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Search resuls for: "The Observer"


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Ukrainian forces in southeastern Ukraine have broken through Russia's first line of defense. Russia devoted 60% of its time and resources to the first line, the Ukrainian general told The Observer. "Sooner or later, the Russians will run out of all the best soldiers," he said. Ukraine's recent success in overcoming Russia's first defensive line comes after weeks of painstaking mine clearance. But sooner or later, the Russians will run out of all the best soldiers.
Persons: Russia's, Oleksandr Tarnavskiy, Tarnavskiy Organizations: Observer, Service, Infantry, Russian Defense Ministry, Anadolu Agency, Getty Images Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Ukrainian, Wall, Silicon, Moscow, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson
[1/4] Zimbabwe's President Elect Emmerson Mnangagwa speaks to the media at State House in Harare, August 27, 2023. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo Acquire Licensing RightsHARARE, Aug 27 (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's re-elected President Emmerson Mnangagwa suggested on Sunday that those people questioning the results of last week's election, which an opposition leader dismissed as a "gigantic fraud", take their case to court. The election commission said on Saturday that Mnangagwa, 80, had won the election with 52.6% of the vote while the opposition Citizens' Coalition for Change (CCC) leader Nelson Chamisa got 44%. Chamisa, speaking on social media platform X, formerly Twitter, said of the election: "It's a blatant and gigantic fraud." It was unclear whether the opposition would use the courts to dispute the election results, as Zimbabwe's judges have historically sided with the governing party.
Persons: Elect Emmerson Mnangagwa, Emmerson Mnangagwa, Nelson Chamisa, Mnangagwa, Robert Mugabe, Christopher Mutswangwa, , Munjodzi Mutandiri, Mkwananzi, Nyasha Chingono, Carien du Plessis, Bhargav Acharya, Nick Macfie, Kirsten Donovan Organizations: State House, REUTERS, Philimon, Rights, Citizens ' Coalition, ZANU, Southern, Liaison, Southern African Development Community, Thomson Locations: Harare, Philimon Bulawayo, Rights HARARE
Maggie EastlandMaggie Eastland is a reporting intern and part of the summer 2023 newsroom intern class at The Wall Street Journal. Maggie is a rising senior at Notre Dame studying finance and journalism. Now serving as editor in chief for the Observer, she revived the student newspaper’s business news beat during her sophomore year. Maggie previously interned at the Dallas Morning News, where she wrote business and real estate stories. She also interned at the Mackinac Island Town Crier, covering local news.
Persons: Maggie Eastland Maggie Eastland, Maggie Organizations: Wall Street, Notre Dame, Observer, Dallas Morning News Locations: Mackinac
Goldman Sachs is having an identity crisis
  + stars: | 2023-08-09 | by ( Linette Lopez | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +11 min
I never thought I'd write this but … I miss the old Goldman Sachs. That was the voice of Goldman Sachs 2009 — the adamantine firm that managed to make its way through the crisis relatively unscathed. This sort of dry humor worked back then, but for today's Goldman Sachs, the joke just doesn't hit the same way. Van Praag — who was once dubbed "Goldman Sachs' Rococo PR prince" by The Observer — left the firm in 2012. It would be nice to see the old Goldman Sachs ferocity is still out there somewhere, even if it's not on Wall Street.
Persons: I'd, , Goldman Sachs, Lucas van Praag, Goldman, van Praag, John F, David Solomon —, Solomon, boardrooms, today's Goldman Sachs, Lucas van Praag's Goldman, , FactSet, JP Morgan, chuffs, DJ Sol, Van Praag —, Observer —, Jake Siewert, Lloyd Blankfein —, David Solomon's, Michael Kovac, Marcus —, DJ'ing, Goldman's, Lloyd Blankfein, Insider's Dakin Campbell, Kim Kardashian, Morgan Stanley, It's, Trump, Gary Cohn, mathlete who's, it's, Linette Lopez Organizations: Sunday Times of, Bloomberg, Refinitiv, Wealth Management, Observer, Treasury, Blankfein, Bank of America, Ivy League Locations: Wall, Sunday Times of London, New York City, Bahamas, Silicon
The Securities and Exchange Commission wants corporate America to tell investors more about cybersecurity breaches and what's being done to fight them. The SEC has voted 3-2 to adopt new rules on cybersecurity disclosure. It will require public companies to disclose "material" cybersecurity breaches within 4 days after a determination that an incident was material. Corporate America is pushing back, claiming that the short announcement period is unreasonable, and that it would require public disclosure that could harm corporations and be exploited by cybercriminals. Current cybersecurity rules are fuzzyCurrent rules on when a company needs to report a cybersecurity event are fuzzy.
Persons: Gary Gensler, Hope, cybersecurity, CISA, SIFMA, Gensler, Jensen Organizations: Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, Corporate America, Federal Register, prudential, Securities Industry, Financial Markets Association, Industry, NYSE Group, Nasdaq, FBI, Infrastructure Security Agency, Department of Homeland Security, Williams Locations: America
Last year, fashion returns created 750,000 tonnes of carbon-dioxide emissions in the UK. Today, companies consider returns management to be more of a marketing tool, and handling returns well can help companies gain new customers and keep them coming back. The environment likely suffers from fashion returns a lot more than we dare to estimateStaff aren't the only ones that we need to consider. A big proportion of unwanted clothes that companies can't resell or recycle end up burned or in landfills. Last year, fashion returns were responsible for 750,000 tonnes of carbon-dioxide emissions in the UK.
Persons: Dani H, who's, , Deshopping, Stuart Higgins, BearingPoint, wardrobing, Zeenia, Naqvee, PrettyLittleThing, aren't, Chloe Organizations: . Research, Service, Retailers, Marketing Management, Observer, Institute of Positive Locations: Wall, Silicon, Sheffield, England
Last year, fashion returns created 750,000 tonnes of carbon-dioxide emissions in the UK. But shoppers who buy clothes with the intent of returning them after wearing them are adding fuel to the fire. The environment likely suffers from fashion returns a lot more than we dare to estimateStaff aren't the only ones that we need to consider. A big proportion of unwanted clothes that companies can't resell or recycle end up burned or in landfills. Last year, fashion returns were responsible for 750,000 tonnes of carbon-dioxide emissions in the UK.
Persons: Dani H, who's, , Deshopping, Stuart Higgins, BearingPoint, wardrobing, Zeenia, Naqvee, PrettyLittleThing, aren't, Chloe Organizations: . Research, Service, Retailers, Marketing Management, Observer, Institute of Positive Locations: Wall, Silicon, Sheffield, England
Zelenskyy told reporters Wednesday that he thinks Ukraine can defeat Russia within one year. Few experts predict that Ukraine can achieve victory over Russia quickly, if at all. NATO said in 2008 that Ukraine could join at a future date, but declined its September 2022 request for "fast-track" membership. Earlier in the summit Zelenskyy decried the lack of a defined timeline as "unprecedented and absurd." Experts previously told Insider that negotiations between Russia and Ukraine that could end the war remain a distant prospect.
Persons: Zelenskyy, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Mykhailo Podolyak, Foreign Affairs Dmytro Kuleba, Kuleba, Valery Zaluzhny, Zaluzhny, John E . Herbst, Putin Organizations: Service, NATO, Presidential, Foreign Affairs, Radio Free, Washington Post Locations: Ukraine, Russia, Wall, Silicon, Europe, Washington , DC, Washington, Ukrainian, NATO
The Freedom of Russia Legion comprises defectors from the Russian army and other volunteers. The anti-Putin group launched two cross-border raids into the Belgorod region in May and June. Its commander told The Observer it's planning more attacks, bolstered by the dissolution of Wagner. "There will be a further surprise in the next month or so," the Freedom of Russia Legion's spokesperson and commander, Caesar, told the newspaper. The Freedom of Russia Legion is based in Ukraine and comprises a few hundred soldiers, who are defectors from the Russian army and other volunteers fighting against their homeland.
Persons: Wagner, Vladimir Putin, Caesar, Caesar —, , Yevgeny Prigozhin Organizations: Russia Legion, Putin, Observer, Service, Legion, Guardian, Russian, Wagner Group Locations: Belgorod, Wall, Silicon, Russia, Ukraine, Shebekino, Al Jazeera, Moscow
Hong Kong CNN —Last year, the world watched closely as China’s Xi Jinping, Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Narendra Modi of India and other world leaders within a Moscow-friendly group gathered in the Uzbek city of Samarkand for a high-profile, two-day summit. World leaders pose for a photo during the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, on September 16, 2022. It remains unknown how tight a grip Putin now has on power in Moscow, and although he attended last year’s SCO summit, he has rarely left Russia since his invasion of Ukraine. Face-to-face meetings, however, can also provide opportunity for world leaders to talk out sensitive issues or push on points of contention that may be handled less delicately in a virtual setting. Given their respective ties with Moscow, both China and India have received pressure from the West to limit their relations or even push Putin toward peace.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN —, Xi, Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Narendra Modi, Putin –, Putin, Modi –, , Modi, , Manoj Joshi, India didn’t, Murat Kula, what’s, Wagner, Steve Tsang, It’s, , Moritz Rudolf, Paul Tsai, Tsang, Putin “ Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Shanghai Cooperation Organization, SCO, , Observer Research, Anadolu Agency, Getty, SOAS China Institute, University of London, Moscow, Paul Tsai China Center of, Yale Law School, Central, Soviet, Ukraine Locations: Hong Kong, India, Moscow, Uzbek, Samarkand, Ukraine, Eurasia, Russia, China, New Delhi, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, , Iran, Washington, , Europe, Beijing, Belarus, Central Asia, Soviet Union
GUATEMALA CITY, July 3 (Reuters) - The Organization of American States (OAS) said on Monday it will send its election observer mission back to Guatemala after the country's constitutional court called for a review of the election's first round. Some analysts expect Arevalo to win the run-off due to Torres' unpopularity in the voter-dense capital, Guatemala City. "Given the recent resolution of the Constitutional Court... the mission has decided to deploy again in Guatemala," OAS said in a statement. It added the observer mission will be present during the review process and "will continue to gather relevant information" ahead of the run-off. "The mission considers it of vital importance that the will of the people as expressed at the ballot box be respected," the OAS added.
Persons: Sandra Torres, Bernardo Arevalo, Arevalo, Torres, Antony Blinken, Carolina Pulice, Sofia Menchu, Stephen Eisenhammer, David Gregorio Our Organizations: GUATEMALA CITY, of American States, Constitutional, Sunday, Thomson Locations: GUATEMALA, Guatemala, Guatemala City, United States
The Guardian newspaper did not publish an opinion column that suggested an award won by British broadcaster and former politician Nigel Farage was because of Russian money, as is claimed in a fabricated screenshot circulating online. Examples of the fabricated screenshot circulating on Facebook can be found here, here and here. But no such headline was published by The Guardian, said Cadwalladr in a written response to Reuters. A spokesperson for the media group in an email also said the newspaper did not publish the headline. A Google search did not show the fabricated headline (archive.md/xue2h).
Persons: Nigel Farage, Carole Cadwalladr, Read Organizations: Guardian, Facebook, Observer, The Guardian, Reuters Locations: British
But Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Kyiv's top general, doesn't want to hear complaints that it's moving too slow. The pace is grinding in some sectors of the front, but Kyiv's top general says he doesn't want to hear complaints it's going too slow. Kyiv's military is currently undergoing several offensive maneuvers along the front lines in the eastern and southern regions and has made small — but, at times, costly — territorial gains in the process. Armed with the right missiles, these aircraft could help support Ukraine's air defenses and inflict damage on Russian positions at range. "So we just need to continue to support Ukraine and ensure that Ukraine prevails as a sovereign independent nation in Europe."
Persons: Valerii, , it's, Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Zaluzhnyi, Sasha Maslov, Ukraine doesn't, Neskucne, Ercin Erturk, Biden, Pat Ryder, Mark Milley, there's, GENYA SAVILOV, wishlist, Jens Stoltenberg, We'll, Stoltenberg Organizations: Washington Post, Service, Ukraine, Ukraine's Armed Forces, Ukrainian Air Assault Forces, Washington, Getty, NATO, Ukraine's, Pentagon, Russia, Ukrainian Army, Anadolu Agency, Getty Images, Army Tactical Missile, Artillery, Street, Pentagon Press, Air Force, Joint Chiefs, Staff Locations: Ukraine, Russian, British, Russia, Storojove, Donetsk, ATACMS, Ukrainian, Avdiivka, AFP, Denmark, Netherlands, Europe, Lithuania
Opinion | The American Empire in the Fog of Ukraine
  + stars: | 2023-06-30 | by ( Ross Douthat | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
In a critique of the political thinker James Burnham, penned in the wake of World War II, George Orwell wrote:Power worship blurs political judgment because it leads, almost unavoidably, to the belief that present trends will continue. Whoever is winning at the moment will always seem to be invincible. But a war that seems stalemated, that grinds without dramatic shifts, poses a somewhat different challenge to political judgment; the observer is always tempted to discern a certain trend, a sweeping historical judgment, amid a state of ebb and flow and wartime fog. The war in Ukraine is a case study, yielding very different big-picture arguments based on developments from month to month and even week to week. The same pattern applies to analysis of how the war fits in the global power picture.
Persons: James Burnham, George Orwell, Orwell, Yevgeny Prigozhin, Samuel Huntington’s, Francis Fukuyama’s Locations: South Asia, Asia, Tobruk, Cairo, Berlin, London, Ukraine
CNN —Sierra Leone’s President Maada Bio has been reelected for a second term in office, the country’s electoral commission announced Tuesday. Bio’s Sierra Leone People’s Party (SLPP) won nearly 1.6 million votes – 56.1% of the total ballots – to defeat his closest opponent, Samura Kamara of the opposition All People’s Congress (APC) party, who won a 41% share of the vote. Bio took an early lead on Monday, according to provisional results released by the Electoral Commission for Sierra Leone (ECSL). But the tallying of votes was fraught with controversies with international observers expressing concern about the integrity of the process. The APC party has yet to react to the final declared results.
Persons: Maada, Bio’s Sierra, Samura Kamara, , Organizations: CNN, Sierra, Bio’s Sierra Leone People’s Party, People’s Congress, Electoral, Sierra Leone, “ Carter Center, APC
Len Deighton Collects Outdated Travel Guides
  + stars: | 2023-06-22 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
You read the ones at the top and you never get to the bottom ones. I recently reprised the Cookstrips for a few years in The Observer Food Monthly with my son Alex. Are there any classic novels that you only recently read for the first time? When I started writing in 1960 and wrote “The Ipcress File,” I stopped reading fiction to develop my own voice. So now I almost never read fiction.
Persons: Illustrators ”, Eric Newby, Collins, Eric, Alex, I’m, Newby, , Organizations: Illustrators, Penguin Collectors Society, Royal College of Art, The Observer, Observer Locations: New York, London
A Reuters photo of the flag display with the Progress Pride flag hanging between two U.S. flags can be seen (here). The Progress Pride flag is a reimagined version of the traditional Pride Flag, with added stripes (white, pink, light blue, black and brown) to represent the Trans community as well as minority or marginalized communities (here), (here). Other critics were less specific, saying the Progress Pride flag was displayed as more prominent overall. Consulted by Reuters Fact Check, vexillologists (flag experts) offered different perspectives on whether the White House display was a violation of the Flag Code. The U.S. flag on top of the White House can be seen in photos from the Pride celebration (here), (here), (here).
Persons: Joe Biden, Charles Spain, observer’s, Peter Keim, , Keim, , Scot Guenter, Guenter, Read Organizations: White, Congressional Research Service, Reuters, Flag Research Center, U.S, , FRC, Facebook, Flag Foundation, San Jose State University, American Vexillological Association, NAVA, , U.S . Locations: U.S, ” Spain, , American
Joseph Fiennes said he turned down a five-part Hollywood movie deal in his early career. He told The Observer that decision was due to bullying by Harvey Weinstein. Fiennes told the newspaper: "I'm not beholden to that. Joseph Fiennes said he turned down a big Hollywood deal early in his career due to bullying tactics by the now-disgraced producer Harvey Weinstein. "It was a bullying tactic that didn't sit well," Fiennes told The Observer in an interview.
Persons: Joseph Fiennes, Harvey Weinstein, Fiennes, I'm, Observer Weinstein, Mirimax, Elizabeth, Weinstein, Ralph Fiennes, Luther Organizations: Observer, Waterford Locations: Love
CNN —A statue of an antisemitic politician who is said to have inspired Adolf Hitler is to be tilted 3.5 degrees to the right. In 2012, a section of the Ringstrasse, the city’s central boulevard, that had borne Lueger’s name since 1934, was renamed Universitätsring. Debate over the future of the statue, which was erected in 1926, has been raging for years. The future of the statue, which has been repeatedly defaced, has been hotly debated in Vienna. He was therefore one of Hitler’s teachers,” Ariel Muzicant, president of the European Jewish Congress and former president of the Jewish Community of Vienna, told CNN in an email.
Persons: Adolf Hitler, Karl Lueger, Karl Lueger Platz, Austrian Hitler, Mein, , Lueger, Klemens Wihlidal, JOE KLAMAR, Wihlidal, ” Ariel Muzicant, ” Oskar Deutsch, , Organizations: CNN, Getty, Public Art, European Jewish Congress, Jewish, of, antisemites Locations: Vienna, Austrian, Lueger, Viennese, AFP, of Vienna, Austria
CNN —“Phygital art” may not be the most elegant phrase in the English language, but it is generating a buzz in certain circles. The Art Dubai international fair has a digital component exploring new media and technology trends, including phygital works. Separately, Christie's hosted its Art + Tech Summit at Art Dubai this year. Pablo del Val: Phygital works of art can also be NFTs, but a phygital work of art doesn’t necessarily need to be an NFT. Cedric Ribeiro/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images for Art DubaiWhy is phygital art important to you?
CNN —Ted Lasso is a nicer character because of Donald Trump. That’s according to star and creator Jason Sudeikis, who plays the loveable, folksy coach on the Apple TV+ series. Jason Sudeikis in "Ted Lasso," now streaming on Apple TV+. Sudeikis and some of the other members of the “Ted Lasso” cast recently visited President Joe Biden at the White House in March for a discussion about mental health. Not just getting to play the characters, but also, what do you want to put out there into the world?”The third season of “Ted Lasso” is currently streaming on Apple TV+.
Washington CNN —The Supreme Court agreed Monday to reconsider long held precedent and decide whether to significantly scale back on the power of federal agencies in a case that can impact everything from how the government addresses everything from climate change to public health to immigration. Conservative justices have long sought to rein in regulatory authority, arguing that Washington has too much control over American businesses and individual lives. The justices have been incrementally diminishing federal power but the new case would allow them to take a much broader stride. Clement argued that the agency exceeded its authority and needed direct and clear congressional authorization to make the demand. The regulation was put in place to combat overfishing of the fisheries off the coasts of the US.
The equalities watchdog found in 2020 Labour had serious failings in the party’s handling of persistent antisemitism complaints. Abbott, 69, was responding to a writer's claims that Irish, Jewish and Traveller people suffered racism. This is similar to racism and the two words are often used as if they are interchangeable," she wrote. A spokesperson for Labour party said she had been suspended pending an investigation. Britain's equalities watchdog said earlier this year the Labour Party had made sufficient changes over the last two years to tackle antisemitism.
India's rural women are bearing the brunt of climate related shocks like severe drought and extreme weather events, Universal Images Group | Getty ImagesIndia's rural women are bearing the brunt of climate related shocks like severe drought and extreme weather events, which are drastically affecting their daily livelihoods. The climate fund will allow women and communities to fight climate change and help provide new livelihood resources and education, said Clinton. Having access to clean water makes a huge difference in tackling the overall health issues for rural women, she added. In the latest economic survey released in February, the government said rural women were increasingly participating in economic activity. Government schemes and policies have helped rural women, said Akanksha Khullar, a visiting fellow with the Observer Research Foundation in New Delhi.
ABUJA, March 3 (Reuters) - Six opposition-led Nigerian states have asked the Supreme Court to throw out the result of last weekend's presidential vote, saying the electoral body broke the law and its own rules during the count, court papers showed. Six of Nigeria's 36 states - Adamawa, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Delta, Edo and Sokoto - said in court papers dated Feb. 28 that the election commission had failed to transmit results through an electronic system meant to show transparency. They sought a court declaration that all presidential election results announced by the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) "were invalid, null and void, and of no effect whatsoever". Those materials included ballot papers and voting machines, the order from the appeals court showed. There have been numerous legal challenges to the outcome of past Nigerian presidential elections but none has succeeded.
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