Exactly one year ago on Monday, the Afghan capital fell to the Taliban in a lightning-fast offensive, just four months after President Joe Biden announced he would honor Donald Trump’s agreement with the Taliban for a full military withdrawal.

Amid the chaotic evacuation from Hamid Karzai International Airport, current and former military personnel and other government officials came together to help vulnerable Afghans escape. These largely voluntary groups received very little formal help from the federal government.

Mann is the head of one of the best known – dubbed “Task Force Pineapple” for the symbol that evacuees would flash at the gates of the crowded, volatile airport before being escorted over the walls to safety.

He documents his commitment and the harrowing experiences of Afghan refugees and other volunteers in the forthcoming book, Operation Pineapple Express, due August 30 from Simon & Schuster.

Task Force Pineapple is the nickname of one of several volunteer groups who worked to help vulnerable Afghans escape Taliban takeover (pictured is a group of Afghans who were successfully helped within the confines of the airport by Task Force Pineapple were conducted in Kabul).

Task Force Pineapple is the nickname of one of several volunteer groups who worked to help vulnerable Afghans escape Taliban takeover (pictured is a group of Afghans who were successfully helped within the confines of the airport by Task Force Pineapple were conducted in Kabul).

1660588284 542 Ex Green Beret who helped evacuate Afghans slams government betrayal for

“Shepherds,” some personally but the vast majority distant, guided Afghans through security checkpoints and into Hamid Karzai International Airport in the middle of the night (pictured is another successfully rescued group inside airport borders).

An Afghan girl seen crying after her father was beaten by the Taliban and a bomb exploded nearby last year

An Afghan girl seen crying after her father was beaten by the Taliban and a bomb exploded nearby last year

Her family is pictured in this Task Force Pineapple photo in the aftermath

Her family is pictured in this Task Force Pineapple photo in the aftermath

He and other military personnel worked remotely as “herders,” guiding Afghan special immigrant visa applicants — and other vulnerable groups — from thousands of miles away to various checkpoints in the middle of the night, with the goal of reaching Kabul airport.

They did this with their own money and little communication or government funds.

But according to Mann, hundreds of people are still left without refuge — particularly Afghan commandos who don’t qualify as SIVs because they weren’t employed by the US government or related organizations. These fighters would be valuable Taliban targets for their advanced military knowledge from American troops.

“There is almost no way for an Afghan commando,” Mann said, adding that the US State Department had “no visible interest” in helping them.

“I’d be lying if I didn’t, you know – I still feel a very deep sense of betrayal,” the Green Beret told .

“I have a feeling that our institutional leaders — they not only have the ball on the — and that includes military leaders, senior leaders — have dropped the ball on withdrawal, but only on the full surrender of our partner forces, particularly ours.” Special Operations Partners and the [Afghan National Mine Removal Group]and then just turn the page like it never happened.”

Mann said getting these groups out of Afghanistan was “not a priority at all” for the Biden administration.

1660588286 833 Ex Green Beret who helped evacuate Afghans slams government betrayal for

Retired Lt. Col. Scott Mann is a US Army Green Beret who has toured in Colombia, Iraq and Afghanistan

He has authored a new book about his experience with Task Force Pineapple called Operation Pineapple Express The Incredible Story of a Group of Americans Who Undertook One Last Mission and Honored a Promise in Afghanistan.

He has authored a new book about his experience with Task Force Pineapple called Operation Pineapple Express The Incredible Story of a Group of Americans Who Undertook One Last Mission and Honored a Promise in Afghanistan.

Mann is pictured here with his friend Nezam, an Afghan commando whose harrowing experiences fleeing his homeland will be detailed in the forthcoming memoir

Mann is pictured here with his friend Nezam, an Afghan commando whose harrowing experiences fleeing his homeland will be detailed in the forthcoming memoir

“I think it’s safe to say that the president has a history of not really looking into things like that, going back to Vietnam when he was a senator,” he said, citing the insistence of lawmakers at the time from Delaware against other military involvement in this conflict months before Saigon fell to the Viet Cong.

But the failure goes deeper than just the government, Mann believes, explaining that the Pentagon has failed Afghan veterans “100 percent” by abandoning their allies.

“Just look at the extent of the moral injury,” he said.

Mann cited a study last year that revealed that since 2001, when the US began retreating after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

“Where are the generals? Where are the Pentagon leaders, the senior special operations leaders, stepping up and saying, “Okay, we clearly have a problem here. There is a massive moral injury that has been inflicted on our people and we will start working on it.” Do you hear about it? You don’t hear about it,” Mann ranted.

Taliban fighters parade in the streets as they celebrate a year since they occupied the Afghan capital Kabul, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, August 15, 2022

Taliban fighters parade in the streets as they celebrate a year since they occupied the Afghan capital Kabul, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, August 15, 2022

Mann told  that the US government's withdrawal and

Mann told that the US government’s withdrawal and “betrayal” of its Afghan ally is causing a serious “moral injury” to American veterans

He said many Afghan commandos and other special forces fighters are still in their country - with Taliban targets on their backs

He said many Afghan commandos and other special forces fighters are still in their country – with Taliban targets on their backs

“And that, in my opinion, is the biggest flaw in our community, in our military. Our active service and former senior leaders are not stepping forward to address this moral violation.’

In his forthcoming book, Mann describes both the life-threatening situations Afghans face as they try to escape and the psychological – and even financial – toll their allies in the US have taken trying to help them.

“It is as my friend Duke says; He says this is an Uncle Sam-sized problem that veterans are trying to solve with their personal checking accounts,” Mann told .

While some refugees found safety and comfort in the United States, the memoir also makes it clear that others weren’t so lucky — including those implicated in the ISIS-K suicide blast that killed nearly 200 people, including 13 US soldiers.

As the pages progress, it becomes clearer that the volunteers realized they were going through the monumental task of planning escapes without government help.

Mann himself is no stranger to putting his military experience down on paper.

The US military ended its withdrawal from Afghanistan two weeks after the Taliban captured the country's capital

The US military ended its withdrawal from Afghanistan two weeks after the Taliban captured the country’s capital

One of his other works is a stage play about his Middle East tour entitled Last Out: Elegy of a Green Beret.

But for Operation Pineapple Express, Mann described a writing process that was at times “cathartic” but at other points “brutal” — given that he began the book shortly after the events.

“I was ready to get back into my life. And to write a book of this caliber, and of this fair weight, I just – my God, you know? And my wife and I had to have a really long conversation about it. But what really mattered was that I was able to really tell the stories of Afghans and their herdsmen in a way that I felt could be compelling,” explained Mann.

He refers to each person in the memoir, including himself, in the third person to “tell their stories,” such as “the Afghans who are still stuck over there… herdsmen who have lost people they brought to the explosion and were just filled with guilt.’

“The interviews were brutal and lasted about 45 days, and then the writing, but there was a catharsis in the writing. Because I felt like telling their stories,” Mann said. “I am the storyteller.”

Ex-Green Beret who helped evacuate Afghans slams government ‘betrayal’ for leaving allies behind Read More »

Andreessen Horowitz announces plans to invest in Adam Neumanns new

Andreessen Horowitz announces plans to invest in Adam Neumann’s new residential real estate company

Adam Neuman, CEO of WeWork.

Eduardo Munoz | Portal

Venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz announced Monday that it plans to invest in Adam Neumann’s new residential real estate company called Flow.

Neumann is the founder and former CEO of coworking space company WeWork, but left in 2019 after the company botched plans to go public. The company’s IPO filing showed big losses, a complicated corporate structure, and anomalies like the company paying Neumann nearly $6 million to acquire the brand from “We” before a company name change. (Neumann later returned the money.) Around the same time, media reports were describing a culture of plenty, and Neumann eventually resigned and walked away with a massive payout.

Andreessen Horowitz said in a blog post that Neumann’s efforts to reinvent the office experience at WeWork are “often underappreciated” and that the firm loves “to see repeat founders build on past successes by growing from the lessons learned.” .

Flow’s website doesn’t offer many details about the company, but says it’s expected to launch in 2023. According to The New York Times, Flow is “effectively a service that allows landlords to partner up for their properties, much like a hotel owner might contract with a branded hotel chain to operate the property. The New York Times said Andreesen Horowitz invested around $350 million in Flow.

Andreesen Horowitz suggests Flow could offer people a new way to buy their housing, although it’s unclear if this will be through a hire-purchase model. “In a world where limited access to home ownership continues to be a driving force behind inequality and fear, providing tenants with a sense of security, community and real ownership has transformative power,” said Andreessen Horowitz, Co-founder and general partner Marc Andreessen wrote in a blog post.

“We think it’s only natural that Adam, for his first project since WeWork, would return to connecting people by transforming their physical spaces and building communities where people spend the most time: their homes.”

“We are excited about the scope and scope of this project,” said Andreessen. “There is no lack of vision or ambition, but only projects with such lofty goals have a chance to change the world.”

Andreessen Horowitz announces plans to invest in Adam Neumann’s new residential real estate company Read More »

1660588199 Kenya Barris writes and directs Warner Bros re imagining of Wizard

Kenya Barris writes and directs Warner Bros. re-imagining of ‘Wizard Of Oz’; Khalabo Ink Society Production

EXCLUSIVE: Warner Bros has just hired Kenya Barris to write and direct Wizard of Oz, a remake of the fantasy classic, with his Khalabo Ink Society producing.

We all know the story from the 1939 film, but Barris keeps the creative details close to the vest. It will be a modern reinterpretation of the legendary musical. His deal was finalized last week. Sheila Walcott oversees the studio.

Kenya Barris writes and directs Warner Bros re imagining of Wizard

The deal comes while the Black-ish creator is in post-production on his directorial debut feature, You People. Barris and Jonah Hill co-wrote the original comedy, with an amazing cast that includes Hill, Eddie Murphy, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Lauren London, Nia Long, and David Duchovny, among others.

Next month, Barris will launch Entergalatic, a televised event he co-developed with Kid Cudi. Inspired by the Grammy winner’s forthcoming album of the same name, the first project of its kind combines adult animation, music, fashion and art to tell a story about modern-day black love in New York City.

Barris has focused more on features, including Girls Trip and Coming 2 America. Upcoming is a remake of the sports comedy White Men Can’t Jump; a feature film about comedic icon Richard Pryor, directed and produced by Barris; an animated film inspired by the songs and music of Bob Marley; and a feature-length musical about Juneteenth, which he co-produced with Pharrell Williams. Barris has also expanded into podcasts and music (with the launch of his label, Khalabo Music last year), as well as studio ownership with BET Studios. He is a main partner of BET Studios.

Barris is represented by CAA, Artists First and attorney Gregg Gellman.

Kenya Barris writes and directs Warner Bros. re-imagining of ‘Wizard Of Oz’; Khalabo Ink Society Production Read More »

UK Why is Boris Johnsons Greece holiday controversial

UK: Why is Boris Johnson’s Greece holiday controversial?

the essentials Amid an historic drought and as the country bears the full brunt of runaway inflation, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson begins his second furlough in 15 days. Which fuels the controversy in the UK.

At a time when the UK is grappling with multiple crises, including historic inflation and drought, outgoing Prime Minister Boris Johnson has taken his second furlough in 15 days, enough to fuel allegations of a power vacuum as he awaits his successor.

In recent weeks, the Tory leader, who has been urged to resign by his party after a spate of scandals, has missed emergency meetings during heat waves, stayed away from the England team’s celebrations at the European Women’s Football Championship and spent a couple of honeymoons in the mountains of Slovenia.

This time he was photographed with his wife Carrie in a supermarket in a suburb of Athens while a removals van was parked outside his home at 10 Downing Street on Monday.

“The Prime Minister is on holiday this week”

“The prime minister is on holiday this week,” his spokesman said, stressing that even in their absence, leaders “are staying informed of all urgent matters and making decisions, particularly on national security matters.”

This escapade comes as Boris Johnson has vowed to remain in business pending the appointment of a new Conservative Party leader. Only two candidates remain in the running, Liz Truss, chief of diplomacy, favorite, and former finance minister Rishi Sunak. The result of the internal election is expected on September 5th.

Voices have been raised in the British political class to accuse Boris Johnson of being absent at a time when his compatriots are suffering from very sharp increases in the cost of living, particularly with electricity and gas prices exploding.

Forecasts of further massive bill hikes in October and then January, and the central bank’s warning of the extent of the impending crisis for the UK economy, have called for urgent action without waiting for his successor to arrive.

“Not up-to-date”

Downing Street said last week it was up to the “future Prime Minister” to act in the face of this crisis, not Boris Johnson, who should be in charge of current affairs.

The country is also facing a historic drought that is hitting the agricultural sector hard and necessitating irrigation restrictions in several regions.

The Labor Party felt that “the party goes on for Boris Johnson at a time when the whole country is struggling to pay its bills”. “Judging from the past few months, it doesn’t matter much whether the prime minister is at work or on holiday as he has not been up to the challenge of the Conservative Party’s living standards crisis,” a left-wing opposition spokesman said.

“Second week of vacation in a year”

However, Labor itself has been criticized for its alleged passivity in the face of the crisis, as its leader Keir Starmer was on holiday last week and only presented his party’s proposals, including a freeze on gas and electricity prices, on Monday.

For Brandon Lewis, Boris Johnson’s ex-minister, the latter has not yet “thrown in the towel”: “It’s probably his second holiday week in a year, and certainly this year (…) even though we’re not in the Downing Street office, we work”.

According to The Times newspaper, Boris Johnson intends to make “a series of visits and speeches” after his return next weekend to urge his successor to continue defending his priorities, including Britain’s support for Ukraine’s Russian invasion.

UK: Why is Boris Johnson’s Greece holiday controversial? Read More »

Zakynthos Airport Joke English Tourist Reports False Delays To Speaker

Zakynthos Airport Joke: English Tourist Reports False Delays To Speaker (Wreaking Havoc) Ferm

Chaos at Zakynthos Airport (Greece), where a English tourist sowed panic spread false announcements over loudspeakers, perhaps as a joke. “The flight to Gatwick was delayed six hours,” said the voice in English, causing fear and terror among the passengers. After a few minutes, more announcements of entirely fabricated delays followed, until the man was greeted by airport security and turned away from the microphone. The whole “trick” scene was shot by a 22-year-old boy who posted it alone TikTok profile.

MORE INFORMATION

The video of the joke at the airport

The video shows the man behind an unattended desk in one of the airport’s gates. He goes to the microphone and says: “The flight to Gatwick was delayed six hours“. He is wearing a Paris Saint Germain tracksuit and sunglasses. Shortly thereafter he provides further information: “Unfortunately, the flight to Manchester was six hours late.” A message that causes confusion, also because there are no flights to that day Manchester were planned.

Shortly after, an airport security officer can be seen in the clip identifying and joining the man. The “Joker” is then escorted by the Greek police.

According to the author of the video, the arrested man was not allowed to board his return flight. “The airport threatened to detain him for three days and confiscate his passport, but after he sat in an empty room for a while they told him to leave.”

The Witness “A Hilarious Situation”

The author of the video also said that the Moment of joke was hilarious: “We were waiting for the gate to open when we heard strange announcements. When I looked up I saw him at the mic so I thought about doing the video. The man made three or four announcements of flights that were delayed by a few hours. And he adds: “Seeing people’s reactions was hilarious because half the airport couldn’t even see it.”

The video has now arrived 72,000 views with hundreds of Comments in support of the “Joker”: There are those who write «He made me laugh», and those who say «He did no harm to anyone».

Zakynthos Airport Joke: English Tourist Reports False Delays To Speaker (Wreaking Havoc) Ferm Read More »

CIA sued over alleged spying by lawyers and journalists who

CIA sued over alleged spying by lawyers and journalists who met with Assange

By Kanishka Singh

WASHINGTON (Portal) – A group of journalists and lawyers are suing the CIA and its former director Mike Pompeo over allegations that the agency spied on them when they visited WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange while he was at the Ecuadorian embassy in London .

The lawsuit states that the CIA, under Pompeo’s command, violated the privacy rights of these American journalists and lawyers by allegedly spying on them.

“The United States Constitution protects American citizens from government abuse even though the activities take place in a foreign embassy in a foreign country,” said Richard Roth, an attorney representing the plaintiffs.

The CIA, which declined to comment on the lawsuit, is barred from collecting information about US citizens, although several lawmakers have claimed the agency maintains a secret archive of communications data.

Assange has appealed to London’s High Court to prevent his extradition to the United States to face prosecution in a legal battle that has dragged on for more than a decade.

According to the lawsuit, before visiting Assange, the journalists and lawyers had to turn in their electronic devices to Undercover Global SL, a private security firm that once guarded the embassy. The lawsuit alleges that the company copied that information and made it available to the CIA, which was then headed by Pompeo.

Assange spent seven years at the embassy before being jailed in 2019.

Assange is wanted by US authorities on 18 charges, including espionage charges in connection with WikiLeaks’ release of confidential US military documents and diplomatic cables.

His supporters say he is an anti-system hero who has fallen victim to the exposure of irregularities committed by the United States in the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.

CIA sued over alleged spying by lawyers and journalists who met with Assange Read More »