Afghan Refugee Crisis Worsens

The Morning Email
Tuesday May 31st, 2016
afghanistan refugee

TOP STORIES

NUMBER OF AFGHANS DISPLACED BY VIOLENCE DOUBLES "The number of Afghans internally displaced by conflict has 'dramatically' doubled to 1.2 million in just three years, Amnesty International said on Tuesday, warning that a lack of basic services was putting people on the brink of survival. The rights group said that situation of people uprooted from their homes in Afghanistan has deteriorated in recent years as global attention and aid money have been diverted to other crises." [Reuters]

YOU PROBABLY HAD A BETTER MEMORIAL DAY THAN THIS GUY "Here’s a different kind of holiday travel problem. A taxi jumped a curb and smashed into the glass at an entrance to Chicago O’Hare International Airport on Monday evening as Memorial Day travelers returned home. Images shared on social media by Daniel X. O’Neil show a Prius with markings of the Dispatch Taxi Affiliation in the entrance vestibule at the lower level of Terminal 3." [HuffPost]

POLISH LAWMAKER PUSHES TO EXTRADITE POLANSKI "Poland's justice minister on Tuesday revived an effort to have filmmaker Roman Polanski extradited to the U.S., where he is wanted in a nearly 40-year-old case involving sex with a minor. Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro's office said he asked Poland's Supreme Court to annul a ruling in October by a court in Krakow which found that Polish law forbids Polanski's extradition." [AP]

DONALD TRUMP DOESN'T ALWAYS BEAT CHINA... "'I beat China all the time,' Mr. Trump declared in a speech the day he announced his candidacy. “I own a big chunk of the Bank of America building at 1290 Avenue of the Americas that I got from China in a war. Very valuable.' Mr. Trump does have an investment in the building, an office tower near Rockefeller Center. But court documents and interviews with people involved in the deal tell a very different story of how he ended up with it." [NYT]

...BUT HE DOES BEAT AZERBAIJAN, THOUGH "Construction on the Trump International Hotel & Tower here in Azerbaijan’s capital stopped last year when the country’s oil-driven economy crashed amid plummeting oil prices. The local owner and developer, facing potentially huge losses, is scrambling to renegotiate contracts and get the building open … Critics say Trump, if elected, would face challenges here in drawing a distinction between the interests of his business and those of his country. Azerbaijan has been dominated for decades, stretching back to the 1960s Soviet Union era, by the Aliyev family, which, according to the State Department and human rights groups, has a poor record on human rights and free speech, including the jailing of journalists who investigate it." [WaPo]

HOLDER: SNOWDEN PERFORMED 'PUBLIC SERVICE' "Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder says Edward Snowden performed a 'public service' by triggering a debate over surveillance techniques, but still must pay a penalty for illegally leaking a trove of classified intelligence documents. 'We can certainly argue about the way in which Snowden did what he did, but I think that he actually performed a public service by raising the debate that we engaged in and by the changes that we made," Holder told David Axelrod on 'The Axe Files,' a podcast produced by CNN and the University of Chicago Institute of Politics." [CNN]

BIG BUSINESS TRYING TO SAVE GOP SENATE "The country’s biggest business lobby will launch an initiative Tuesday to deploy influential Republicans to raise funds for tight Senate races, hoping to keep the GOP from losing control of the chamber in November. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s 'Save the Senate' effort is being led by both Republicans who back the party’s presumptive presidential nominee, Donald Trump, and those who have balked at doing so, in a shared quest to retain the Senate majority." [WSJ]

For more video news from The Huffington Post, check out this morning's newsbrief.

WHAT’S BREWING

THE GREAT BARRIER REEF IS DYING "The worst bleaching event ever seen on the Great Barrier Reef has killed more than a third of corals across wide swaths of the region, scientists announced on Sunday. Those numbers continue a streak of horrifically bad news for the largest living structure on the planet. Just a month ago, researchers said 93 percent of the reef had been affected by the mass bleaching event.” [HuffPost]

GOLDEN STATE HEAD TO THE FINALS "In a 336-minute, seven-game series, the Golden State Warriors needed less than 170 seconds in the third quarter to dismantle, dishearten and dispose of the Oklahoma City Thunder, doing what they do best and knocking down five treys in three minutes to earn their second consecutive berth in the NBA Finals with a 96-88 victory Monday night. Of course, it started and ended with Stephen Curry." [HuffPost]

AD BLOCKING SOFTWARE HURTING ONLINE BUSINESSES "Many of the world’s largest Internet companies, like Google and Facebook, rely heavily on advertising to finance their online empires. But that business model is increasingly coming under threat, with one in five smartphone users, or almost 420 million people worldwide, blocking advertising when browsing the web on cellphones. That represents a 90 percent annual increase, according to a new report from PageFair, a start-up that helps to recoup some of this lost advertising revenue, and Priori Data, a company that tracks smartphone applications." [NYT]

ELTON JOHN, MAN OF PEACE "British singer Elton John told a concert in Moscow he still wanted to meet President Vladimir Putin to discuss his concerns about gay rights and AIDS in Russia despite the Kremlin leader not having time to meet him this time round. John, performing at a luxury shopping and entertainment centre in the Russian capital on Monday night as part of a world tour, sounded disappointed about not getting to meet Putin, but said he would return to try to see him." [Reuters]

For more from The Huffington Post, download our app for iOS or Android.

WHAT'S WORKING

FT GOES GREEN… SORT OF "The editorial board of the Financial Times isn’t exactly stacked with bleeding-hearted environmentalists. Just a month ago, the British paper defended ExxonMobil’s right to question climate change amid legal probes into whether the oil giant covered up evidence of global warming. But in an editorial published Saturday, the FT urged the oil industry to “face a future of slow and steady decline.”
[HuffPost]

For more, sign up for the What's Working newsletter.

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BEFORE YOU GO

~ DOD is finally getting rid of its floppy disks.

~ A look at China's 20 largest companies.

~ How to uproot and retire in Spain.

~ Breaking down Bran's visions from the latest episode of "Game of Thrones."

~ In this week's Candidate Confidential, Sam Stein and Jason Cherkis talk to the newly minted Libertarian Party presidential nominee, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson.


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Send tips/quips/quotes/stories/photos/events/scoops to Lauren Weber lauren.weber@huffingtonpost.com.
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17 stellar short stories you should read this weekend 📓 🖊

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Culture Shift is a weekly newsletter curated by the HuffPost Culture writers and editors.

This week we're talking about Short Story Month, a burlesque tribute to Prince, the first play to feature an all-black and female creative cast and team on Broadway, the "Anatomical Venus," empathy in comedy, and the women artists of color making a space for change.


Inside The Bizarre 'Venus' Figures Once Used As Anatomical Models

venus

She's called the "Anatomical Venus" and rests in peace, beneath a Venetian glass and rosewood case, in a medical museum called La Specola, which opened in Florence, Italy, in 1775.

She is beautiful, endowed with supple flesh, touchable curls that create a pillow around her head, and even a string of pearls around her neck. Her head is tipped back ecstatically, resembling a moment of spiritual rapture from one angle, an intense orgasm from another. She is, in her peaceful repose, as physically enchanting as Sleeping Beauty, save for the fact that her innards and guts are spilling out. (Read more here)


'Eclipsed' Production Duo On Breaking Through Broadway's Glass Ceiling

eclipsed

During a season where Broadway is grossing a record high of $1.37 billion, lead producers Stephen Byrd and Alia Jones-Harvey of Front Row Productions are making history of their own with "Eclipsed."

Starring Lupita Nyong'o, Pascale Armand, Akosua Busia, Zainab Jah and Saycon Sengblo, "Eclipsed" — which is the first play written by, directed by, produced by and starring black women — tells the intense story of five women who are brought together by turmoil in their homeland of Liberia. (Read more here)


Celebrate Short Story Month With These 17 Stellar Short Stories By Contemporary Writers

books

We're now in the throes of Short Story Month, a gleeful celebration of fiction writing with a word limit. Here are 17 stories you should read in celebration. (Read more here)


A Burlesque 'Purple Rain' Is The Ultimate Tribute To Prince

prince

Brown RadicalAss Burlesque is bringing the 1984 album back to the stage, from start to finish. (Read more here)


How 'Crazy Ex-Girlfriend' Uses Empathy To Make Better Comedy

craz

Maybe comedy doesn't have to be so mean. (Read more here)


Artists Of Color Are Creating A Space To Talk About Change

color

An exhibition, entitled "Mami," reflects on the process of discovering the Others within ourselves. (Read more here)


Book of the Week!

sweet

A flawed but dazzling coming-of-age story, Sweetbitter captures foodie culture and the highs and lows of getting by in New York City. (Read more here)

Follow HuffPost Arts and Books on Facebook and Twitter

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Obama's Historic Hiroshima Visit

The Morning Email
Friday May 27th, 2016
obama hiroshima

TOP STORIES


Lauren Weber is out on a reporting trip until June 7, so Eliot Nelson and I are filling in -- and attempting to write like much nicer people than we are so it seems like she’s still here!


OBAMA’S HISTORIC HIROSHIMA VISIT More than seven decades after the U.S. destroyed Hiroshima with an atomic bomb during the Second World War, Barack Obama on Friday became the first sitting U.S. president to visit the Japanese city. Obama will pay his respects at a memorial for the dead, but will not apologize to Japan for the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. He delivered a speech and met with elderly survivors of the bombings. [NYT]

CONGRESS FAILS TO FUND ZIKA FIGHT Congress split town for a two-week recess despite never coming to an agreement on a spending package to help prepare for a domestic Zika virus outbreak this summer. No one in the U.S. has contracted the tropical illness, which can cause serious birth defects when pregnant women become ill, but the coming warm weather and mosquito season have the health care community and senior government officials like Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Thomas Frieden seriously concerned. Hundreds of Americans have returned home carrying Zika and more than 900 people have become infected in Puerto Rico. [WaPo]

DID NORTH KOREA LITERALLY ROB A BANK? "Security researchers have tied the recent spate of digital breaches on Asian banks to North Korea, in what they say appears to be the first known case of a nation using digital attacks for financial gain … On Thursday, the Symantec researchers said they had uncovered evidence linking an attack at a bank in the Philippines last October with attacks on Tien Phong Bank in Vietnam in December and one in February on the central bank of Bangladesh that resulted in the theft of more than $81 million." [NYT]

EGYPTAIR FIND BEACON "The chief investigator in the EgyptAir plane crash that killed all 66 people on board last week has said search teams in the Mediterranean have picked up a beacon believed to be from the doomed aircraft. Ayman al-Moqadem said the beacon signal had narrowed down the search to a 3-mile radius. He insisted, however, that it did not mean the flight data and cockpit voice recorders -- the so-called 'black boxes' -- had been found." [AP]

"T-I-E. T-I-E, TIE" Nihar Saireddy Janga and Jairam Hathwar are your 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee co-champions. It's the third straight tournament that ended in a draw. That includes two years ago, when Hathwar's older brother, Sriram, was one of the joint champs. And because we know you're wondering, the winning words were "Feldenkrais" and "gesellschaft." No, we don't know, either. [WaPo]

HILLARY CLINTON'S EMAIL SAGA CONTINUES "Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton doubled down on defending her email practices as Secretary of State, arguing that the use of a personal account was 'allowed,' and rules have since been 'clarified.'” [ABC News]

JEWS AND NEO-NAZIS JOIN FORCES FOR TRUMP Enthusiastic anti-Semites and some prominent American Jews like Ari Fleischer see what they want to see when they look at Donald Trump. Hard to envision how this alliance could possibly go wrong. [Jessica Schulberg, HuffPost]

For more video news from The Huffington Post, check out this morning's newsbrief.

WHAT’S BREWING

WELL THIS IS TERRIFYING The superbugs are coming! A Pennsylvania woman has become the first person in the United States known to contract a bacterial infection that's immune to antibiotics. [WaPo]

MORE GAWKER VS. BILLIONAIRE ACTION Now that he knows who his real enemy is, Gawker honcho Nick Denton has some words for "thin-skinned billionaire" Peter Thiel. [Gawker]

TRUMP HYPOCRISY AGAIN He’s suddenly just fine with taking outside money for his campaign after talking a big game about self-funding (even though it was never really true). Now he's recruited New York Jets owner Woody Johnson -- a man whose money Trump trashed Jeb Bush for accepting.[NYT]

YOU KNOW WHAT ELSE ATTRACTS FLIES, RIGHT? A fly landed on Trump's head. It was huge, and there's video.[CNN]

HOUSE REPUBLICANS GET IN THEIR OWN WAY AGAIN "House Republicans unexpectedly sunk their own $37.4 billion water and energy spending bill on Thursday because it included a provision ensuring that people who work for government contractors can’t be fired for being lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender."[HuffPost]

COLLEGE KIDS ENJOYING GETTING WASTED "On any given day, 1.2 million full-time students are drinking alcohol and more than 703,000 are using marijuana, according to a report released Thursday by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)." [LA Times]

For more from The Huffington Post, download our app for iOS or Android.

WHAT'S WORKING

HELPING THE EXPLOITED HuffPost interviews a former child laborer in the Philippines has devoted her life to helping children forced into lives of forced labor and sex work. [HuffPost]

For more, sign up for the What's Working newsletter.

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BEFORE YOU GO

~ Khloe Kardashian wants to divorce Lamar Odom -- for real this time.

~ A woman camping in Botswana was rudely awakened by a lion licking the outside of her tent. Thank goodness there's video.

~ Bernie Sanders might not become president, but he's using his popularity to keep influencing politics. For example, he's helping progressive Democrat Russ Feingold raise money to regain his Wisconsin Senate seat.

~ Aww, Dolly Parton has been married for 50 years!

~ Yet another baseball player is suspended over domestic violence charges.

~ Gawker watched 21 YouTube videos of different songs called "The Trump Train" so you don't have to.

~ This week on “So That Happened,” The Huffington Post podcast team say flattering things about Elizabeth Warren, if you can believe that.

The Morning Email will return on Tuesday, after the holiday weekend.


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