Cowboys Get Amari Cooper

  1. Full Details on Amari Cooper Trade

    via Bleacher Report

  2. Gordon Wishes Cooper Well

    F L ⚡ S H @Melvingordon25

    EAT UP MY GUY !!! https://t.co/fYurFyNZkW

  3. GrudenSZN

    Riley McAtee @Riley_McAtee

    when you trade a bad receiver with one year left on his deal for a first round pick https://t.co/AjPb4QQA8Q

  4. Raiders Thievery!

    Mike Wright @FFHitman

    “I dunno Jon, how are we possibly going to get the Cowboys 1st round pick??” https://t.co/ms9aY67CdK

  5. Live Look at #RaiderNation

    Andrew Tashian @Tashville401

    My reaction when finding out Jon Gruden actually won a trade https://t.co/GhDz4j3PVa

  6. Not Everyone Is Happy

    Dieter Kurtenbach @dkurtenbach

    Don’t let the Cowboys’ ridiculous overpay make you forget that Jon Gruden found no use for Amari Cooper in his offense.

  7. Life Comes at Ya Fast 😂

    SB Nation @SBNation

    Congratulations? @BloggingTheBoys https://t.co/CEQIbdlYDf

  8. Woof 😬

    ✖isaiah.✖ @FourWitTheFive

    When you go from Derek Carr to Dak Prescott https://t.co/VzYAoQY25L

  9. Don’t Be That Friend

    Adam Rank @adamrank

    A first-rounder for Amari Cooper.

    The Cowboys are your friend who pays $179 for a T-shirt that they could have bought at Target for $12.

  10. Embrace the Tank

    MileHighReport @MileHighReport

    Me when Oakland embraces the tank. #JustLoseBaby https://t.co/avQGdn2VWv

  11. Worth It?

    Maurice Moton @MoeMoton

    “But no team will trade a first-round pick for Amari Cooper”

    Haha!

    #Raiders

  12. Gruden Has TIME

    Ian Kenyon @IanKenyonNFL

    Jon Gruden is Sashi Brown with a 10-year contract. This is going to be fun as hell.

  13. Gruden Kicking People Out

    NOTSportsCenter @NOTSportsCenter

    Jon Gruden, when he sees someone on the Raiders with actual talent https://t.co/JIg8mof6pP

  14. Good Question 🤔

    Wale @Wale

    Raider fans. Real question . Why did y’all trade Cooper an Mack?

  15. Howling 😂

    David Matos @DaviidMatos

    Jon Gruden after he hangs up the phone with Jerry Jones: https://t.co/wuEyuqbXUZ

  16. Gruden Did…Good?

    Sean Wagner-McGough @seanjwagner

    Honestly, good for Jon Gruden. That’s a fantastic move.

  17. Who Needs to Develop Talent Anyway?

    Sports Illustrated @SInow

    2013 No. 12 overall D.J. Hayden

    2014 No. 5 overall Khalil Mack

    2015 No. 4 overall Amari Cooper

    No longer with the Raiders https://t.co/OCnizmBl0E

  18. Jerry Always Getting the Hate

    James Seltzer @JamesSeltzer

    Only Jerry Jones could make Jon Gruden win a trade

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Can Saudi Arabia get away with murder?

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is promising to reveal the “naked truth” about the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Saudi Arabia’s consulate in Istanbul.

That will be the first official release of details.

Unofficially, Turkish sources have repeatedly leaked gruesome accounts of how Khashoggi was killed and dismembered three weeks ago.

The journalist was missing for two weeks before Saudi leaders eventually admitted his killing, they say by mistake.

Their story has changed since then. What’s being described as a “rogue operation” is the latest explanation.

What is not changing is the kingdom’s insistence that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman did not order the operation to kill.

As the international outcry builds, critics are sceptical that the heir apparent did not know anything about it.

Will pressure on the Saudis work?

Presenter: Peter Dobbie

Guests:

Ali al-Ahmed – director of the Gulf Affairs Institute and former Saudi political prisoner

Matthew Brodsky – senior fellow with the Security Studies Group in Washington, DC

Mustafa Akyol – senior fellow with CATO Institute’s Center for Global Liberty and Prosperity

Source: Al Jazeera News

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Trump says he’s ditched Lyin’ Ted name: ‘He’s Beautiful Ted’


Donald Trump

When the two men were duking it out for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, President Donald Trump famously hurled insults at Ted Cruz, christening him with one of Trump’s signature monikers: “Lyin’ Ted.” | Evan Vucci/AP Photo

President Donald Trump let bygones be bygones Monday with his former rival presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz, praising the Texas Republican before heading to Houston to rally for him.

When the two men were duking it out for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, Trump famously hurled insults at Cruz, christening him with one of Trump’s signature monikers: “Lyin’ Ted.” Trump also went after Cruz’s family, suggesting Cruz’s father was involved in the John F. Kennedy assassination and targeting Cruz’s wife Heidi for her appearance.

Story Continued Below

But the president made a reversal of his past insults as he prepared for his highly anticipated rally in support of Cruz’s Senate reelection campaign.

“He’s not Lyin’ Ted anymore. He’s Beautiful Ted,” Trump said. “I call him Texas Ted.”

Still, when asked if he regretted his comments about Cruz’s father, Trump demurred and played the comments off as part of a “very, very nasty and tough campaign.”

“I don’t regret anything, honestly,” Trump said. “It all worked out very nicely.”

Trump spoke while leaving the White House for Houston, where he will rally in support of Cruz, who faces a challenge from Rep. Beto O’Rourke. O’Rourke has captured national attention for his strong showing against Texas conservatives who have dominated the state’s politics for decades. Last quarter, O’Rourke raised more money than any Senate candidate in a single quarter in American history.

But Trump was not impressed. Responding to reporters Monday, the president dismissed the viral candidate while reasserting his support for Cruz.

“I think Beto O’Rourke is highly overrated,” Trump said. “When I heard about him, I thought he must be something special, he’s not.”

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Darius Bazley Takes $1M Internship with New Balance After Skipping G League

The Black Team's Darius Bazley #55 in action against the White Team during the Jordan Brand Classic high school basketball game, Sunday, April 8, 2018, in Brooklyn. (AP Photo/Gregory Payan)

Gregory Payan/Associated Press

First, Darius Bazley decided to forgo a scholarship at Syracuse to play one season in the G League before declaring himself eligible for the 2019 NBA draft. Now, after signing with agent Rich Paul and Klutch Sports in May, he’s also forgoing the G League to serve as a New Balance intern. 

According to Marc Stein of the New York Times:

“This week, Paul revealed he has arranged for Bazley to spend the heart of the college basketball season—January, February and March—as an intern at New Balance.

“The internship, to be precise, is folded into a handsome shoe contract Bazley, 18, has landed with New Balance on the lure of his pro potential. According to Paul, Bazley’s multiyear deal will pay him $1 million ‘no matter what happens’ with his NBA career—and can pay up to $14 million if he reaches all performance incentives.”      

“They hooked me up,” Bazley said of the internship.

In March, Bazley announced his decommitment from Syracuse to play in the G League. But in late August, he told Shams Charania of The Athletic that he would be skipping the G League, too:

“Talking about it over with my group, we felt confidently that the G League wasn’t going to be needed and now I can use this time to work on my craft. It’s mainly me talking to Rich [Paul], he knows so much, and whenever he speaks my ears perk up. When Miles [Bridges] was in Cleveland for his predraft workouts, whenever he got a chance to work out in front of NBA teams, I was working out in the gym, too. So that played a part in it, me playing well in those workouts for us to say there’s no upside in the G League. If you play well, it’s expected. If you don’t play well, you’re not NBA-ready. That’s what they’ll say. For me, working out and preparing is the best route.”

The NBA has attempted to make the G League path more viable for players who don’t intend to play college basketball, creating a “professional path” contract for prospects that pays them $125,000, ostensibly a holdover option until the league allows players to enter the draft immediately after high school.

The G League route would have offered Bazley experience and time on the court, but Paul isn’t worried about that trade-off.

“There will be some things he misses out on, but I’m not worried at all—not with the talent and skill set he has,” Paul said. “No matter what we do this year, he still has to be developed in the NBA. You see it even with the highest draft picks—it’s not like you come into the league as a rookie and set the league on fire.”

The gamble will pay off if Bazley is a lottery pick in the 2019 NBA draft, though that’s hardly a guarantee. In his most recent mock draft, B/R’s Jonathan Wasserman didn’t project Bazley to be a first-round pick, while ESPN’s Jonathan Givony projected him at No. 18 overall in his August mock.

As Charania noted, however, Bazley has top-10 talent, and he’s hardly the first player to bypass a year of college. Players like Emmanuel Mudiay, Dante Exum and Terrance Ferguson played a year overseas, for instance, while Mitchell Robinson dropped out of Western Kentucky last year to train for the draft.

Regardless, his lucrative agreement with New Balance should act as insurance in the event he isn’t a lottery selection. 

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Another ugly Florida campaign — over dog racing


Greyhounds are seen on the track as they race.

A ballot question fight has left the industry’s nerves raw amid the increased scrutiny from animal rights groups. | Rhona Wise/AFP/Getty Images

Elections

Opponents call the tracks ‘a Depression-era anachronism.’

TALLAHASSEE — A bitter Florida campaign featuring charges of lying, dirty tricks and bad faith is nearing an end. But this isn’t the battle for governor or Senate: It’s a ballot question that would ban greyhound racing in Florida, one of the industry’s last bastions.

After six months of feuding between animal rights advocates and industry leaders, Florida voters could determine the future of the industry for the entire country and thousands of breeders, track operators and trainers. Forty states have already banned dog racing, and Florida has 11 of the 17 remaining greyhound tracks in the country.

Story Continued Below

If voters approve the ban on Nov. 6, “it would be very damaging to the industry, and the industry would be in a tough position for the future,” National Greyhound Association Executive Director Jim Gartland told POLITICO. “I don’t think it will kill it. … But it will be tough moving forward.”

The battle over Florida’s Prop 13 has been rife with drama, punctuated earlier this month by a state government decision to shut down public tours of kennels — a loss for greyhound racing advocates who were looking to disprove the allegations of animal cruelty that critics have thrown at them. Backers of the ban have promoted the amendment with hours of race video capturing dog deaths and countless photos of injuries and mistreatment.

Republican Gov. Rick Scott said he supports the ban; his Senate rival, Bill Nelson, has not weighed in on the issue. Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum, the Democratic nominee for governor, also supports the ban; his GOP opponent, Ron DeSantis, has avoided the question, saying only that he feels gambling policy should be addressed in legislation and not added to the state constitution.

Opponents of the racing ban say the criticisms are outdated, and they succeeded in getting a state circuit judge to take the question off the Nov. 6 ballot earlier this year — only to see the state Supreme Court put it back on. At one point, backers of the amendment accused their opponents of making common cause with the chief of a dog-hunting group who is facing animal cruelty charges in Louisiana. And earlier this month, ban proponents called on greyhound industry lobbyist Jack Cory to resign after he compared greyhound deaths to humans who die in polo games. (A leading supporter of the ban’s son died during a polo game in February 2017.)

“The industry is no longer viable — it’s dead,” says Carey Theil, the organizer of “Protect Dogs — Yes on 13,” the group leading the charge for the potential ban. Theil is also executive director of the Massachusetts-based GREY2K USA, which lobbies across the country for stronger greyhound protection, and calls dog racing “a Depression-era anachronism.”

Theil’s Florida campaign is supported by the Committee to Support Dogs, which raised more than $2.2 million, including $1.5 million from the Doris Day Animal League, which is affiliated with the Humane Society of the United States. Another $603,000 came from GREY2K USA, and $75,000 came from a Washington-based group known as Animal Wellness Action.

In contrast, the Committee to Support Greyhounds raised just $52,000 in small contributions from across the country.

In a bid to win over the public and combat the animal cruelty narrative, pro-racing advocates offered this summer to give voters a chance to tour the kennels at four of the state’s greyhound tracks. But the state Department of Business and Professional Regulation shut the visits down on Sept. 4, just days before they were to begin. DBPR issued a warning to tracks about an existing rule prohibiting the public from visiting restricted areas of a racetrack, despite the fact that Cory had given the tours to state lawmakers and journalists for years.

The agency’s decision to shut down the tours was in response to an anonymous Aug. 28 email complaint. Cory said he is convinced Theil authored the email, and that animal right advocates wanted the tours shut down because they would not show the evidence of cruelty that’s been the centerpiece of their campaign for the ban.

“Mr. Theil is a pathological liar,” Cory said. “If he had nothing to do with it, he would want people to go in there — he would want the press to have access. … But instead, he’d rather just have you believe his half-truths and lies.”

Theil said he did not know who sent the email and that industry advocates are just trying to paper over the reports of animal abuse that ban advocates have been drawing attention to in their campaign.

“I really don’t know how Jack sleeps at night,” Theil said.

Theil’s campaign offered a statement the same day the tours were stopped that said it had no input in the agency’s decision — but the statement largely tracks the key points in the anonymous complaint, calling the kennel tours a “politically motivated photo opportunity.”

The ballot question fight has left the industry’s nerves raw amid the increased scrutiny from animal rights groups.

At the Sanford Orlando Kennel Club kennel in late September, greyhound kennel owner A.J. Grant gave a POLITICO reporter a tour and said he would gladly pay any fine levied by DBPR to give people a chance to see the operation. Grant pointed to a block of frozen ground beef, defrosting in an industrial size sink. He offered an opportunity to sample a whiff of the meat, which the greyhounds eat along with applesauce and peanut butter.

“That’s the diseased meat they keep telling you about,” Grant told POLITICO. “You just let me know if you see anything wrong with it.”

“I’m fighting for my livelihood here,” he added. “I don’t care if they fine me.”

But opponents including Theil say conditions such as long stretches of captivity in a cage should have no place in a dog’s life.

Grant later complained to POLITICO that he was the subject of an anonymous complaint about fleas and ticks, which prompted a state investigator to conduct a surprise inspection. Grant said the investigator found one dead tick on one of the 40 dogs the investigator checked. The visit was nothing more than another stunt by Theil’s campaign, Grant said.

But DBPR spokeswoman Suellen Wilkins said an investigator visited Grant’s kennel because a dog from the kennel had died from a bacterial infection and the visit was a follow-up to ensure the other dogs were OK.

In some cases, pressure from animal right advocates has led to reforms that have helped boost business at some tracks. Still, the National Greyhound Association’s Gartland notes that the amendment presents a risk to the broader industry; the state’s tracks, for instance, provide business for a Kansas farm where 400 racing greyhounds are raised every year.

The Kansas farm recently reduced the number of dogs it raises by 50 percent just on the possibility that Amendment 13 will pass, he said.

“And that’s not something you can just bounce back from,” Gartland said. “If we win this, it’ll take two years for that farm to get back up to speed.”

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Normani Drops Two New Songs With Supreme Bop Maestro Calvin Harris



Getty Images

Linking up with ultra major bop architect Calvin Harris is always a good idea; just ask Dua Lipa, Katy Perry, Rihanna, Sam Smith — the list goes on. Another name you can add to it now, and another authority on the matter of Harris’s bop supremacy, is Normani.

The two have connected for a new pair of dance floor-ready pop tunes including “Checklist,” also featuring WizKid, and the house-influenced “Slow Down.” The latter seems of a piece with Harris’s previous 2018 house-pop hits, including “One Kiss” with Lipa and “Promises” with Smith. On both, though, Normani brings an urgent and dynamic energy that marks a high point here in the early part of the former Fifth Harmony singer‘s burgeoning solo career.

These two cuts don’t sound much alike, but both are showcases for Normani’s vocals to take center stage. On “Checklist,” she adopts a delivery reminiscent of reggae to match the fluttering rhythms, while she ramps up the speed to increase the heat on the strobe light-primed “Slow Down.”

On Instagram, she shouted out her collaborators for these two tracks. “Throughout the process of working on my album I have gotten the opportunity to get in the room with some of the most talented human beings everrrrr like ever ever!!!!,” Normani wrote, singling out Harris and WizKid, as well as Jessie Reyez and Starrah, who worked on the songs.

In the wake of 5H’s hiatus announcement in March, Normani has appeared on the sultry “Love Lies” with Khalid and the remix of Reyez’s swaggering “Body Count” along with Kehlani. And earlier this month, she popped up with Davido on Quavo’s solo effort, Quavo Huncho. She’s keeping busy, and these two new tracks are nice additions to an already packed year for Normani.

Listen to the two very different tracks above and try to choose a favorite between them, if you can.

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Japan challenges Facebook to improve its users’ security

“Mark, my dude, what is going on over there?!” — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe

Image: AZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images

2017%2f09%2f19%2ffa%2frakheadshot.f59fbBy Rachel Kraus

The latest Facebook data breach is prompting scrutiny on the world stage.

On Monday, the Japanese government asked Facebook to be more proactive and transparent about protecting its users’ data. Reuters learned of the request via a statement from Japan’s Personal Information Protection Commission.

SEE ALSO: Mark Zuckerberg on election interference: ‘This has been an intense year’

Specifically, Japanese authorities want Facebook to increase monitoring of third party apps, tell users when there’s been any issue, and keep the government abreast of any changes to its security infrastructure. 

The letter is reportedly just a request. There is nothing legally binding or carrying any penalties within it.

Japan’s ask of Facebook comes after the social media company revealed that a security breach compromised the personal data of 29 million users. It also follows a year of scandal about how the British political consulting and data firm Cambridge Analytica got their hands on the data of 87 million Facebook users, and used the data to inform its microtargeted psychographic advertising.

In light of Facebook’s very bad year, Japan is just the latest country to tell the company to do better. The United States, Canada, and the European Union have all held hearings and been in communication with the company. Papua New Guinea even went as far as to ban Facebook in the country for one month, to assess the benefits vs. risks for citizens.

Facebook was certainly more forthcoming about the recent breach than it was about Cambridge Analytica; it’s clearly trying to do better on that watchword of the tech community, “transparency.”

Now it just has another government watching its every move.

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TCU WR KaVontae Turpin Arrested on Assault with Bodily Injury Charges

AUSTIN, TX - SEPTEMBER 22:  KaVontae Turpin #25 of the TCU Horned Frogs reacts in the fourth quarter against the Texas Longhorns at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium on September 22, 2018 in Austin, Texas.  (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images)

Tim Warner/Getty Images

TCU wide receiver KaVontae Turpin was arrested Sunday for assault with bodily injury of a family member.

“Texas Christian University is aware that one of its students was recently arrested for a reported domestic situation,” TCU said in a statement. “The university takes these types of reports very seriously and is continuing to gather information to determine next steps. TCU expects its students to behave in an ethical manner, abide by campus policies and adhere to state and federal law.

“The student also may face a charge of violating the University Code of Student Conduct, the results of which are independent and separate from any legal charges.”

Drew Davidson of the Star-Telegram reported Turpin has been released from jail.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app and get the game.

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Border tensions boil over as France ‘dumps’ migrants to Italy

Relations between Italy and France hit a new low this week, with Rome accusing French border guards of illegally crossing the border to “dump” unwelcome migrants inside Italian territory.

On Monday, a delegation from the Italian interior ministry was expected in the Italian mountain village of Claviere, 80km north of Turin, to investigate increasing reports of illegal crossings by French officers.

“The French are trespassing, dumping migrants at their pleasure … but Italy is no longer the refugee camp of Europe,” said Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, as he ordered a fresh military deployment to check the border on Sunday.

Italian authorities claim that French officers disregard the frontier line as well as standard refoulement procedures for migrants, often dropping them in the woods between Claviere and the French town of Montgenevre.

To defuse the tensions, Christophe Castaner, the newly-appointed French interior minister, said he wished to improve border cooperation but called for more stringent measures against undocumented immigration, supposedly in Italy.

“We have to be more efficient in the expulsion procedures of illegal migrants or those whose asylum request have already been denied,” he told Journal du Dimanche. 

Salvini, who is also a deputy prime minister and the head of the far-right League party, did not wait long to issue a sharp retort.

“I am happy Castaner shares my views about illegal migrants. When I spoke of expulsions I was labelled a racist, even by the French. Better late than never”. 

The Italian government’s hard line on migration has come under fire by French President Emmanuel Macron, but Castaner has tried to refrain from engaging in a spat with Salvini.

Macron, however, has not hidden his antipathy for Salvini and his anti-migrant policies, describing the interior minister’s approach as “nauseating”.

The two have engaged in a tit-for-tat, with Salvini replying by calling Macron a hypocrite disguised as a humanitarian who invokes solidarity while pushing away migrants, including children. 

Amnesty accuses France of inhuman treatment 

Perhaps paradoxically, Salvini’s accusations are now finding an echo in the opposite camp of human rights watchdogs.

On Wednesday, Amnesty International and 12 other charities accused France’s authorities of mistreating refugees and migrants, including children, at the borders with Italy in what they described as the “inhuman and hypocritical behaviour of the French authorities”.

The allegations came after a task force of 60 human rights lawyers and activists conducted a two-day mission at the French border town of Briancon, not far from Claviere.

“The list of violations is long, and we join our voices to those of local NGOs so that the French government stops turning a deaf ear and stops these illegal and degrading practices,” said Agnes Lerolle, coordinator of the French-Italian task force.

“This inhuman and hypocritical behaviour is unacceptable in a state of law.”

Amnesty said the violations include obstruction of asylum requests, neglect of unaccompanied minors, mistreatment, harassment and denial of emergency healthcare and humanitarian assistance.

“The attitude of French border control authorities is appalling,” Riccardo Noury, a spokesperson for Amnesty told Al Jazeera. “The use of threats, scornful and aggressive behaviour towards defenceless people, especially migrant children, is deplorable.”

Amnesty denounced a systematic violation of the rights of migrants to request asylum. Under international law, migrants should always be granted the right to request asylum and unaccompanied children should be provided immediate protection, regardless of their status.

“France is violating both principles,” Noury said. 

The French Ministry of Interior did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment on the alleged abuses.

Denial of medical care and child protection 

In one documented case, an Ivorian migrant was denied medical care after sustaining an injury during a chase by French guards in the woods.

“Border police threatened to shoot him down if he didn’t stop,” said Noury. “He received medical attention only after being taken back into Italy.”

An unaccompanied minor from Ivory Coast told Amnesty the French border police refused to acknowledge his age, saying “all migrants claim to be minors”.

“I was told, I cannot live in France if I am not a French citizen and I can never hope to become one,” the minor told the UK-based rights group.

In just two days, the task force witnessed 26 cases of migrants pushed back into Italy, eight of whom were unaccompanied minors. According to Amnesty, at least 11 of these refoulements were illegal and its lawyers have appealed to the Tribunal of Marseilles for their annulment.

In June, Oxfam, Intersos and other human rights watchdogs condemned French methods – especially towards minor children along the southern border with Italy.

They said minors as young as 12 were being held without food or care, put on trains or left at the border without any assistance despite their requests to remain in France.

The charities accused French police of falsifying the birth dates of migrant children travelling alone in an attempt to pass them off as adults and send them back to Italy, as well as cutting the soles off their shoes to prevent them from trespassing again. 

‘Ping-pong game of migrants’

But while France is allegedly violating the fundamental human rights of migrants, Italy has also come under criticism for its inability to implement a strict registration system of refugees arriving on its soil.

The country has been unable to sustain a proper registration process for asylum seekers, who at times arrive by the thousands on Italian shores. Most migrants’ centres are near collapse.

There is no mechanism in place allowing for an integration process and stranded refugees remain exposed to the web of illegal labour and human trafficking at the hands of criminal organisations. 

“In this ongoing ping-pong game of migrants between France and Italy there is a fundamental international norm that is being violated: the right to asylum,” said Noury.

“The Dublin Accord has turned the countries of the south, like Italy and Greece, into parking lots for human beings, because it lacks a solidarity principle of redistribution of migrants.”

The accord stipulates that a migrant should file their asylum request in the country of entry. The evaluation process can last many months and its acceptance is not granted. In the meantime, the host nation is left to bear the migrant’s costs indefinitely.

Southern countries such as Italy and Greece say refugees and migrants should be distributed among European states. Many also believe that the Dublin system pushes migrants to choose illegal ways to reach the north of Europe, thus increasing human trafficking. 

According to estimates with the Italian Ministry of Interior, out of 82,000 asylum requests examined in 2017, some 52.4 percent were not eligible. Today, there are an estimated 600,000 undocumented migrants in Italy.

“There is consensus over the fact that Dublin needs to be changed, but we are stuck,” Hanne Beirens, acting director of the Migration Policy Institute Europe, told Al Jazeera.

“In the absence of a politically acceptable solution, countries are now adopting these ad hoc measures at the borders, like stopping secondary movements of migrants within Europe.”

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Pete Davidson Addresses His Ariana Grande Breakup With A Lot Of Jokes, Of Course



Kevin Mazur/WireImage

Just two months ago, Ariana Grande stood onstage at the 2018 VMAs, accepting the award for Best Pop, and shouted out her fiancé. “Pete Davidson, thanks for existing,” she said. The zeitgeist of their relationship and subsequent engagement, which began in early June, had reached its peak. And then it was over.

Since the news that the pair had ended things a little over a week ago, Ari’s taken herself off of social media for the time being — though maybe she’s back now? Pete, meanwhile, has been off social media for months. But as his trademark hilarious contributions to SNL‘s Weekend Update consistently remind us, the dude tends to keep it real. So that’s what he did over the weekend.

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

At a comedy show co-hosted with Judd Apatow, Pete addressed the elephant in the room with a joke, naturally. “Well, as you could tell, I don’t want to be here. There’s a lot going on,” he told the room, as E! reports. “Does anybody have any open rooms? Looking for a roommate?”

Pete also apparently took time to address the, uh, “permanent” reminders of his and Ari’s love that he got inked onto his body during their dizzying summer romance.

“So, obviously you know I, we broke up or whatever, but when me and her first got engaged, we got tattoos,” he said. “And it was like in a magazine like, ‘Was Pete Davidson stupid?’ And 93 percent of it said yes. … So my boy, he was like, ‘Don’t listen to that shit, man. They’re literally fucking haters.’ And I’m like, yeah, fuck that. I’m not stupid. And the other day we were in my kitchen and he was like, ‘Yo bro. Turns out you were stupid.’”

No word on the status of the Piggy Smallz tattoo, but believe that we’re all holding our collective breath to find out. Relive the highs and lows of Pete and Ari’s relationship in the MTV News video below.

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