United Arab Emirates Says Its War In Yemen Is 'Practically Over'

DUBAI (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates’ involvement in more than a year of war in Yemen is “practically over,” a top diplomat was quoted as saying on Wednesday.

The UAE is key member of a Saudi-led military coalition which intervened in Yemen in March 2015. It backs the exiled government against the armed Houthi movement, which Saudi Arabia and the UAE fear is a proxy for their regional arch-rival, Iran.

“Our position today is clear: the war is practically over for our troops,” Foreign Minister Anwar Gargash was quoted as saying by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed.

“We are looking at political arrangements and our political role now is to empower the Yemenis in the liberated areas.”

A Houthi missile killed more than 60 Gulf Arab troops stationed in central Yemen in September, including 52 Emiratis, the worst loss ever suffered by the UAE military.

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The Holy Grail of Gold Box Deals Features All of Your Favorite Anker Gear

Anker makes your favorite Bluetooth earbuds
, battery packs, Lightning cables
, and (a lot) more, and a whole bunch of their best stuff is on sale today in Amazon’s Gold Box.

Read more…

Jide reveals the Remix Pro 2-in-1 tablet, more Remix devices

Pro Front shotAndroid is an operating system that, almost like its Linux ancestor, can be found almost anywhere and any device. That doesn’t mean, however, that it offers the best experience outside of smartphones and tablets. Take for example laptops and desktops, where Android normally just looks like an overgrown tablet. Jide’s Remix OS addresses that space, providing a desktop-like Android experience … Continue reading

Celebrating Immigrant Heritage Month: A Kenyan Doctor's Experience

I walked up the cement sidewalk anticipatory, sweaty-palmed, wide-eyed. It was my first day on the job. But this wasn’t just any job: it was my first real doctoring job, and it was at an Ivy League university. It felt like all eyes were on me. Judging my soul. Reading the uncertainty in my eyes. Seeing my inner being and deeming me unworthy. They must know that I’m new here, I thought to myself. Just act normal, don’t let them notice you. Be confident! Stand up straight, don’t look down. Try to fit in!

As I approached the doors to the hospital, white coat crisp and blemish-less, hair perfectly coiffed and jaw clenched, something caught my eye, or someone. A black, elderly gentleman sat resting on a rusted metal chair next to a large cart that advertised “kettlecorn” and he had his gaze fixed on me. Oh my goodness, he’s reading me too, I thought to myself. But then something softened. I realized how tightly pursed my lips had been as they melted into a little smile. And in a flood of emotion, right there on that hot cement sidewalk, I began to process.

Something about the simplicity of this man’s demeanor, the unapologetic nature of his gaze free to take up his surroundings as he pleased, the repetitive nature of his work obvious as he sat slumped in a chair that looked like it had seen better days, which he yet seemingly took pride in, owning that sidewalk. It all made me recount my own very humble beginnings. I thought of the number of shoulders I had literally and figuratively stood on to get this point, now standing on this historic cement ground to serve patients and why I’d been allowed to do so.

I thought about my late grandmothers who would sit down conversing with us in our mother’s tongue, Kikuyu, a Kenyan dialect. In their little village homes, they would repeat time and again scriptures from the Bible exhorting and blessing us and reminding us how much they’d been praying for us since the last time they saw us. And how they continued to pray for us on end. I thought about the back-breaking work they did as farmers, tilling the land with hoes and other tough manual labor throughout their lives even up until a ripe old age. I thought about my family members in Kenya, so many of whom had not had the chance to attend college, let alone pursue tertiary degrees. I thought about my parents who put us through school typically sacrificing their own happiness and physical well-being, including multiple separations of our immigrant family across US/ Kenya borders so that “the girls could go to school.” Tears welled up in my eyes. Oh great, now this man definitely thinks I’ve gone mad, I thought. I gave him a nod, and a bigger smile, which he returned, then I walked by his little cart and into the hospital feeling centered.

I am an immigrant and during this immigrant heritage month, I am excited to be celebrating my background and the beautiful ways in which it has influenced my reality today. When patients see my last name that sounds nothing like the way it’s spelled embroidered above my white coat pocket, it stirs innumerable conversations about Africa. Coming from one of the many cultures that use the term “Baba” for “father” or “grandfather” allows me to speak to my patients with a quiet understanding of what it means to not be able to put their loved one in a nursing home because that would be the equivalent of abandonment in their culture of origin. All in all, over the past several years of treating diverse patients, I’ve learned that different is good. And that we all have something to learn from one other, with our respective backgrounds, whether we are the doctor with the funny name in the long white coat taking care of patients or the man sitting on the sidewalk selling kettlecorn to his hungry patrons. At a time when hatred seems to be running at an all time high, it is critical that we embrace our individual differences and the ways in which we can grow, learn from and build one other. For those interested, we can all participate in this celebration of one-ness by going to the page at http://welcome.us. I hope to see you there.

Ngaruiya is an academic physician and first-generation Kenyan-American. She was born in Nebraska to Kenyan parents but grew up in Africa for most of her formative years, returning to the U.S. to pursue higher education.

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IMPULSE – S2 Ep.17

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Updated every Thursday

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THE HOUSE CAT – Ep.2

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Updated every Thursday

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We Were All At Pulse / 14ymedio, Yoani Sanchez

Christopher Sanfeliz and Alejandro Barrios, show to death by Omar Mateen at the gay nightclub Pulse. (Facebook)
Christopher Sanfeliz and Alejandro Barrios, show to death by Omar Mateen at the gay nightclub Pulse. (Facebook)

14ymedio, Yoani Sanchez, Generation Y, 15 June 2016 – The news mourned on Sunday, a week that ripped apart and will forever mark the lives of the victims’ families. The Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, became a death trap for dozens of people at the mercy of a madman. The motivations that led Omar Seddique Mateen to kill 49 human beings and injure another 53 are still being investigated, but solidarity does not need to wait for FBI reports or summations, it should be immediate and unhesitating.

The official Cuban press has treated the fact that the event took place in a gay establishment with omissions and squeamishness. The prudery on television and in the national periodicals, with this silence, only promotes homophobia and belies their own discourse of changes. This absence is also noted in the condolence message sent by Raul Castro to Barack Obama, where he called the locale of the tragedy “a nightclub.”

The omissions don’t end there. The press in the hands of the Communist Party delayed until Wednesday the news that two Cubans were among the dead, when it was already vox populi on the streets. Why the delay? Because they were gay or because they were emigrants? This double condition must be upsetting to some in the government and thus in their periodicals, which operate by way of ventriloquists.

Also surprising is that the National Center for Sexual Education (Cenesex) has limited itself to a formal statement of condemnation and has not called for a vigil, for flowers to be left at the doors of the mothers who lost their sons, or at least a symbolic action that reflects the pains of the Cuban LGBTI community.

None of that has happened, and not for lack of indignation or sadness, but from the same lack of freedom of expression that prevents a dissident from making a public demand, or any person from carrying, spontaneously, a banner that recognizes: “We were all at Pulse.”

2014-11-04-14ymediobestlogo.jpg
14ymedio, Cuba’s first independent daily digital news outlet, published directly from the island, is available in Spanish here. Translations of selected articles in English are here.

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Watch Members Of Congress Read Stanford Rape Victim's Full Statement

A bipartisan group of congressional lawmakers spent nearly an hour Wednesday evening reading aloud on the U.S. House floor the graphic statement by the 23-year-old woman who was sexually assaulted by former Stanford University student athlete Brock Turner. 

U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.), who hosted the reading, called the victim’s letter “gut-wrenching.”

“The sexual predator received a paltry sentence of six months in country jail, of which he will serve only three, for committing a violent crime,” Speier said.

“We are not moved by the felon’s excuse of alcohol. We are not moved by the judge, who said a longer sentence would have a ‘severe impact’ on the offender. We are not moved by the felon’s father, who said that his son should not serve jail time for ‘20-minutes of action.’

“Emily Doe is a survivor in every sense of the word,” Speier added. “And her words deserve to be amplified.” 

Two graduate students spotted Turner assaulting the unconscious woman behind a dumpster on Stanford’s campus in July 2015. A jury convicted Turner of three felony sexual assault charges in March. Instead of the six-year prison term requested by prosecutors, a judge sentenced Turner to six months. 

The victim’s 12-page letter, an expanded version of what she read to Turner during his sentencing on June 2, has been viewed more than 6 million times on BuzzFeed

“Your Honor, if it is all right, for the majority of this statement I would like to address the defendant directly,” the woman’s statement begins. “You don’t know me, but you’ve been inside me, and that’s why we’re here today.”

In an interview with The Huffington Post last week, Speier said reading the statement aloud is “a symbolic act that underscores the gravity of the offense.”

“I hope that by reading it into the record, by elevating this issue, that we’re going to take some steps to provide leadership on the federal level to address sexual assault on campus and in the military,” Speier said. 

 

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Filibustering Senator Tells Young Son: 'I Hope You'll Understand Someday Why We're Doing This'

When his young son entered the gallery on Wednesday night, Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), was waging a filibuster in an attempt to force a gun reform vote. From the Senate floor, he offered some poignant words to the boy.

“I’m sorry I missed pizza night,” Murphy said. “I hope that you’ll understand someday why we’re doing this.”  

Led by senators who represent Newtown, Connecticut — where 26 people, including 20 children, were killed in a mass shooting in 2012 — Democrats took control of the Senate floor to call for change in gun laws.

Murphy, who launched the filibuster, vowed to keep talking “as long as I can” in order to spark action that would “stem this epidemic of gun violence and in particular this epidemic of mass shootings.”

The move came three days after the Orlando attack, the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.

“There is a fundamental disconnect with the American people when these tragedies continue to occur and we just move forward with business as usual,” Murphy said. “So I’m going to remain on this floor until we get some signal, some sign that we can come together on these two measures, that we can get a path forward on addressing this epidemic in a meaningful bipartisan way.”

As of midnight Thursday, the filibuster was ongoing.

Many on social media reacted to Murphy’s comments to his son, with some offering to get the senator “some pizza.”

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NASA conducts largest fire experiment in space

As part of its efforts to ensure the safety of spacefarers, NASA set a 16×37-inch block of cotton-fiberglass material on fire aboard a spacecraft that’s making its way back home. Since the largest material NASA ever burned in space before this was th…