Princess Charlotte looks just like the Queen in these new photos

By Rachel Thompson

Princess Charlotte is celebrating her fourth birthday and that means one thing: new photos! 

Interestingly, in the latest dispatch of photos of the royal kids, Princess Charlotte bears a striking resemblance to her great-grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II. 

SEE ALSO: These new photos of Prince Louis will make you swoon at his cuteness

Three photos were taken by the Duchess of Cambridge in April at Kensington Palace and their residence in Norfolk. 

If, by now, you haven’t clocked the uncanny resemblance, here are some archive photographs of Queen Elizabeth II to jog your memory.

Princess Elizabeth riding her tricycle in a park in 1935.

Princess Elizabeth riding her tricycle in a park in 1935.

Image: Keystone/Getty Images

Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret at the Royal Lodge, Windsor, in July 1946.

Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret at the Royal Lodge, Windsor, in July 1946.

Image: Lisa Sheridan/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Happy Birthday, Princess Charlotte. 

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2vxvxzt
via IFTTT

How Abe Is Outsmarting Trump on Trade

Donald Trump and his team surely figured Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe would be an easy mark in U.S.-Japan trade talks. No world leader, after all, has subjugated himself more to the dealmaker in chief than Abe. Abe has presented Trump with golden gifts; the two have golfed together; most recently, Abe invited Trump to be the first world leader to meet Japan’s new emperor in May. Not to mention Abe’s letter reportedly trying to nominate Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.

But things didn’t go as planned last week as the leaders of the No. 1 and No. 3 economies in the world met in Washington. There are already signs Trump won’t find Japan the compliant partner he expects—and his own policies might be to blame.

Story Continued Below

Trump and Abe were discussing a bilateral trade deal intended to narrow the $60 billion U.S trade deficit with Japan, a deal Trump has said will “be something very exciting.” Since the 1980s, Trump has been a vocal critic of Japan’s export industry, particularly cars, and as president, he hopes to swing the trade relationship in America’s favor. According to Japanese media reports, however, Abe quickly balked on some key points: He resisted Trump’s demand at their meeting for quick access to Japan’s agricultural market; he made clear that Tokyo wants currency issues set aside for now; and he said Japan expects concessions from Washington, too.

Trump put on a brave face after the talks. His administration’s efforts, he insisted on Saturday, are “moving along very nicely.” But the reality is that Tokyo’s negotiating position has grown stronger over the past year as Trump has imposed tariffs and upended global supply chains—and the president is learning the hard way just how much his improvised approach to trade could leave him vulnerable to any negotiator who watches carefully.

It might seem as though the Japanese prime minister is suddenly hardening his stance, from Trump lapdog to proud nationalist, but Abe’s obsequiousness has been about tactics. The strategy with this president, as any observer of Trump now knows, is to avoid antagonizing the White House or drawing Trump’s wrath on Twitter. Abe seems to be doing just this so that he can in fact pursue Japan’s economic interests. Abe isn’t girding for a fight so much as trying to keep the peace without appearing to give in too much. And so far, it appears to be working.

“Bottom line, Abe will play Trump, softening the blow with the first state dinner with Emperor Naruhito, and astute fawning and flattery,” says Jeff Kingston, head of Asian studies at Temple University’s Tokyo campus.

Looking back over the past year, Abe’s strategy becomes clear. All along, he has hedged his bets in dealing with Washington. While Trump was slapping tariffs on steel, aluminum and $200 billion-plus of Chinese goods last year, irking allies, Abe was burnishing Japan’s free-trade bona fides. He signed the world’s largest free-trade deal with the European Union. He stuck with the Trans-Pacific Partnership, on which Trump reneged.

As if to amplify the point, Abe flew right to Ottawa on Sunday after his trip to Washington. In Canada, he and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau toasted their economies having “benefited tremendously” from the renamed TPP, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, which comprises 11 Asia-Pacific countries representing 500 million consumers. Trudeau didn’t mention Trump when stressing the “benefits of countries working together and not falling back on protectionism as a way of growing our economy.” But the point was clear. Abe similarly said the deal “should be a model going forward” for developed nations.

Abe’s economic minister and lead trade negotiator, Toshimitsu Motegi, has little choice but to go through the motions with Trump’s point man, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer; Trump is threatening to impose 25 percent levies on imports of cars and auto parts, a move that would slam Japan’s key industry. Yet Japan’s top trading partner is now China, not the United States. Add in Abe’s deal with the European Union and efforts to strengthen trade links with Southeast Asia and India, and Japan is more diversified than ever. That gives Tokyo leverage to ask Trump for bigger concessions, such as scrapping existing levies on light trucks and cars. Or, Japan could drag its feet on a bilateral U.S. deal, in the hopes that American voters elect a more trade-friendly leader in 2020.

Abe is also well aware of Trump’s political vulnerabilities, and apt to exploit them to force Trump to accept a less sweeping deal. The U.S. president’s approval rating dropped by 5 points after the release of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report in April, and talk of impeachment is still in the air. This suggests Trump is eager for a win on the international stage. Meanwhile, Abe’s team knows American voters in the agricultural sector are hurting amid the trade war. “There’s significant concern among the U.S. agriculture industry that its market share in Japan will be taken,” says Ichiro Fujisaki, a former Japanese ambassador to Washington. So far this year, U.S. pork shipments to Japan are down 35 percent. Barley farmers also are losing contracts to Japan. These dynamics are likely to increase Abe’s ability to play hardball. One likely ask: that Washington phase out the current 25 percent levies on imports of light trucks and 2.5 percent tax on Japanese car imports.

Abe has also wisely reminded Trump that since he moved into the White House, Japanese companies have invested $23 billion in the U.S. economy. The 43,000 jobs Abe says that money is creating could always go elsewhere. According to the Nikkei Asian Review, a disproportionate amount of that $23 billion has been targeted at Trump country: Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and West Virginia. Push Abe too hard, and those investments could always be rerouted to Mexico and Canada.

Finally, Abe has been strategic in studying how China has played Trump. For all the Art of the Deal bluster, details aren’t a Trumpian hallmark. Nor is strategy. Chinese officials, President Xi Jinping included, plan in terms of decades. Trump is all about the next tweet. Xi’s team has exploited Trump’s short-termism and seems to be waiting out the clock for a watered-down trade deal between the two countries. Trump’s team is backing away from demands that Beijing stop subsidizing state enterprises, for instance. And Xi’s negotiators have whittled Trump’s “enforcement mechanisms”—such as forcing Beijing to grant the Trump administration broad monitoring capabilities—to mere talking points. The final deal with China probably won’t include strong protections against intellectual property theft, either.

China will probably promise to buy more U.S. goods and agree in principle not to manipulate its currency to boost exports. Both are low cost ways for Xi to get the “America First” crowd off his back. Yet they’re high-cost reality checks for those favoring wholesale changes to China’s illiberal capitalism model in order to level the playing field internationally. Xi will have a free hand to pursue his “Made in China 2025” vision, a state-sponsored plan for China to modernize its tech manufacturing. As Trump attempts to pull America back to the 1980s, when the United States wielded vast industrial power around the globe, China is investing hundreds of billions of dollars in dominating industries including energy innovation, software, semiconductors, aerospace, self-driving vehicles, biotechnology and artificial intelligence by 2025.

Whatever happens with China, Trump will declare a big victory and pivot to Japan. On the one hand, Abe has positioned Japan as an ally in Trump’s efforts to contain China’s influence. The idea, says Scott Seaman of the Eurasia Group, is to “showcase the work Japan is doing to support the efforts of the U.S. and other countries to address problematic Chinese commercial and trade practices.” On the other hand, Trump’s climbdown on China won’t be lost on Abe. “Team Trump has lurched from concession to capitulation in trade talks with China,” Temple University’s Kingston says. “This fiasco has to hearten Team Abe as it fends off Trump’s ’80s-era trade nostalgia.”

In other words: Trump might be surprised to find Abe is more willing to push back than roll over.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2PKvJEP
via IFTTT

Tesla Model 3 is now available in the UK

Rejoice, Tesla fans in the UK: The Model 3 is now available.
Rejoice, Tesla fans in the UK: The Model 3 is now available.

Image: Tesla

By Stan Schroeder

As promised, Tesla’s Model 3 is now available to order in the United Kingdom. 

It was quite a long wait for UK citizens, who were able to reserve their place in line to get a Model 3 as far back as 2016 — but better late than never, no?

SEE ALSO: Tesla’s new video shows a Model 3 driving itself like it’s no big deal

The pricing (with destination and documentation fee included) starts at £38,900 for the Partial Premium Interior model with a rear-wheel drive. The Long Range model with a dual motor and an all-wheel drive costs £47,900, and the Performance variant costs £56,900. 

Image: Tesla

If you switch to the Payment screen on the Model 3 order page you’ll also get Tesla’s estimate on fuel savings; for example, for the £38,900 variant, this estimate is £9,500. Note that in the U.S., this number is far lower at $4,500 — and while the U.S. does have cheaper gas than the UK, I’m still not certain that I understand Tesla’s math here.

Estimated delivery for all three basic variants of the car is June (though the first people to get it will be the first who reserved all those years ago). 

Last week, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said the Model 3 would become available in Japan, Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong “shortly” after the UK launch. 

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2LhIE2I
via IFTTT

‘Game of Thrones’ breaks a major promise with that White Walker twist

From the very first scene of the very first season of Game of Thrones, the story seemed to make us a promise: There is a larger mystery at the heart of this world. And you should not forget it.

Before even learning their names, we watch the three characters who open the show fall victim to an ancient and sinister otherworldliness. All but one is systematically slaughtered by creatures of untold power, unknown motivation, and inhuman brutality.

It was the enigma that launched the largest cultural phenomenon in TV history. Who were these beings? What did they want? Why were they massacring humans? What made them come back?

For eight years, we patiently subsisted on agonizingly slow servings of information hinting at answers — confounding puzzle pieces that only added to the wonder of that mystery. It felt like, if we just worked hard enough to figure it out, we might even grasp the overarching themes that defined our long, winding, twisted journey.

Finally on the eve of the final season’s much-hyped “Long Night” episode, we prepared for Game of Thrones to make good on that promise. At the end of the hour-and-twenty-minute long battle confronting that unfathomable existential conflict, we finally got our answer …

And apparently, it’s that there was never any mystery at all. Or rather, that the answers were given to us all the way back in that Season 1 opener. We just made the mistake of thinking there was more to it. 

For seven seasons we waited for the winds of winter to come — only to have it abruptly blow over with a quick gust.

Who were the White Walkers? Ice monsters. What did they want? To end humanity. Why were they killing humans? It’s their thing. What made them return? ¯_(ツ)_/¯

For seven seasons we waited for the winds of winter to come — only to have it abruptly blow over with a single gust. 

SEE ALSO: Why ‘Game of Thrones’ will end in peace, not war

Maybe we should have seen it coming. In truth, we always knew Game of Thrones wouldn’t tell the story we thought it would tell. We loved it because it was a show built on pulling the rug out from under us, repeatedly subverting the expectations of its own narrative setups, and then reinventing itself from the leftover aftermath.

We expected the unexpected. But what happened to the White Walkers wasn’t a deliberately dissatisfying subversion of expectations. Instead the premature conclusion to their storyline seems to sabotage all the previous narrative subversions that came before it.

ASOIAF: The Game of Thrones is just a distraction from the real problem, The Long Night

GoT: The Long Night is just a distraction from the real problem, The Game of Thrones

— Menino Manoel (@DetoniFlores) April 29, 2019

Unlike any of the series’ other game-redefining twists, not making good on the White Walker storyline failed to deliver on the promise that this show had something bigger to say. Sure, this began as a game of thrones. But we were told it would end as a song of ice and fire, more elemental and universal in its thematic scope than the squabbles of aristocratic families.

Yet if the preview for episode 4 of Season 8 is any indication, that’s exactly where we’re headed: Back to the spokes on a wheel — Lannister, Stark, Targaryen, Greyjoy, etc. And the surprise twist at the end of “The Long Night” that brought us back there feels like a cheap bastardization of what used to make Game of Thrones exceptional. 

Sorry, folks, but Cersei was right all along.

Sorry, folks, but Cersei was right all along.

Image: hbo

Again, we’re used to (and enjoy) the show’s capacity to reinvent itself by not giving us what we either wanted or expected — Ned’s beheading, the Red Wedding, Oberyn’s death, the Sept of Baelor. But every time Game of Thrones reinvented its narrative stakes with a major upset before, it stemmed from an understanding that even the best players and heroes were expendable to the story’s larger themes. 

All men must die, because no man matters more than the collective. Valar morghulis, valar dohaeris.

This is what the White Walker threat embodied: challenges that are bigger than you, or any one of your favorite heroes. It’s also what allowed us to read real-world metaphors into a fantasy show, seeing the worldwide threat as global warming, nuclear annihilation, or the hubris of human exceptionalism.

By eliminating that threat in one fell swoop with zero thematic payoff for the sake of a surprise, for the first time ever a Game of Thrones twist has made its story smaller rather than more expansive. The latest shocker does not reinvent the story. It resets it back to square one.

I don't blame you, Arya, but this ruins everything.

I don’t blame you, Arya, but this ruins everything.

Image: HBO

Before the White Walker threat could even become the fully realized central conflict of Game of Thrones, the show ditched that more uncharted territory to return to its comfort zone. And we’re left to wonder what purpose the slowly built up introduction of them as a threat served in the first place. 

Forget all our earlier questions about the mystery of the White Walkers, what they wanted, and why they were killing everyone. Let’s take that at face value, because in all likelihood that’s being saved for the upcoming spinoff show literally called the Long Night (which, again, still feels like cheating the story we started eight years ago). 

For the first time ever a Game of Thrones twist has made its story smaller rather than more expansive

Let’s focus on the most important question to determine whether or not the White Walkers were an effective storytelling device: What did the characters and world of Game of Thrones learn by defeating them?

The toll of sacrifice? Nope. At most, only the massacred Dothraki and other nameless armies suffered much loss in the battle. That humanity’s survival depends on banding together to overcome tribalism? Nope. Turns out that Cersei’s plan to let the do-gooders deal with a world-ending catastrophe while she drank wine was the best plan all along! Perhaps the White Walkers added to the “fuck fate” philosophy heard on the show before? Nope. The Princ(ess) We Thought Was Promised Jon Snow and/or Daenerys might’ve failed to realize their prophesied victory as Azor Ahai — but Arya fulfilled her lesser-known fated destiny delivered by Melisandre. 

From where we’re standing now, the defeat of the White Walkers only redefined the expectation that taking this story seriously was a worthwhile endeavor. 

Seemingly nothing about the Game of Thrones world has changed after it was faced with the millennia-spanning existential threat of death itself. Only the North and Daenerys’ armies reckoned with facing that reality, while everyone else slept soundly in their beds believing the so-called White Walkers are still one of Old Nan’s wacky stories.

You let the whole team down, White Walkers.

You let the whole team down, White Walkers.

Image: hbo

Maybe that is exactly the theme the journey was leading us to: Nothing changes. Even after overcoming the last enemy of death against all odds, the parasitic virus of human ego will be enough in itself to wreak the same apocalyptic havoc on the world as the White Walkers. If that’s the case, well, we wish we hadn’t spent all this time and energy to reach the rather clichéd conclusion that war is, indeed, cyclical and bad.

There is perhaps an argument to be made that by defeating a prophesied, apocalyptic enemy with a literal sleight of hand from one of the smallest heroes works on a thematic level. But that’s not our problem with the White Walkers’ defeat.

Our issue is that the showrunners seem to be under the impression that the surprise of Arya defeating the Night King instead of Jon is the kind of unexpected twist on par with Game of Thrones‘ history of subverting expectations. It isn’t. 

Everyone's a hero! You're a hero! You're a hero! You're a hero!

Everyone’s a hero! You’re a hero! You’re a hero! You’re a hero!

Image: hbo

Sure, some viewers might’ve expected the “traditional hero” like Jon to deliver the final blow. But you don’t subvert his hero’s journey by replacing it with a different, less expected hero’s journey. In every other way imaginable, “The Long Night” turned Game of Thrones into the fantasy genre caricature of pure good versus pure evil that George R. R. Martin has repeatedly condemned.

The good guys won and the bad guys lost due to their heroism during a big battle. While there may still be plenty of deaths and sacrifices in the three remaining episodes with the new “Last War” Daenerys mentions in the episode 4 sneak peek, the damage to the overall story is already done.

“The Long Night” turned Game of Thrones into the fantasy genre caricature of pure good versus pure evil that George R. R. Martin has repeatedly condemned.

Right now much of the Game of Thrones fandom is scrambling to either divorce itself from what the show has become entirely, or cling onto whatever remaining theories, predictions, and interpretations might render “The Long Night” anything other than a complete betrayal of the story we loved. 

What if Bran is actually the Lord of Light and evil? What if there’s another Night King hiding somewhere? What if what’s left of the season is equivalent to the Scouring of the Shire chapters in Lord of the Rings that George R. R. Martin has said he wanted to emulate?

But on Game of Thrones, the Shire has already been scoured for a long time now. War ravaged Westeros since Season 2 (and long before that historically), without any need for the White Walkers. What little innocence existed in the world died alongside those atrocities, as seen in nearly every character arc since Ned’s death. 

We have been living the traumatic aftermath of war throughout the majority of this story. And unlike those final chapters in Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones didn’t just get rid of the White Walkers so it could take stalk of the bittersweet aftermath of successfully defeating evil. Instead, it seems to just have replaced a red herring of a Big Bad Guy with the Real Final Boss Cersei. 

At this point our best hope is that the shift back to human politics culminates with a melting of the iron throne. Perhaps the White Walkers only served as a contrast to the real battle, which will be the more bureaucratic fight to end the zero sum game of monarchy for a better game where no one really wins but no one loses either. 

But after “The Long Night,” we wouldn’t put it past Game of Thrones to end with the most milquetoast #ForTheThrone conclusion any of us could’ve imagined: Jon and/or Dany take back the crown, and the cycle begins anew.

We hope we’re wrong. We hope that Game of Thrones can pull off one last narrative reinvention, to tell a different story than we expected but still the story we deserve. Like the Night King, though, we won’t hold our breath.

If you thought this game of thrones had a happy ending, then it may turn out that you were paying exactly as much attention as you needed to.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2VHHaCF
via IFTTT

North Korea: Chemistry, a killing, and then karaoke

It is a touching scene, a husband beside his wife leading a tribute to “the fragrant flower of the family”. Friends sing along and wave their arms to the classic North Korean tune, You Should Love.

The singer in this karaoke video is no ordinary man – he is suspected of concocting a nerve agent that killed the eldest brother and main rival of North Korea‘s leader Kim Jong Un.

Kim Jong Nam’s assassination, caught on camera at a busy airport in Malaysia‘s Kuala Lumpur, was a brazen and sensational killing that sparked a major diplomatic crisis.

Footage obtained exclusively by Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit shows one of the suspects, Ri Jong Chol, 48, enjoying freedom in a karaoke restaurant in China in the months after the assassination.

Ri had been arrested and jailed in the aftermath of Kim Jong Nam’s killing, but he was later released in a prisoner swap between Malaysia and North Korea.

At the time, Malaysia’s government said it did not have enough evidence to charge him, but police and intelligence sources suspect Ri prepared the VX nerve agent that killed Nam.

Ri Jong Chol, a karaoke chemist [Al Jazeera]

However, Ri escaped justice, while two young women, who said they were duped into smearing the poison on Nam’s face, were charged with murder and spent years in jail facing the death penalty.

Malaysia has since dropped the murder charges against both women. One of them was allowed to return home to Indonesia in March, while the second, a Vietnamese national, is set to walk free on May 3.

The main planners and perpetrators of one of the most high-profile killings of recent times have escaped justice.

‘Nowhere to hide’

Going on a family holiday to Disneyland in Japan’s Tokyo was Nam’s first major mistake. He travelled on a fake Dominican passport under a Chinese name: Japanese authorities noticed and he was deported.

The 2001 trip cost him the leadership of North Korea. The international embarrassment was too much for his father and Nam went from heir apparent in Pyongyang to wandering playboy.

Nine years later, while living in Macau, he learned that his younger half-brother was next in line for power. Kim Jong Un took over at the turn of 2012 and swiftly issued an assassination order against his older brother, the New York Times reported, citing South Korean legislators who were briefed on the matter by the country’s intelligence service.

Nam reportedly survived a first attempt that year.

Fearing for his life and that of his family members, Nam wrote a letter to his younger brother: “Please withdraw the order to punish me and my family,” he was quoted as saying in the letter.

“We have nowhere to hide. The only way to escape is to choose suicide.”

In February 2017, Nam went on holiday again. The trip to Langkawi in Malaysia was his second mistake, one that proved fatal. While on the popular tourist island, he reportedly met an American spy and handed over a large amount of electronic data.

A man believed to be Kim Jong Nam, right, is escorted by police as he boards a plane upon his deportation from Japan at Tokyo’s Narita International Airport [File: Kyodo/via Reuters]

On the way home, at Kuala Lumpur’s main airport, Nam was heading towards the check-in desks for a flight to Macau when two young women pounced.

The first applied a chemical to his face with her hands before the second applied another substance with a towel. When they were mixed, experts now say, the compound became the deadly VX nerve agent, killing Nam within two hours.

The suspected assassins, Doan Thi Huong and Siti Aisyah, two aspiring models, left the airport and went back to work in the bars of Kuala Lumpur. They neither changed their clothes nor washed their hands.

Gooi Soon Seng, defence lawyer for Aisyah, is adamant that his client did not know what she was really doing. The 26-year-old Indonesian thought she was doing a TV prank and continued to believe so for several days afterwards, he tells Al Jazeera.

“If they knew how lethal the VX could be, why were they not wearing gloves?” he says.

“She would have disposed of the T-shirt or she could have washed it and she would have run back to Indonesia. But she did none of that.”

Aisyah was charged with murder, an offence that carries the death sentence, and spent more than two years in prison. She was released on March 11 in a surprise move after Malaysian prosecutors overturned the charge against her.

Her partner, 30-year-old Doan Thi Huong, pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of causing harm after prosecutors dropped murder charges against her, too. She was sentenced to three years in prison, but will walk free on Friday – her term was later reduced because Malaysian law can allow a one-third remission of prison sentences.

Doan Thi Huong, left, and Siti Aisyah, right, were charged with murder over Kim Jong Nam’s killing [File: Malaysia police handout] 

Following her sentence, Huong says she wants to pursue singing and acting.

Defence lawyers say the two women had been hungry for stardom. They worked in bars, as part-time models and on TV shows, hoping to be discovered.

They did find fame, but not as they had hoped.

 A life of mystery

Five months before Nam was poisoned, Ri received $38,000 in cash. Police said they found the cash along with five computer devices, four phones and a bottle of chloride at his high-rise apartment in a Kuala Lumpur suburb. They were the effects of “a life of mystery“.

On paper, Ri worked in the IT department of a small herbal medicine firm called Tombo Enterprise. In the flurry of interest that came after the assassination, the owner of the company, Chong Ah Kow, said he only gave Ri a job as a favour to a friend.

Chong said Ri only came to the office a handful of times despite officially drawing a monthly $1,200 salary.

“It was just a formality, just documents, I never paid him,” Chong, a Malaysian, told Reuters. “I don’t know how he survives here. I don’t know how he gets money.”

Al Jazeera has seen documents that shed more light on how Ri worked. He seemed to have been an active export agent working for Korea Ponghwa General Trading Corporation, a company based in Pyongyang.

Invoices and shipping documents from early 2017 show exports of hundreds of tonnes of wholesale “soap noodles”, the main ingredient used in the production of soap bars, bought from Octo Plus Resources, a small company with Chinese directors based in Malaysia’s Port Klang.

He seems to have purchased heavy machinery. He also sought satellite tracking software.

North Korean suspect in Kim Jong Nam murder, Ri Jong Chol, leaves a Sepang police station to be deported, in Malaysia March 3, 2017 [Kyodo via Reuters]

In an email to Al Jazeera, Octo Plus Resources said they had helped Ri export 600 tonnes of soap noodles that were documented and declared to Malaysian customs authorities. The goods, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, were booked for export from Malaysia to Nampo in North Korea, via Dalian in China.

There is also a cheque deposit slip for a payment to Octo Plus Resources of around $43,000 in December 2016, less than two months before the killing. Octo Plus said documents bearing its name had been “manipulated by a third party”.

For Ri, who is a chemist as well as an IT expert, home and business mixed. His daughter, Ri Yu Gyong, studied at a fee-paying private college in western Kuala Lumpur. But emails and text messages suggest she also helped her father in business. 

Photos show Ri enjoying a life of plenty in Malaysia, spending time in the capital’s shopping malls and restaurants. He poses for a picture with his young son, Ri Un Hyang, at Saisaki Japanese Buffet and with his wife at another eatery.

But what the material from Ri’s phones reveals is what he was really up to. He was in close contact with the North Korean ambassador and other diplomats.

US and UN investigators have said he was a government agent who helped North Korea dodge sanctions by sourcing what it needed, making money and doing it with a cover story.

Golden opportunity lost 

Malaysian police say five men were posted at the airport to oversee the assassination. Four of them watched the girls carry out their “prank”. A fifth is caught on camera calmly observing the clinic where Nam’s life was ebbing away.

Investigators found that a car purchased by Ri ferried some of those agents away from the airport.

When they arrested him at home, he was driving another vehicle that bore North Korean diplomatic plates, which he had used since 2015.

Officers suspect he concocted the nerve agent at home. However, they only searched Ri’s apartment once, interviewed him only once and failed to test his belongings for VX residue.

The police were neither objective nor competent, according to Gooi, Aisyah’s defence lawyer. He accuses them of focusing their energy on convicting the young women rather than leading any meaningful investigation into Ri and his comrades. The orders came from above. 

“The investigating officer was not, in fact, the investigating officer,” he says. “He was under the direction of the officer in charge of the criminal investigation, a higher-up who was never called to testify.”

Malaysian police declined to comment for this article.

Two weeks after they arrested Ri, they let him go and he was deported to China. North Korea had seized nine Malaysian nationals in Pyongyang, and a swap had been quietly arranged.

Ri landed in Beijing in the early hours of the first Saturday in March 2017, taking with him any chance of understanding who had really planned and executed the assassination.

“There was a golden opportunity to hold them accountable,” says Hoo Chiew Ping of the National University of Malaysia. “We have completely lost that.”

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2XWs8Xa
via IFTTT

Cyclone Fani: Nearly 800,000 evacuated in India ahead of storm

Nearly 800,000 people in India’s eastern coastal districts have been evacuated ahead of the expected arrival of a major cyclone packing winds of up to 200 kilometres per hour, officials said on Thursday.

Tropical Cyclone Fani, brewing in the Bay of Bengal some 450 kilometres offshore and moving westwards, is expected to make landfall on Friday afternoon near the Hindu holy town of Puri.

A state relief department official told AFP news agency that 780,000 people were moved to safer places overnight from at least 13 districts of Odisha state that will bear the brunt of the powerful cyclone.

“More people are being moved to safer places,” an official from the department told AFP on Thursday.

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

The office of the state’s special relief commissioner said local authorities had been told to identify “all vulnerable people… and shift them to multi-purpose cyclone/flood shelters”.

“Arrangements have already been made for free kitchen, safe drinking water, lighting, health and sanitation,” it said in a statement.

HR Biswas, director of the meteorological centre in state capital Bhubaneshwar, said at least 11 districts would be affected by severe rainfall.

“We have suggested people to stay indoors,” he told reporters.

The neighbouring coastal states of Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu have also been put on high alert.

Navy on standby

The cyclone was expected to pack sustained wind speeds of 180-190 km/h, bringing gusts of up to 200 km/h, and is equivalent in strength to a Category 3 to 4 hurricane.

It will be the fourth such storm to hit the country’s east coast in three decades.

India’s weather office has warned that the high speed winds can uproot trees, flatten crops, damage homes, power and communication infrastructure along with flooding in low lying areas.

India’s weather department, in an advisory, asked all fishermen in the state to return to shore by late Wednesday.

The department warned of “potential threat of flying objects … Extensive uprooting of communication and power poles …Disruption of rail, road”.

This May 1, 2019, satellite image obtained courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows Tropical Cyclone Fani intensifying in the Bay of Bengal [HO/NOAA/AFP]

One local agency said that it had kept around 300 boats and crew on standby for rescue or relief work in the next 48 to 72 hours.

On Wednesday, authorities deployed emergency personnel and ordered the navy on standby. 

Tourists have also been advised to leave coastal towns in West Bengal and Odisha, state government officials said.

Storms regularly hit eastern and southeastern India between April and December. In 2017, Cyclone Ockhi left nearly 250 people dead and more than 600 missing in Tamil Nadu and Kerala states.

Odisha had to evacuate some 300,000 people last October when its coastal districts were battered by cyclone Titli, with winds up to 150 kilometres per hour and heavy rains.

A super-cyclone battered the coast of Odisha for 30 hours, killing 10,000 people, two decades ago. 

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2Y6404F
via IFTTT

Emilia Clarke gives us a glimpse behind that epic ‘Game of Thrones’ battle episode

Emilia Clarke, actual royalty, dropped into Jimmy Kimmel Live! to talk about “The Long Night,” the epic third episode of Game Of Thrones’ eighth season.

It took 55 nights to film the extraordinary episode, and the cast and crew would stay up all night to shoot its long, fiery scenes.

“What you saw was really what it was like shooting it,” Clarke told of the Battle of Winterfell episode. “You saw blood and mud, and angry, screaming people.”

Clarke also talked through how her scenes on the dragon came together, and how co-star Kit Harington learnt to ride them — although with much more pain.

“I feel weird about it, I’m not going to lie,” she said. “He was all like, you think you’re good at this, let me be the professional … he was kind of arrogant about it.

“That was then I learnt that men riding dragons is like a whole other thing, [rather] than a lady who rides a dragon. It’s a little more uncomfortable for them.”

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2UWCgNX
via IFTTT

Drake gave the perfect shout out to Arya Stark and everyone’s in a spin

“Shout out to Arya Stark for putting in that work last week.”

Image: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for dcp/hbo

By Shannon Connellan

Drake knows an MVP when he sees one, and this week’s was definitely Arya Stark.

The hip hop superstar accepted his Billboard Music Award on Wednesday with a cheeky shout out to the Stark powerhouse and her work in Game of Thrones Season 8, episode 3, when that happened.

SEE ALSO: Why we should have seen Arya’s major ‘Game of Thrones’ twist coming

Before leaving the stage with the Top Billboard 200 Album award for his whopper of a double album, Scorpion, Drake dropped some unexpected recognition for the biggest badass in Westeros.

“Shout out to Arya Stark for putting in that work last week,” he said.

Needless to say, folks on Twitter lost their collective shit.

drake literally just said “shout out to arya stark for putting in that work last week” in his acceptance speech and i’ve honestly never seen the billboard music awards before but it is now my favorite one

— Jamie (@Jmw3iss) May 2, 2019

I just have this strong feeling that Drake’s next hit is going to have some Game of Thrones reference lyric about Arya Stark.. it’s something he would do

— sad naruto flute (@FaithRies) May 2, 2019

When drake said “shout out to arya stark for putting in that work last week” I felt that 😂

— k. (@OfficiallKelsey) May 2, 2019

Even HBO got in on the action.

Of course, the dreaded “Drake curse” got a few mentions too, a reference to several football players who have posed for photos with the star, only to have their team lose their next game. Italian club AS Roma even jokingly “banned” their players from taking photos with Drake for this reason.

It’s silly, but superstition is a powerful thing.

Whatever happens, watching the top of the game shout out the top of the game is one heck of a moment. Curse be damned.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2ZRi43m
via IFTTT

Portland Trail Blazers Show They’re More Than Damian Lillard Heroics

Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard, left, congratulates center Enes Kanter after his basket against the Denver Nuggets during the first half of Game 2 of an NBA basketball second-round playoff series Wednesday, May 1, 2019, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

David Zalubowski/Associated Press

Plenty of worthy candidates populate the playoff field, but Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard entered Wednesday’s Game 2 against the Denver Nuggets as a frontrunner for unofficial postseason MVP.

Prior to the Blazers’ 97-90 win, Lillard’s playoff low in scoring was 24 points. He was shooting 47.8 percent from the field and 45.5 percent from three. Portland’s net points per 100 possessions was a whopping 37.4 points better with him on the floor. As much as anyone still playing, he was carrying his team.

Then he had an off night, which almost seemed impossible at this point.

In Denver on Wednesday, Lillard went for a meager 14 points on 5-of-17 shooting, and his team won. It was almost the inverse of Game 1, during which Lillard had 39 points on 21 field-goal attempts in an eight-point loss.

And that’s a great sign for these Blazers.

Already down Jusuf Nurkic, who suffered a broken leg at the end of the regular season, Portland lost starting forward Maurice Harkless to a sprained ankle near the conclusion of Wednesday’s first half. It didn’t matter.

The Blazers need as many “other guys” as possible to up their contributions if they’re going to keep pace with the high-powered attacks of the Nuggets, Houston Rockets or Golden State Warriors. In Game 2, several were up to the task as Portland stole home-court advantage away from Denver.

CJ McCollum had 20 points on 8-of-20 shooting, including a crucial three with less than four minutes to play that stymied a Denver run and bumped the lead back to double digits. Enes Kanter went shot for shot with Nikola Jokic. He had 15 points on 5-of-10 shooting; Jokic had 16 on 17 attempts.

Three other non-Lillard Blazers—Rodney Hood, Al-Farouq Aminu and Zach Collins—reached double figures.

“You just need a few guys to make a few big-time plays,” Lillard said of his teammates. “And CJ, Chief [Aminu] and Enes did that.”

David Zalubowski/Associated Press

As the series shifts to Portland, one or more of these players must continue to share Lillard’s burden.

For much of Game 2, Denver had 6’3″ Monte Morris matched up against Hood. If the Nuggets continue to do that, the Blazers should attack with their 6’8″ wing off the bench. He has a high release and plenty of lift on his jumper, making him a tough matchup even for players his size. A five-inch advantage is something Portland should continue to exploit.

Kanter is certainly an option, as well. Much has been made of his lackluster defense throughout his career, and a lot of that is fair. But he’s giving buckets as well as he’s getting them this postseason. After Wednesday’s game, his playoff scoring average is up to 15.3 points on 60.6 percent shooting. He’s grabbing over three offensive boards in 30.2 minutes per game, and Portland’s net rating is 5.7 points per 100 possessions better with him on the floor.

Then, there’s the obvious one: McCollum.

Down the stretch Wednesday, Portland ran everything through him. On several possessions, Lillard was even able to watch as his teammate took over the game. Lillard’s heroics have been the story of the playoffs for Portland, but McCollum now has four consecutive seasons averaging over 20 points under his belt.

Forget about him at your own peril.

DENVER, CO - MAY 1: CJ McCollum #3 helps up Damian Lillard #0 of the Portland Trail Blazers against the Denver Nuggets during Game Two of the Western Conference Semifinals of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on May 1, 2019 at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado. NO

Bart Young/Getty Images

Still, as good as the rotation players were on offense in Game 2, it might have been the defensive aggressiveness that did more to pick Lillard up.

“Our defensive focus for most of the game was the difference,” Portland head coach Terry Stotts said.

The Blazers flew around for most of three quarters, doubling down hard on Nikola Jokic and daring everyone else to beat them. The results were the aforementioned poor shooting and seven assists (two below his playoff average) from Denver’s All-Star big.

“We didn’t give him the freedom to make the plays he made in Game 1,” Stotts said when asked about his team’s approach against Jokic.

He wasn’t shy about when he went to the double team, as pointed out by the Dallas Mavericks‘ Haralabos Voulgaris:

Haralabos Voulgaris @haralabob

When you hear the whistle – thats Stotts signaling his guys to double Jokic.

Now, this could all simply be a case of Denver having an off night. Its true shooting percentage of 41.1 is the lowest this team has registered in a game since November 2016. Jokic called it a “weird game, weird day.” And Denver coach Mike Malone didn’t think his team did itself many favors.

“If you’re not making shots, maybe attack the basket,” Malone said following the game. “You gotta start thinking attack instead of settle.”

He may have shared a similar message with his team at the half because the Nuggets were far more aggressive trying to get into the paint following the break. Shots just continued to roll out.

Denver grabbed 23 offensive boards and went 6-of-17 (35.3 percent) on putback attempts. In the regular season, the Nuggets shot 54.1 percent on putback possessions. The league average was 54.7 percent.

They aren’t likely to shoot this poorly again (or miss this many layups), and that may have masked some defensive issues for the Blazers. But Portland can take solace in the fact that it has stolen homecourt advantage, and a lot of those open looks were largely conceded by double-teaming Jokic.

DENVER, CO - MAY 1: Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets goes to the basket against the Portland Trail Blazers during Game Two of the Western Conference Semifinals of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on May 1, 2019 at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado. NOTE TO

Garrett Ellwood/Getty Images

Proceeding with that defensive scheme is a bit of a dice roll. Do you maintain this level of aggression on Jokic and hope for more off nights from Jamal Murray and Gary Harris (2-of-13 from downtown in Game 2)? Do you stay home on the shooters a little longer and make Jokic beat you?

“Did you see Game 1?” McCollum asked reporters on the subject of the opposing big man.

During that contest, Denver’s star center had 37 points, nine rebounds and six assists on 11-of-18 shooting against a Portland defense that was decidedly less aggressive. In other words, the Blazers probably need to keep doubling.

If they do that and get more contributions from all over the roster, they have a chance to upset the second-seeded Nuggets.

Prior to Wednesday, it felt like Portland was heavily dependent upon Lillard going supernova. Stealing a game in which he isn’t giving 40 minutes of “Dame Time” almost feels like more than a single win.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2UTCd5l
via IFTTT

Japan’s Abe wants to meet Kim to talk ‘frankly with an open mind’

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has offered to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “unconditionally” in a bid to restore diplomatic ties between the two historic foes.

In an interview with the Sankei Shimbun on Wednesday, Abe said: “I want to meet Chairman Kim Jong Un unconditionally and talk with him frankly with an open mind.”

“It is more than important for our country to be proactive in tackling the issue,” said Abe. “We can’t break the shell of mutual distrust between Japan and North Korea unless I directly face Kim.

“I hope he is a leader who can make a decision strategically and flexibly on what is best for his nation.” 

North Korean authorities have given no public indication of any willingness to meet Abe.

But, even as a member of Japan’s foreign ministry called Pyongyang an “unprecedentedly serious and imminent threat” earlier this year, Abe in recent times has struck a more conciliatory tone, eyeing a “solution on North Korean matters”.

Earlier this year, North Korea’s official KCNA news agency called its neighbour a “heinous criminal state against humanity” and an “immoral and impudent country”.

Tokyo has been one of the most hawkish of the major powers on reclusive state North Korea, and has been on the receiving end of some of Pyongyang’s harshest rhetoric – as well as missiles launched over its territory.

Until late 2017, North Korea repeatedly tested missiles that flew towards or over Japan, sparking warnings blared out on loudspeakers and stoking calls for a tough stance against Pyongyang.

However, Japan now finds itself battling to keep itself relevant in the fast-moving North Korea issue as Kim expands his diplomatic circle.

Kim met Russian leader Vladimir Putin last week after multiple meetings with US President Donald Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping and South Korean leader Moon Jae-in. 

Abe held talks with Trump in Washington last week and told the Japanese newspaper that he had asked the US president to help resolve the abduction issue.

Tokyo believes North Korean agents kidnapped Japanese nationals to train its spies in language and customs in the 1970s and 80s.

After years of denial, North Korea admitted in 2002 that it had taken 13 Japanese civilians and released what it said were the five survivors, saying eight others had died.

Trump is scheduled to visit Japan in May and will hold another meeting with Abe.

A Japan Times report earlier this year said Tokyo repeatedly said it is continuing “every effort” to contact North Korea through diplomatic channels, including through embassies in Beijing.

But, the report added, there has been no response from Pyongyang.

“Japan-North Korea relations are in a stalemate,” a senior foreign ministry official in Tokyo said in January.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2ZONp70
via IFTTT