Like ‘Detective Pikachu’, these Pokémon phone cases are out for your childhood

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These Pokémon phone cases are here for that nostalgia factor.
These Pokémon phone cases are here for that nostalgia factor.

Image: CASETiFY

By Johnny Lieu

Detective Pikachu is out soon, and that inevitably means merchandise.

Case maker Casetify has collaborated with Pokémon for a collection of phone accessories and other cool stuff.

SEE ALSO: Artist recreates her Pokémon fan art from childhood

These include phone cases with your favourite Pokémon characters like Pikachu (of course), Bulbasaur, Mew, Charmander, and Jigglypuff. Some cases appear to have a customization option, which means you can throw your name on the back.

You can also get a case with all sorts of Pokémon on the back, if you can’t decide.

Image: CASETiFY

Image: CASETiFY

Image: CASETiFY

There’s also AirPods cases, cardholders, laptop skins, and more.

Image: CASETiFY

There will be three different releases, the first of which is set to drop on May. 10. You’ll have to sign-up for a waitlist if you wanna catch ’em all.

It’s unclear what each item costs just yet, but the range will be priced somewhere between $20 – $65. How much is nostalgia worth, really?

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Pole maintains innocence after Indonesia treason conviction

Wamena, Papua, Indonesia – Polish traveller Jakob Skrzypski has been found guilty of treason and sentenced to five years in prison in Papua on the far east of Indonesia, the first foreigner to be convicted of such a crime.

Skrzypski is charged with meeting members of a pro-independence organisation in the restive region of the southeast Asian archipelago.

Maintaining his innocence, the 39-year-old Pole said the court’s decision was politically motivated and that he was a victim of a show trial. Skrzypski will appeal the sentence, his lawyer said.

The Pole was arrested in Papua in August last year and accused of meeting members of the West Papua National Committee (KNPB), including student Simon Magal who was also put on trial.

Magal, who is the nephew of West Papua activist Yosepha Alomang, a long-time campaigner against the giant Freeport McMoran gold mine in the territory, was jailed for four years.

The far eastern region that shares an island with Papua New Guinea became part of Indonesia in 1969 after a controversial referendum, triggering a low-intensity rebellion that has rumbled for decades.

The territory remains off-limits to foreign journalists despite a 2015 promise to open up the area to the international media.

During the trial last month, defence lawyer Latifah Anum Siregar argued that Skrzypski could not be charged with treason because the KNPB was not registered and had not been banned.

The prosecution dropped earlier allegations that Skrzypski was an arms dealer, instead focussing on his meetings with independence supporters.

The KNPB says it is a peaceful movement that campaigns for the indigenous people’s right to self-determination. Other pro-independence groups include the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) and the Free Papua Movement (OPM).

Fighting erupted most recently in December in Nduga after 17 workers on a road construction site were killed by independence fighters and the military began a crackdown that forced thousands to flee.

Prosecutor Fanny Karel Leimena argued that while KNPB was not registered, its ideology could be considered a threat to the Indonesian state.

Simon Magal (left) and Jakob Skrzypski (right) in the court cell during their trial in Papua in the far east of the Indonesian archipelago [Febriana Firdaus/Al Jazeera]

Rights group doubts charges

Rights group Amnesty International had earlier expressed its doubts over the charges against Skrzypski.

“The prosecutor failed to prove any evidence that [Skrzypski] committed treason,” Usman Hamid, head of Amnesty International Indonesia, told Al Jazeera.

“We consider all of them to be prisoners of conscience who are imprisoned solely for peacefully expressing their political views and [who] have not used violence or hatred,” he said.

Skrzypski, who had been working in a factory in Switzerland before he began travelling, maintains he was a tourist who went to Papua as part of a backpacking trip across Indonesia.

Having visited the popular islands of Sumatra, Java and Bali, he said he was curious about Papua, especially given the long-running rebellion in the region.

Al Jazeera visited Skrzypski in prison in Wamena in the Papuan highlands as he went on trial last month.

The cell where he had been held since November measures only three square metres. Beds lie on the floor and there is almost no space to walk. It has only one dirty toilet with no hot water. He shares the cell with four other inmates.

Skrzypski said prison conditions were bad and there was a lack of clean water. He said he mostly ate rice and vegetables, which came wrapped in the paper twice a day. If he was lucky, there would be chicken.

During his detention, he asked the police to send him back to the prison in Jayapura, the provincial capital, and considered going on hunger strike. He said that being held in Wamena had made it difficult for Polish diplomats to visit him or media to report on the case.

Skrzypski is not the first foreigner to run into trouble in Papua, although he is the first to be charged with treason and found guilty.

An Australian student was barred from Indonesia last year after making an attempt to enter the region. In 2017, two French journalists were found guilty of entering Papua illegally and jailed for over two months.

Jakob Skrzypski in his cell in the Indonesian town of Wamena in Papua, where he has been arrested on the charge of treason since November [Al Jazeera]

‘Why him?’

Two of Skrzypski‘s potential witnesses, including Edward ‘Edo’ Wandik – the man who introduced him to KNPB members, disappeared before they were able to give any evidence.

The Polish citizen maintains that he met Edo by chance in a restaurant.

“So many foreigners and researchers came to the headquarters, even published journalists, but they have not been charged with treason,” Anum said. “Why him?”

“Documenting a meeting with the group which is accused [of being] against the state, or a group which is banned by the state is not a crime. Moreover, all these members [who met him] have never been arrested by the state,” she added.

Ahmad Kamal, the spokesman for the Papua police, declined to comment on Skrzypski’s allegations, saying the matter was now in the hands of the prosecutors.

After meeting in Jayapura, Skrzypski and Edo flew together to Wamena to meet Edo’s family. It was there that Edo introduced him to two members of the KNPB. “Whether they are members of anything, I don’t know,” Skrzypski said.

In early September, police arrested those people for possessing weapons.

“I didn’t know that Simon [Magal] was related to Yosepha Alomang, and I have learned about her [Yosepha] for the first time only in Papua,” Skrzypski told Al Jazeera.

Skrzypski says he learned about the KNPB and was introduced to Magal over the internet.

Over Facebook Messenger, he says, they mostly talked about West Papua’s culture and Magal’s plan to secure a scholarship overseas. The police say the evidence showed Skrzypski had actually shown his support for West Papua’s independence movement.

Since Skrzypski’s arrest, police have also arrested pro-independence activists and raided some of KNPB’s offices, accusing them of having ammunition and working to overthrow the Indonesian rule.

Skrzypski’s conviction came as independence activists step up their global advocacy. In January, Benny Wenda, the exiled chairman of the ULMWP, submitted a petition signed by more than 1.8 million people calling for independence to the United Nations.

On Wednesday, lawyers representing 20 Papuans started legal action to challenge the referendum that made Papua a part of Indonesia.

Skrzypski, meanwhile, says he will continue to fight for his freedom. “I don’t want to spend any more days here,” he told Al Jazeera.

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Joel Embiid, Sixers’ Big 4 Putting Raptors, Eastern Conference on Notice

PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 2: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts during a game against the Toronto Raptors during Game Three of the Eastern Conference Semifinals on May 2, 2019 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 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 soon as LeBron James’ exodus to Los Angeles was official, the Eastern Conference made like the Red Sea and opened up for the Milwaukee Bucks, Toronto Raptors, Boston Celtics and Philadelphia 76ers.

On Thursday, in a 116-95 win over the second-seeded Raptors, Philly looked ready to march toward the other side. Led by their 7-foot Cameroonian Moses, Joel Embiid, the Sixers were dominant for stretches. And they may not even have the best individual player in the series, though 76ers coach Brett Brown would disagree.

Kyle Neubeck @KyleNeubeck

Q from @mcten: When Joel is right, do you feel you have the best player in the series?

Brown: Yes.

Kawhi Leonard has been absurd this postseason. After dropping 33 in Game 3, his playoff average is up to 31.5. But Philadelphia has a legitimate Big Four, and it overwhelmed the rest of the Raptors.

Thursday, it was all about Embiid and Jimmy Butler. The big man was dominant on both ends of the floor, scoring 33 points on 9-of-18 shooting and blocking five shots. Butler filled up the box score to the tune of 22 points, nine rebounds, nine assists and three steals.

And on nights when one or both of those players don’t have it, Philly has Ben Simmons and Tobias Harris. Talk about luxury.

If you sort every NBA player this season with 250-plus minutes by the average of their ranks in 10 catch-all metrics (real plus-minus, player impact plus-minus, box plus-minus, win shares per minute and game score per minute, as well as the cumulative variants of each), Embiid was No. 12, Butler was No. 25, Simmons was No. 30 and Harris was No. 58. Four top-60 players. Throw in JJ Redick (No. 94), and Philly’s entire starting five is in the top 100.

Yes, there are valid questions about the 76ers’ depth. Prior to garbage time, James Ennis III was the only reserve who’d logged more than 15 minutes. But it’s the playoffs. Brett Brown can get away with a tight seven- to eight-man rotation. And on any given night, four or five of those eight could provide the star performance to put Philadelphia over.

According to Basketball Reference, Game Score is “a rough measure of a player’s productivity for a single game.” Prior to Game 3, Philadelphia had eight individual performances this postseason with a 20-plus Game Score. Two from Embiid, two from Butler, two from Simmons and two from Harris.

On Thursday, Embiid (29.2) and Butler (25.4) bumped that total 10 in Philadelphia’s blowout win over the Raptors.

“He is our crown jewel defensively,” Brown told reporters after the game. “I suppose offensively too.”

When the Raptors trimmed an 18-point lead in the second half all the way down to single digits, Philly’s crown jewel helped turn momentum back around with emphatic blocks on Leonard and Pascal Siakam.

Two dunks and a dime to Embiid from Butler were huge too.

“Jimmy’s focus, his leadership, attention to detail are heightened,” Brown said. “We need it all.”

Again, those two put on the show Thursday. And they probably have the highest individual ceilings of anyone on the roster. But Philadelphia isn’t a two-man show. And that should have Toronto worried.

So far this series, Leonard has been phenomenal. Through three games, he has 113 points (37.7 per game). And even the stellar on-ball defense of Butler or Simmons looks borderline helpless in front of him. He’s shooting 60.9 percent from the field. Siakam has been strong too, averaging 23.3 points and hitting 50.9 percent of his attempts.

But, unlike Philly, Toronto does look like a two-man show. After that duo, things get ugly in a hurry. The rest of the roster is shooting 30.5 percent from the field.

Point guards Kyle Lowry and Fred VanVleet were especially bad in Game 3:

Micah Adams @MicahAdams13

Kyle Lowry and Fred VanVleet combined to shoot 2-17.

And here we thought Ben Simmons was the point guard in this series that couldn’t shoot. https://t.co/2iVNvV4ROF

The Raptors need more from the other guys. Leonard and Siakam have scored 62.7 percent of their team’s points in Round 2. Lowry, in particular, may need to shake the playoff narrative that has plagued him for years if Toronto is going to turn this around.

It can. On paper, the Raptors’ talent is right up there with anyone’s in the East. They showed it in their double-digit victory in Game 1. Since then, Philadelphia has made the case that it has the higher ceiling. And not just in this series.

Embiid, Butler and Simmons are all bona fide stars. Harris is close.

Milwaukee has Giannis Antetokounmpo and Khris Middleton. Brook Lopez and Eric Bledsoe are probably underrated. Boston has Kyrie Irving and Al Horford. Gordon Hayward still seems to be working his way toward pre-injury form, and Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown may not be ready yet.

Strange as it may sound, the Golden State Warriors might be the only team in the league that can match the 76ers’ top-of-the-roster star power.

And if Philadelphia keeps playing the way it has for most of the postseason, it may be able to seize control of the post-LeBron East and test itself against the game’s current dynasty.

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Shawn Mendes Casually Hits The Treadmill In ‘If I Can’t Have You’ Video



YouTube

Last spring, Shawn Mendes ushered in the warm weather with an aptly breezy bop, “Lost In Japan,” and now he’s doing the same thing for us in 2019. Just a day after announcing the new single “If I Can’t Have You,” Mendes has delivered the goods, alongside a captivating video that finds the 20-year-old smiling through a lovesick spiral.

Sonically, “If I Can’t Have You” is an upbeat affair about an all-consuming love: “Is it too late to tell you that / Everything means nothing if I can’t have you,” he sings on the buoyant hook. The video, meanwhile, is entirely black and white, opening on a close-up of Mendes’s face as he wakes up in a fake Toronto. The camera follows him as he sits at a piano, sings into a mic, and, finally, strides past a gospel choir and onto a treadmill. To absolutely no one’s surprise, Shawn’s the kind of guy who can smile, run, and belt out sky-grazing high notes without breaking a sweat.

In a new interview with Beats 1 host Zane Lowe, Mendes chatted about the genesis of “If I Can’t Have You,” which he originally wrote for Dua Lipa. But after playing it in the studio more and more, he decided to keep it for himself, especially since it started to align with the mood he wanted for his new music.

“It’s a confident pop record, and it’s clearly that for me,” he explained. “I am going through this phase right now where I’m testing out all the styles of music that I can possibly be doing. And pop is what is in my blood, no pun intended. In the last six months, I wrote about 45 songs, and they’re all over the place and different vibes, and this is the one that consistently, every single time I played it, was just giving people that smile.”

Though he’s clearly been busy crafting new songs, Mendes clarified that he’s not immediately gearing up for a new album era and doesn’t want to “overthink” his next project just yet. Instead, he wanted to release “If I Can’t Have You” so he could have something new to play on the remaining legs of his world tour, which continues through December.

“I just went through a really serious run with ‘In My Blood’ and ‘Lost In Japan,’ feeling super mature,” he said. “I wanted people to remember that I can still create a song that’s just a feel-good record. The point of music is not to be so serious all the time; sometimes it’s just to feel good.”

It seems like a safe bet that Mendes will perform his new single on Saturday Night Live this weekend, where he’ll be the musical guest alongside host Adam Sandler. Tune in to see whether or not he recreates the vid by pulling off a singing/jogging hybrid performance!

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Brett Brown: Healthy Joel Embiid Is Best Player in Raptors vs. 76ers Series

PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 02: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts after dunking the ball against the Toronto Raptors in the fourth quarter of Game Three of the Eastern Conference Semifinals at the Wells Fargo Center on May 2, 2019 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The 76ers defeated the Raptors 116-95. 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. (Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

Mitchell Leff/Getty Images

A healthy Joel Embiid is one of the biggest game-changers in the NBA in Philadelphia 76ers coach Brett Brown’s eyes.

After Embiid put up 33 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks in a 116-95 victory over the Toronto Raptors in Game 3 on Thursday night, Brown was asked if he felt a healthy Embiid was the best player in the series.

“Yes,” Brown responded, according to Kyle Neubeck of PhillyVoice.com.

Brown would also go on to say Embiid is the Sixers’ “crown jewel,” via KYW Newsradio’s Dave Uram:

Dave Uram @MrUram

Brett Brown on Joel Embiid’s dominating performance in Game 3 #Sixers #Raptors #NBAPlayoffs https://t.co/LaCQyzuq4g

Embiid battled knee soreness late in the regular season and during the team’s first-round series against the Brooklyn Nets. It hasn’t kept off the court against Toronto, though. Following a monster Game 3, the two-time All-Star is now averaging 20.3 points, 8.0 rebounds and 2.0 blocks per game in the series, helping Philadelphia grab a 2-1 lead.

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If the Sixers are going to win their first championship since 1983, having a healthy Embiid figures to be a key.

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Joel Embiid Erupts for 33 and 10 as 76ers Crush Kawhi Leonard, Raptors in Game 3

PHILADELPHIA, PA - MAY 2: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts during a game against the Toronto Raptors during Game Three of the Eastern Conference Semifinals on May 2, 2019 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 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

The Philadelphia 76ers have hit their stride against the Toronto Raptors, taking a 2-1 series lead after an impressive 116-95 victory in front of a raucous crowd at the Wells Fargo Center. 

After being picked apart in Game 1, the Sixers have responded with aplomb. Their defense held Toronto to 89 points in Game 2, allowing them to return home with a chance to take control of the series. 

This time, Philadelphia’s offense was able to match its defensive intensity. Joel Embiid had his best game of the postseason with 33 points, 10 rebounds, five blocks and three assists. Jimmy Butler contributed 22 points, nine rebounds and nine assists. 

Kawhi Leonard did his best to carry the Raptors on the road. He finished with 33 points on 13-of-22 shooting. Pascal Siakam rebounded from a difficult Game 2, adding 20 points. 

Red-Hot Sixers Have Perfect Formula to Reach NBA Finals

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There’s a theory in Major League Baseball that some teams are better equipped for a deep playoff run than a 162-game regular season because of how differently the games are managed. Starting pitchers will be used on short rest, and relievers will stay in longer than they would for a random August outing. 

The NBA postseason tends to work the same way, with starters routinely taking on more minutes and easing the burden on the reserves. 

No team better represents the different dynamics of these playoffs than the Philadelphia 76ers. After a season filled with worries about what would happen when head coach Brett Brown had to call upon his bench, a funny thing happened.

The Sixers have hit their stride because their star power is overwhelming the Raptors. 

Game 2 was ugly for both teams, but Philadelphia succeeded by making Embiid the primary defender against Siakam. Toronto’s breakout star went from scoring 29 points on 15 attempts in Game 1 to 21 points on 25 attempts the next game.

Returning home showcased the best of both worlds for the 76ers. The starting five accounted for 93 of the team’s 116 points. 

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Right Arrow Icon

ESPN’s Kevin Pelton threw out a comparison for this Philadelphia team that should terrify the rest of the Eastern Conference:

Kevin Pelton @kpelton

The way the Sixers can control a game with their size and athleticism when engaged is sort of reminiscent of the Durant/Westbrook Thunder.

If Embiid‘s knee is still giving him problems, you’d never know it based on his performance Thursday night. 

Sixers Stats @SixersStats

.@sixers @JoelEmbiid’s game-high 18 first-half points are the most he’s scored in the first half in his playoff career.

He’s had one higher-scoring half with 20 in the second half at Brooklyn on April 20.

h/t @nbastats

Michael K-B @therealmikekb

Embiid looking much more like his usual, dominant self tonight.

After he attempted just 12 shots in Game 1, Butler has since taken a more proactive approach in the offense. He dropped 30 points in Game 2 and did a little bit of everything Thursday. 

Philadelphia 76ers @sixers

🗣LOOK OUT BELOW

@JimmyButler
#PhilaUnite | #HereTheyCome https://t.co/1dvtILbxRk

Sixers general manager Elton Brand essentially emptied out his bench during the regular season to acquire Butler and Harris. Robert Covington, Dario Saric, Wilson Chandler, Mike Muscala, Landry Shamet are all capable of contributing to a playoff team. 

But the playoffs aren’t about having the deepest team. Stars are what teams need to win a championship. Embiid, Simmons, Butler and Harris needed time to build their chemistry together, but everything is coming together at the right time. 

Zach Lowe @ZachLowe_NBA

Sixers looked like a team developing a coherent identity tonight. Fast, huge, good mix of how they played pre-Butler/Harris and more pick-and-roll on offense. Considering stakes, etc, probably this group’s best win.

It helps that Philadelphia’s much-maligned bench has shown up in the past two games. James Ennis III, Greg Monroe and Mike Scott outscored Toronto’s reserves 19-15 in Game 3. 

But that vaunted starting five is the reason the Sixers have taken control of this series. Unless the Raptors can find a way to contain that group, it won’t matter that Brown is only using an eight-man rotation.

Raptors Need Kyle Lowry to Find All-Star Form to Save Dream Season

On Thursday, Toronto tried to ride the same formula it used in a Game 1 victory. Leonard and Siakam were dominant on the offensive end with 53 combined points on 20-of-37 shooting. 

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Right Arrow Icon

It’s a good idea in theory, but the problem is no one else showed up for the Raptors in Game 3. Kyle Lowry, in particular, remains a source of frustration in the playoffs. He finished with seven points, five rebounds and five assists on 2-of-10 shooting against Philadelphia’s defense. 

Sports Gifs & Videos @Supreme_Gifs

Kyle Lowry – 11.6 PPG on 40 FG% and 25.6% from 3 in the 2019 NBA Playoffs. #WeTheNorth https://t.co/PvPVrgJtcH

Lowry’s minus-28 was the worst of any player on the floor Thursday night. 

This is nothing new for the Raptors. In their opening-round series against the Orlando Magic, Lowry went scoreless in Game 1 and had two other outings in which he shot 40 percent or worse. 

Toronto has been able to get away with Lowry’s inconsistent playoff showings to this point because Leonard and Siakam are special talents. The spotlight is unfortunately back on the five-time All-Star after a difficult game Thursday. 

Cian @Cianaf

Gasol and Kawhi gotta start treating Lowry like Bron and Wade did Chalmers.

Tyler R. Tynes @TylerRickyTynes

Kyle Lowry just Ray Felton with more hair

Lowry is especially important for the remainder of this series against Philadelphia because the Raptors not named Siakam or Leonard are struggling to put the ball in the basket.  

Kurt Helin @basketballtalk

Raptors not named Kawhi are shooting 36% overall and 4-18 from three.

The postseason is about stars playing up to their full potential and giving their teams the best chance to win. Lowry is being paid like an elite point guard, but his failure in Game 3 is the latest frustrating chapter in the book that is his career. 

Depth was supposed to be the biggest advantage Toronto had in this series. Instead, Raptors starters outside of Leonard and Siakam combined to go 9-of-25. It didn’t help that Fred VanVleet had just one point and missed all seven of his field-goal attempts in 21 minutes. 

If the Raptors are going to fulfill the promise they showed with an impressive regular season, Lowry has to give more than he has. 

As things stand, they’re facing the possibility of another long offseason wondering what went wrong in the playoffs. 

What’s Next?

The Raptors and 76ers will play Game 4 of their series on Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET. 

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India races to evacuate coast before Cyclone Fani hits

Indian and Bangladesh authorities raced to complete the evacuation of more than one million people out of the path of an extreme cyclone heading towards the Bay of Bengal coast with winds of up to 200 kilometres per hour.

Major airports were closed in India’s eastern states of Odisha and West Bengal and the railway network virtually closed down ahead of the arrival of Extremely Severe Cyclone Fani – expected to be the biggest storm to hit the region in more than two decades – on Friday morning.

More than one million people in the two states have been ordered to leave their homes and the Bangladesh government separately issued evacuation orders for 19 coastal districts and put the army on standby.

The Indian meteorological department is predicting Fani will hit the coast near the Hindu holy city of Puri by about 0400 GMT in Odisha and then sweep up into West Bengal and reach Bangladesh on Saturday, gradually weakening.

It said a storm surge of about 1.5 metres could hit Odisha and flood low-lying areas where in 1999 10,000 people were killed by a cyclone. 

Tropical system threatens flooding across northwestern parts of the Bay of Bengal. [AFP]

Forecasters have warned of the “total destruction” of thatched houses, the uprooting of power and communication poles, the “flooding of escape routes” and damage to crops in some areas.

A state relief department official told AFP that 780,000 people were moved to safer ground by Thursday.

Some 1,000 shelters have been set up in schools and government buildings to accommodate more than a million people.

Bishnupada Sethi, special relief commissioner for Odisha, which has a population of 45 million in all, told AFP news agency that one million people would have to be moved by the time the storm hits.

Hundreds of thousands more in West Bengal have also been given evacuation orders. Special teams went through holiday villages urging tourists to move to safety.

“We have heard that the cyclone has turned towards Bengal and it will also hit Kolkata. But people should not panic unnecessarily. All precautionary steps are being taken to prevent any loss of life,” Kolkata mayor Firhad Hakim told reporters.

UPDATE: Cyclone #Fani is making landfall right now near Puri, India as a Category 4 — one of the strongest landfalling cyclones in the country’s recorded history. pic.twitter.com/TDfalErBJR

— Eric Holthaus (@EricHolthaus) May 3, 2019

It was predicted to pack sustained wind speeds of 180-190 kph and gusts up to 200 kph, equivalent in strength to a Category 3 to 4 hurricane.

More than 200 train services have been cancelled along coastal routes, according to Indian Railways. Three special trains were running however from Puri to evacuate pilgrims and tourists.

Flights have been cancelled in and out of Odisha’s capital Bhubaneswar and Kolkata in West Bengal until at least Saturday.

Heavy rain was already falling when hotels, schools and government offices started closing. At one Puri hotel visited by AFP all 175 rooms were ordered emptied, causing a wedding party to be cut short.

Measures were also being taken to protect the eight and a half century old Jagannath temple in the city.

Dozens of officials made announcements on megaphones across the coastal belt telling residents to flee their homes. State authorities also sent out mass SMS text messages to residents.

Ports have been closed but the Indian Navy has sent six warships to the region while India’s biggest oil and gas producer ONGC evacuated almost 500 workers from offshore rigs.

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Did new athletics rules unfairly target Caster Semenya?

Caster Semenya is an inspiration to many women around the world.

However, the South African Olympic and world champion athlete is accused of having an unfair advantage, because her body naturally produces more male sex hormones than most females.

To stay in the race, she’s going to have to change her life.

She lost a legal challenge against the governing body of world athletics, which issued a new rule forcing her to take drugs to lower her testosterone levels.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport admits the regulation is discriminatory, but says it’s necessary.

Is the decision fair?

Or is it needed to ensure a level playing field in elite sport?

Presenter: Imran Khan

Guests:

Silvia Camporesi – Senior lecturer in bioethics and society, King’s College London

John Brewer – Professor of applied sports science, Buckinghamshire New University

Julian Savulescu – Director of Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford

Source: Al Jazeera

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Moore is just the latest casualty of Trump’s nomination process


President Donald Trump

In total, President Donald Trump has withdrawn 62 nominations since taking office. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

White House

The administration’s long-standing vetting problems have contributed to a surge in doomed picks.

Hours after withdrawing as a candidate to serve on the Federal Reserve Board, Stephen Moore expressed shock that his critics had pored over his divorce records and decades-old columns.

“If I had any sense that this would happen — people would be looking at my writings from 20, 25 years ago — I would have told the president, ‘Wait a minute, I can’t do a Senate confirmation,’” Moore told Fox Business Network on Thursday.

Story Continued Below

But the White House probably should have seen it coming.

Past administrations have historically spent weeks or even months trying to identify potentially damaging information about candidates for administration jobs — long before their nominations are announced. Yet Trump’s White House again appeared to neglect the basic vetting that has for decades been the cornerstone of the nomination process.

“What went wrong here was the vetting process,” Moore acknowledged during Thursday’s interview.

Indeed, many in the administration were unaware of some of Moore’s past writings, according to a person familiar with the matter.

And Trump’s team appeared to be slow to react to Moore’s mounting problems. The White House, which did not respond to a request for comment on this article, announced this week that it was reviewing Moore’s writings, long after Moore had started facing heavy criticism for his outlandish past statements about women. And as of Thursday morning, Moore was telling journalists that the White House still backed his nomination.

“It’s just sloppy,” said one veteran lawyer who helps guide clients through the confirmation process.

The Trump administration’s long-standing vetting problems have contributed to a surge in doomed nominees.

In total, Trump has withdrawn 62 nominees since taking office, according to data provided to POLITICO by the Partnership for Public Service, a nonprofit that tracks federal vacancies. At this point in his presidency, Barack Obama had withdrawn 30 nominees. The figures include only people who were formally nominated, so Moore and others who took themselves out of consideration before their official paperwork was sent to the Senate aren’t counted.

The Trump administration has struggled for years to adequately vet nominees, dating back to the presidential transition, when Trump filled his Cabinet with friends and associates with little regard for the rigor of the traditional government hiring process, according to transition officials.

Less than one month after Trump took office, his first nominee for labor secretary, Andy Puzder, pulled out after facing a series of damaging revelations, including that he hired an undocumented household staffer and was once accused of abuse by his ex-wife. Later, his nominee to lead the Department of Veterans Affairs, Ronny Jackson, withdrew amid questions about Jackson’s behavior as a physician at the White House.

In the past three months alone, two high-profile candidates for top administration jobs have pulled themselves out of consideration, in addition to Moore. Trump announced last month that he would not nominate Herman Cain, a former pizza executive, to the Fed amid opposition from some Senate Republicans. And in February, Heather Nauert removed herself from consideration to become the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations after learning that she had employed a nanny without the correct work authorization.

Current and former administration officials insist that they’ve made strides in professionalizing the White House’s internal vetting operation. But they say the president himself sometimes undermines that process by making major staffing decisions on his own, with little consultation and with little notice.

“He’s impatient and impulsive,” a former senior White House official said. “When he makes a decision, he wants to move forward. There aren’t any people around him urging caution.”

More than two years into his presidency, Trump is surrounded by fewer senior White House aides who are willing to discourage his inclinations. These days, the White House is permeated by a “let Trump be Trump” mindset, an approach spearheaded by acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney.

“It’s been a steady march toward an unrestrained president,” the former official said. “We’ve now reached the complete extreme of the spectrum in which the president is deciding something in private based on the recommendations of one or two people.”

Bradley Moss, a lawyer who has represented clients seeking employment in the federal government, said the chronic problems getting high-profile nominees confirmed are “the result of nothing less than the president’s own personal disdain for vetting and his personal preference for gut intuition.”

The news of Cain and Moore’s pending nominations to the Fed caught many Senate Republicans by surprise. Trump announced his plans to tap Cain during a question-and-answer session with reporters following an event in the Oval Office, and he revealed Moore’s candidacy in response to a shouted question on the tarmac at Palm Beach International Airport. The unexpected announcements left White House officials with no time to brief lawmakers and get their feedback.

White House officials have instead often assumed that Trump’s nominees will easily win the necessary support from Senate Republicans, especially since they require only a simple majority vote in the chamber. But Senate Republicans have shown in recent weeks that they’re unwilling to simply green-light all of Trump’s nominees.

In the meantime, the president is increasingly relying on acting officials to fill senior roles across the government. Trump has said in private and in public that he likes acting officials because they give him more flexibility and they don’t need to go through the Senate confirmation process. Both the Homeland Security and Defense secretaries — two crucial positions tasked with protecting the country — are serving in an acting capacity.

Watchdog groups also remain alarmed by the sheer number of positions for which Trump has neglected to nominate anybody. At the State Department, more than 30 senior positions are vacant. There are more than a dozen senior-level vacancies at the Justice and Defense departments.

“Our government is still not fully and effectively staffed at the most senior levels,” said Max Stier, who leads the Partnership for Public Service, which advised the Trump transition team as it started staffing up the government.

Lawyers who represent potential nominees say the number of well-qualified individuals interested in joining the administration has slowed. And for those who are interested, the vetting process can sometimes be confusing and unorganized, the lawyers said.

“We had a client who thought he was all set and then at the last minute, they said, ‘No, we’re going to hold things up,’” one of the lawyers said. “We had no idea even who to call to find out what the holdup was.”

But people close to the White House said the president is facing bigger problems than sloppy vetting, adding that many in the West Wing are unbothered by the recent string of withdrawals.

“Compared to all of the stuff Trump is dealing with, this stuff barely registers,” a former administration official said. “Is anybody going to remember Steve Moore in three months?”

Burgess Everett contributed to this story.

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YouTuber may have unknowingly filmed a suitcase with a body inside

A YouTuber inadvertently filmed what might be the body of a murder victim stuffed in a suitcase for a travel video.

The suitcase may be connected to a serial murder case rocking Cyprus politics, nearly two years after the video was filmed. The suspected killer confessed to murdering seven people just days ago, and told law enforcement officials he dumped some of his victims’ bodies in suitcases into a lake that’s become a destination for travel influencers. 

New York-based vlogger Sarah Funk visited Cyprus’ Mitsero Red Lake, a toxic, acidic body of water tinted red from now-abandoned British mining operations in June 2017. 

“This is what murder episodes are made of,” Funk’s partner, Luis Yanes, can be heard joking in a YouTube video she posted of their visit to the eery locale. 

They climbed over barbed wire and scrambled down a steep hill to get to the lake. 

“This feels like death, you know what I mean?” Funk exclaimed. Later, she quipped, “I just feel death in the air, it’s so nice.”

A shot of Funk squatting to photograph a boxy object in the water can be seen at roughly 2:08 in the video. The object may be one of the suitcases containing a woman’s remains. 

Cypriot officials believe there are three suitcases in the lake and on Saturday retrieved one of them. It’s unclear if that suitcase is the same one Funk saw nearly two years ago and police have not confirmed whether they used Funk’s video during the investigation. On Sunday, Cypriot military officer Nicos Metaxas confessed to murdering five women and two children over a three year period. He said he dumped three of their bodies into Mitsero Red Lake. His adult victims were domestic workers for households around Cyprus, according to the Guardian, and are thought to hail from the Philippines, India or Nepal, and Romania. 

Political critics are blaming police for mishandling the case, noting that they were unmotivated to find the missing persons because they were foreigners. 

The Washington Post reports that two of the suitcases have been located, but only one has been retrieved. Authorities continue to search for the third suitcase. 

<img alt="Funk said she thought the suitcase was a log." class="" data-credit-name="sarah funk” data-credit-provider=”custom type” data-fragment=”m!eeaa” data-image=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F979920%252Fb490b296-321f-4d11-ba8f-ce09a2b6e1a0.jpg%252Foriginal.jpg?signature=8riplXamm3P4CxYjd_C0Sai9Nj0=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com&#8221; data-micro=”1″ src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F979920%252Fb490b296-321f-4d11-ba8f-ce09a2b6e1a0.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=HdjAuaho23t1wG86ekUz21x5ixM=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: sarah funk

After news of the confession broke, Funk posted a blog post with photos of one of the suitcases and asked people to stop contacting her about it. 

“This is terrible and I am devastated for the victims’ families,” she wrote. “It felt eerie there but I did not see anything completely out of the norm … I don’t have any other information about the lake. This is all of the information I have, and I hope it helps.”

She added that at the time, she thought the suitcase was a log. 

<img alt="Funk also said she didn't have any other information about the lake." class="" data-credit-name="sarah funk” data-credit-provider=”custom type” data-fragment=”m!3b3f” data-image=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F979918%252Ffebacd83-15db-4698-aa71-d6191dd17606.jpg%252Foriginal.jpg?signature=1ebC78BrACuDjnk6jLynqnZEejU=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com&#8221; data-micro=”1″ src=”https://mondrian.mashable.com/uploads%252Fcard%252Fimage%252F979918%252Ffebacd83-15db-4698-aa71-d6191dd17606.jpg%252Ffit-in__1200x9600.jpg?signature=5vsihxiers_QwQDyik1L3vMnqqE=&source=https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com”&gt;

Image: sarah funk

The Guardian reports that four bodies have been found so far, but notes that the island has “scores” of unsolved cases related to missing migrant women. 

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