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China says its spacecraft lands on Moon's far side

 

China says its spacecraft lands on Moon's far side



The Chang'e 6 mission launched from China's Wenchang Spaceport in May

China says its uncrewed craft has successfully landed on the far side of the Moon - an unexplored place almost no-one tries to go.

The Chang'e 6 touched down in the South Pole-Aitken Basin at 06:23 Beijing time on Sunday morning (22:23 GMT Saturday), the China National Space Administration (CNSA) said.

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Launched on 3 May, the mission aims to collect precious rock and soil from this region for the first time in history.

The probe could extract some of the Moon's oldest rocks from a huge crater on its South Pole.

The landing was fraught with risks, because it is very difficult to communicate with spacecraft once they reach the far side of the Moon. China is the only country to have achieved the feat before, landing its Chang'e-4 in 2019.

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After launching from Wenchang Space Launch Center, the Chang'e 6 spacecraft had been orbiting the Moon waiting to land.

The lander component of the mission then separated from the orbiter to touch down on the side of the Moon that faces permanently away from Earth.

During the descent, an autonomous visual obstacle avoidance system was used to automatically detect obstacles, with a visible light camera selecting a comparatively safe landing area based on the brightness and darkness of the lunar surface, the CNSA was quoted as saying by state-run Xinhua news agency.

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The lander hovered about 100m (328ft) above the safe landing area, and used a laser 3D scanner before a slow vertical descent.

The operation was supported by the Queqiao-2 relay satellite, the CNSA said.

Chinese state media described the successful landing as an “historic moment”.

The state broadcaster said “applause erupted at the Beijing Aerospace Flight Control Center” when the Chang’e landing craft touched down on the Moon early on Sunday morning.

The lander should spend up to three days gathering materials from the surface in an operation the CNSA said would involve "many engineering innovations, high risks and great difficulty".

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"Everyone is very excited that we might get a look at these rocks no-one has ever seen before," explains Professor John Pernet-Fisher, who specialises in lunar geology at the University of Manchester.

He has analysed other lunar rock brought back on the American Apollo mission and previous Chinese missions.

But he says the chance to analyse rock from a completely different area of the Moon could answer fundamental questions about how planets form.

Most of the rocks collected so far are volcanic, similar to what we might find in Iceland or Hawaii.

But the material on the far side would have a different chemistry .

READ MORE.......... 

Biden unveils Israeli proposal to end Gaza war

 

Biden unveils Israeli proposal to end Gaza war


US President Joe Biden has urged Hamas to accept a new Israeli proposal to end the conflict in Gaza, saying that "it's time for this war to end".

The three-part proposal would begin with a six-week ceasefire in which the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) would withdraw from populated areas of Gaza.

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There would also be a "surge" of humanitarian aid, as well as an exchange of some hostages for Palestinian prisoners.

The deal would eventually lead to a permanent "cessation of hostilities" and a major reconstruction plan for Gaza.

Hamas said it views the proposal "positively".

Speaking at the White House on Friday, Mr Biden said that the first phase of the proposed plan would include a "full and complete ceasefire", the withdrawal of IDF forces from populated areas and the exchange of hostages for Palestinian prisoners.

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"This is truly a decisive moment," he said. "Hamas says it wants a ceasefire. This deal is an opportunity to prove whether they really mean it."

The ceasefire, he added, would allow more humanitarian aid to reach the beleaguered territory, with "600 trucks carrying aid into Gaza every single day".

The second phase would see all remaining living hostages returned, including male soldiers. The ceasefire would then become "the cessation of hostilities, permanently."

Among those who have urged Hamas to agree to the proposal was UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron, who said on X that the group "must accept this deal so we can see a stop in the fighting".

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"We’ve long argued a stop in the fighting can be turned into a permanent peace if we are all prepared to take the right steps," Lord Cameron added. "Let’s seize this moment and bring this conflict to an end."

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres also welcomed the development in a post to X, formerly known as Twitter. He said the world had "witnessed too much suffering [and] destruction in Gaza" and said it was "time to stop".

"I welcome [President] Biden’s initiative [and] encourage all parties to seize this opportunity for a ceasefire, release of all hostages, guaranteed unhindered humanitarian access [and] ultimately a durable peace in the Middle East," he added.

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In his speech, Mr Biden acknowledged that negotiations between phases one and two would be difficult.

As recently as a few days ago, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was letting it be known that he was implacably opposed to agreeing to end the war as part of a ceasefire deal - making Mr Biden's reference to the war's end particularly significant.


READ MORE........ 

Following the Mediterranean Diet May Help Women Live Longer

 

Following the Mediterranean Diet May Help Women Live Longer



.In a study involving over 25,000 female participants, researchers found that those who adhered more strictly to the Mediterranean diet were nearly 25% less likely to die from all causes, cancer, or heart disease.( )

The Mediterranean diet, which includes seafood, fruits and vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts, seeds, and olive oil, is well-known for its beneficial effects on health and wellbeing. Research suggests that following this diet plan can reduce the risk of heart disease, metabolic diseases, and cancer.

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Scientists believe that most of these health benefits are due to the diet's anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, as well as its potential to help manage weight and prevent diabetes.

Now, a new study suggests that this diet inspired by the cuisines of regions around the Mediterranean Sea may help women reduce the chance of dying from cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and other causes.

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The research, published on May 31 in JAMA Network Open, examined the food intake and biomarkers of 25,315 female healthcare professionals in the United States involved in the Women's Health Study from April 1993 to January 1996.

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The researchers collected baseline data on 33 blood biomarkers, including lipoprotein, inflammation, insulin resistance, and metabolism measurements. They also gathered dietary information from food-frequency questionnaires and calculated the participants' Mediterranean diet scores, ranging from zero to nine, with nine reflecting the highest adherence.

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During a 25-year follow-up, the scientists tracked health outcomes and deaths among the participants.

READ MORE......... 


GB energy firm would secure future jobs, says Labour

 

GB energy firm would secure future jobs, says Labour



Labour’s leader says his party’s green energy plans will ensure the UK’s transition away from oil and gas does not repeat mistakes from the phase-out of coal.( )

The party has been accused of putting jobs at risk by vowing not to issue any new oil and gas licences if it wins power at July’s general election.

The SNP says the proposals, along with Labour's plan to hike taxes on firms' profits, would put thousands of Scottish jobs at risk.

But Sir Keir Starmer argued his party's plans for a new green investment firm would safeguard replacement jobs for generations to come.

Labour wants to set up a new public company, branded Great British Energy, to be headquartered in Scotland.( )

It would not generate energy itself, but would invest public money in projects like offshore wind farms and solar panels - which the party says would help secure domestic supplies and cut bills for consumers.

Labour wants to hand the company £8.3bn over the next five years for investments, funded by a windfall tax on the profits of oil and gas companies.( )

The government already has such a tax, recently extended until 2029, but Labour would charge a higher rate and close some tax allowances for investment.

The party has said initial investments would focus on wind and solar projects, with new technologies such as floating offshore wind, hydrogen and carbon capture and storage also eligible for funding.

It hopes that each pound of public investment would trigger a further £3 in private-sector funding for projects.( )

At the same time, Labour says it would not issue new licences for oil and gas projects, which are largely based in Scotland.

It has specified that it would honour existing licences, but the plan has prompted warnings from the SNP, as well as unions, that jobs would be put at risk.( )

The SNP has also attacked Labour's plans to get existing nuclear plans in England over the line, adding it would be done using "Scotland's energy wealth".

READ MORE........ 


Brazil withdraws ambassador from Israel in protest of massacre in Gaza

 

Brazil withdraws ambassador from Israel in protest of massacre in Gaza



Brazilian President Lula da Silva has withdrawn the ambassador from Israel over allegations of genocide in Gaza. The country has been strongly criticizing the Israeli genocide in the Gaza Strip for a long time. There has been tension between the two countries for several months. Brazil decided to withdraw the ambassador amid such tension.( )

The Brazilian government issued an official gazette on Wednesday. However, there was no immediate response from Israel.

Lula is a big critic of Israeli genocide in Gaza. Earlier this year, he compared the Israeli attack to the Holocaust. After his comments, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz summoned the Brazilian ambassador to the National Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem to publicly reprimand him. In addition, Lula was declared uninvited in Israel.( )

An official of Brazil's foreign ministry said the action was taken because of insulting their country's ambassador. He said this on condition of anonymity even though he is aware of this. Because he is not allowed to speak to the media.( )

On October 7, Hamas entered southern Israel and carried out an unprecedented attack, killing 1,200 Israelis and arresting nearly 250 Israelis and foreigners. Since that day, Israel has been indiscriminately bombing Gaza after declaring war on Hamas. Already, more than 36 thousand Palestinians have been killed by Israel's attack in this small valley. Most of the dead are women and children.( )

READ MORE......... 

WOLVES Timberwolves fall apart in Game 5 as season ends with 124-103 loss to Dallas


Timberwolves fall apart in Game 5 as season ends with 124-103 loss to Dallas


The Timberwolves season is over after a disappointing loss to the Mavericks. Staff writer Chris Hine provided this live report:( )

10:00 p.m.: Wolves season ends with xx-xx loss to Mavericks in Game 5

Even when the Timberwolves were down 3-0 to the Mavericks, Anthony Edwards was in the team's locker room in Dallas saying he still felt like the Wolves were the better team.

What happened Thursday night ended any idea of that being true, as the Mavericks made quick and lethal work of the Wolves and ended their season with a 124-103 win to clinch the Western Conference finals 4-1.( )

The Wolves experienced all kinds of heartbreak in this series; Dallas star Luka Doncic quickly ripped it apart in Game 2 with a game-winning three-pointer. On Thursday, Doncic and company stomped it into oblivion from the opening minutes when he began the game with 20 first-quarter points.

A playoff ride that featured plenty of highs — sweeping Phoenix and a Game 7 comeback against the defending champion Nuggets — deserved a better ending than what the Wolves gave in Game 5. But any time an exciting ride ends, there's inevitable letdown after the adrenaline rush drips out.( )

The Wolves made their bed to make Game 5 possible earlier in the series, when they couldn't win one of the first two games at home. Their biggest regret of the postseason will be how they performed in front of their home crowd. They were just 3-5 at Target Center in the postseason. They shot just 43% while Dallas shot 55%.( )

The Mavericks did to the Wolves what the Wolves did to the Nuggets in Game 6 in the only Wolves home win of the final two rounds — completely took the life out of them.

READ MORE........ 

Amal Clooney, the ICC’s shame and the real threat to Israel

 

Amal Clooney, the ICC’s shame and the real threat to Israel
When the International Criminal Court needed a top adviser to justify an appalling arrest warrant for Bibi Netanyahu, its members turned to Amal Clooney.The ultra-liberal British human rights lawyer – and the wife of George Clooney – was happy to comply. In a statement referring to "Palestine," she said both Netanyahu and Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar are guilty of war crimes. 


Think about that for a moment.

Hamas murders civilians deliberately, as we saw with the Oct. 7 massacre that started this war, the largest one-day death toll since the Holocaust. Israel at least tries to minimize civilian casualties with warnings and leaflets.Now critics can argue that Israel has used excessive force, that it’s created a humanitarian crisis and famine in Gaza, but to compare it to a terrorist organization is a "travesty of justice" and "disgrace," as Bibi Netanyahu says. "This is like creating a moral equivalence after September 11th between President Bush and Osama bin Laden, or during World War II between FDR and Hitler." 

Amal Clooney was among the international legal experts who recommended an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

READ MORE........ 

France's Macron to visit riot-scarred New Caledonia

 

France's Macron to visit riot-scarred New Caledonia


French President Emmanuel Macron will visit riot-hit New Caledonia, Paris said Tuesday (May 21). The Pacific territory of 270,000 people has been in turmoil since May 13, when violence erupted over French plans to impose new voting rules that would give tens of thousands of non-indigenous residents voting rights.

Almost 2 months after it destroyed Baltimore’s Key Bridge, the Dali cargo ship has been moved

 

Almost 2 months after it destroyed Baltimore’s Key Bridge, the Dali cargo ship has been moved

After 55 days stuck in the Patapsco River, the Dali cargo ship was hauled away from the site of its catastrophic crash into the Francis Scott Key Bridge – a crucial step toward fully reopening the busy Port of Baltimore.Several tugboats started pulling the 106,000-ton vessel at around 7 a.m. Monday, officials said. The ship traveled about 1 mph to the Seagirt Marine Terminal in Baltimore.Federal authorities are still investigating why the cargo ship lost power, veered off course and smashed into the Key Bridge on March 26 – killing six construction workers.

But the Dali’s move from scene of destruction means authorities will soon be able to open more channels to and from the Port of Baltimore – a critical hub for commerce, especially for the sugar and automotive industries nationwide.We’ve been ahead of schedule with getting our channels open,” US Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Kate Newkirk told CNN affiliate WBAL over the weekend.We plan to open a 400-foot by 50-foot channel (Monday) and, hopefully in the next week or so, we’ll be at that 700-foot channel, which is our goal.”Maryland Gov. Wes Moore said he expects the main federal channel that had been clogged by wreckage to reopen by the end of this month.

“I’m proud that we’re on track,” Moore told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday. “By the end of May, we’ll have that federal channel reopened.”

Assange wins right to challenge US extradition

 

Assange wins right to challenge US extradition

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange can bring a new appeal against extradition to the US, the High Court has ruled.

He was granted permission to appeal against the order that he be sent to the US to stand trial for leaking military secrets, which prosecutors say endangered lives.

The decision means Mr Assange will be able to challenge US assurances over how his prospective trial would be conducted and whether his right to free speech would be infringed.

Mr Assange’s lawyers hugged each other in court after the ruling.

They have argued that the case against him is politically motivated.

In a short ruling this morning, two senior judges granted him permission to appeal against an earlier order, ruling that he needs to be given a full appeal in the UK.Mr Assange, who is currently in Belmarsh Prison, will now have a number of months to prepare his appeal which will concern whether or not the US courts will protect his right to free speech as an Australian citizen.

He argues that his disclosures in 2010 revealed war crimes by the US.

Supporters of Mr Assange cheered as news of the decision filtered out of the court room.

It means he will remain in the UK for now.

Earlier on Monday, the 52-year-old’s wife Stella Assange told the BBC that it would be a "decisive" day in the protracted legal battle. Ms Assange added that she would "fight on until Julian is free", whatever the judges ruled.

Had the court ruled in the US's favour, Mr Assange would have exhausted all legal avenues in the UK.

He has resisted extradition from the UK for more than a decade after his Wikileaks website published thousands of confidential US documents in 2010 and 2011.

The US Department of Justice described the leaks as "one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States".

The files suggested the US military had killed civilians in unreported incidents during the war in Afghanistan.

US authorities say Mr Assange endangered lives by failing to redact the names of intelligence operatives in the documents, but his lawyers have argued that the case is a politically motivated form of "state retaliation".

Julian Assange can appeal extradition to the US, UK court rules

 

Julian Assange can appeal extradition to the US, UK court rules

Julian Assange has been granted the right to appeal his extradition to the United States, following a recent ruling by the UK High Court. The court decided that Assange can continue his legal battle unless the US provides assurances within three weeks that he will not face the death penalty and that he can rely on the First Amendment protections of free speech. If these assurances are not given, Assange will be allowed to appeal without further hearings.

Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, faces 18 charges in the US, including 17 under the Espionage Act, related to the publication of classified documents. These documents included diplomatic cables and military files, which the US government claims endangered lives and threatened national security. His legal team argues that the prosecution is politically motivated and that his actions were part of journalistic practice.

The court's ruling is seen as a temporary reprieve, with further legal proceedings scheduled for May 20.A UK court has ruled that Julian Assange can appeal the decision to extradite him to the United States. This ruling requires the US to provide further assurances within three weeks that Assange would not face the death penalty and would receive the same First Amendment protections as a US citizen. If these assurances are provided, a further hearing will be held on May 20 to decide on the appeal.

The court rejected other grounds for appeal, such as the claim that the extradition is politically motivated, but recognized the potential threats to Assange's free speech and his rights as a non-US citizen. This decision continues the long-running legal battle over Assange's extradition, with Assange remaining in London's Belmarsh Prison.Julian Assange's appeal against extradition to the United States is conditional on the US providing assurances within three weeks regarding his treatment. Specifically, the US must guarantee that Assange will not face the death penalty, that he will be afforded the same First Amendment protections as a US citizen, and that his trial will not be prejudiced by his nationality. This ruling by the UK High Court comes after Assange's legal team argued that his prosecution is politically motivated and that he would not receive a fair trial in the US.

Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, faces 18 charges in the US, including 17 under the Espionage Act, related to the publication of classified military and diplomatic documents in 2010. These documents, provided by former US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning, included information on US military operations and diplomatic communications.

The UK court's decision also underscores ongoing concerns about Assange's health, with his wife, Stella Assange, highlighting his deteriorating condition due to prolonged confinement. Assange has been held in Belmarsh Prison since his arrest in 2019, following his removal from the Ecuadorian Embassy where he had sought asylum for seven years.

If the US meets the court's conditions, a further hearing is scheduled for May 20, delaying any immediate extradition. Should Assange's appeal ultimately fail, he may still seek recourse through the European courts.