UN chief Antonio Guterres: Libya arms embargo must be enforced

All countries must implement a UN arms embargo against Libya with illegal weapons transfers by land, sea and air fueling the current fighting in the oil-rich country, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said.

Guterres made the appeal in a report circulated on Monday before the UN Security Council’s unanimous approval of a resolution authorising the inspection of vessels on the high seas headed to or from Libya for another year to enforce the arms embargo.

The European Union’s Operation Sophia has been the only regional naval operation carrying out inspections.

UN experts monitoring the arms embargo, individual countries, and regional organisations “have all reported on illicit transfers of arms and related materiel into and out of Libya”, Guterres noted.

Implementing all measures related to the arms embargo is “of immediate importance in de-escalating the current situation” and is “of critical importance to the protection of civilians and the restoration of security and stability in Libya and the region”, the secretary-general said.

‘Escalating conflict’

The civil war in Libya in 2011 toppled and later killed longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

The chaos that followed resulted in a divided country, with a UN-recognised but weak administration in the capital Tripoli overseeing the country’s west and a rival government in the east aligned with the self-declared Libyan National Army led by renegade military commander Khalifa Haftar.

Each is backed by an array of militias and armed groups fighting over resources and territory.

Haftar launched a military offensive in early April aimed at taking Tripoli despite commitments to move towards elections in the North African country. Clashes receded as the Muslim holy month of Ramadan began in May, but later intensified.

The UK’s political coordinator at the UN, Stephen Hickey – whose country sponsored the UN resolution – expressed deep concern after the vote at “the now protracted and escalating conflict”, which has led to a deteriorating security and humanitarian situation in Libya.

“Any arms entering Libya will only escalate the conflict and lessen the prospects for a ceasefire,” Hickey told the Security Council. “Respecting the arms embargo is only one part of the solution in Libya, which requires a full political dialogue and reconciliation.”

Britain, Belgium, France, Germany, South Africa, Ivory Coast and Indonesia reiterated calls for a ceasefire and return to UN-led political talks.

‘Constant supply’

South African Ambassador Jerry Matjila said “it is two months since the crisis started in Libya without any respect for this council’s calls for a ceasefire by all parties to the conflict”, which he said is being “fueled by the constant supply of arms”.

While the EU in March extended Operation Sophia’s mandate until September 30, it suspended the deployment of ships, saying it would send more planes to monitor the area instead.

Italy commands Operation Sophia, but the populist government in Rome refuses to allow its ships or rescue vessels from aid groups that rescue refugees and migrants to disembark in Italian ports. The EU move on suspending the naval mission was widely viewed as being aimed at easing tensions with Italy’s anti-migrant government.

Matjila and Ivory Coast Ambassador Kacou Adom expressed concern at Operation Sophia’s suspension of the naval operation. Adom called on countries to immediately make available equipment for the operation “in order to ensure it can be more effective”.

Germany’s deputy UN ambassador, Juergen Schulz, backed UN calls for all countries to implement the arms embargo, saying in the current environment it is “more important than ever”.

“A seemingly unlimited arms supply fuels the erroneous belief in a military solution to the conflict and contributes to the unwillingness of actors on the ground to agree to a ceasefire” and resume the UN-led political process, Schulz said.

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Dubs Dynasty Stays Alive as Golden State Rises in Kevin Durant’s Absence

TORONTO, CANADA - JUNE 10: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors reacts to a play during Game Five of the NBA Finals against the Toronto Raptors on June 10, 2019 at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images)

Andrew D. Bernstein/Getty Images

However these NBA Finals end and whatever causes the eventual collapse of the Golden State Warriors‘ dynasty, the Dubs’ 106-105 Game 5 win over the Toronto Raptors on Monday assures it won’t be because the Warriors gave in.

On a night when they had every opportunity to collapse, when the physical and emotional blows would have felled any other team, the two-time defending champs somehow emerged still standing. Still alive. Still able to look forward to another elimination game.

Behind 31 points from Stephen Curry, 26 more from Klay Thompson, a valiant effort from Kevin Durant and a series-sustaining 20-of-42 team performance from long range, Golden State prolonged its postseason existence.

Durant’s long-anticipated return made it seem like the series was starting anew. He lit the Raptors up early, hitting three treys and scoring 11 points in the first quarter. The terms of engagement had changed; Golden State had its most dangerous weapon again. Why couldn’t the Warriors blow this game open, return to Oakland and do it again in Game 6?

As Durant buried the shots Shaun Livingston, Andre Iguodala and a revolving cast of suspect shooters wouldn’t even take all series, the path to an improbable Warriors upset materialized.

KNBR @KNBR

Durant goes down, leaves the court limping https://t.co/n6yjdrfc2r

But then KD went down early in the second quarter after trying to push off on that sore right leg. It looked bad, and close-ups made it look worse. Stephen Curry and Iguodala accompanied Durant to the locker room as play resumed, telegraphing their understanding of just how grave the injury was. They seemed to understand the level of his sacrifice.

After the game, Warriors president of basketball operations Bob Myers validated everyone’s concerns:

SportsCenter @SportsCenter

“It’s an Achilles injury. … He’ll have an MRI tomorrow.”

Bob Myers holds back tears as he explains the magnitude of Kevin Durant’s injury. https://t.co/glQ6j5hATe

The full repercussions of Durant’s injury are too vast to chronicle here—to say nothing of the fact that full clarity won’t come until an MRI on Tuesday. In the moment, though, Durant’s injury had a bleak, simplifying effect on the game and the series. With him available, there were angles to discuss, strategies to dissect and matchups to ponder. His presence added layers and intrigue to the proceedings. Without him, the Warriors didn’t have a chance. Three losses in their last four games proved that.

Golden State got its difference-maker back for a grand total of 12 minutes and then lost him again, surely for the duration of the series.

Somehow, the Warriors fought on.

They fought on after Kevon Looney, inexplicably playing through a right first costal cartilage fracture, re-aggravated the injury and couldn’t play in the fourth quarter.

They fought on after Kawhi Leonard ran off 10 straight fourth-quarter points, seizing the lead for the Raptors and setting up all the predictable narratives about how the Warriors gave their best but ultimately couldn’t hold on.

ESPN @espn

“BANG!”

Kawhi gives Toronto their first lead since the 1st quarter. https://t.co/Y4ML6ytV7M

They fought on even when Toronto expanded its late lead, closing the curtain on a dynasty with every second that ticked away.

But then it happened.

Down six with three minutes to play, Klay Thompson hit his sixth three of the game. Then Curry hit his fifth. Then Thompson rang up trey No. 7 to put the Warriors back on top. Nearly dead, Golden State lived by the three—appropriate for the team that ushered in the long-range revolution just a few years ago.

Mister Berry 💭 @peinxy

Curry & Klay. The Splash Brothers get the win 🤪😌 Stay Alive 🤞🏾 #StrenghtInNumbers #Curry #Durant #NbaFinals #SplashBrothers https://t.co/2fKPav6rYX

Really, it was the only way they generated offensive life all game. Toronto beat Golden State 43-37 on the boards and racked up 13 offensive rebounds. The Raptors also got to the foul line 13 more times than the Warriors and won the points-in-the-paint battle in a rout, 54-32.

Golden State nearly gave the game away anyhow, committing a backcourt violation and turning it over on an illegal DeMarcus Cousins screen on their final two offensive possessions. On brand even in the direst of moments, the Warriors nearly let complacency spoil the whole thing.

But on Toronto’s final play, Iguodala’s timely double-team forced the ball from Leonard’s hands, and Draymond Green refused to be pinned down by a Marc Gasol baseline screen, enabling him to close out aggressively and send Kyle Lowry’s would-be game-winner off target at the buzzer.

SportsCenter @SportsCenter

WHAT A FINISH.

The final shot is off, and it’s headed back to Oracle. https://t.co/PDSoD0O1N4

In the wake of a breathless, touch-and-go, emotionally exhausting effort like Monday’s, it’s hard to argue the Warriors have momentum in the series. But they have a chance. The door is ajar. They got one miracle, and now they need two more.

And maybe it means something that the task ahead is so stripped of inessential distractions. No reinforcements are coming. The roster is too thin for any late-series tweaks or lineup changes. This deep in a series, everyone’s best ideas are already out in the open. Nobody has anything saved up for an emergency. For a Warriors team beset by noise all year and assailed by outside chatter, that simplicity might even be refreshing.

Survival will be incredibly difficult, as Monday’s win proved. But at least it’s uncomplicated.

Curry yelled out his team’s new mantra as he walked off the floor in Toronto.

SportsCenter @SportsCenter

“Stay alive … Stay alive.”

#NBAFinals https://t.co/7RlOaWBXu5

For one more night at least, it was mission accomplished.

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Warriors’ Bob Myers: Kevin Durant Suffered Achillies Injury in NBA Finals Game 5

TORONTO, ONTARIO - JUNE 10:  Kevin Durant #35 of the Golden State Warriors is consoled by Serge Ibaka #9 of the Toronto Raptors after sustaining an injury in the first half during Game Five of the 2019 NBA Finals at Scotiabank Arena on June 10, 2019 in Toronto, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Claus Andersen/Getty Images)

Claus Andersen/Getty Images

Kevin Durant exited Monday night’s Game 5 of the 2019 NBA Finals between the Golden State Warriors and Toronto Raptors in the second quarter due to what president of basketball operations Bob Myers confirmed was an Achilles injury. 

Myers was fighting back tears while relaying the news to reporters and stated that Durant will have an MRI Tuesday to determine the severity of the injury.

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Bob Myers fighting back tears talking about KD’s injury: “I don’t believe there’s anyone to blame…if you have to, you can blame me.”

(via @NBATV)
https://t.co/6HcrfxTxfL

Durant played 12 minutes and scored 11 points on 3-of-5 shooting from the field (3-of-3 from three) before going down. The All-Star had not played since suffering a right calf strain on May 8 in the conference semifinals against the Houston Rockets but pushed to get back on the court as the Warriors found themselves facing a 3-1 Finals deficit. 

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NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

Iggy helped KD walk to the locker room after his injury. https://t.co/6TLRPRCiW0

The 30-year-old was then seen leaving Scotiabank Arena on crutches (h/t Phil Barber of the Press Democrat). 

Despite the latest injury, the two-time Finals MVP is still emotionally invested in his squad. 

“Dub nation gonna be loud as f–k for game 6,” Durant wrote on Instagram following the Warriors’ 106-105 win to force Game 6 (h/t ESPN.com’s Ramona Shelburne). “I’m hurting deep in the soul right now I can’t lie but seeing my brothers get this win was like taking a shot of tequila, I got new life lol.” 

While Durant took to social media to support his teammates, players across the league immediately did the same to wish him well: 

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Kevin Durant has an Achilles injury https://t.co/VxKqsa5pD5

The Warriors will continue fighting for their third championship in as many seasons Thursday night at Oracle Arena. 

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Explainer: Hong Kong’s controversial extradition bill

More than a million people in Hong Kong marched on Sunday against a controversial extradition bill that they fear will erode freedom in the semi-autonomous territory.

Hong Kong, a British colony until 1997, was handed over to China under the concept of ‘one country, two systems,’ which accorded political and legal autonomy to the city.

Critics fear the changes will undermine the independence of Hong Kong‘s legal system and put Hong Kong citizens and foreign nationals at risk by allowing suspects to be sent to mainland China for trial.

The government has made some revisions to the Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill, as it is officially known, which is due for another debate in the Legislative Council, the territory’s parliament, on Wednesday.

Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam, insists the legislation is necessary to allow Hong Kong to better uphold justice and fulfil its international obligations.

She has denied Beijing played a role in the amendments, which will apply not only to the mainland, but also to Macau, Taiwan, and other countries with which Hong Kong has no formal extradition treaty.

Hong Kong to push ahead with extradition law despite protests

On Tuesday, Lam stressed her administration would press on with the bill despite the size of Sunday’s protest and the threat of more demonstrations, strikes and sit-ins.

Lam has said safeguards have been incorporated into the bill but critics say it would put people at risk of extradition to China for political ‘crimes’.

Al Jazeera explains the controversy:

Why authorities push for the new law?

The Hong Kong administration first proposed the changes in February, citing the case of local man Chan Tong-kai who was wanted for the suspected murder of his pregnant girlfriend while the two were on holiday in Taiwan.

Officials said he could not be sent back to Taiwan for trial because there was no formal extradition agreement between the two territories.

Hong Kong’s extradition arrangements are laid out in the Foreign Offenders Ordinance, which was negotiated in 1997 when the British returned the territory to China.

Taiwan, Macau and the mainland were not included in that agreement in what the Hong Kong Bar Association says was a “deliberate decision” on the part of the legislature given the “fundamentally different criminal justice system operating in the mainland and concerns over the mainland’s track record on the protection of fundamental rights.”

Lam has said a ‘legal loophole’ was preventing the extradition of fugitives like Chan.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam walks behind a red barrier tape toward a press conference in Hong Kong Monday, June 10, 2019

Hong Kong Chief Executive insists the legislation is necessary to allow the city to better uphold justice [Vincent Yu/AP Photo]

What are the amendments?

Hong Kong currently has bilateral extradition treaties with 20 countries including the UK, United States and Singapore, but the amendments put forward by the administration are being framed as a way to enable suspected offenders to be sent even to places with which the territory has no formal extradition agreement on a case-by-case or one-off basis.

Under the proposals, the Chief Executive, who is not elected but chosen by an election committee accountable to China, would have the authority to decide any request.

The 70-member assembly or Legco would have no role in the process.

Hong Kong’s courts would have the opportunity to review any decision, but they would not be allowed to enquire into the ‘quality of justice’ the accused would receive or whether they were guilty of the alleged offence.

“The courts will have very little power to reject any extradition request,” said MK Tam, director of Amnesty International Hong Kong.

“It’s not a formal prosecution so you cannot examine the evidence presented by the other side. We all know that if they want to prosecute someone – a human rights defender or activist – actually in mainland China the charges are political in nature but they use other laws to prosecute them, like tax evasion, for example.”

The amendments will cover some 37 offences, including fraud and other white-collar crimes.

The administration announced a series of changes at the end of May that included raising the threshold for an offence to be considered for extradition to at least seven years, and setting a time limit on the date of offences to prevent retrospective requests.

It has also said that only China’s highest court and its top prosecutor would be able to file an extradition request and that the Chief Executive would be allowed to order any jurisdiction requesting extradition to respect presumption of innocence, the right to appeal, open trial and other international judicial norms.

Only the seven year term, would actually be written into the bill.

The administration has also proposed amendments to mutual legal assistance, which would allow outside investigators to request assistance from Hong Kong for criminal cases including search and seizure, and confiscation and restraint orders.

Since mainland China’s police and officials are not allowed to operate in Hong Kong, lawyers say those changes could also have a significant impact.

Hong Kong Extradition Bill Protest

Protesters marched through Hong Kong on Sunday to show their opposition to the the extradition bill [Kin Cheung/AP Photo]

What are peoples’ concerns?

Hong Kong was returned to China under the concept of ‘one country, two systems.’

Article 4 of the Basic Law, the mini-constitution which governs post-colonial Hong Kong, promises to “safeguard the rights and freedoms of the residents of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and of other persons in the Region in accordance with law.”

Michael DeGolyer, who has tracked the territory’s transition to mainland Chinese rule as an academic at the Baptist University of Hong Kong, said people in Hong Kong have been particularly sensitive to issues involving judicial independence, which is seen as guaranteeing a measure of protection from the government on the mainland.

“This bill not only ‘erodes’ those protections; it places protection of those rights it only belatedly recognised as critically important to most Hong Kongers squarely within the hands of unelected bureaucrats who have so far manifested a rather poor record of being able or willing to resist pressure from Beijing,” DeGolyer, who now lives in the US, told Al Jazeera via email.

This could sound the death knell of ‘one country, two systems’

Willy Lam, Chinese University of Hong Kong

Opposition to the amendments comes as China’s President Xi Jinping, who took office in 2012, has increasingly cracked down on dissent.

The apparent kidnap of Hong Kong booksellers critical of the mainland government, the disqualification of pro-democracy lawmakers from office and the jailing of leaders from the Occupy Central movement have fuelled concerns that the amendments could become a tool to be used against political opponents.

The deepening trade war between the US and China has also put the mainland’s judicial system, which is said to have a near 100 percent conviction rate, under the spotlight.

Morgan Ortagus, a spokeswoman for the the US State Department said on Monday that the country was gravely concerned about the proposed amendments and what she described as “the continued erosion” of the ‘one country, two systems’ framework.

Hong Kong pro-democracy leaders face seven years in prison

The US was concerned the proposals would damage Hong Kong’s business environment “and subject our citizens residing in or visiting Hong Kong to China’s capricious judicial system,” she said.

Two Canadians, Crisis Group director Michael Kovrig and businessman Michael Spavor, were detained in China last December accused of national security offences.

Neither man has been allowed access to lawyers. Their detention followed Canada’s arrest of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou on a US extradition request.

In 2019, China ranked 82nd out of 126 countries on the World Justice Project’s Rule of Law Index, coming in 12th out of 15 countries in the Asia Pacific. It scored particularly poorly on “constraints on government power” and “fundamental rights”.

“The consequences of the bill will be dire,” said Willy Lam, an expert on Chinese politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

“For the first time since Hong Kong became part of China almost all the consulates based in Hong Kong have told the Carrie Lam administration not to proceed.

“There is this fear that Hong Kong will lose its international reputation as a free society that is different from China. This could sound the death knell of ‘one country, two systems’.”

China backs the amendments

China has said it has played no part in Hong Kong’s decision to amend its extradition law, but it has indicated it supports the initiative.

“We resolutely oppose wrong words and actions by any foreign forces to interfere in the legislative matters of the Hong Kong SAR,” Geng Shuang, a spokesman at China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said at a regular press briefing on Monday.

Mainland newspapers have also run editorials denouncing Western criticism of the amendments claiming the Hong Kong protesters had been “hoodwinked” by the opposition.

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Kyle Rudolph, Vikings Reportedly Agree to 4-Year, $36M Contract Extension

Minnesota Vikings v Detroit Lions

Leon Halip/Getty Images

The Minnesota Vikings and tight end Kyle Rudolph reportedly reached an agreement on a contract extension Monday, according to Tom Pelissero of NFL Network. 

Rudolph seemingly confirmed the news on Twitter:

Kyle Rudolph @KyleRudolph82

#UnfinishedBusiness #Skol https://t.co/ooOXJruWFF

ESPN’s Adam Schefter subsequently reported the terms of the extension: 

Adam Schefter @AdamSchefter

Vikings are giving veteran TE Kyle Rudolph a four-year, $36 million extension that locks him into Minnesota, per source. Rudolph not going anywhere, except back to the Vikings.

Rudolph’s name popped up in trade rumors after the Vikings selected Alabama Crimson Tide tight end Irv Smith Jr. in the second round of the 2019 NFL draft in April. The speculation intensified in early May after Andrew Krammer of the Star Tribune reported the sides “tabled” contract talks as the Vikes sought a hometown discount.

Rudolph continued to express his desire to remain in Minnesota despite the contract situation, and he showed up for the start of organized team activities with hope of bridging the gap.

“That’s what they’re working at,” he told reporters. “We’re in a tough situation. Everybody knows that. That’s why we have the best salary-cap guy in the NFL and I believe I have one of the best agents. So, like I said, they’re working really hard.”

Rudolph tallied 64 receptions for 634 yards and four touchdowns while playing all 16 regular-season games for the fourth consecutive year in 2018. Pro Football Focus graded him as the league’s 35th-best tight end.

The 29-year-old two-time Pro Bowl selection ranks 10th in catches (386), 12th in receiving yards (3,787) and fourth in touchdowns (41) among tight ends since Minnesota selected him out of Notre Dame in the second round of the 2011 draft, per Pro Football Reference.

Although Rudolph and the Vikings were able to overcome their financial differences, the question now shifts to whether there are enough targets to keep everyone consistently involved. Along with Rudolph and Smith at tight end, Minnesota features the dynamic tandem of Stefon Diggs and Adam Thielen along with Laquon Treadwell at wide receiver.

The Vikings will expect a big year from quarterback Kirk Cousins with that much talent at his disposal.

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Saudi Arabia says it has intercepted two Houthi drones

Saudi air defence forces on Monday intercepted two drones launched by Houthi rebels from neighbouring Yemen, state media reported, as the Iran-aligned group steps up attacks on the kingdom.

The drones targeted Khamis Mushait in the kingdom’s south and caused no damage or casualties, the Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen said in a brief statement released early on Tuesday by the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

The rebels, who control large parts of the country including the capital Sanaa, said earlier via their news outlet Almasirah that they had targeted the King Khalid airbase near Khamis Mushait.

The attacks come as SPA reported the coalition was intensifying air raids on Houthi positions in the northern Yemeni province of Hajjah.

The rebels have stepped up drone and missile attacks on the kingdom amid tensions between Shia power Iran and the United States, Saudi Arabia’s main ally.

Worst humanitarian crisis

Last month, the Saudi air force shot down a bomb-laden drone deployed by Houthi rebels that targeted Jizan airport, close to the southern border with Yemen, the coalition said.

The airport is used by thousands of civilians every day, but the coalition reported no casualties and warned the rebels of a strong response.

Yahya Sarea, Houthi military spokesperson, Yemen

Last month Houthi military spokesman claimed responsibility for drone attack on oil facilities in Saudi Arabia [Reuters]

Two oil pumping stations in Saudi Arabia were targeted by Houthi drones in May causing minor supply disruptions highlighting an apparent significant leap in the drone capabilities of the Houthis.

The Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen in March 2015 in support of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi who was forced out of power by the Houthis.

Since then, the conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, many of them civilians, relief agencies say.

It has triggered what the UN describes as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, with 24.1 million – more than two-thirds of the population – in need of aid.

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Stars React to KD Injury

  • SportsCenter @SportsCenter

    Kevin Durant appears to aggravate his calf injury and heads to the locker room early in the second quarter. https://t.co/VXu3SmTS8Y

  • DWade @DwyaneWade

    Even with all the things @KDTrey5 has done. This is the most fan(ed) out I’ve been. He knew he wasn’t right but he wanted to be there for his brothers. That’s sports! That’s love!

  • Joel Embiid @JoelEmbiid

    Why are they cheering for his injury? Come on man #Disguting

  • Trae Young @TheTraeYoung

    MAJOR RESPECT for KD wanting to rush back and try to help his team win a Championship… Get Back Healthy Bro🙏🏽

  • Kevin Love @kevinlove

    Nooooo…HATE TO SEE THAT SH*T!!!

  • Patrick Mahomes II @PatrickMahomes

    Cheering for an injury of any player is not the move man!

  • Marvin Bagley III @MB3FIVE

    Praying for you bro 💯🙏🏽 @KDTrey5

  • Enes Kanter @Enes_Kanter

    Respect @KDTrey5
    Get well brother 🙏

  • Jusuf Nurkić @bosnianbeast27

    🙏🏻

  • Bobby BP Portis @BPortistime

    Gotta respect the game man. Idc who it is. Not a good look at all.

  • Kendrick Perkins @KendrickPerkins

    If KD hurt I Blame the @warriors For pressuring that man to play and he wasn’t healthy! That’s 🤬up! I told him the other night not to play unless he was 100%!

  • Allonzo Trier @ISO_ZO

    Praying for you brother! @KDTrey5

  • Andre Roberson @FlyDre21

    Can’t question his heart!! Salute ✊🏽✊🏽

  • Josh Hart @joshhart

    Damn my boy….prayers up @KDTrey5

  • Patrick Patterson @pdpatt

    Clearly we all just saw him grab his achilles… #nbafinals

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    Athletes Pray for Ortiz

    1. Sports World Sends Prayers to Ortiz 🙏

      MLB family sends its thoughts and prayers as Big Papi recovers from shooting.

    2. Keeping Big Papi in Our Hearts ❤

      Boston Red Sox @RedSox

      #RedSox Statement Regarding David Ortiz: https://t.co/zl2yp8NREs

    3. From 1 Boston Legend to Another ✊

      Bleacher Report NFL @BR_NFL

      Prayers up from TB12 ❤ https://t.co/UhGliQcVFH

    4. Alex Rodriguez @AROD

      Anxiously waiting for more news. In the meantime, only prayers for @davidortiz, Tiffany and their family. https://t.co/IlE2v4g38t

    5. Mike Trout @MikeTrout

      Thoughts and prayers going out to @davidortiz… 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

    6. andrew mccutchen @TheCUTCH22

      Pull thru Big Papi🙏🏾. Dang what a world we live in😔

    7. Section 10 Podcast @Section10Pod

      Manny shows love to Big Papi 🙏🏼 https://t.co/me3h46CI8w

    8. Vladimir Guerrero @VladGuerrero27

      Que terrible enterarse de cosas como estas. David mi hermano mis oraciones están contigo, todo saldrá bien en el nombre de Dios. 🙏🏽 @davidortiz https://t.co/JANA2yPsvC

    9. Dontrelle Willis @DTrainMLB

      Praying for my man big Papi. Not a better person I’ve ever met in baseball. Pulling for you 🙏🏿 https://t.co/3dQBEtQmB0

    10. Sam Travis @DoctorChill6

      Prayers up Big Papi 🙏🏻

    11. Derek Holland @Dutch_Oven45

      Praying for @davidortiz #bigpapi and hoping everything is ok. 🙏🙏🙏🙏

    12. Blake Aubry Swihart @BLAKESWIHART_1

      A guy who takes care of people all over the world and has made an impact on so many. Was there for me with my brother and he will be back being Big Papi! Thoughts and Prayers from my family to you and yours! #PAPI

    13. Shane Victorino @ShaneVictorino

      Prayers for my brother @davidortiz 🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽…hearing all this news is so disheartening☹

    14. Gleyber Torres @TorresGleyber

      Keeping @davidortiz in my prayers. God willing he will be okay and recover quick. 🙏🏻🙏🏻

    15. Kenley Jansen @kenleyjansen74

      Praying for Big Papi. Oraciones con @davidortiz. Fuerza Big Papi. 🙏🏾

    16. Marcus Stroman @MStrooo6

      Prayers up for my bro @davidortiz man. One of the best human beings I’ve ever met. Hate seeing that. Hoping for the best! 🙏🏾

    17. Alex Bregman @ABREG_1

      Big papi 🙏

    18. Justin Turner @redturn2

      All the prayers for @davidortiz right now 🙏🙏

    19. Todd Frazier @FlavaFraz21

      Saying a prayer for my man @davidortiz tonight.

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    Russian jets carry out deadly bombings in Syria’s Idlib

    At least 25 people have been killed in aerial bombardment carried out by Russian jet fighters in Idlib region, with schools and medical centres knocked down during a continued Syrian military offensive.

    The rebel stronghold of northwestern Syria despite being part of a buffer-zone deal has come under deadly regime bombardment in recent weeks, sparking fears for its roughly three million residents.

    At least 13 people were killed, including women and children, after Russian Sukhoi jets dropped bombs on the village of Jabala in southern Idlib province, residents and civil rescuers told Reuters news agency.

    Russian jets were also behind several raids that hit the town of Khan Sheikhoun, Kafr Battikh and several other villages that left at least another 12 civilians dead, according to another local rescuer.

    Rescuers say the major aerial campaign that Moscow has thrown its weight behind since it was launched in earnest at the end of April has killed over 1,500 people with more than half of the death toll civilians.

    More than 300,000 people have fled the front lines to the safety of areas near the border with Turkey, UN and aid agencies said.

    The Russian-backed offensive has so far failed to make major inroads into rebel territory in northern Hama and southern Idlib provinces, where mainstream rebels backed by Turkey alongside fighters aligned to al-Qaeda-linked groups are putting up fierce resistance in their last remaining bastion in Syria.

    Russia and the Syrian army deny allegations of indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas or a campaign to paralyse everyday life in opposition-held areas and say they are fighting al-Qaeda-inspired fighters.

    Moscow blames the rebels for breaking a truce by hitting government-held areas and said Turkey has failed to live up to its obligations under a deal brokered last year that created a buffer zone in the area that obliges it to push out rebels.

    Nearly half of estimated three million inhabitants in northwest Syria – including Idlib province and parts of neighbouring provinces – had already fled fighting elsewhere, according to the United Nations.

    Civilians in rebel-held areas, where many oppose returning to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s one-party rule, look to Turkey which has steadily built up a military presence in the area as a protector against the Russian-led attacks.

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    Republicans pray Trump holsters his tariffs


    John Thune

    “I don’t want to see tariffs as a tool for everything that could possibly go wrong,” said Sen. John Thune. | Pete Marovich/Getty Images

    congress

    GOP senators warn the president’s agenda hangs in the balance.

    Senate Republicans want just one thing when it comes to Donald Trump’s global trade war: a cease-fire.

    It’s a move that would benefit not just their caucus, senators argue, but the president too.

    Story Continued Below

    If Trump withholds new tariffs, he can reasonably expect Senate passage of his new North American trade deal this summer, assuming Speaker Nancy Pelosi budges in the House — still a big if. And if he imposes new tariffs, he could see a major effort to restrict his trade powers finally come to fruition at the hands of his own party.

    Trump already got a taste of how Senate Republicans would confront him during his will-he-or-won’t-he vow to impose stiff tariffs on imports from Mexico.

    Using the chance to approve a NAFTA replacement as a carrot and threats to block his Mexico tariffs as a stick, GOP senators last week helped stop 5 percent levies from being slapped on all Mexican goods. But Trump warned on Monday that “tariffs will be reinstated” if Mexico doesn’t follow through on his vague deal to stem the surge of Central American migrants, and senators take him at his word.

    “If Mexico does not step up, I think the president will come back to it,” Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) said. “I don’t want to see tariffs as a tool for everything that could possibly go wrong. I don’t think everything’s smooth. Mexico needs to step up.”

    Meanwhile, there’s a short window to pass the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement in Congress, one that will close — perhaps permanently — if the president unleashes any more tariff threats.

    “It’s too hard to judge precisely where we are on that,” Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah.) said. “The administration also heard that Congress is not in favor of tariffs on friends … [and] the USMCA would have faced a real challenge here and perhaps in Mexico.”

    The long-running dispute between Senate Republicans and the president came to a head last week when several Republicans predicted that the president could face jaw-dropping defections in the chamber on a vote to block any effort to impose those tariffs on Mexico. That too would have put approval of the new North American trade deal back on ice in the Senate, where Republicans wield considerable leverage.

    For most of the year, the USMCA has been in severe jeopardy, not just in the Democratic House but in the Senate, where Republicans first threatened to stall any vote as long as steel and aluminum tariffs remained on U.S. allies. Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is continuing to devise legislation that would allow Congress to stop those types of tariffs, which were imposed on the basis of national security.

    After wiping away the threat of the Mexico tariffs, senior Republicans said once again conditions are ripe for passage of the president’s chief trade achievement of this Congress. So they need to move quickly.

    “To me it feels like the near-term issues have been resolved,” said Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, the Republican whip. “I hope it removes any uncertainty about at least being able to get USMCA voted on.”

    Yet what Republicans have learned after nearly 30 months with Trump in the White House is that the president can turn on a dime. The Mexico tariff threat was a perfect example: Trump’s tweet announcing the move to impose new tariffs without new immigration controls jolted nearly everyone in the Capitol and thrust Washington into a week of drama, even if some Democrats said they always thought Trump was bluffing.

    “He made a bogus threat to impose tariffs, which the business community and Republicans in Congress rejected,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said. “And now the president claims a bogus agreement with Mexico which contains policies that Mexico volunteered to do months ago. Bogus, bogus, bogus.”

    Yet Trump also experienced unprecedented Republican pushback: The party has not yet before offered to provide a veto-proof majority in opposition to his policies, a real escalation of the intraparty feud. But Trump seems unbowed, even threatening new tariffs on French wine on Monday.

    “Without tariffs, we would be captive to every country, and we have been for many years,” Trump said on CNBC on Monday. “They take advantage of us in every way possible.”

    The president sees tariffs as a blunt and unilateral tool that allows him to force foreign countries to take him seriously. Republicans said they have multiple fears about the specter that new levies could still be slapped on Mexico: That it would hurt USMCA’s support in Congress, that it could drive Mexico away from the agreement and that Republicans could mount an ugly rebellion in Congress against him.

    Whether Trump would use the tariff threat again is only a matter of time, allies say.

    “I’m certain of it,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) said. “It’s always on the table with him as a strategy and when it works, it’s great.”

    “He likes to use tariffs as a negotiating tool,” Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said.

    Yet the blowback could only increase the next time the president brings them up. For one, any more significant delay could imperil the USMCA deal altogether. Pelosi is reluctant to bring it up in the first place, and Republican leaders have said that after the August recess the chance of approval decreases exponentially.

    That’s because September will be filled with tough funding fights over the federal debt and government spending, all while the Democratic presidential primary heats up.

    “I’m hoping we can get that back on track and done by the August break,” Thune said. “That’s the goal.”

    Yet there’s plenty of time for the deal with Mexico to fall apart or for the number of border crossings to continue its steep rise.

    So while Republicans wait for Pelosi to move, they’re keeping one eye on their own whip count and the other on Trump’s Twitter feed, wary that this week’s relative calm could be upended at any instant with the tariff threat roaring anew.

    “We’ve been pretty clear on that topic,” Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, another GOP leader, said. “The president thinks that we’ve been very clear and that we don’t know what we are talking about.”

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