Odell Beckham Jr. Thanks Giants, Fans on Instagram After Browns Trade

New York Giants wide receiver Odell Beckham looks on prior to an NFL football game against the Chicago Bears, Sunday, Dec. 2, 2018, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

Bill Kostroun/Associated Press

Wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. took to Instagram on Thursday to thank the New York Giants organization and its fans after his trade to the Cleveland Browns.

OBJ wrote the following about his time with the G-Men:

“So many mixed emotions and feelings. This is all, a lot to process but it is reality. I don’t kno exactly what to say so just gotta keep it real and short. I want to thank the NY giants organization for giving me an opportunity to do what God put me on this earth to do , I want to thank the organization and the owners for everything and especially giving me my first chance to be a part of the NFL. I want thank everyone in that building from the kitchen staff to my main man Jośe! I loved you guys dearly and always will. I gave u my all every Sunday. To the fans, some happy , some not, I just wanna thank u guys for making my experience in NY SOMETHIN ILL NEVER FORGET! To the New Yorkers and REAL NYG fans… you guys will always have a place in my heart, a beautiful city .. a beautiful place Thank You for every last moment and experience. Without them, I wouldn’t be exactly who I am today ! LUV.”

The Giants traded Beckham to Cleveland this week in exchange for safety Jabrill Peppers, the No. 17 overall pick in the first round of the 2019 NFL draft and the No. 95 overall pick in the third round of the 2019 NFL draft.

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

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How Beto got to yes


Beto O'Rourke

On Thursday, Beto O’Rourke urged supporters to join him in the “greatest campaign this country has ever seen.” | Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for SXSW

2020 elections

A hometown showdown with Donald Trump over immigration was the confirmation O’Rourke needed.

Beto O’Rourke was fading. Weary from a bruising Senate campaign and unsure about his future, the former Texas congressman left his home in January for a road trip through the American Southwest, brooding about falling into and out of a “funk” while irritated donors’ and activists’ calls went unreturned.

By early February, he had begun to slip in presidential polls.

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But O’Rourke, who announced his candidacy for president on Thursday, would soon regain his footing, seizing a stroke of uncommonly good timing to reintroduce himself to Americans as a serious contender. First a government shutdown re-focused public attention on President Donald Trump’s proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall — a major issue to Democratic voters and a signature concern of O’Rourke’s. Then Trump flew to El Paso to rally support for the wall, all but daring O’Rourke to confront him in his home town.

The result — a protest rally that drew thousands of supporters — confirmed to O’Rourke the durability of his appeal to Democrats beyond the 2018 Senate campaign. It offered the border-state politician a rationale for a campaign focused heavily on immigration. And it marked a turning point in O’Rourke’s deliberations about a run for president.

Privately, O’Rourke’s advisers were struck by the tenor of the crowd at his rally. The chants and placards were less about opposing Trump than encouraging to O’Rourke to run for president. And the candidate himself began to overcome concerns about the demands a campaign would place on his family. He had begun to gain back weight he had lost during the Senate campaign, and according to several people close to O’Rourke, he received encouragement from family members who had previously expressed reservations.

In the weeks following the February rally, O’Rourke spoke personally with prospective staffers about the shape of a 2020 run in early primary states, and he dusted off his massive email list, sending out updates on his events and surveys typical of a presidential campaign.

Then, in recent days, O’Rourke began plotting a trip to Iowa to coincide with his announcement. While O’Rourke began calling high-profile figures in the first-in-the-nation caucus state ahead of his visit today, he dispatched intermediaries to seek meetings with labor and Latino leaders, two sources familiar with O’Rourke’s conversations told POLITICO. By late Wednesday, the campaign had alerted top O’Rourke supporters to prepare to text or email their own donor networks links to contribute to the campaign once he announced.

On Thursday, O’Rourke urged supporters to join him in the “greatest campaign this country has ever seen.”

“We are truly now more than ever the last great hope of earth,” he said in a video posted on social media. “At this moment of maximum peril, and maximum potential, let’s show ourselves and those who will succeed us in this great country just who we are and what we can do.”

O’Rourke, a former El Paso councilman and three-term congressman is, at 46, less experienced than many of his Democratic competitors. And there is little historical precedent for him to draw on. While Abraham Lincoln ran for president successfully after two failed Senate campaigns, the last person to go from the House to the presidency was James Garfield in 1880.

During O’Rourke’s Senate race last year, Trump called him a “total lightweight,” and a former campaign assistant, Joey Torres, said O’Rourke himself once questioned the potential of a failed Senate candidate in a presidential campaign. While O’Rourke was running for his House seat in 2012 – and following the Republican presidential primary in the media that year – Torres recalled to POLITICO O’Rourke telling him of then-Sen. Rick Santorum, “You know, you can never become president coming off of a loss.”

Still, O’Rourke’s fundraising capacity and public polling suggests he will enter the 2020 primary in the top tier of contenders. Some Democratic donors, staffers and activists had refused to commit to other candidates while they awaited word of O’Rourke’s plans. “Draft Beto” campaigns sprang up in early nominating states, and advisers to rival Democrats privately fretted about the potent list of small-dollar donors that O’Rourke used to raise $80 million in his Senate campaign.

“This is why I think Beto is a major player, because of his fundraising ability, because of his message, and he is immediately a top-tier candidate in my view,” former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who ran for president in 2008, said recently. “The stars really are aligned for him.”

Yet O’Rourke will enter the race at an organizational disadvantage to his more established rivals. His candidacy will immediately test the limits of a relatively inexperienced politician who has only run for office as an insurgent, not as a favorite, and who, despite his broad appeal, has at times befuddled the Democratic Party establishment and angered the most progressive edge of the Democratic Party’s base.

In his Senate run against Ted Cruz, a Republican universally reviled by Democrats, O’Rourke enjoyed near-unfaltering support from within his own party. But as he began mulling a presidential run, O’Rourke came in for intensifying criticism from within his party’s ranks – with progressives vilifying him for his membership in the centrist New Democrat Coalition and for his acceptance of campaign money from oil industry employees, among other issues.

O’Rourke’s advisers have dismissed such lines of criticism, after a Senate campaign in which O’Rourke was chiefly faulted for being too progressive in a heavily Republican state. Nevertheless, as other Democratic presidential contenders court the party’s leftward-tilting base, O’Rourke has suggested that he will likely attempt to position himself as a less ideological – and more unifying – figure.

Asked in December if he is a progressive Democrat, O’Rourke told reporters, “I don’t know. I’m just, as you may have seen and heard over the course of the campaign, I’m not big on labels. I don’t get all fired up about party or classifying or defining people based on a label or a group. I’m for everyone.”

O’Rourke said during the Senate race last year that he would not run for president in 2020. But he changed his mind soon after the election. Even though O’Rourke and his wife, Amy, said they worried about the toll a presidential campaign would take on their three young children, few people close to O’Rourke believed he would not run.

Now O’Rourke will be tested in his appeal to progressive voters who did not have other high-profile Democrats to choose from in his run against Cruz. And he will have to persuade many skeptical, older Democrats that he has the necessary experience to be president.

“I’m a little frightened by all these new, young Congress people and their audacity,” said George Appleby, a Des Moines-based attorney who has long been active in presidential campaigns in Iowa. “It seems to me we live in a really dangerous world.”

In the run-up to his announcement, O’Rourke has at times struck a lofty, traditionally presidential tone. In January, he said his decision would hinge on whether he felt he had “satisfied my commitment to this country and our democracy,” and in February, he cast himself as a healing figure in a divided time.

“This is our moment of truth, the most divided point that this country has reached since 1860, a time so highly polarized and partisan that we have a hard time listening to, talking to one another if we are of a different political persuasion,” O’Rourke said at an event in El Paso. On issues ranging from climate change to immigration and foreign wars, he said, “Think about any challenge, even the most existential ones. The only way we will be able to meet them is if this divided country comes together, if our democracy once again works.”

Yet O’Rourke has not always projected such confidence in himself. When he left Texas in January for an unusual, unaccompanied road trip through the Southwest, O’Rourke wrote that he had been “stuck lately … in and out of a funk.”

He wrote, “Maybe if I get moving, on the road, meet people, learn about what’s going on where they live, have some adventure, go where I don’t know and I’m not known, it’ll clear my head, reset, I’ll think new thoughts, break out of the loops I’ve been stuck in.”

The trip – and O’Rourke’s writing – drew some mocking online. But it was praised by former operatives for Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. On Twitter, Axelrod wrote that O’Rourke’s “missive from the road may not be the conventional route to a presidential candidacy but, in its humility and connection, it also reflects why so many want him to run.”

Tactically, O’Rourke is expected to embark on a campaign reminiscent, in some ways, of Sanders’ run in 2016. In private conversations with Democratic strategists in recent weeks, O’Rourke’s advisers had begun outlining an operation that would expand on the “distributed organizing” model used by Sanders and replicated by O’Rourke in his Senate campaign, with the campaign training low-level staffers and volunteers to run their own door-knocking, text and email operations.

In Iowa, O’Rourke is being assisted by Norm Sterzenbach, a former executive director of the Iowa Democratic Party. Paul Tewes, who ran Obama’s 2008 operation in the state, is also helping O’Rourke. Yet it is unclear if he will hire a pollster, a traditional campaign practice that O’Rourke – to the chagrin of some fellow Democrats – eschewed in 2018.

“I haven’t really gotten to thinking through those kinds of issues,” he told reporters in El Paso following an event in February. “I think any campaign I run … I would want to run in the same way that I’ve run every race – just as grassroots as possible, powered by people, directly connected to the people that I want to serve and represent.”

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New Algerian prime minister to form ‘technocratic government’

New Algerian Prime Minister Noureddine Bedoui said on Thursday that he will set up a technocratic interim government days after longtime President Abdelaziz Bouteflika  opted out of the presidential race in the face of mass protests.

Bedoui, who was appointed prime minster this week after his predecessor Ahmed Ouyahia resigned in the wake of the protests, said his new cabinet would be formed early next week and will include young Algerians, who have been staging mass protests to push for quick political changes.

Bouteflika, the 82-year-old wheelchair bound leader, also decided to delay the long-awaited election scheduled to be held in April, sparking countrywide protests.

Speaking at a press briefing in the capital, Algiers, the new prime minister said postponing presidential election came in response to ”people’s will” and an independent commission will oversee Algeria presidential election, for which he did not specify a date.

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Bedoui called for establishing new state of law and announced that a national conference for political reforms will start work after government formation “to represent young Algerians including young women”.

He added that the new government to be formed would be in charge for a “short period of time” and would support the work of a national conference for a political transition.

The prime minister urged the opposition to accept dialogue, but lawyers and activists behind the protests are in no mood to compromise and say they will not negotiate, at least for now.

“What we have to understand is that the government is trying to accelerate the pace of negotiations in order to avoid mass protests on Friday,” Amina Afaf Chaieb, an activist at Ibtykar Citizen Movement, told Al Jazeera from Paris on Thursday.

Polls postponed indefinitely

Bouteflika has faced three weeks of mass protests against his planned fifth-term run.

He relented on Monday by announcing he would not be running again but said the presidential elections scheduled for April 18 will be postponed indefinitely.

The ailing president, 82, made the unexpected decision in a letter to the Algerian people released on state-owned agency APS, a day after returning from a two-week stay at Geneva University Hospital for “routine medical tests”.

According to Bouteflika’s message and prime minister-designate’s statements, an inclusive and independent conference will oversee the transition of power, drafting new constitutional law and setting the date for new presidential elections.

Bouteflika, who has been in power for 20 years and has rarely appeared in public since a stroke in 2013, has promised to work for a new era that would cater to all Algerians.

His offer came after tens of thousands of Algerians staged weeks of protests demanding an overhaul of a stagnant political system dominated by veterans of the 1954-62 war of independence.

Bouteflika has faced three weeks of mass protests [Ramzi Boudina/Reuters]

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Inspirational quotes for Women’s History Month

If you’re in need of inspiration on how to make a difference, there are plenty of female role models to turn to. No matter what you’re interested in, whether that’s gun control, girls’ education, or racial justice, it’s important to acknowledge and celebrate the women who’ve come before you, so you can better understand how to follow in their footsteps. 

SEE ALSO: Emma Watson and 75 prominent women pen powerful letter about equality for International Women’s Day

Here are 13 quotes from female activists, politicians, and celebrities that will get you fired up to change the world. 

1. Emma González, gun control activist 

“To each of you powerful women I say this, you know that you are forces to be reckoned with, you can and have inspired peace and understanding and most importantly right now you can inspire your audience to vote. Now more than ever women need to continue to rise up.”

2. Hillary Clinton, 2016 presidential candidate

“When women are held back, our country is held back. When women get ahead, everyone gets ahead.”

3. Janelle Monáe, singer and actor

“Women will be hidden no more. We will not remain hidden figures. We have names.”

4. Malala Yousafzai, education activist 

“I raise up my voice – not so that I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard.”

5. Mari Copeny, clean water activist 

“It’s ok to build somebody up without tearing others down at the same time.”

6. Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex

“Women don’t need to find their voice. They need to feel empowered to use it and people need to be encouraged to listen.”

7. Michelle Obama, former first lady

“You should never view your challenges as a disadvantage. Instead, it’s important for you to understand that your experience facing and overcoming adversity is actually one of your biggest advantages.”

The world needs to hear your story. That’s the message I had for the students at the Gila River Indian Community in Arizona—one of the brightest, most resilient, most inspiring groups I’ve met. I have a feeling we’ll hear more from them in the years ahead. #MondayMotivation pic.twitter.com/ogMkV6UytG

— Michelle Obama (@MichelleObama) February 25, 2019

8. Emma Watson, actress

“Women feel like we need permission … We need to lead and change that.”

9. Naomi Wadler, gun control activist

“I urge everyone here and everyone who hears my voice to join me in telling the stories that aren’t told. To honor the girls, the women of color, who are murdered at disproportionate rates in this nation. I urge each of you to help me write the narrative for this world and understand, so that these girls and women are never forgotten.”

10. Oprah Winfrey, media personality 

“What I know for sure is that speaking your truth is the most powerful tool we all have. And I’m especially proud, and inspired by all the women who have felt strong enough and empowered enough to speak up and share their personal stories.”

Seeing all your comments on social & feeling the love that you all have for Michelle. I couldn’t agree with you more, so I’m GIVING you more. Watch the EXTENDED version of our conversation TOMORROW w/some never-before-seen moments. Streaming on my Facebook page 11aET #IAmBecoming pic.twitter.com/iXM9GryZZg

— Oprah Winfrey (@Oprah) November 17, 2018

11. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court Justice

“Women belong in all places where decisions are being made … It shouldn’t be that women are the exception.”

12. Sarah McBride, national press secretary for the Human Rights Campaign

“We cannot have equality for all if we have an economy that only works for the wealthy few, but we also cannot have an economy that works for everyone if even one person is kept out of a job because of hate.”

13. Zendaya, actress

“A feminist is a person who believes in the power of women just as much as they believe in the power of anyone else. It’s equality, it’s fairness, and I think it’s a great thing to be a part of.”

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Competitive Meditation 101: What you need to know about the world’s weirdest sport

March Mindfulness is our new series that examines the explosive growth in mindfulness and meditation technology. It culminates in Mashable’s groundbreaking competitive meditation bracket contest. Because March shouldn’t be all madness.


There are many things I like about Competitive Meditation — not least of which is the name. It’s sure to bring a confused frown or a bemused smile to the face of anyone who hears it for the first time. 

Which is fitting for a sport that is at once extremely serious and utterly hilarious. Think of Competitive Meditation as the mental equivalent of a summer softball league. Using a brain-sensing headband, it lets friends and colleagues play for bragging rights over who can keep the coolest head. 

At the same time it demystifies the act and pursuit of meditation, in particular bringing it to the attention of those competitive Type-A personas who often need its calming and coping effects the most. What’s not to love?

It is the only sport you win by not caring about winning. 

One year after creating the sport for a Mashable tournament, a year in which I continued to referee demonstration matches and learned much more about its potential, I can categorically state the best thing about Competitive Meditation is this: It is the only sport you win by not caring about winning

As we prepare for the second year of our March Mindfulness tournament, in which video game players will face off against meditation app employees, here’s the FAQ — everything you wanted to know about Competitive Meditation but were too serene to ask. 

What is Competitive Meditation? 

Competitive Meditation is a fledgling sport I invented in which two players go head to head, literally, for 5 minutes. The game is administered by a referee. 

In a Competitive Meditation match, players wear a brain-sensing headband called the Muse. The headband brings a thin strip of electrodes to the forehead. It is able to pick up weak electrical signals from the brain via EEG (electroencephalogram, a standard medical brainwave-detecting test). The Muse is fast becoming an industry standard device; other apps are building atop its “EEG Anywhere” platform. 

The Muse app translates your brain’s sparks of electricity, which fire any time you have a thought, into audio cues. It translates silence into another audio cue. That second cue become an objective measurement of how successful your meditation is — in other words, a score. 

In one-person meditation with the Muse, headphones are generally used. In competitive meditation, both players can hear the other’s audio. Many sports see players boasting about getting inside their opponents’ head. Only Competitive Meditation fans know for sure. 

How is the game scored?

When a player’s brain is noisy, various nature sounds are heard (the default is a rainstorm). Every time their brain is quiet for 5 seconds, the sound of a bird chirping is played. Every further 5 seconds of quiet equals one more bird. The app records the total number of birds heard. The player that hears the most birds in 5 minutes — from 1 to a maximum of 60 — is the winner. 

The world record thus far is 54.

While competitive meditation can be limited to individual games, it is best constructed as a knock-out bracket contest (such as March Mindfulness). A tournament allows a given environment — a workplace, a social group, a team of players of any other sport — to discover whom amongst them is literally the most chill. 

Isn’t meditation supposed to be the opposite of competition?

A regular meditation practice has been shown, repeatedly, by science, to be helpful in reducing anxiety and depression. Over time, it literally changes the physical size of various areas of your brain. It can help increase your willpower and change bad habits, as I recently discovered

So you shouldn’t ever berate yourself for failing to quiet your mind or focus on your breath, because this stuff is really hard — and failing is part of the process. All that really matters with meditation is that you regularly attempt it. It’s not whether you win, it’s whether you’re playing the game.

Still, we’re pretty good as a species at turning everything into a competition, even activities that don’t have to be competitive and rely entirely on subjective judgment (synchronized swimming, ice-skating, gymnastics). Competition is how we learn, grow, and gain the desire to do more. There’s no shame in that.

Most people who use a meditation app like Calm and Headspace are already being competitive with themselves — if only on the question of how long you can maintain a “streak” of meditating every day, a number these apps are at pains to point out. 

If you’ve ever compared your total meditation minutes in any app on different days and felt spurred on to do more next week, congratulations — you’re already a competitive meditator. 

SEE ALSO: March Mindfulness: How I created the world’s first meditation bracket contest

Try as we might to be egalitarian, we seem primed by our evolutionary programming to rank feats of mental discipline. We want to know who has their head in the game. And with good reason: it’s what makes a winner. Almost every athlete in every sport will tell you about the importance of being in a state of “flow,” where one is entirely focused, time slows down and the ego disappears. 

Flow is, more or less, what Competitive Meditation seeks as well.

Competitive Meditation takes the practice as far away as possible from New Age clichés.

Besides, meditating with others is simply more fun. It helps you not take the whole thing too seriously, which is an enormous advantage when trying to keep one’s mind quiet. I also believe that turning meditation into a game helps people avoid being alone with the dark and traumatic thoughts that can come up for some meditators

All in all, this is why almost everything you’ve read about meditation and mindfulness is missing the mark. It’s preaching to the converted. Competitive Meditation takes the practice as far away as possible from New Age clichés, and brings its proven benefits to an entirely new crowd: sports and games fans.  

I don’t meditate. Can I still participate?

Absolutely. You could be a natural. The winner of the world’s first meditation tournament did not meditate. In his best match, his world-record score was six birds away from a perfect game. 

Most sports require years of practice before you can even get close to being on the same level as the masters. But Zen Buddhism teaches the importance of Shoshin, which means having a “beginner’s mind.” Competitive Meditation will show the truth of that more often than you think.    

Is trash-talking encouraged?

Competitive Meditation matches themselves should be held in silence, with or without a live audience. But players should not be penalized for laughter; it’s a release of tension that can actually help both sides find their calm. It is, after all, an inherently ridiculous setup. 

Before and after the game, however, trash-talking is absolutely encouraged. The Onion was on to something when it published this satirical take way back in 1996 — Monk Gloats Over Yoga Championship: ‘I am the Serenest,’ he says. 

What has helped players so far?

Another very interesting factor in Competitive Meditation is that players love to experiment. Does focusing on your breath work for you? How about thinking of a mantra, a word or set of words or sounds that you repeat in your head over and over? Some players prefer lying down, some sit. Some stay still, others find that moving around works best for them. 

In my own personal headband experiments, very little seems to bring me more birds than using the Apple Watch’s Breathe app at the same time. Congratulations, Apple. Don’t let it go to your head. 

Small movements — touching fingertips to each other, say — also seem to help calm my usually overactive mind. Then again, the two finalists of last year’s tournament — seen below — stayed stock-still. In Competitive Meditation, your mind’s mileage will always vary. 

Cms%252f2019%252f3%252fbb20eea9 bbdd 3658%252fthumb%252f00001.jpg%252foriginal.jpg?signature=lros15buzrj27ifyiexshkp3nty=&source=https%3a%2f%2fvdist.aws.mashable

Some commonsense advice has emerged from a year of practice that will improve any player’s game. Make sure you’ve eaten and gone to the bathroom beforehand, because you don’t want to find your mind distracted by an empty stomach or a full bladder. Make sure your face is as relaxed as possible, as the Muse’s EEG can pick up on electrical signals from a tense forehead. 

Drinking coffee, not surprisingly, doesn’t help. Nor, more surprisingly, does falling asleep: The brain is actually quite noisy at that point (think of all those weird images that flash through your head on the edge of sleep). You want to be relaxed yet focused, completely in the zone — exactly the mental space we all long to occupy in the rest of our lives. Competitive Meditation is a sport that can literally help you live your best self. 

Like any modern sport, of course, Competitive Meditation is going to have to wrestle at some point with the question of performance-enhancing chemicals. Should Xanax be allowed? How about marijuana? Further experimentation is needed to discover if these substances make all players more calm across the board — or if your mileage will vary there too. 

At the end of the day, there is one attitude that seems to work for everyone, and that is lightheartedness about the whole exercise. The players who come into the room with clenched fists — the ones with something to prove to themselves, the preemptively defensive ones, or the ones who won a prior game and think they have to keep up a victory streak — are almost guaranteed to hear nothing but rain. 

But the ones who come in with ridiculous grins, the ones who get the joke, who understand it’s just a game, who loosen up and have fun with it? They are the champions, my friends. 

Tune in next week for our first report on March Mindfulness, 2019 edition, when the game-players of our sister website IGN take on the chilled-out employees of meditation app Calm. 

Who is the serenest? We’ll know soon enough. 

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Rohingya ‘tusk force’ keeps refugees safe from deadly elephants

At least once a year, the Asian elephants living in southern Bangladesh migrate eastwards, passing through the forest that straddles the border with Myanmar. 

Because this area is sparsely populated, the elephants usually encounter little trouble beyond a few run-ins with local farmers when their crops are trampled.

Now, however, the world’s largest refugee camp sits in the middle of their migration path. 

Since August 2017, more than 700,000 Rohingya have fled their native Myanmar amid a violent crackdown by the Myanmar army. A mostly Muslim minority, they have been persecuted for years.

While around 300,000 Rohingya were already living in Bangladesh, having fled Myanmar during other crackdowns in the 1970s and 1990s, the most recent exodus is of an unprecedented scale.

In a matter of weeks, much of the forest in the border area, between the towns of Cox’s Bazar and Teknaf, was torn down and replaced by a sea of tarpaulin shelters.

Now home to around one million people, the Rohingya refugee camps are densely populated. Problems include disease, overcrowding, a lack of sanitation and vulnerability to natural disasters.

The sudden emergence of a camp in what was once forest has also created problems for local wildlife. Perhaps no animals have been more affected than the elephants. 

“This camp didn’t happen gradually,” says Raquibal Amin, Bangladesh representative for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), “there was no time for elephants to adjust.”

Between 35 and 45 elephants are trapped in Bangladesh, unable to follow their usual migratory route into Myanmar – around 15 percent of Bangladesh’s entire elephant population, according to the IUCN.

“Elephants have genetic memories,” says Amin, “so they follow the same path, again and again, generation after generation.” 

As a result, elephants are still trying to follow their usual migratory route through the refugee camp – often with dire consequences.

Since September 2017, 14 Rohingya have been killed by elephants. Others have been injured.

The elephant tusk force demonstrates to their community how not to react if an elephant comes into the camp [Susannah Savage/Al Jazeera]

Finding a way to allow the elephants to pass through while preventing further casualties has proven challenging. 

IUCN and UNHCR, the UN agency for refugees, say a corridor between three and four kilometres wide would need to be carved out through the camp, requiring at least 24,000 shelters be moved. 

“That’s a logistical issue, not to mention an ethical one,” says Amin. “It would involve clearing more forest for those people to move to, creating another environmental dilemma.”

Even if the corridor’s location was altered to avoid such an upheaval for the refugees, another hurdle remains. 

“The border between Myanmar and Bangladesh is lined with barbed wire now, and there are landmines, too, it seems,” says Amin. “We heard that two elephants have died already because of landmines.”

The IUCN and UNHCR have attempted to broker a deal between the governments of Bangladesh and Myanmar to find a way to let the animals cross.

“Elephants are a non-politically sensitive issue, after all,” says Amin. 

But so far, they have been unsuccessful.

Rohingya children learn about elephants by singing songs and making elephant masks [Susannah Savage/Al Jazeera]

The number of elephant deaths has plummeted from 13 between September 2017 and February 2018  to just one in the past year, even though the number of times elephants attempted to enter the camp has remained high. 

This is thanks to the aptly named elephant tusk force – “pun intended”, says Chris Melzer of UNHCR. 

Comprising a passionate group of Rohingya refugees, the group is trained by UNHCR and IUCN to respond safely to elephants in the camp. 

“Their success is remarkable,” says Melzer.

Watchtowers built throughout the camps are manned around the clock by two members of the tusk force. Equipped with torches and megaphones, these volunteers sound the alarm and alert the other members of their team if they spot an elephant.

“The most important thing,” says Mohamad Saddiq Hossain, one of the tusk force leaders, “is not to intimidate the animal.”

Instead of throwing sticks or confronting the animal aggressively, which might “antagonise the elephant”, the volunteers use lights and sounds to gently push the elephant back.

Mohamad Saddiq Hossain, a leader in the elephant tusk force, says he his proud to be working with UNHCR and IUCN to protect his community [Susannah Savage/Al Jazeera]

“The elephant is very, very intelligent,” says Amin. “The trick is to change your tactics, to keep them guessing all the time, rather than be predictable.”

Soon, tusk force members plan on introducing new flashing lights to do just this.

Another element of the volunteers’ work is educating community members about elephants and what to do if one comes into the camp. 

One way is by staging a drill using a puppet elephant created for this purpose.

The brightly coloured life-size puppet, steered by three puppeteers, charges into the camp from the nearby trees, accompanied by elephant sound effects. 

In the first run-through, the tusk force volunteers run around wildly, shouting and screaming and throwing objects, showing onlookers what not to do. 

In the second demonstration, they calmly form a line and slowly approach the elephant with their torches.

“The puppet itself is a masterpiece,” says Melzer. 

People recognise the tusk force because of their t-shirts and often approach them for help or to report an elephant sighting [Susannah Savage/Al Jazeera]

The whole community built the puppet, which was designed by Bangladeshi artist Kamruzzaman Shadhin.

This helps connect the Rohingya – many of whom never encountered elephants in Myanmar –  to the animals. 

The frame was made of bamboo and built by the men in the community. The women sewed their own used clothes to make a patchwork for the elephant’s skin.

Rohingya children, too, are learning about their big-eared neighbours. 

“Elephants are our friends, don’t kill elephants, show them their way,” they sing at a learning centre as volunteers show them how to make elephant masks and teach them facts about the mammals. 

The message is coexistence, says tusk force leader Hossain.

Like the rest of the group, he takes his work seriously. 

“It makes me very happy to know that the camp residents – almost one million people – depend on us,” he says. “They can sleep well at night, knowing that if an elephant comes, we’ll be there. We feel proud to protect their lives.”

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Chris Evans and Robert Downey Jr. just had a Marvel-lous Twitter exchange

This is what BFFs look like.
This is what BFFs look like.

Image: Dave J Hogan/Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

2017%252f09%252f12%252fd7%252fsambw.5d18f%252f90x90By Sam Haysom

Twitter undeniably has a whole bunch of uses. 

But helping us fill the gaping void between Avengers movies by providing a space for our favourite superheroes to cheerfully tweet at each other is surely one of its finest achievement.

SEE ALSO: Chris Evans being charming is the Oscar moment of our swoon-y dreams

On Wednesday evening, Robert Downey Jr. — aka Iron Man — posted the following, beautifully captioned image of two well-known toy figurines sheltering beneath a rain of fire.

And a few hours later, Captain America himself responded.

When will these two stop being adorable?

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Ethiopian air crash: France to analyse Boeing’s black boxes

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – The black boxes from the Boeing 737 MAX 8 that crashed on Sunday in Ethiopia have been sent to France for analysis, Ethiopian airlines said on Thursday.

Addis Ababa said on Wednesday that it was sending the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) abroad because the East African country does not have the required facilities to carry the detailed analysis required to determine the cause of the deadly disaster.

“An Ethiopian delegation led by Accident Investigation Bureau (AIB) has flown the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) to Paris, France for investigation,” the airlines said in a statement on Thursday.

The devices will be probed by France’s BEA air accident investigation agency.

Analysts said the decision by Africa’s biggest airline was the correct one.

“To send the data recorders to the USA would be to allow a party with a vested interest to be a judge in its own case,” Awo Allo, a lecturer in law at Keele University in the UK, said.

“Boeing is more than just a company for the US and Ethiopia cannot reasonably expect a judicious outcome from a US investigation,” Awo added.

Boeing wants suspension of ‘entire global fleet’ of 737 MAX

Flight ET 302, heading to Nairobi from Addis Ababa, crashed about 50km outside the Ethiopian capital six minutes after taking off.

All 157 people on board – 149 passengers and eight crew – died in the crash.

Previous incident

The crash was the second involving a Boeing 737 MAX 8 model in five months.

In October, Lion Air Flight 610 crashed in Indonesia 10 minutes after take-off, killing 189 people. The cause of that accident is still under investigation.

Before Sunday’s disaster, more than 370 jets of the model were in operation.

Following the latest crash, the European Union and several countries banned the aircraft model from their airspace.

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ordered the temporary grounding of all 737 MAX aircraft operated by US airlines or in US airspace on Wednesday.

US, home of Boeing – the world’s largest aircraft maker, was one of the last countries where the plane model was still allowed to operate.

According to flight tracking website, FlightRadar24, all Boeing 737 MAX jets have now been grounded.

Meanwhile, Boeing recommended a temporary suspension of the “entire global fleet” of the 737 MAX aircraft on Wednesday.

Following Wednesday’s announcement, Boeing shares fell by nearly three percent. The aircraft maker’s stock has gone down by at least 13 percent since Sunday.

Inside Story: How safe is Boeing’s 737 Max 8 aircraft? (25:00)

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Beto announces bid for president


Beto O'Rourke

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Elections

The untested but charismatic Democratic phenom joins the crowded race to take on Donald Trump.

Beto O’Rourke said Thursday he will run for president, asking voters to choose a young and charismatic — but largely untested — Democrat as the best option to defeat Donald Trump in 2020.

With his national profile and one of the most potent small-dollar fundraising lists in Democratic politics, O’Rourke enters the race immediately as a top-tier contender. His announcement came months after he captured the party’s imagination with his improbable — and closer than expected — run for Senate in Texas, a heavily Republican state.

Story Continued Below

The former congressman’s entry into the presidential race had appeared all but certain. Yet his announcement could reshape the Democratic primary, unfreezing activists and donors who’d been waiting to commit to other candidates until O’Rourke announced his plans.

O’Rourke will follow his announcement with an immediate push into Iowa, the first-in-the-nation caucus state. He has been personally calling high-profile figures in Iowa in recent days, including former Gov. Tom Vilsack, according to two sources familiar with his calls, and he is expected to appear today in Burlington and Muscatine.

O’Rourke is also expected to travel to Cedar Rapids to record the popular Political Party Live podcast, and to Waterloo for an event on Saturday with Eric Giddens, a Democratic state Senate candidate. He will attend a house party that night with John Murphy, the Dubuque County recorder.

O’Rourke had begun speaking with potential staffers to discuss strategy soon after a massive rally in his home town, El Paso, to protest President Donald Trump’s call for a U.S.-Mexico border wall. In recent days, his advisers reactivated his Senate campaign email list with a flurry of messages to supporters, including a promise to “be in touch soon.” O’Rourke himself teased the upcoming announcement recently, announcing that he had decided whether to run — but declining to reveal his decision.

Little known outside of his El Paso district before his run last year against Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), O’Rourke has catapulted to become one of the Democratic Party’s most buzzed-about prospects. He had kept largely out of public view for weeks following his Senate loss, before embarking on a solo road trip through the Southwest, and then confronting Trump on issues of immigration.

In a recent email to supporters, O’Rourke’s campaign reiterated his call for extending citizenship to young undocumented immigrants known as Dreamers while giving their parents legal protection and a path to citizenship, among other proposals.

“If we want to make real progress and achieve actual change,” the pre-campaign’s email said, “then we can’t just say what we’re against, we have to say what we’re for.”

O’Rourke will now join a sprawling primary campaign in which top-tier Democrats are already raising millions of dollars and marshaling robust operations in early nominating states. More established Democrats such as Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Cory Booker (D-N.J.), have been courting activists and operatives in early nominating states for months, while Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), raised nearly $6 million from more than 220,000 donors in the 24 hours after he announced last month.

O’Rourke, meanwhile, had been holding back. The 46-year-old and his wife, Amy, both expressed reservations about the toll a presidential campaign could take on their three children, after a grueling, two-year campaign to unseat Cruz. And O’Rourke has done relatively little to prepare for the organizational rigors of a campaign. In recent weeks, O’Rourke slipped slightly in public opinion measures as he vacillated on a run.

Yet after raising more than $80 million in his Senate campaign — a staggering sum collected mostly from a national network of small donors — O’Rourke is widely considered capable of amassing millions of dollars quickly to fund a presidential run.

To assist O’Rourke, two separate “Draft Beto” campaigns have been raising money, retaining strategists and organizing volunteers in early primary states. Those groups have said they would transfer their email lists and money to O’Rourke’s presidential campaign.

“Now the real work begins,” Nate Lerner, co-founder of one of the groups, Draft Beto, said in a prepared statement. “We’re shifting the grassroots, financial, and political resources we’ve built over to Beto’s campaign and focusing entirely on electing Beto in 2020.”

A strong public speaker with little experience in elected office, O’Rourke has drawn comparisons to Barack Obama when he jumped into the presidential race in 2007. Obama noted as much in an interview last year with his former adviser David Axelrod.

“What I liked most about his race was that it didn’t feel constantly poll-tested,” Obama on Axelrod’s podcast, referring to O’Rourke. “It felt as if he based his statements and his positions on what he believed. And that, you’d like to think, is normally how things work. Sadly, it’s not.”

O’Rourke’s supporters anticipate that the timing of O’Rourke’s announcement, while later than other major Democratic contenders, could be fortuitous for a border-state Democrat, with the recent government shutdown focusing attention of immigration and Trump’s proposed border wall.

After speaking with O’Rourke recently, Danny Anchondo, a former chairman of the local Democratic Party in El Paso, said, “If anybody can give Trump a problem, it’s Beto … One, he’s got the ability to fight back, and secondly, he’s from the border. And he’ll take the border issue away from [Trump].”

O’Rourke has kept his focus on immigration since the November election, walking across the border form El Paso to Juarez to meet with asylum seekers and visiting a detention camp for migrant children at Tornillo. On Christmas Eve, he was photographed passing out pizza slices to immigrant children in El Paso.

In February, O’Rourke drew widespread attention headlining a march and rally in El Paso just steps from a coliseum where Trump had come to redouble his calls for funding for a border wall. While Trump dismissed O’Rourke as “a young man who’s got very little going for himself except he’s got a great first name,” O’Rourke drew an estimated 8,000 cheering supporters to his event.

“With the eyes of the country upon us, all of us together are going to make our stand, here in one of the safest cities in the United States of America,” O’Rourke said. “Safe not because of walls, but in spite of walls. Secure because we treat one another with dignity and respect.”

He said, “We are the example that the United States of America needs right now.”

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Android Q will let you share Wi-Fi password with a QR code

Do you know your house’s Wi-Fi password, or is it lost in a stack of papers in one of seven possible drawers?

If it’s the latter (it sure is for me), you’ll welcome Android Q’s new, clever way of sharing Wi-Fi passwords: Via a QR code. 

SEE ALSO: Google releases first beta version of Android Q

Android Authority reports that Android Q, which just came out in beta, now lets you go into your Wi-Fi settings, tap on your current network, then tap “Share,” which will generate a QR code (note that you will have to authenticate with a fingerprint or pin to do this). 

Then, you can take another phone running Android Q, go to Wi-Fi settings, and tap the icon on the right of the Add network setting. This will give you the QR scanner; now scan the code on the other phone, and you’ll connect to the Wi-Fi network. 

There are two problems with this. One, it’s still too damn complicated, but it’s better than digging through those drawers for your password (on iOS, the solution is different but still too complicated). Two, it’ll take a while before enough people run Android Q on their phones to make this useful. 

Still, it seems that Android Q is chock-full of small improvements like this, and it puts a smile on my face. The entire “share your Wi-Fi password” problem feels like something that could’ve easily be solved years ago, but I’m happy to see Google finally working on it. 

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