Refugee suicide attempts spike on Manus after Australia election

Melbourne, Australia – Refugees on Papua New Guinea‘s (PNG) Manus Island say there is increasing desperation on the Pacific island and at least 10 people have attempted suicide or committed self-harm following the re-election of Australia’s conservative government at the weekend.

For years, the Australian government has been sending asylum seekers who attempt to reach the country by sea to the remote islands of Manus and Nauru where they are held indefinitely with no chance of being resettled in Australia.

Many of the roughly 900 people now on the islands live in squalid conditions and were hoping for a change in government to the left-leaning Australian Labor Party and a softening in Canberra’s hard line on asylum seekers.

But in a suprise result, Prime Minister Scott Morisson’s Liberal-National coalition on Saturday defied opinion polls to secure a victory over Labor.

Behrouz Boochani, an Iranian-Kurdish journalist who has been detained on Manus since 2013, told Al Jazeera that 10 men had attempted suicide or self-harm by various means, including cutting themselves with a razor, since then.

Several had been sent to a local medical centre, which he said is “not a real hospital, not a place with facilities”.

Two people receiving medical treatment in PNG’s capital, Port Moresby, who were due to be transferred back to Manus Island had attempted suicide prior to the election, he added.

Morrison stepped up the use of indefinite offshore detention in 2013, when he was immigration minister. A prime minister since August last year, he has vowed to undo recently-passed legislation – known as the Medevac Bill – that allowed people held on the remote Pacific islands to be brought to Australia for urgent medical treatment.

‘Big shock’

PNG remains one of the poorest nations in the Asia Pacific. Security is volatile, health facilities lack resources and local people have previously attacked refugees and asylum seekers.

Australia Scott Morrison

Surrounded by his family, Morrison waves to supporters after the conservative coalition’s surprise election victory [Saeed Khan/AFP]

“When we found out that the current government won the election, it was a big shock,” Shamindan, a refugee from Sri Lanka who is living on Manus, told Al Jazeera. Since Saturday, two or three people were attempting suicide or self-harm daily by “cutting themselves, overdosing with tablets, setting themselves on fire, and hanging themselves”, he said.

There have been 24 deaths in Australia’s onshore and offshore detention facilities since 2010, according to refugee groups, with 14 confirmed as suicides. More than half of the recorded deaths were people held on Manus and Nauru.

“We expected that if Labor got into power, they would accept New Zealand’s offer,” Boochani said. “The election was our big and last chance.”

New Zealand’s government has on several occasions offered to resettle 150 refugees from Manus and Nauru annually, an offer rejected by Canberra which claims it could provide a “backdoor” for refugees to get into Australia. New Zealand nationals are able to live and work in Australia without the need for visas.

Labor had pledged to revisit the proposal.

Asked about the suicide attempts, a spokesperson for Australia’s Department of Home Affairs said the welfare of the people on Manus was the responsibility of the PNG government.

“The Department of Home Affairs takes seriously its role in supporting the government of PNG to ensure refugees and failed asylum seekers are provided with a range of health, welfare and support services arrangements. This has not changed,” the spokesperson added.

Morrison has said his government will prioritise the repeal of the Medevac law.

“People were hoping that [a] Labor government would solve many problems [including] the problem of the sick people, facilitate the process with the United States, and accept the New Zealand offer so the men could be sent there out of that nightmare,” Sudanese refugee Abdul Aziz Muhamat, told Al Jazeera over the phone from Geneva where he recently travelled from Manus to receive an international human rights award.

“As someone who has been detained for six years … I have never seen people in that stage of mental health anguish,” Muhamat said.

Manus Aziz

Aziz Abdul Muhamat walks with friends on Manus Island [Bill Code/Al Jazeera] 

‘Duty of care’

Under a deal signed in 2016 with the administration of former President Barack Obama, the US agreed to consider resettling refugees held on the islands, as well as those transferred back to Australia for medical reasons.

So far, the US has resettled several hundred out of a promised commitment of 1,250 refugees, but President Donald Trump has called the deal “stupid”.

Australia’s Treasurer Josh Frydenberg reiterated this week that it was the government’s policy to reverse the Medevac legislation and prevent the Pacific refugees from being transferred to Australia.

But the opposition and members of the crossbench in the upper house are likely to make it difficult for them to do so.

The policy of offshore detention and boat turn-backs cost Australia an estimated 9.6 billion Australian dollars ($6.6bn) between 2013 and 2016, according to the United Nations’ children agency and Save the Children. It has also brought condemnation from the UN and human rights groups.

“Australia still has a duty of care to these people,” Elaine Pearson, director of Human Rights Watch in Australia, told Al Jazeera. “[It] transferred these people there, and under these conditions people have developed such serious and acute health conditions.”

Some 80 percent of the refugee population in offshore detention suffer from mental health conditions, and do not have proper access to psychological support, she added.

The Morrison government claims the law does not allow authorities to return people seeking asylum back to Manus or Nauru after receiving treatment in Australia. Legal experts and Labor’s shadow immigration minister say the law means no change to the existing system of return.

“We don’t want to go to Australia,” said Boochani, whose autobiographical account of his detention on Manus, No Friend but the Mountains, recently won a prestigious Australian literary prize.

“Only freedom [can help] these people because people have been separated from their families for six years. Nothing else makes them happy,” he said.

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Stephen Colbert on Trump, Pelosi, and the so-called ‘temper tantrum’

What a morning.

On Wednesday, all eyes were on the White House, when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accused Donald Trump of throwing a “temper tantrum” and leaving a meeting with Democrats meant to discuss potential infrastructure legislation.

Then, the president called a press conference in the Rose Garden, firing back at Pelosi for saying he’s currently “engaged in a cover-up.” In the briefing, Trump said he won’t work with the Democrats while they’re investigating him.

It’s a lot. So on The Late Show, Stephen Colbert broke it all down.

“Trump has a clear stance on infrastructure: It’s my way or no highways,” said Colbert. It’s ten minutes but proves quite the highlight reel.

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Millie Bobby Brown is pretty much a human iPod in Jimmy Fallon’s ‘Beat Battle’

Millie Bobby Brown, who you might know as a good rapper, is pretty good at pulling random song lyrics out of her head too.

The Stranger Things star dropped into The Tonight Show on Wednesday, where she sung alongside Jimmy Fallon in a segment called “Beat Battle.”

You shouldn’t be so surprised, but Brown is utterly effortless at switching from songs like Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” to Lizzo’s “Juice.” She is just that good.

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Jakarta clashes rage in second night of unrest over poll result

Demonstrations against the result of Indonesia‘s presidential election have turned violent for a second consecutive night, with protesters opposing to the reelection of President Joko Widodo clashing with security forces in the capital, Jakarta.

Protesters on Wednesday threw fireworks and rocks at the police, who responded by firing tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon. Medical workers were seen treating dozens of protesters affected by tear gas and using oxygen to revive some who had passed out.

Authorities blamed the violence on paid “provocateurs”, citing money-filled envelopes they said were found on some of the 257 demonstrators arrested.

“After questioning, the suspects admitted that they were told to riot and that it was planned,” Argo Yuwono, a spokesman for Jakarta police, told reporters. “We are still looking for the person who gave the instruction and the money.”

Anies Baswedan, the governor of Jakarta, said six people were killed in the first night of rioting, while state news agency Antara reported that three hospitals had so far treated more than 350 people for wounds.

Protests continue in Indonesia after Jokowi’s election win

Election result

The unrest followed an announcement in the early hours of Tuesday by the General Election Commission confirming that the incumbent leader – who is widely known as Jokowi – had beaten rival Prabowo Subianto in last month’s vote.

Jokowi won more than 85 million of 154 million votes cast but Prabowo alleged “massive cheating and irregularities” and refused to concede defeat. The retired general has said he would challenge the results in court, as he did, unsuccessfully, against Widodo after losing the previous election five years ago.

Election officials and analysts have discounted Prabowo’s claims, but many of his supporters appeared convinced of rampant cheating in the April 17 poll.

“They cheated on us in 2014, we don’t want it to happen again, enough is enough,” a protester told Al Jazeera earlier on Wednesday, when the crowd was small and peaceful.

“Getting justice through the courts is impossible with the government we have now. So we come here. We don’t care about our safety, we are prepared to give our life.”

INDONESIA ELECTION PROTEST

Protesters throw rocks and other objects towards police in Jakarta Achmad Ibrahim/AP Photo]

Calls for calm

For his part, Jokowi called for calm but also warned against disruption.

“I open myself to anyone who wants to develop this nation, but I won’t tolerate anyone who tries to disrupt public security, the democratic process or the unity of our… country,” Widodo said at a press briefing, flanked by his chief security minister and the head of the military.

Early on Thursday, Prabowo called for the protesters to go home, and again urged them to avoid violence.

“Trust in your leaders. We are struggling in the legal and constitutional way,” he said in a video on his Twitter feed. “We’re all looking for the best solution for the nation.”

Al Jazeera’s Florence Looi, reporting from Jakarta, said the protests were “likely to continue into Friday”, when Prabowo was expected to file a complaint with the Constitutional Court to challenge the election result.

Authorities say 40,000 police and soldiers have been put on duty across Jakarta to maintain security this week.

The government has also temporarily blocked some social media functions, saying the move was aimed to prevent inflammatory hoaxes and fake news that could fan unrest.

INDONESIA ELECTION PROTESTS

Riot police fire tear gas at demonstrators [Dita Alangkara/AP Photo]

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Playdate is one very adorable handheld gaming system

Playdate is a new gaming system from the publishers of 'Firewatch.'
Playdate is a new gaming system from the publishers of ‘Firewatch.’

Image: panic

By Johnny Lieu

The publishers of indie favourite Firewatch have unveiled quite the surprise: a handheld gaming system.

Playdate is an adorable, pocket-sized unit from app developer Panic, who said they worked on the project over the last four years “just for fun.” 

Panic explains that Playdate is not meant to replace any existing consoles or platforms that are out there, rather that it’s “designed to be complementary.”

“It’s designed to deliver a jolt of fun in between the times you spend with your phone and your home console; something to fill the moments when you just want a game you can pick up and play,” the company explained in a post.

On the front, there’s a black-and-white screen, which doesn’t come with a backlight. This shouldn’t be a problem though, as Panic claims the 400 × 240 resolution LCD will be clear at night — so long as you have a light nearby — while during the day the screen will look “spectacular.”

SEE ALSO: The 6 Oculus Quest games everyone should get on day one

Just below, there’s familiar controls in A and B buttons and a D-pad. Not so familiar is the crank on the side — yes, a crank — which is actually a rotating analog controller. Games will use the crank exclusively, sometimes, or not at all.

The Playdate is one very cute gaming console.

The Playdate is one very cute gaming console.

Image: panic

There are no cartridges here. The games, specially designed for Playdate, will arrive over-the-air in something called a season.

Once a week, for 12 weeks, a new game will be delivered to the system, and there’s a light on the hardware to indicate that there’s a new title ready to play. These games are included with the system, but it’s unclear if there will be more than one season of games.

The first game to be announced for Playdate is Crankin’s Time Travel Adventure, developed by Keita Takahashi, creator of Katamari Damacy. Use the crank to control the flow of time, backwards and forwards, as you try and navigate obstacles.

Playdate’s design comes from Teenage Engineering, the Swedish electronics company known for their fun, out-of-the-box takes on synthesizers and audio products.

There’s the usual modcons onboard, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, USB-C, and a headphone jack. Processing and storage specifications are still to be confirmed. Playdate runs a custom operating system, and again, it’s tiny, measuring 74mm ×  76mm  ×  9mm.

It’s a strange, exciting little thing. Playdate is set to be released early 2020, with pre-orders to kickoff in late 2019 for $149.

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Women actually have a point when complaining about cold offices, study says

Women are more productive when they’re warm, a study concludes, confirming the complaints of chilly female employees everywhere. 

While women’s gripes about frigid workspaces have long been dismissed as a sign of oversensitivity, a study published in PLOS ONE argues differently. The University of Southern California and the WZB Berlin Social Science Center had 543 students in Berlin perform tasks and steadily raised the temperature of the environment. Temperatures in each session varied in increments from 61 degrees Fahrenheit to 91 degrees Fahrenheit. 

As the temperature increased, women’s performance did as well. Although men performed better at lower temperatures and worse at higher temperatures, the disparity was less pronounced than women’s performance across temperatures.

“It’s been documented that women like warmer indoor temperatures than men, but the idea until now has been that it’s a matter of personal preference,” study co-author Tom Chang said in a statement from USC. “What we found is it’s not just whether you feel comfortable or not, but that your performance on things that matter — in math and verbal dimensions, and how hard you try — is affected by temperature.”

Participants had to complete three different tasks and were promised monetary incentives based on their performance. During one portion, they had to add five two-digit numbers without a calculator. During another, they were asked to build as many German words as possible from the scrambled letters ADEHINRSTU, Scrabble-style. In the third task, they had to answer logic problems. 

SEE ALSO: Damian Lillard’s ice cold victory stare is now a meme

In sessions below 70 degrees, women scored an average of 28.7 (out of 35) while men scored an average of 33.7. Both genders scored around 32.6 (although women scored marginally higher) in sessions between 70 and 80 degrees. Women performed better than men in very warm temperatures, scoring an average of nearly 33 in temperatures above 80 degrees while men scored an average of 31.2.

As the study’s authors note, the relationship between temperature and performance was less pronounced in men than in women.

“One of the most surprising things we learned is this isn’t about the extremes of temperature,” Chang added. “It’s not like we’re getting to freezing or boiling hot. Even if you go from 60 to 75 degrees, which is a relatively normal temperature range, you still see a meaningful variation in performance.”

It’s worth noting that skills didn’t necessarily improve with warmer temperatures, but women were able to complete more work. It’s not like women got chilly and forgot how to do math — it’s that in the colder temperatures, they didn’t complete as many answers, seemingly because the conditions weren’t conducive for their productivity. The same goes for men in higher temperatures.

So what does that mean for real-world applications? 

Take the SAT, for example. According to 2016 results released by the College Board, boys scored an average of 524 on the math section (out of 800) while girls scored an average of 494. That’s just under 4 percent higher than girls’ results. As the Atlantic points out, a 1 degree Celsius increase boosted math scores by almost 2 percent. 

Chang told the Atlantic that more studies need to happen before we jump to changing up thermostats to “eliminate gender-based performance differences” on standardized tests. But he does note in the study that the results “raise the stakes for the battle of the thermostat.” 

No wonder why grown adults — professionals nonetheless — are swaddling themselves in blankets during the workday — if a company wants to ensure a productive workforce, maybe it should consider turning up the thermostat to the mid-70s.

“People invest a lot in making sure their workers are comfortable and highly productive,” Chang concluded. “This study is saying, even if you care only about money or the performance of your workers, you may want to crank up the temperature in your office buildings.”

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Mark Zuckerberg reportedly made a racist online profile to smear rival

So funny.
So funny.

Image: David L. Ryan / The Boston Globe / getty

By Jack Morse

If you believe Ben Mezrich’s reporting, young Mark Zuckerberg was a huge asshole. Like, the make a fake and racist social media profile for someone you don’t like kind of asshole. 

The author of The Accidental Billionaires, the 2009 basis for Aaron Sorkin’s The Social Network, is back at it again with some wild claims about the Facebook CEO’s early days. Specifically, while promoting his latest book on The Jim Rome Show, Mezrich alleged that Zuckerberg once made a fake online profile for Cameron Winklevoss that just so happened to be sexist and racist. 

The book, Bitcoin Billionaires: A True Story of Genius, Betrayal, and Redemption, focuses on both Bitcoin and the Winklevoss twins. In it, Mezrich claims he documents an episode where Zuckerberg hacked the Winklevoss’ ConnectU website (previously known as HavardConnection, and the supposed inspiration for Facebook) in order to make a fake account for Cameron. He bases the accusation on Instant Messages that were shared after The Social Network was written.

“Zuckerberg lied to [the Winklevoss twins], he planned on screwing them over,” Mezrich explains. “He actually hacked into their program and made a fake profile of Cameron Winklevoss through of all this racist, like sexist, crazy stuff. And all this stuff never came out.”

Importantly, while there’s no doubt that young Zuckerberg was a piece of work, it’s worth taking Mezrich’s latest reporting with a grain of salt. While Mashable has not had a chance to review the book ourselves, the New York Times has — and one specific line from said review sticks out. 

“And then there is Mezrich’s jarring disclosure at the outset that some details and settings described in the book are ‘imagined,’” writes the Times‘ David Enrich. “It is hard to overcome the impression that large swaths of the book fall into that fictional zone.”

SEE ALSO: Every Facebook insider who has turned against the company

So, yeah. We don’t know if this little tidbit falls into that “imagined” category or not. We do, however, have one definitely not imagined piece of evidence that Zuckerberg was contemptuous of his collegiate contemporaries. In blunt IMs he sent to a friend during the early days of Facebook, which were published by a Silicon Valley gossip blog, he wrote about the personal information Harvard students’ provided him.

“People just submitted it,” he wrote. “I don’t know why. They ‘trust me.’ Dumb fucks.”

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Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert: ‘I Think’ Kyrie Irving Will Leave Celtics in Free Agency

MILWAUKEE, WI - MAY 8: Kyrie Irving #11 of the Boston Celtics looks on 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 Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)

Nathaniel S. Butler/Getty Images

Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert is among those who believe Kyrie Irving has played his last game in a Boston Celtics uniform.

“I don’t know, but I think Kyrie will leave Boston,” Gilbert said of his former player to the Plain Dealer‘s Terry Pluto

Irving has spent the last two seasons in Boston after forcing his way out of Cleveland. As he entered his walk year, he revealed to the world back in October that he planned on re-signing with the Celtics “if you guys will have me back”:

Boston Celtics @celtics

“If you guys will have me back, I plan on re-signing here.” – @KyrieIrving https://t.co/0wDLzuv5WL

Then the 2018-19 season happened.

Irving had another strong season from an individual standpoint, earning his sixth career All-Star selection by averaging 23.8 points, 6.9 assists and 5.0 rebounds. It was a tough year from a team perspective, though. 

After coming within one game of the 2018 NBA Finals with Irving and Gordon Hayward sidelined, Boston managed just a 49-33 record during the regular season, finishing fourth in the Eastern Conference. As the team struggled to find a rhythm, Irving found himself calling out his teammates in the middle of the season. 

When asked about his future in February, Irving told reporters, “Ask me July 1”:

He would later apologize for his lack of leadership, though that would do little to get the team back on track. The Celtics’ season ultimately came to an end in the second round of the playoffs as they were dispatched by the Milwaukee Bucks in five games.

Boston now faces an uncertain future as it pertains to Irving, who can be a free agent this summer. While the trade worked out fairly well for Boston, Cleveland has been criticized for the deal, though 2018 first-rounder Collin Sexton remains a work in progress. 

Gilbert made sure to point out that his team was in a tough spot and had limited options, per Pluto:

“It becomes a melting snowball. We had to trade him when we did. What team would want Kyrie with only one year on his contract knowing he could leave after the season? You won’t get much back (under those circumstances).

[…]

“We could have ended up with nothing. Looking back after all the moves Koby made, we killed it in that trade.”

Gilbert also acknowledged that the report of Irving—who wound up being limited to 60 games and missed the entire postseason in 2017-18—threatening to sit out the season and undergo knee surgery if he wasn’t moved was indeed accurate.

“The agent was telling us, if we don’t trade him, there is some surgery he is on the borderline of having on his knee,” Gilbert told Pluto. “It was possible he could be out for most of the year. It turned out to be true.”

Gilbert will now watch with the rest of the basketball world to see what Irving decides. 

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Trump rages at Democrats as investigations advance on multiple fronts


Donald Trump

President Donald Trump pivoted to talking about the Mueller report after a combative meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelsoi initially intended to cover infrastructure. | Andrew Harnik/AP Photo

white house

An angry president makes it clear that he can’t look past the Russia investigation.

President Donald Trump has spent weeks insisting that Democrats and the country need to move on from the Mueller report and questions about Russian influence over his 2016 campaign.

But a day of anger and drama at the White House on Wednesday was a stark reminder that the various investigations the subject has spawned threaten to swamp the rest of Trump’s first term.

Story Continued Below

Its public centerpiece was a hastily-arranged Rose Garden monologue in which Trump declared that he would refuse to work with Congressional Democrats unless they abandon talk of inquiries and impeachment. “You can go down the investigation track, and you can go down the investment track, or the track of ‘Let’s get things done for the American people,’” Trump told a crowd of reporters who’d been hustled together for the impromptu event.

Although White House aides later downplayed the notion that Trump would cut off all cooperation with Democrats, it was the president’s starkest expression of anger to date about the Democratic-led investigations pressuring his presidency. Trump’s remarks came after he upended a White House meeting with Congressional Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who earlier in the day had accused Trump of waging a “cover-up.”

It also arrived during a week — ostensibly dedicated to the bloodless topic of infrastructure, the subject of his aborted meeting with Democrats — in which the president has increasingly come under siege.

New York lawmakers, for instance, passed a bill on Wednesday allowing New York’s Department of Taxation and Finance to share politicians’ state tax returns with congressional committees – a move that ultimately could help Democrats as they attempt to learn more about the president’s finances.

And earlier in the week, a federal judge ruled that Trump’s accounting firm, Mazars, must turn over records and communications from its work for Trump, his businesses, and his foundation from 2011 to 2018, landing another blow to the president’s efforts to stonewall various congressional inquiries and subpoenas.

In the ruling, the judge said the Constitution clearly gives Congress the power to investigate the president for unlawful conduct regardless of any alleged political motivations. Trump’s lawyers quickly promised to appeal the decision.

The result is a president facing multiple angles of attack as he tries to pivot to a busy summer of foreign policy trips and his own re-election bid.

Trump’s response — a declaration that he can’t work with Democrats who are pursuing him — is also a break from past presidents who have tried to present an image of carrying on with the nation’s business amid partisan harassment.

“The president arguing that he is under investigation and cannot govern is basically saying that he can’t work for the American people, and I think voters will think differently about that,” said Joe Lockhart, White House press secretary for President Bill Clinton from 1998 to 2000. Clinton repeatedly shrugged off questions about White House scandals by saying he was focused on his policy agenda, and Lockhart noted that Clinton managed to strike deals with House Republicans.

White House aides were quick to modulate the president, arguing behind closed doors that Trump would not stop all legislation, or end all cooperation with Democrats, despite his Rose Garden outburst and several ensuing tweets warning Democrats, in part, that “[y]ou can’t investigate and legislate simultaneously.”

Officials still expect Republicans and Democrats to work together this summer to pass the recently-negotiated USMCA trade deal. Similarly, the two parties are expected to raise the debt ceiling and come to some spending agreement to both keep the financial markets intact heading into 2020 and to take pressure off of senators facing re-election next year.

“There are a number of other things, under the radar, that we’re working on and can get done,” said one White House official. “His comments were more directed at infrastructure, I think.”

When Clinton faced vigorous investigations during his 1996 re-election campaign of subjects that included his political fundraising, Lockhart says that he still managed to work with Republicans to pass legislation that raised the minimum wage, reformed welfare, and made significant changes to health care.

“He had the exact opposite approach than President Trump on every level. He never complained publicly. He never made himself the victim, and his job was to work for American people even if Republicans were investigating,” Lockhart said.

He noted that Clinton even hosted Republican Rep. Tom DeLay – one of the architects of the impeachment proceedings — at the White House for an event on adoption during the investigations.

President Richard Nixon similarly tried to continue to govern even as the Watergate proceedings ramped up. During the Senate hearings on the scandal, Nixon tried to work on major health care legislation and economic measures to deal with stagflation, said Timothy Naftali, at New York University professor and founding director of the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum.

As the Watergate investigation wore on, Nixon turned to foreign policy as a refuge, attending a summit in the Soviet Union and visiting the Middle East in the summer of 1974, said John Aloysius Farrell, a presidential historian and author of Richard Nixon: The Life, a biography of the 37th president.

The lessons for Trump in Nixon’s experience, Farrell said, are to buy time by casting the investigations as partisan and run out the clock until the election, if possible.

“They survived Mueller without there being a smoking gun in terms of public opinion, and they can play that hand out. They don’t have that much longer to go,” Farrell added.

“The Watergate investigation started in June ‘72, but Nixon did not resign until August 1974. These things do not happen quickly – if they happen at all,” he said.

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Steve Mills: Kristaps Porzingis Told Knicks He’d Return to Europe Without Trade

New York Knicks forward Kristaps Porzingis stands on the court during a time out in the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets, Friday, Oct. 19, 2018, in New York. The Nets won 107-105. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

Kristaps Porzingis was reportedly willing to return to Europe rather than continue his NBA career with the New York Knicks before the franchise traded him to the Dallas Mavericks in a midseason deal.  

SNY noted Knicks president Steve Mills and general manager Scott Perry revealed as much during a fan forum series on Wednesday.

“When he walked into our office—my office and Scott was sitting there with me—and point blank said to us, ‘I don’t want to be here, I’m not going to re-sign with the Knicks, and I’ll give you seven days to try and trade me or I’m going back to Europe,’” Mills said of the ultimatum Porzingis provided.

#Knockstape @KnicksGuy1

Interesting new information on the Porzingis trade from today’s JPM speaker event with Scott Perry and Steve Mills

KP threatened to go back to Europe if not traded within 7 days

Scott and Steve had trade offers lined up dating back to last September https://t.co/JGp1EQQrUV

These comments echo the remarks Mills made in February when he was speaking to MSG Network’s Rebecca Haarlow and said Porzingis “made it clear” he wouldn’t re-sign in New York:

Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

Steve Mills says KP told the Knicks he wasn’t going to re-sign with them 🍿 https://t.co/MauIFn8b6A

The Knicks eventually traded him to Dallas along with Tim Hardaway Jr., Courtney Lee and Trey Burke in exchange for Dennis Smith Jr., DeAndre Jordan, Wesley Matthews and two future first-round draft picks.

Porzingis is set to be a restricted free agent this offseason and has a qualifying offer for the 2019-20 campaign worth just less than $4.5 million. Shams Charania of The Athletic and Stadium reported in January that he planned to sign the qualifying offer instead of testing restricted free agency.

That would give him the chance to become an unrestricted free agent in the summer of 2020.

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