Saturday, May 24, 2025

ASEAN must deepen integration and stay united to tackle US tariffs, Malaysia saysNew Foto - ASEAN must deepen integration and stay united to tackle US tariffs, Malaysia says

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Southeast Asian nations must accelerate regional economic integration, diversify their markets and stay united to tackle the fallout from global trade disruptions resulting from sweeping U.S.tariffhikes, Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan said Sunday. Mohamad, opening a meeting of foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, also reiterated the bloc's call to warring parties in Myanmar to cease hostilities in a deadly civil war that has killed thousands and displaced millions of people since a 2021 government takeover by the military. "ASEAN nations are among those most heavily affected by the U.S.-imposed tariffs. The U.S.–China trade war is dramatically disrupting production and trade patterns worldwide. A global economic slowdown is likely to happen," Mohamad said. "We must seize this moment to deepen regional economic integration, so that we can better shield our region from external shocks." ASEAN countries, many of which rely on exports to the U.S., are reeling from tariffs imposed by the Trump administrationranging from 10% to 49%. Six of the association's 10 member nations were among the worst-hit with tarrifs ranging from 32% to 49%. ASEAN unsuccessfully sought an initial meeting with the U.S. as a bloc. When U.S. PresidentDonald Trumplast month announced a 90-day pause on the tariffs, countries including Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam swiftly began trade negotiations with Washington. The meeting of foreign ministers preceded a planned ASEAN leaders' summit Monday in Malaysia, the bloc's current chair. A summit is expected to follow on Tuesday with Chinese Premier Li Qiang and leaders from the Gulf Cooperation Council comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. ASEAN's unity is crucial as the region grapples with impacts of climate change and disruption from the malevolent use ofartificial intelligenceand other unregulated techologies, Mohamad said, adding that ASEAN's centrality will be tested by external pressure, including a superpower rivalry. "External pressures are rising, and the scope of challenges has never had higher stakes," he said. ""It is therefore crucial that we reinforce the ties that bind us, so as to not unravel under external pressures. For ASEAN, unity is now more important than ever." ASEAN members have refused to take sides, engaging the U.S. and China, which are both key regional trading and investment partners. ASEAN remained committed to help war-torn Myanmar, which is recovering from aMarch earthquakethat killed more than 3,700 people, Mohamad said. Myanmar's military leaders were barred from attending ASEAN meetings after refusing to comply with ASEAN's peace plan, which includes negotiations and delivery of humanitarian aid. "We call on the stakeholders in Myanmar to cease hostilities, and to extend and expand the ceasefire, to facilitate the long and difficult path towards recovery," Mohamad said. Myanmar's crisis has challenged the credibility of ASEAN, which has been hampered by its long-held policy of non-interference in each other's affairs. After informal consultations with bloc members, Mohamad said Saturday that ASEAN has to step up efforts as Myanmar's problems had spilled over borders with a growing number of refugees fleeing to neighboring nations and rising transborder crime. Malaysia's efforts now focus on de-escalation of violence and greater access to humanitarian aid, but he said plans for political dialogue between the conflicting parties would be challenging due to a "trust deficit."

ASEAN must deepen integration and stay united to tackle US tariffs, Malaysia says

ASEAN must deepen integration and stay united to tackle US tariffs, Malaysia says KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Southeast Asian nations must...
Indonesian president and Chinese premier meet to discuss expanding trade during US trade warNew Foto - Indonesian president and Chinese premier meet to discuss expanding trade during US trade war

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Chinese PremierLi Qiangmet with Indonesia's PresidentPrabowo Subiantoon Sunday to discuss ways to expand trade and investment during the U.S. global trade war and as economic globalization faces headwinds. Li arrived in Indonesia's capital, Jakarta, on Saturday afternoon for a three-day visit to Southeast Asia's largest economy. It was the first stop of his first overseas visit this year. Indonesia and China are member states of theGroup 20major developing countries and emerging economies and ofBRICS. Li brought 60 Chinese prominent businesspeople for his address to the Indonesia-China Business Reception on Sunday evening. He emphasized in his remarks that China's economy has achieved rapid growth this year despite increasing external challenges. "The current international situation is a stalemate," Li said at the event which was also attended by Subianto, "Unilateralism and protectionism are on the rise, bullying behavior is increasing." Li noted that this year marks the 70th anniversary of the Non-Aligned Movement which was held by Asian and African countries in Indonesia's Bandung city, when the world was at a historical crossroads more than seven decades ago. The Bandung spirit of solidarity, friendship and cooperation has played a pivotal role in the unity and cooperation of the Global South countries, Li said. "More than seven decades later, the world is once again at an important crossroads," Li said. He called on all countries to seek common ground while resolving differences through dialogue and peaceful coexistence. Subianto expressed gratitude to the Chinese government and its companies "that have participated in our economy, created jobs, transferred technology and built trust among all businesses, especially in our homeland." He also invited Chinese businesspeople to invest more in Indonesia. Two-way trade exceeded US$147.8 billion last year, growing by 6.1%. Li said for nine consecutive years, China has been Indonesia's largest trading partner, and its Belt and Road cooperation program has seen substantive progress, including nickel smelting plants andWhoosh, the commercial service of Southeast Asia's first high-speed railway which has been operating since October 2023, carrying nearly 10 million passengers. Indonesia wants a larger role in supplying nickel and other raw materials to China's fast-growing electric car makers. On Sunday, Subianto hosted Li in a ceremony at Merdeka Palace in Jakarta. Li is also scheduled to meet with Indonesian parliament members on Sunday. He will head on to Malaysia on Monday where he and Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim will address the ASEAN-GCC-China Economic Summit, attended by leaders from Southeast Asian countries and the Gulf Cooperation Council. ___ Associated Press journalists Andi Jatmiko and Achmad Ibrahim in Jakarta, Indonesia, contributed to this report.

Indonesian president and Chinese premier meet to discuss expanding trade during US trade war

Indonesian president and Chinese premier meet to discuss expanding trade during US trade war JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Chinese PremierLi Qia...
For George Floyd, a complicated life and consequential deathNew Foto - For George Floyd, a complicated life and consequential death

HOUSTON (AP) — Years before a bystander's video of George Floyd's last moments turned his name into a global cry for justice, Floyd trained a camera on himself. "I just want to speak to you all real quick," Floyd says in one video, addressing the young men in his neighborhood who looked up to him. His 6-foot-7 frame crowds the picture. "I've got my shortcomings and my flaws and I ain't better than nobody else," he says. "But, man, the shootings that's going on, I don't care what 'hood you're from, where you're at, man. I love you and God loves you. Put them guns down." ___ EDITOR'S NOTE: The Associated Press initially published this profile of George Floyd on June 10, 2020. The fifth anniversary of George Floyd's murder is May 25, 2025. ___ At the time, Floyd was respected as a man who spoke from hard, but hardly extraordinary, experience. He had nothing remotely like the stature he has gained in death, embraced as a universal symbol of the need to overhaul policing and held up as a heroic everyman. But the reality of his 46 years on Earth, including sharp edges and setbacks Floyd himself acknowledged, was both much fuller and more complicated. Once a star athlete with dreams of turning pro and enough talent to win a partial scholarship, Floyd returned home only to bounce between jobs before serving nearly five years in prison. Intensely proud of his roots in Houston's Third Ward and admired as a mentor in a public housing project beset by poverty, he decided the only way forward was to leave it behind. "He had made some mistakes that cost him some years of his life," said Ronnie Lillard, a friend and rapper who performs under the name Reconcile. "And when he got out of that, I think the Lord greatly impacted his heart." ___ Floyd was born in North Carolina. But his mother, a single parent, moved the family to Houston when he was 2, to search for work. They settled in the Cuney Homes, a low-slung warren of more than 500 apartments south of downtown nicknamed "The Bricks." The neighborhood, for decades a cornerstone of Houston's Black community, has gentrified in recent years. Texas Southern University, a historically Black campus directly across the street from the projects, has long held itself out as a launchpad for those willing to strive. But many residents struggle, with incomes about half the city average and unemployment nearly four times higher, even before the recent economic collapse. Yeura Hall, who grew up next door to Floyd, said even in the Third Ward other kids looked down on those who lived in public housing. To deflect the teasing, he, Floyd and other boys made up a song about themselves: "I don't want to grow up, I'm a Cuney Homes kid. They got so many rats and roaches I can play with." Larcenia Floyd invested her hopes in her son, who as a second-grader wrote that he dreamed of being a U.S. Supreme Court justice. "She thought that he would be the one that would bring them out of poverty and struggle," said Travis Cains, a longtime friend. Floyd was a star tight end for the football team at Jack Yates High School, playing for the losing side in the 1992 state championship game at Texas Memorial Stadium in Austin. He was an atypical football player. "We used to call him 'Big Friendly,'" said Cervaanz Williams, a former teammate. "If you said something to him, his head would drop," said Maurice McGowan, his football coach. "He just wasn't going to ball up and act like he wanted to fight you." On the basketball court, Floyd's height and strength won attention from George Walker, a former assistant coach at the University of Houston hired for the head job at what is now South Florida State College. The school was a 17-hour drive away, in a small town, but high school administrators and Floyd's mother urged him to go, Walker said. "They wanted George to really get out of the neighborhood, to do something, be something," Walker said. In Avon Park, Florida, Floyd and a few other players from Houston stood out for their size, accents and city cool. They lived in the Jacaranda Hotel, a historic lodge used as a dormitory, and were known as the "Jac Boys." "He was always telling me about the Third Ward of Houston, how rough it was, but how much he loved it," said Robert Caldwell, a friend and fellow student who frequently traveled with the basketball team. "He said people know how to grind, as hard as it is, people know how to love." After two years in Avon Park, Floyd spent a year at Texas A&M University in Kingsville before returning to Houston and his mother's apartment to find jobs in construction and security. Larcenia Floyd, known throughout the neighborhood as Ms. Cissy, welcomed her son's friends from childhood, offering their apartment as a refuge when their lives grew stressful. When a neighbor went to prison on drug charges, Ms. Cissy took in the woman's pre-teen son, Cal Wayne, deputizing George to play older brother for the next 2½ years. "We would steal his jerseys and put his jerseys on and run around the house, go outside, jerseys all the way down to our ankles because he was so big and we were little," said Wayne, now a well-known rapper who credits Floyd with encouraging him to pursue music. George Floyd, he said, "was like a superhero." ___ Floyd, too, dabbled in music, occasionally invited to rap with Robert Earl Davis Jr., better known as DJ Screw, whose mixtapes have since been recognized as influential in charting Houston's place as a hotbed of hip-hop. But then, the man known throughout Cuney as "Big Floyd" started finding trouble. Between 1997 and 2005, Floyd was arrested several times on drug and theft charges, spending months in jail. Around that time, Wayne's mother, Sheila Masters, recalled running into Floyd in the street and learning he was homeless. "He's so tall he'd pat me on my head ... and say, 'Mama you know it's going to be all right,'" Masters said. In August 2007, Floyd was arrested and charged with aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon. Investigators said he and five other men barged into a woman's apartment, and Floyd pushed a pistol into her abdomen before searching for items to steal. Floyd pleaded guilty in 2009 and was sentenced to five years in prison. By the time he was paroled, in January 2013, he was nearing 40. "He came home with his head on right," said friend Travis Cains. At a Christian rap concert in the Third Ward, Floyd met Lillard and pastor Patrick "PT" Ngwolo, whose ministry was looking for ways to reach residents in Cuney Homes. Floyd, who seemed to know everyone in the project, volunteered to be their guide. Soon Floyd was setting up a washtub on the Cuney basketball courts for baptisms by Ngwolo's newly formed Resurrection Houston congregation. He joined three-on-three basketball tournaments and barbecues, organized by the ministry. He knocked on doors with Ngwolo, introducing residents as candidates for grocery deliveries or Bible study. Another pastor, Christopher Johnson, recalled Floyd stopping by his office while Johnson's mother was visiting. Decades had passed since Johnson's mother had been a teacher at Floyd's high school. It didn't matter. He wrapped her in a bear hug. "I don't think he ever thought of himself as being big," Johnson said. "There's a lot of big dudes here, but he was a gentleman and a diplomat and I'm not putting any sauce on it." On the streets of Cuney, Floyd was increasingly embraced as an O.G. — literally "original gangster," bestowed as a title of respect for a mentor who had learned from life experience. In Tiffany Cofield's classroom at a neighborhood charter school, some of her male students — many of whom had already had brushes with the law — told her to talk to "Big Floyd" if she wanted to understand. Floyd would listen patiently as she voiced her frustrations with students' bad behavior, she said. And he would try to explain the life of a young man in the projects. After school, Floyd often met up with her students outside a corner store. "How's school going?" he would ask. "Are you being respectful? How's your mom? How's your grandma?" ___ In 2014, Floyd began exploring the possibility of leaving the neighborhood. As the father of five children from several relationships, he had bills to pay. And despite his stature in Cuney, everyday life could be trying. More than once, Floyd ended up in handcuffs when police came through the projects and detained a large number of men, Cofield said. "He would show by example: 'Yes, officer. No, officer.' Very respectful. Very calm tone," she said. A friend of Floyd's had already moved to the Twin Cities as part of a church discipleship program that offered men a route to self-sufficiency by changing their environment and helping them find jobs. "He was looking to start over fresh, a new beginning," said Christopher Harris, who preceded Floyd to Minneapolis. Friends provided Floyd with money and clothing to ease the transition. In Minneapolis, Floyd found a job as a security guard at the Salvation Army's Harbor Light Center, the city's largest homeless shelter. "He would regularly walk a couple of female co-workers out ... at night and make sure they got to their cars safely and securely," said Brian Molohon, director of development for the Army's Minnesota office. "Just a big strong guy, but with a very tender side." Floyd left after a little over a year, training to drive trucks while working as a bouncer at a club called Conga Latin Bistro. "He would dance badly to make people laugh," said the owner, Jovanni Thunstrom. "I tried to teach him how to dance because he loved Latin music, but I couldn't because he was too tall for me." Floyd kept his connection to Houston, regularly returning to Cuney. When Houston hosted the Super Bowl in 2017, Floyd was back in town, hosting a party at the church with music and free AIDS testing. He came back again for his mother's funeral the next year. And when Cains spoke with him last, a few weeks ago, Floyd was planning another trip for this summer. By then, Floyd was out of work. Early this spring, Thunstrom cut Floyd's job when the COVID-19 pandemic forced the club to close. On the evening of Memorial Day, Floyd was with two others when convenience store employees accused him of paying for cigarettes with a counterfeit $20 bill, then called the police. Less than an hour later, Floyd breathed his last. Those who knew him search for meaning in his death. "I've come to the belief that he was chosen," said Cofield, the teacher. "Only this could have happened to him because of who he was and the amount of love that he had for people, people had for him." It's a small comfort, she admits. But, then, in Big Floyd's neighborhood, people have long made do with less. ___ Merchant and Lozano reported from Houston, Henao from Hershey, Pennsylvania, and Geller from New York. Associated Press writer Aaron Morrison in Minneapolis and videographer John Mone in Houston contributed to this report.

For George Floyd, a complicated life and consequential death

For George Floyd, a complicated life and consequential death HOUSTON (AP) — Years before a bystander's video of George Floyd's last ...
A 302-pound loggerhead sea turtle hit by a boat gets an oversize CT scan, with a surpriseNew Foto - A 302-pound loggerhead sea turtle hit by a boat gets an oversize CT scan, with a surprise

JUNO BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A massive loggerhead sea turtle hit by a boat off Florida's Atlantic coast arrived at a turtle hospital needing medical care, but at 302 pounds (137 kilograms), Pennywise was too large to fit their equipment. So the veterinary team at theLoggerhead Marinelife Centerin Juno Beach took her to nearby Jupiter Medical Center, hoping she could get a CT scan on a human machine. She was too big for that, as well. They quickly came up with another plan: taking Pennywise to Palm Beach Equine Clinic in Wellington, where the scan was performed on equipment designed for horses. "And, luckily, the horse-sized machine was big enough to fit this lady through," Heather Barron, the chief science officer and veterinarian at Loggerhead, told The Associated Press. Turns out, they also got a nice surprise: Images showed that Pennywise is carrying eggs. "We hope we'll be able to get her back out there into the wild as soon as possible so that she can lay those eggs," Barron said. Loggerheads, an endangered species, often lay multiple clutches during a season, she said. Pennywise arrived at the center Monday, after a crew from Inwater Research Group found her floating in the Atlantic with significant blunt force trauma to her shell that had already started to heal. The staff at the Juno Beach turtle center estimated that Pennywise's injuries were about a month old. Barron said the imaging showed some damage to bones that surround the spinal cord. They have the turtle on high-powered antibiotics. "Luckily, right now, her neurologic exam shows that all those nerves are intact. And that is a great sign for her. We're very excited about that and we'll just be rechecking to make sure that we have no progression of the disease, and as soon as we feel like that wound is healed well enough, she can go back out into the wild." Even so, Barron said, Pennywise's story is a "textbook case of a turtle returning to the area for mating and nesting season, only to fall victim to an entirely preventable boat-strike injury." Becausenesting seasonin Florida runs from March 1 to Oct. 31, officials at the sea turtle center are encouraging boaters to slow down and to be especially mindful in what they refer to as theSea Turtle Protection Zone, which extends a mile (1.6 kilometers) off the coast. ___ Frisaro reported from Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

A 302-pound loggerhead sea turtle hit by a boat gets an oversize CT scan, with a surprise

A 302-pound loggerhead sea turtle hit by a boat gets an oversize CT scan, with a surprise JUNO BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A massive loggerhead sea t...
Infamous Russian hacker indicted for operating cybercrime ring that stole millions in targeted cyberattacksNew Foto - Infamous Russian hacker indicted for operating cybercrime ring that stole millions in targeted cyberattacks

A Russian national was indicted for leading acybercriminal enterprisethat infected computers and stole millions from victims around the globe for more than a decade, federal prosecutors revealed. Rustam Rafailevich Gallyamov, 48, of Moscow, was slapped with conspiracy and wire fraud charges on Thursday for allegedly leading a group of hackers who developed and unleashed malicious software, called Qakbot, in targeted ransomware attacks starting in 2008,according to the Department of Justice. Prosecutors are attempting to retrieve $24 million the alleged cybercriminal swiped from his victims. "Today's announcement of the Justice Department's latest actions to counter the Qakbot malware scheme sends a clear message tothe cybercrime community," Matthew R. Galeotti, head of the DOJ's Criminal Division, said in a statement. "We are determined to hold cybercriminals accountable and will use every legal tool at our disposal to identify you, charge you, forfeit your ill-gotten gains, and disrupt your criminal activity." Prosecutors said Gallyamov used Qakbot to infect thousands of computers to establish a botnet — a network of compromised systems he and his co-horsts controlled and used to carry out the cyberattacks. Gallyamov, who received a cut of the ransom payments, eventually reframed his attacks to trick victims into granting access to their computers shortly after the FBI and other European law enforcement agencies dismantled his massive trove of infected systems in 2023. Prosecutors said he last attacked the US in January. "Mr. Gallyamov's bot network was crippled by the talented men and women of the FBI and our international partners in 2023, but he brazenly continued to deploy alternative methods to make his malware available to criminal cyber gangs conducting ransomware attacks against innocent victims globally," said Akil Davis, the FBI's Assistant Director in Charge in Los Angeles. "The charges announced today exemplify the FBI's commitment to relentlessly hold accountable individuals who target Americans and demand ransom, even when they live halfway across the world." It was not immediately clear if Gallyamov was arrested or his whereabouts. Law enforcement agencies in the US, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, the United Kingdom, and Canada were involved in the coordinated takedown.

Infamous Russian hacker indicted for operating cybercrime ring that stole millions in targeted cyberattacks

Infamous Russian hacker indicted for operating cybercrime ring that stole millions in targeted cyberattacks A Russian national was indicted ...

 

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