Kyrie Irving Rumors: Kobe Bryant Recruiting Star to Lakers; Nets Still Favorites

MILWAUKEE, WI - MAY 8: Kyrie Irving #11 of the Boston Celtics handles the ball against the Milwaukee Bucks during Game Five of the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on May 8, 2019 at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images)

Gary Dineen/Getty Images

Kyrie Irving will be a hot commodity when he hits free agency, but the Los Angeles Lakers apparently have a secret weapon to try to convince the Boston Celtics point guard to sign with them.

On Tuesday’s episode of The Herd, Bleacher Report’s Ric Bucher said Kobe Bryant has been recruiting Irving to Los Angeles over the past 24 hours:

Herd w/Colin Cowherd @TheHerd

“It’s between Brooklyn and the Lakers… I was told in the last 24 hours Kobe has been recruiting Kyrie in particular, to get him to the Lakers. Everything I’ve heard I would still expect Kyrie is going to go to Brooklyn… He just bought a place in South Orange.” — @RicBucher https://t.co/HICrTPushl

Bucher also noted the Brooklyn Nets remain the favorite for Irving, who grew up a fan of the organization and recently bought a place in nearby South Orange, New Jersey.

The Nets would be an interesting destination considering the young talent on the roster. They reached the playoffs this season and gave the Philadelphia 76ers some trouble in the first round, putting the team ahead of schedule in its rebuild.

Perhaps the only snag is whether Irving could play alongside fellow point guard D’Angelo Russell, but the Nets apparently aren’t concerned.

According to Brian Lewis of the New York Post, the Brooklyn front office believes the two “could not only coexist but thrive.”

Meanwhile, the biggest issue with a potential move to the Lakers is the reunion between Irving and LeBron James.

The two won an NBA title together with the Cleveland Cavaliers, but Irving left on ugly terms, forcing a trade to Boston. However, he admitted in January that he called James to apologize for his behavior.

Brian Windhorst of ESPN recently reported Irving has become “more open” to joining the Lakers after improving his relationship with James.

Los Angeles could certainly use his talent after a disappointing season, and the added push from Bryant could be what’s needed to get the All-Star on the roster.

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Iran set for dialogue with Gulf neighbours as tensions soar

The USS Abraham Lincoln was deployed to the Gulf, stoking tensions in the already-volatile region [Jeff Sherman/US Navy via AP]
The USS Abraham Lincoln was deployed to the Gulf, stoking tensions in the already-volatile region [Jeff Sherman/US Navy via AP]

Iran is ready to engage in dialogue with Gulf Arab countries to address escalating tensions in the Middle East, its deputy foreign minister said on Tuesday.

Abbas Araqchi made the comments on a visit to neighbouring Qatar where he met Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani in the capital, Doha.

Both sides “expressed their concern about escalations and problems in the region”, a Qatari foreign ministry statement said.

Tensions have risen between Iran on one side and the United States and its Gulf allies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on the other. Washington has deployed a carrier strike group and bombers, and announced plans to deploy 1,500 US troops to the Middle East – prompting fears of a conflict.

Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump’s National Security Adviser John Bolton – who has been accused of promoting “regime change” in Iran – arrived in the UAE on Tuesday ahead of talks scheduled for Wednesday.

Just landed in the UAE. Looking forward to meeting with our Emirati allies tomorrow to discuss important and timely regional security matters.

— John Bolton (@AmbJohnBolton) May 28, 2019

A war of words between Iran and the United States escalated after attacks this month on oil tankers in the Gulf. Washington blamed the attacks on Tehran, which denied the accusations.

Bolton said last week the United States had “deep and serious” intelligence on threats posed by Iran, without providing details.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif earlier hit out at the United States after Trump said Washington was not looking for regime change in Iran but was only interested in preventing it from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said in October the US was seeking regime change in Iran, adding the Trump administration was the most hostile the Islamic Republic had faced in its four decades.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera News

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High-tech fishing gear could help save critically endangered right whales

Many fish, marine mammals and seabirds that inhabit the world’s oceans are critically endangered, but few are as close to the brink as the North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis). Only about 411 of these whales exist today, and at their current rate of decline, they could become extinct within our lifetimes.

From 1980 through about 2010, conservation efforts focused mainly on protecting whales from being struck by ships. Federal regulations helped reduce vessel collisions and supported a slight rebound in right whale numbers.

But at the same time, growing numbers of right whales died after becoming entangled in lobster and crab fishing gear. This may have happened because fishing ropes became stronger, and both whales and fishermen shifted their ranges so that areas of overlap increased. Entanglement has caused 80% of diagnosed mortalities since 2010, and the population has taken a significant downward turn.

This comes after a millennium of whaling that decimated the right whale population, reducing it from perhaps between 10,000 to 20,000 to a few hundred animals today. And entanglement deaths are much more inhumane than harpoons. A whaler’s explosive harpoon kills quickly, compared to months of drawn-out pain and debilitation caused by seemingly harmless fishing lines. We believe these deaths can be prevented by working with the trap fishing industries to adopt ropeless fishing gear – but North Atlantic right whales are running out of time.

Image: NOAA

Deadly encounters

Whalers pursued right whales for centuries because this species swam relatively slowly and floated when dead, so it was easier to kill and retrieve than other whales. By the mid-20th century, scientists assumed they had been hunted to extinction. But in 1980, researchers from the New England Aquarium who were studying marine mammal distribution in the Bay of Fundy off eastern Canada were stunned when they sighted 26 right whales.

Conservation efforts led to the enactment of regulations that required commercial ships to slow down in zones along the U.S. Atlantic coast where they were highly likely to encounter whales, reducing boat strikes. But this victory has been offset by rising numbers of entanglements.

Adult right whales can produce up to an estimated 8,000 pounds of force with a single stroke of their flukes. When they become tangled in fishing gear, they often break it and swim off trailing ropes and sometimes crab or lobster traps.

Lines and gear can wrap around a whale’s body, flukes, flippers and mouth. They impede swimming and feeding, and cause chronic infection, emaciation and damage to blubber, muscle and bone. Ultimately these injuries weaken the animal until it dies, which can take months to years.

Fishing rope furrowed into the lip of Bayla, right whale #3911.

Fishing rope furrowed into the lip of Bayla, right whale #3911.

Image: Michael Moore, NMFS Permit 932-1905-00/MA-009526, CC BY-ND

One of us, Michael Moore, is trained as a veterinarian and has examined many entangled dead whales. Moore has seen fishing rope embedded inches deep into a whale’s lip, and a juvenile whale whose spine had been deformed by the strain of dragging fishing gear. Other animals had flippers nearly severed by swimming wrapped in inexorably constricting ropes. Entanglement injuries to right whales are the worst animal trauma Moore has seen in his career.

Even if whales are able to wriggle free and live, the extreme stress and energy demands of entanglement, along with inadequate nutrition, are thought to be preventing females from getting pregnant and contributing to record low calving rates in recent years.

Solutions for whales and fishermen

The greatest entanglement risk is from ropes that lobster and crab fishermen use to attach buoys to traps they set on the ocean floor. Humpback and minke whales and leatherback sea turtles, all of which are federally protected, also become entangled.

Conservationists are looking for ways to modify or eliminate these ropes. Rock lobster fishermen in Australia already use pop-up buoys that ascend when they receive sound signals from fishing boats. The buoys trail out ropes as they rise, which fishermen retrieve and use to pull up their traps.

Other technologies are in development, including systems that acoustically identify traps on the seafloor and mark them with “virtual buoys” on fishermen’s chart plotters, eliminating the need for surface buoys. Fishermen also routinely use a customized hook on the end of a rope to catch the line between traps and haul them to the surface when the buoy line goes missing.

Transitioning to ropeless technology will require a sea change in some of North America’s most valuable fisheries. The 2016 U.S. lobster catch was worth US$670 million. Canadian fishermen landed CA$1.3 billion worth of lobster and CA$590 million worth of snow crab.

Just as no fisherman wants to catch a whale, researchers and conservationists don’t want to put fishermen out of business. In our view, ropeless technologies offer a genuine opportunity for whales and the fishing industry to co-exist if they can be made functional, affordable and safe to use.

Switching to ropeless gear is unlikely to be cheap. But as systems evolve and simplify, and production scales up, they will become more affordable. And government support could help fishermen make the shift. In Canada, the federal and New Brunswick provincial governments recently awarded CA$2 million to Canadian snow crab fishermen to test two ropeless trap designs.

Converting could save fishermen money in the long run. For example, California Dungeness crab fishermen closed their 2019 season three months ahead of schedule on April 15 to settle a lawsuit over whale entanglements, leaving crab they could have caught still in the water. Under the agreement, fishermen using ropeless gear will be exempt from future early closures.

A rebound is possible

The Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act require the U.S. government to conserve endangered species. In Congress, the pending SAVE Right Whales Act of 2019 would provide $5 million annually for collaborative research into preventing mortalities caused by the fishing and shipping industries. And an advisory committee to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recently recommended significant fishing protections, focused primarily on reducing the number of ropes in the water column and the strength of the remaining lines.

Consumers can also help. Public outcry over dolphin bycatch in tuna fisheries spurred passage of the Marine Mammal Protection Act and led to dolphin-safe tuna labeling, which ultimately reduced dolphin mortalities from half a million to about 1,000 animals annually. Choosing lobster and crab products caught without endangering whales could accelerate a similar transition.

Population trends in the North Atlantic and southern right whale species (estimates for North Atlantic species prior to 1990 are unavailable; southern estimates prior to 1990 on decadal scale). Illegal whaling caused a downturn in the southern species in the 1960s.

Population trends in the North Atlantic and southern right whale species (estimates for North Atlantic species prior to 1990 are unavailable; southern estimates prior to 1990 on decadal scale). Illegal whaling caused a downturn in the southern species in the 1960s.

Image: Michael Moore; data from Pace et al., 2017, North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium,   International Whaling Commission, CC BY-ND

North Atlantic right whales can still thrive if humans make it possible. The closely related southern right whale (Eubalaena australis), which has faced few human threats since the end of commercial whaling, has rebounded from just 300 animals in the early 20th century to an estimated 15,000 in 2010.

There are real ways to save North Atlantic right whales. If they go extinct, it will be on this generation’s watch.

This article originally published at The Conversation
here

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Egypt: Al Jazeera’s Mahmoud Hussein returned to Tora prison

In the middle of being processed for release, Al Jazeera journalist Mahmoud Hussein has instead been returned to prison in Egypt under unclear circumstances.

Hussein’s family said in a statement on Tuesday that a new investigation has been opened against the journalist, who has already spent more than 880 days behind bars without charge.

An Egyptian court on Thursday had upheld a May 21 decision to release Hussein under “precautionary measures” which would have restricted his movements, but freed him from jail.

The Qatar-based journalist was transferred from southern Cairo’s Tora prison to a holding cell in Giza on Saturday where he awaited final clearance from the National Security Agency’s office.

“After spending a night at the police station, the family was surprised to learn that Mahmoud had been taken to the office of the prosecutor for state security,” the statement read.

The family then waited on Sunday for Hussein to be released from the police station as they were told that the visit to the state security’s office was part of the release formalities.

However, “he was taken back to Tora prison,” the family statement said, and that no official reason was given for his continued detention.

No charges, no trial

The journalist has been in custody since 2016 without facing formal charges or a trial. He has not been convicted of anything. 

Hussein, an Egyptian national who works for the Al Jazeera Arabic television channel based in Qatar, was arrested on arrival on December 20, 2016, while travelling to Egypt to visit his family. 

Hussein was accused of “incitement against state institutions and broadcasting false news with the aim of spreading chaos,” allegations he and the Al Jazeera Media Network deny.

Gamal Eid, executive director of the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information, said under Egyptian law Hussein should have been freed within 24 hours of Thursday’s release order by the court.

“This is a final court ruling but the problem is that security forces delay releases when they do not like those freed,” Eid told Al Jazeera last week.

Hussein’s detention was in violation of both Egyptian and international laws, with the former setting 24 months as the maximum period for pre-trial detention.

Egyptian authorities have repeatedly renewed his two-year detention. 

According to Hussein’s lawyer Taher Abul Nasr there are at least 20,000 people currently in detention without charge in Egypt for political reasons.

Hundreds of them have already exceeded the legal two-year pre-trial term, he said.

‘Arbitrary detention’

In February, the United Nations called Hussein’s jailing “arbitrary detention“, saying the “appropriate remedy would be to release Mr Hussein immediately”.

Since the overthrow of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi in 2013, a senior member of the Muslim Brotherhood, Al Jazeera Media Network has been portrayed as Egypt’s national enemy for its coverage of the group.

That same year Egypt arrested and later imprisoned Al Jazeera’s Abdullah Elshamy, Baher Mohamed, Mohamed Fahmy and Peter Greste on charges of spreading “false news” – cases that were widely condemned by international media outlets and many politicians. All have since been freed.

 A former editor-in-chief of Al Jazeera Arabic was sentenced to death in absentia for purportedly endangering national security. 

Several other Al Jazeera journalists have also been charged in absentia of spreading lies and supporting “terrorists” – a reference to the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood organisation.

Since his coup removed Morsi, President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has waged an unprecedented crackdown on dissent, arresting thousands and rolling back freedoms won after the 2011 uprising that ended decades of rule by Hosni Mubarak.

In 2017, the Egyptian government blocked access to Al Jazeera’s news website along with dozens of others it deemed too critical of Sisi’s regime.

According to a 2018 report by the New York-based Committee to Protest Journalists, Egypt, along with Turkey and China, was responsible for more than half of journalists jailed around the world for the third year in a row. 

Reporters Without Borders ranked Egypt 163rd out of 180 in its 2019 Press Freedom Index.

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Kid interrupts group song with perfect rendition of ‘The Imperial March’ from Star Wars

By Harry Hill

All talent show lineups should include Darth Vader’s theme song. 

Twitter user Erin Gibson blessed the feeds with a video of her cousin’s son hijacking the mic to sing “The Imperial March,” Darth Vader’s theme from Star Wars. The rendition gets him a lot of laughs, even though his co-performers aren’t having it. At one point, he hilariously swats the girl to his right, who happens to be his older sister, away mid-song. 

Sometimes when I need to laugh, I think about the time my cousin’s son took over a group rendition of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star to sing the Imperial March pic.twitter.com/wnjy2rZFFQ

— erin gibson (@actuallyerin) May 26, 2019

The clip, which has been viewed over seven million times, has made everyone a fan of the boy.

14/10 Child. Would raise.

— Byron Whyte, MD (@UrbaneDoc4Kids) May 27, 2019

Even Mark Hamill, who famously played Luke Skywalker, retweeted it.

Now, whenever I hear “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star,” I will think of “The Imperial March.” And for that, I’m grateful. 

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“Paid Off” host Michael Torpey exceeds his own painting expectations

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Just how easy is it to keep up with ‘Joy of Painting’ master Bob Ross? We asked these comedians to try their hand at following along with the simple steps and soothing sounds of the boss himself. Will they have their brush with greatness?

Mark Stetson

After worrying that he was going off the rails, Michael Torpey ended up painting one of the best paintings we’ve seen yet!

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Kawhi Leonard 2019 Free Agency Odds: Clippers Heavy Favorites over Raptors

TORONTO, CANADA - MAY 25: Ernie Johnson interviews Kawhi Leonard #2 of the Toronto Raptors after a game between the Milwaukee Bucks and the Toronto Raptors during Game Six of the Eastern Conference Finals on May 25, 2019 at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images)

Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images

As the Toronto Raptors prepare for the 2019 NBA Finals, they face the possibility that it could be the final series Kawhi Leonard plays in a Raptors uniform.

The Los Angeles Clippers are currently heavy favorites to land Leonard in free agency this summer, according to Caesars Palace:

B/R Betting @br_betting

Clippers are big favorites to land Kawhi 👀

(via @CaesarsPalace) https://t.co/fJVGqMsAhK

The three-time All-Star has a $21.3 million player option for the 2019-20 campaign.

Toronto acquired Leonard last offseason knowing that it was possible Leonard could be one-and-done in the Six. Still, president Masai Ujiri decided it worth trading a package centered around DeMar DeRozan for Leonard and Danny Green.

It’s hard to argue with the results.

The Raptors (58-24) finished with the second-best record in basketball during the regular season and have made it to the Finals for the first time in franchise history—and Leonard has played a pivotal role in the team’s success.

After averaging a career-high 26.6 points per game during the regular season, Leonard has taken his game to another level during the postseason. The 2014 Finals MVP is averaging 31.2 ppg on 50.7 percent shooting this postseason:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Kawhi is on a playoff run for the ages.

◽ 31.2 PPG | 8.8 RPG | 50.7 FG%
◽ Raptors’ first NBA Finals
◽ Iconic buzzer-beater
◽ Helped stop Giannis
◽ 7 games with 35+ points
◽ Playoff points leader by 100+
◽ Playoff leader in PTS, FGM, MIN, STL https://t.co/6RrjfQvhPM

Leonard’s incredible performance helped Toronto rally from an 0-2 hole in the Eastern Conference Finals against the top-seeded Milwaukee Bucks and set up a showdown with the two-time defending champs.

But with just one series remaining, Leonard’s impending free agency will continue to be a storyline.

When Leonard was traded to Toronto, Sean Deveney of the Sporting News reported that the two-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year had “no interest” in playing for the Raptors. Meanwhile, ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski reported the Southern California native had been hoping to land in Los Angeles, either with the Lakers or the Clippers.

Leonard has not given any indication what he might do should he opt for free agency this summer. However, Wojnarowski revealed on The Woj Pod (h/t Real GM) earlier this month that Toronto is a “serious consideration now.”

It’s worth noting Toronto can offer Leonard for money than any other team. The Raptors can offer him a five-year, $190 million this summer while opposing teams are limited to four years and $141 million, per Wojnarowski.

Raptors coach Nick Nurse revealed back in January, per Tim Bontemps of ESPN.com, that Leonard made it clear to him that his top priority is winning. Getting to the Finals is a strong selling point, and now the team will have the opportunity to make an overwhelming recruiting pitch against the Warriors.

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Another GOP lawmaker blocks massive disaster aid package


Thomas Massie

Rep. Thomas Massie demanded that the vote be held after the House returns from recess next week. | Bryan Woolston/AP Photo

Another House Republican on Tuesday thwarted attempts to pass a bipartisan disaster aid package, further delaying $19 billion in emergency relief and frustrating lawmakers whose states were hit by devastating hurricanes, wildfires and flooding.

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), who objected to the bill’s passage during a voice vote, demanded that the vote be held after the House returns from recess next week — making it unlikely that President Donald Trump can sign the package before early June.

Story Continued Below

“If the Speaker of this House felt that this was must-pass legislation, the speaker of this House should have called a vote on this legislation before sending its members on recess for 10 days,” Massie said.

Massie’s objection is now the sole hurdle to clearing the $19 billion package, which had been stalled for nearly six months until an 11th hour deal in the Senate last Thursday.

House Democrats will have another chance to clear the disaster aid package on Thursday, when the chamber returns for another pro forma session. But Republicans have made clear they will continue to throw up roadblocks.

Conservatives have objected to the Democrats’ attempts to clear the funding bill during recess, with no chance for debate and no roll call vote to put members on the record. Republicans have also complained that the bill ignores the White House’s emergency funding request for the southern border — which leaders of both parties agreed to leave out for the sake of speed.

Trump has already agreed to sign the emergency relief bill, which came together in stunning fashion just before the Senate left for a 10-day recess, with GOP leaders agreeing to pass nearly the exact bill that House Democrats had passed weeks before.

By the time the Senate voted, the House had already departed for recess, with its members scattered across the country. House Democrats attempted to send it to Trump on Friday before Memorial Day during a pro forma session, but the plan was derailed by lone dissenter Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas).

Much of the $19 billion in recovery dollars will go to states hit by Hurricanes Michael and Florence in 2018, mostly Florida, Georgia and Alabama. It also includes money for states ravaged by wildfires, like California and Oregon.

The disaster aid package has been snared by setbacks since before the midterm elections, including Trump’s own determined efforts to block Puerto Rico from receiving more cash.

Republicans and Democrats ultimately agreed to deliver $600 million for Puerto Rico’s nutritional assistance program and $300 million for its community development programs.

Efforts to fund disaster relief were also made more complicated when the White House asked Congress for roughly $4.5 billion in emergency money for the southern border, where authorities and humanitarian efforts had been overwhelmed by a surge of arrivals from Central America.

Democrats had demanded stringent rules for any money going to the White House’s border operations — a hurdle that further delayed a deal. Republicans ultimately agreed to drop their border funding requests, punting that request until later this summer.

Congress last approved a giant disaster aid package in February 2018, which focused on a trio of deadly hurricanes that hit Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) on Tuesday urged Republicans not to block the bill.

“It needs to be passed as soon as possible for the welfare for the people in this country,” he said.

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‘PUBG’ players arrested in India for playing game on their phones

In several cities in India, gamers have been arrested simply for playing PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (aka PUBG) on their phones.

An astonishing BuzzFeed News report published Monday night took a deep dive into the extreme popularity of Battlegrounds in India, as well as government efforts to contain it. At the center of the story are four boys who were arrested for playing the game in a public space after it was banned in the city of Ahmedabad.

Authorities cited the game as a powerful distraction from academics as a reason for the ban. Some even attributed a handful of deaths to the game. Additionally, some parents have accused the game of encouraging violent or aggressive tendencies in their children, per BuzzFeed’s report.

'PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds' is all about being the last player standing.

‘PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds’ is all about being the last player standing.

Image: PUBG CORP

Battlegrounds was essentially the game that kickstarted the current battle royale craze in the games industry. Players are air-dropped onto an island with 99 others and tasked with scavenging for weapons and supplies in a quest to be the last one standing. While similar games like Fortnite and Apex Legends may have stolen some of its thunder, Battlegrounds soared to new heights with a mobile release last year.

The mobile version reportedly raked in more than $65 million in March alone, according to market analysis from Sensor Tower

SEE ALSO: John Wick officially joins ‘Fortnite’

BuzzFeed’s reports that officers were on the lookout for young people in public places with their phones in landscape mode, considered a sure indication they might be playing the game. It was banned in the Indian state of Gujarat in early March, resulting in a separate arrest of 10 students that made international headlines. 

While many of those arrested were let off with warnings or small fines, others spent nights in jail for the crime of playing a video game. Even if the punishments weren’t severe, the report pointed to the trauma of being arrested and the stigma surrounding it as lasting effects of the laws.

The Gujarati cities of Ahmedabad and Rajkot eventually lifted the bans in April and May, respectively. 

Still, BuzzFeed’s report paints a fascinating picture of a country where mobile gaming only became accessible to most of the population relatively recently, and a government struggling to deal with the changes that came with it. 

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