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NCDC: Fourth wave of Covid-19 in Libya is waning – The Libya Observer

The fourth wave of Covid-19 in Libya is ebbing, the Director of the National Centre for Disease Control, Haider Al-Sayeh, has confirmed, indicating that it was less damaging than the third wave.

The NCDC head lauded all who worked to confront the pandemic, saying they had a significant role in the receding of this wave.

"Some of them returned to work and ended their sit-in in response to the centre's call, but they are now waiting for their rewards and rights that we failed to pay."

According to Al-Sayeh, the broadly expanded Covid-19 vaccinations, which continued over the past year, had also led to the improvement of the epidemiological situation, noting that easing or continuing with some precautionary measures depends on the progress of the vaccination process.

As Ramadan approaches, Al-Sayeh said they are considering easing measures on Mosques during this holy month depending on the stability of the epidemiological situation and the progress of the vaccination campaigns.

He pointed out that schools may return to giving daily classes starting next semester.

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NCDC: Fourth wave of Covid-19 in Libya is waning - The Libya Observer

Three Under Construction "Urgent" Power Plants in Libya to be Operational by Q3 2022 – Construction Review

Led by Caretaker Prime Minister Abd Alhamid Aldabaiba, the current government of National Unity pledged that the construction of three urgent power plants in Libya is nearing completion.

Also Read:License Issued for Construction of Solar Power Plant in Ghadames, Libya

The projects in question, which are the Tripoli West gasoline power station, the Misrata power station, and the Tobruk gas power station, will be operational before the summer (which begins in July) when electricity demand is high according to Aldabaiba.

This move by Prime Minister Abd Alhamid Aldabaiba is reportedly intended to curb the North African countrys electricity problems.

Tripoli West gasoline power station

The gasoline power station, which will be located in Tripoli, is expected to have a power production capacity of 670 MW and an 87 percent completion rate. It is said that the project is currently being executed by two organizations, Siemens of Germany and ENKA of Turkey.

Misrata power station

Another of the three urgent power plants in Libya is the Misrata power station project. It is defined as one of the Libyan governments revival of life initiatives to revitalize development projects in the nation.

Once finished, the Misrata power station is expected to have a production capacity of 640 MW. Its construction is being overseen by the General Electric Company and implemented by Siemens of Germany and ENKA of Turkey.

The projects current completion rate is 83 percent.

Tobruk gas power station

Tobruk power station is third on the list, with an 80 percent completion rate. Implemented by Metka, a Greek firm, the Tobruk power station is expected to have a production capacity of 740 MW, the most of the three urgent power plants, with the first of its four units anticipated to be functional before the summer peak period.

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Three Under Construction "Urgent" Power Plants in Libya to be Operational by Q3 2022 - Construction Review

Letters to the Editor: Feb. 26, 2022 – TCPalm

Treasure Coast Newspapers

I appreciated Dominic Calabro's guest column Citizens must have easy access to public notices on Feb. 17. I belong to many environmental organizations and as conservation chair of one and government affairs representative of another I need to be able to access information about plans and meetings of the city of Port St. Lucie, St. Lucie County, South Florida Water Management District, the Department of Environmental Protection and other agencies plans that might affect the environment, our drinking water, waterways, the air we breathe. Also, changes that will affect wildlife, businesses, tourism and even our economy due to their policies that affect our surroundings.

There is not enough time each day to go on each of these and other organizations' websites, but I can find out their plans by checking your newspaper's public notices. If this stops, we all may suffer from not knowing what special interests may have gotten our public officials to do without our being able to have input. Please contact your state representative and ask them to continue to provide these important notices in the newspaper.

Diane Goldberg, Port St. Lucie

The West Corridor of Vero Beach is not being served fairly by the Indian River County Commission. Dozens of separate communities were approved and developed without any overall plan that includes mixed zoning, retail and business properties, as well as homes. Then these communities were left with limited county services such as parks, recreation programs and office buildings. The goal should be to provide citizens with these amenities without having to drive downtown.

To my knowledge there are no parks or recreation programs west of 58th Avenue. Additionally, infrastructure is non-existent or in poor repair. Examples include the horrible and dangerous condition of the 12th Avenue roadway; lack of adequate lighting on 74th Avenue south of SR 60, particularly at the bridge crossing at 14th Lane; the dangerous intersection at 74th Avenue and 16th Street, and the general lack of sidewalks and bike lanes throughout the West Corridor.

So, whats the solution? Tens of thousands of citizens are living in the West Corridor. We need to make our voices heard by getting involved in the commissions work. Additionally, lets support the movement to single-member districts rejected recently by the commission so we will know whom to hold accountable. Our commission argued that this would lead to provincialism. Perhaps that would be a good result given that our current elected-at-large commissioners are not serving the entire county equally.

Betty Hearn Morrow, Vero Beach

I appreciated Cray Littles Jan. 5letter, in which, in the context of a discussion about democracy, he wrote: Admitting our failures is painful, and Human behavior is addicted to pain avoidance. It is true that acknowledging anything less than genius of our sacrosanct Founding Fathers isnt always easy. Is it possible that the conditions surrounding the establishing of our election processes were unique, and that the authors were not thinking 200 years into the future?

True confession No.1: I probably wasnt paying as much attention as I should have been during high school civics class. And true confession No. 2: At the 2000 George Bush/Al Gore recount, my heart was too heavy with losing to notice that, recount or not, there were still more votes for Al Gore on a national level than ever would have made a recount necessary.

I hereby penitently admit, it took me years to notice that the election did not always go to the candidate achieving the most votes nationally. Time may or may not heal all wounds, but it does have a way of bringing illumination. I now understand that the Electoral College, so ominously and suddenly a player on election night, has never once in its long archaic history actually overturned an election.

I have to say: It is ironic that the racial inequalities meant to be addressed by the tradition of winner-take-all states are now heightened by it. Every Vote Counts! minorities are urged. And, Voting Matters! From sea to shining sea, however, two recent elections have proven that not every vote may count. Democracy is a matter of luck. Officially, it is little more than a mirage.

Until Electoral College reform is confronted, a country governed by its people is an option higher than the moon.

Chris Lowery, Palm City

The Feb. 21 article about "Stand Your Ground" laws is very misleading. Most importantly, the SYG law did not even apply in the George Zimmerman prosecution. The SYG law applies if you exercise your right of self-defense in public and it gives the prosecution a heavier burden of proving that you could have avoided the use of deadly force.

In the Trayvon Martin case, at the time Zimmerman drew his gun, Martin had him pinned to the ground and was banging Zimmerman's head on the sidewalk, placing him in fear for his life. That's what the jury heard and why there was an acquittal. There was no issue of whether Zimmerman could have withdrawn and avoided the use of force. The fact that Zimmerman approached Martin before the two became engaged in a struggle is not relevant. The only thing that is relevant is the situation at the time Zimmerman drew his weapon.

Tom Morris, Jensen Beach

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Letters to the Editor: Feb. 26, 2022 - TCPalm

‘This is what makes America what it is’: educators taught to include Black history through the year – North Country Public Radio

Todd R. McAdam/Cortland Standard SUNY Cortland alumnus Aaron Bowen, left, and his sister, junior Jailah Bowen, pose for a video, pose for a digital video Thursday at an event to mark Black History Month. Black history, educators say, should be incorporated into everyday history lessons -- part of American history. And other Black studies should be pursued, too, including economics, theology, humanities and political science. Photo: Cortland Standard.

Mar 01, 2022

By VALERIE PUMA

Cortland Standard

The students in party dresses and semi-formal attire traded hugs, mugged for a video camera and prepared for a party. The group was Know Your Roots, and the event was for Black History Month but the celebration was for the future, not the past.

It starts here, said junior Jailah Bowen of Virginia, standing with her brother, Aaron Bowen, an alumnus who returned to SUNY Cortland for the event. It makes us stronger as a community. Theres knowledge behind this.

Nevermind Black History Month, established in 1976 to honor the contributions and sacrifices of Black people in making America, educators say. Nevermind little tidbits and educational units on the Underground Railroad, of Booker T. Washington, George Washington Carver and the assorted Black people who made U.S. history.

Black history should be taught year-round, they say. And not just as an isolated, segregated, topic, but integrated into the whole of American history. Beyond that, Professor Seth Asumah said, the studies should include political science, humanities, theology, economics even biology.

We have to think of all those aspects, Asumah said just before he joined the celebration.

In colleges in the greater Cortland area, educators are being trained to do just that.

Inclusive education

Asumah was born in Ghana and came to the United States to pursue his college education in the late 1970s. After earning two bachelor's degrees, a masters degree in public administration and a doctorate in government, Asumah became a professor at SUNY Cortland in 1989.

Now, as a distinguished teaching professor and chairman of the Africana studies department at SUNY Cortland, Asumah teaches political courses, many of which have a focus on multiculturalism, social change and the relationship between race and politics.

To do that, he and other professors teach using primary sources first-person or contemporary sources, like journals or newspaper clips showing history that might not be listed in a state- or school district-set curriculum.

We have to teach the experience of all people this is what we call inclusive education, Asumah said. To be able to acknowledge the history of not just race, but class, gender, people with disabilities and people from different regions and places. This is what makes America what it is.

Teaching teachers

Anna Burns Thomas, a professor of the foundations and social advocacy department at SUNY Cortland, said the profession of teaching remains predominantly white. To change that, Cortlands Urban Recruitment of Educators scholarship program is designed for students of color who are interested in becoming teachers.

There have been efforts over the past 25 years to try and increase the racial and gender and ethnic diversity of the teaching force, said Burns Thomas, the programs coordinator.

Working with these future teachers, Burns Thomas said she has realized how reading materials have become less Eurocentric over the years, and a wider variety of books for all ages showcases Black history.

Teachers can introduce their classrooms to not just the story of slavery and struggle, but the story of Black joy or Black excellence, Burns Thomas said. Thats one of the big focuses Ive seen shift over time when you think of Black history, there are many different Black experiences.

Seth Thompson, chief diversity officer for Tompkins Cortland Community College and a member of the Cortland Common Council, said its important for Black history and American history to be integrated as a shared story.

And not just about slavery, but our full story about how people of color and people who identify as white have worked to make this country what it is, Thompson said. There is a void within the curriculum.

Integrating history

Although some school districts do a fine job integrating truth into the curriculum, many textbooks leave out important parts of the histories of people of color, Thompson said.

Asumah recommends teaching Black history that took place in other areas, such as Mexico and Puerto Rico, as well as Black history dating before United States independence in 1776.

Burns Thomas suggests including Black history outside of the main inventors and big names that most curriculums already include.

Thompson wants students to learn more from primary sources, such as literature of the time, court documents and even current social media platforms to provide a perspective of Black history and culture.

Black history, Latinx history, native history our histories arent singular, Thompson said. For so long, textbooks in this country have been reproduced and updated minimally from a perspective of a time that had a very narrow lens of what history was and not what history is.

Being a teacher means learning more about history, the world and experiences beyond their own, Burns Thomas said.

Our future teachers know so much more than I did at their age, and I feel like social media is very educational to people who didnt grow up in a diverse environment learning about Black history, she said.

Young students who come into my classes are living history history is with us all the time, Asumah said. When I am teaching about the Black Lives Matter movement, I take them back to the liberation struggles of the 1960s, where we struggled for freedom, justice, equality and talked about the dispersion of power.

Not only in the past

The Black Lives Matter political and social movement aims to highlight racism, discrimination and inequality that Black people experience.

The movement began in July 2013 after the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the shooting death of Black teen Trayvon Martin. In the years following, the movement became nationally recognized for street demonstrations and protests against police brutality and violence against people of color.

We are fighting for their lives and the fight started way back in the Civil Rights Movement and even before that, Asumah said. This is a continuation of a foundation that was built to challenge America to do the right thing. For justice.

Celebrating Black history

Tompson said Black History Month carves out a time for recognition and reflection, but people should appreciate Black people and their history year-round.

Its one of those bittersweet opportunities for people that identify as African American because we are mutual partners with the building of America, Tompson said. The integration of history needs to start sooner than later within our textbooks.

When educational materials do not include different groups histories and experiences, it manifests a limited appreciation for those groups today, Thompson said.

To Asumah, Black History Month is an opportunity to acknowledge how unique Americas history is, and to celebrate African-Americans strength.

We are celebrating Black resiliency. Black accomplishments are also American accomplishments without Black history, America is not complete, Asumah said. You cannot take Black excellence or Black achievements out of the American society.

The future generation

Thompson said he believes the next generation has the tools to lead this country, starting in the classroom. Teachers can transform and redevelop lesson plans, possibly entire curriculums, to educate students about topics like Black history.

We are blessed at this point in time and in our lives to have access to an unimaginable number of reliable primary sources, Thompson said.

These first-person or contemporary accounts of history help students to dissect and analyze that piece of history, Thompson said. This could be a national newspapers account of events that took place in New York a century ago, or the original lyrics of the Star-Spangled Banner.

You have to meet students, and people, where they are. The key point is to learn, and to not be afraid of what youll find out, Thompson said. What you find out will help center you and guide you, and those are the things that guide our actions.

Its all about spreading awareness, Aaron Bowen said before joining his sister and friends for the party. Were better for knowing.

But it goes beyond history, Asumah said. Black studies include perspectives in a number of fields: political science, economics, performing arts, theology, history, humanities. Even biology should be studied, considered and taught from a Black perspective.

People dont get the story well, he said. We have to think of all these aspects. Its about bringing back Black excellence.

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'This is what makes America what it is': educators taught to include Black history through the year - North Country Public Radio

Biden risks progressives, Blacks with pivot to the center – Albuquerque Journal

DEVELOPING... Story will be updated as new information can be verified. Updated 4 times

WASHINGTON President Joe Biden is signaling an election year shift to the center, embracing a strategy he hopes will protect fragile Democratic majorities in Congress. But hes risking a revolt from key voices across his partys sprawling coalition.

In his first State of the Union address Tuesday night, the Democratic president embraced Republican calls to strengthen the nations southern border and barely mentioned climate change. He glossed over concerns about voting rights and spent little time heralding his historic decision to nominate the first Black woman to serve on the Supreme Court. On domestic issues, he was perhaps most blunt in disavowing the push from some Black Lives Matter activists to defund the police.

The calculated messages, threaded through one of the most important speeches of Bidens young presidency, marked a clear effort to reset the political climate for Democrats. Polls suggest the party is losing support from almost every demographic at the outset of the 2022 campaign. But Bidens effort to stabilize the party could alienate the coalition of Black people, young people, progressives and independents who delivered him the presidency in 2020 and will be needed again this year.

His address intensified a debate inside the party about how best to proceed this year, with many veteran lawmakers embracing Bidens tone while younger, more progressive critics on the left warned he wasnt connecting with the Democrats most loyal voters.

There was particular frustration with Bidens declaration that the nations police need more funding, seen by some as a tone-deaf overture to white voters at the expense of millions of Black Americans still waiting for the president to deliver promised policing reforms almost two years after George Floyds murder.

Our party often, we target the white moderate, we target the white independent. And I get it, right. Those are the swing voters and we want to get them. But we continue to underestimate Black and brown people, said Rep. Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y. I liked 95% of the speech, maybe even 97%, but he missed an opportunity to bring Black voters in more and voters of color in more.

Beyond Washington, Melina Abdullah, a grassroots director for Black Lives Matter, was more frank in her criticism. Slapping down those on the left wanting to defund the police, Biden three times called for funding as Democrats and Republicans gave him a standing ovation.

Its appalling that he would say it, that he would repeat it, and he would say it with such exuberance, Abdullah said, warning of dire political consequences. They think we dont have a choice. Maybe we wont vote for Republicans, but we will stay home. And thats something that Democrats cant afford to have happen.

For now, the White House is betting that Democrats have more to gain by siding with voters in the middle who are worried about the nations rising crime rates than with those focused on police brutality. And public polling indicates that a significant portion of voters of color do support increased funding for law enforcement.

The third-ranking House Democrat, Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus, defended Bidens reach for the center.

I think he knows what the country needs, and he laid out exactly what we need to do to bring this country back together, Clyburn said.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., praised Bidens explicit opposition to calls for defunding the police: I think he spoke for all of us, Hoyer said.

He was trying to dispel what is a false scenario that the Republicans have tried to create since a couple of our members out of 223 or 4 said they were for defunding the police, he added. Democrats are not for defunding the police.

But some of the most prominent progressives in Congress insisted Biden wasnt speaking for them when it comes to policing.

Im not going to change how I feel, Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., said Wednesday. Im not going to stop saying defund the police at all.

Only 34% of Americans say the things Biden has done in office are good for Americans, according to a February AP-NORC poll. Nearly as many 29% say hes been bad for Black Americans. Another 36% say hes been neither good nor bad.

Thats a decline from the first few months of his presidency, when 50% said in a poll in late April and early May that things he was doing were good for Black Americans.

As the midterm campaign begins, such tension within the Democratic Party is unlikely to subside. In a potential preview of whats to come, nine-term incumbent Texas Rep. Henry Cuellar failed to clear the 50% threshold in Tuesdays Democratic primary and will face progressive challenger Jessica Cisneros in a runoff election in May.

Despite an energized progressive wing, Democratic pollster Jeff Pollock suggested Bidens focus on the center is smart politics.

The data shows if there is softening in Bidens numbers, it is coming from the middle: centrist Republicans, centrist Democrats, independents who are in the middle, he said. And theyre also the ones who happen to swing the elections, including the midterms.

If Joe Biden is aiming things at the center, Im all for it, Pollock added.

Even under the best of conditions, history suggests that Bidens party is likely to lose its House and Senate majorities come November. If the Democratic Party cannot unify its disparate factions, the losses could be staggering.

And even as the Democratic strategists applauded Biden, younger African Americans and progressive activists said his strategy left them feeling angry and alienated.

John Paul Mejia, a spokesman for the Sunrise Movement, a national youth organization focused on climate change, criticized Biden for largely ignoring that issue and other priorities for young people including student loan debt.

Biden needs to have some respect for the people and issues that got him into power, he said.

And like other activists, Paul Mejia said he was most disturbed by Bidens call to fund the police. He called it absolutely disgusting.

I understand the messaging tactic there, he said. But I dont think Biden should be stabbing the backs of loads of organizers and activists who participated in the uprisings over the summer and got him into office.

___

Peoples reported from New York. Associated Press writer Hannah Fingerhut contributed to this report.

___

This story was first published on March 2, 2022. It was updated on March 3, 2022, to correct the name of a national youth organization focused on climate change. It is the Sunrise Movement, not the Sunrise Foundation.

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Biden risks progressives, Blacks with pivot to the center - Albuquerque Journal