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Protesters Reunite With Man Who Sheltered Them From Arrest at Black Lives Matter Protest – NBC4 Washington

It was a year ago when Rahul Dubey opened his door on Swann Street to Garrett Reaves, Jorge Fuentes and around 60 people, all strangers, while they were protesting against police brutality and systemic racism.

Tuesday they reunited.

Weve been a collective since June 1 last year, marking our one year anniversary today, Dubey said.

A News4 viewer shared video of crowds trying to avoid police officers who were enforcing a 6 p.m. curfew on that day.

They started moving in, beating people with clubs, pepper spraying, Reaves recalled. And [Dubey] was one of the few people on the street that opened his door.

One demonstrator shot another video showing protesters coughing from mace they said police were spraying.

Protesters waited inside Dubeys house overnight, avoiding arrest and finally walking out at 6 a.m. once the curfew was lifted.

Rahul helped us that night by opening his door and allowing us to come together for whats right, Reaves said.

Today marks one year since a peaceful protest at Lafayette Square ended with law enforcement using tear gas to clear protesters. Later, President Trump would pose for a photo with a Bible outside St. John's Church. News4's Cory Smith has more.

Police made dozens of arrests that night. Former D.C. Police Chief Peter Newsham denied the alleged police brutality.

I saw absolute terror and atrocities raining down upon them as well as others on Swann Street, Dubey said.

They share in the struggle to make sure people understand that Black Lives Matter in hopes of having equality for all and bringing an end to racism in America.

[Reuniting with Reeves and Fuentes is] an honor. I feel a lot of love, Dubey said. The struggle continues on, and we work together.

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Protesters Reunite With Man Who Sheltered Them From Arrest at Black Lives Matter Protest - NBC4 Washington

Opinion: Black lives matter now and forever – Houston Chronicle

Regarding As 1-year anniversary of death nears, Third Ward park named after George Floyd, (May 23): I agree 100 percent with this article and the honoring of George Floyd. Hopefully his death will help our country trend in a better direction. We should not fear the police. They are here to protect us. The park should remain as a symbol of how we are willing to fight for justice for Black lives now and forever.

Steven Shields, Houston

Party of distraction

Regarding Majority in GOP ready to move on from riot, (A3, May 28): As I read the morning paper it seems to me that Republicans in Texas and nationally are sharpening their skills as the party of distraction. In Texas the party is embroiled in fights over legalizing unlicensed gun carry and keeping transgender women students from participating in sports. Meanwhile the real business of the state goes by the wayside. The Republican leadership in Congress plays down the importance of establishing a commission to discover the leaders of the lawless mob that invaded the United States Capitol killing a Capitol policeman and maiming others. But neither Sens. Ted Cruz nor John Cornyn seem capable of admitting the seriousness of the events of Jan. 6 nor the truth of what my eyes saw captured on camera. My only recourse was my vote but now they are attempting to even take away or limit that right.

Jere Pfister, Houston

Protecting liberty

Regarding Abbott bans mask rules, (A1, May 19): Even though fully vaccinated, I will continue to wear a mask in public buildings because I believe in science and have a genuine desire to help my family and my community. Even though I could go without a mask, I see the value in protecting those around me (who either cannot be vaccinated yet or are immunocompromised) from any airborne contagion. Many of us have grandchildren who are too young to be vaccinated. Many of us have elderly parents who even though vaccinated have benefited from a flu-free year. Many of us have family members who have serious diseases and would be endangered even catching a cold. Many of us go to stores and confront workers who must interact with hundreds of people a day. By making this very small sacrifice we are protecting the liberties of others, in other words, the liberty of those other people to engage in the world around them and stay healthy.

Kitty Kenyon, Katy

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Opinion: Black lives matter now and forever - Houston Chronicle

Park City mayor, in tense moment, cuts off activist as Black Lives Matter mural returns to forefront – The Park Record

Angela Moschetta in May was one of the Parkites in attendance online as Mayor Andy Beerman and the Park City Council met in a two-day retreat, an opportunity for the elected officials to talk broadly about key issues without the pressure of a typical meeting when votes must be cast.

The mayor and City Council addressed the overarching issues confronting the community, including the ideal of social equity. It is a priority for City Hall and designed to ensure the diverse tapestry of the communitys population has an opportunity to thrive.

The discussion eventually moved to comments about a series of giant murals with social justice themes that were put on the Main Street asphalt last summer, including one with a Black Lives Matter message. The murals quickly became polarizing and were vandalized shortly after they were made. The works and the vandalism spurred widespread discussion about race in the community that has stretched for nearly a year. There were also questions at the time about the City Hall process that led to the creation of the murals and whether the project was properly publicized prior to the works appearing.

The elected officials at the retreat spoke about the topic, but Moschetta provided notable input as well. She was especially direct as she addressed the mayor and City Council, indicating that Black people were not involved in the planning of the murals. She said the artist who created the Black Lives Matter mural is not Black.

You have chosen to not involve these people. You have chosen to make decisions as white people, to turn to other white people. Anybody with any kind of curatorial experience would have known what was going on that street, would have known about the potential political implications, Moschetta said during the retreat.

She added that City Hall did not involve any of these people in the discussion before that you could have and that the Park City Police Department could have been alerted to the murals prior to their creation.

Moschetta also mentioned two members of the City Council by name Tim Henney and Max Doilney as she spoke about the controversy. The mayor intervened after Moschetta mentioned Doilney by name, abruptly stopping her comments.

Hey, Angela, Angela, Angela, were not going to tolerate personal attacks here, so if you want to keep it broad level, youre welcome to, Beerman told her.

Moschetta responded by saying she was addressing what she saw as a lack of process regarding the murals. Beerman then ended her comments.

Angela, Im sorry, I asked you not to be personal, you continue it. Were cutting you off, he said.

Moschetta in recent years has become an activist who has addressed topics like the trademark controversy centered on the name Park City, the Treasure dispute and City Halls plans to develop an arts and culture district. She has both praised and criticized the municipal government. She is seen as the leader of a group known as Future Park City. Moschetta is a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement.

The tense moment between Moschetta and the mayor that ended with Beerman stopping her comments highlighted the contentiousness of the topic of social equity in a community that is largely white with Latinos being the only racial minority inside Park City in any significant number. It also showed there is lingering controversy regarding the murals months after time, traffic and the elements left the works unintelligible.

Beerman provided a prepared statement regarding the matter in response to a Park Record inquiry.

Public input is always welcome and encouraged, but it is expected to be civil and topical, he said. Recently one of our residents was muted after making personal attacks and disrupting an otherwise constructive discussion. She was given a chance to re-frame her statements but chose not to, so we moved forward with the meeting. Following the discussion, all of Council showed their support for my decision.

In a later interview, Moschetta said it is concerning that, according to her, Park City leaders have recently attempted to discredit, dismiss and undermine public comment and dissenting opinions.

Its the opposite of democracy, Moschetta said.

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Park City mayor, in tense moment, cuts off activist as Black Lives Matter mural returns to forefront - The Park Record

Homan rips ‘pure ignorance’ of Biden admin on border crisis: ‘All they have to do’ is reverse policies – Fox News

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to travel to Costa Rica in a push to stem the prolonged migrant crisis, as former acting ICE director Tom Homan said on Tuesday that the amount of illegal border crossings is "unprecedented."

BLINKEN VISITS CENTRAL AMERICA AS PROLONGED MIGRANT CRISIS RAMPS UP PRESSURE ON BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION

TOM HOMAN: It leaves us in a really bad spot. The number of crossers at the border, especially children that come across the border in the last few months, is the most we've ever seen in the history of the United States Border Patrol. Illegal entries on the border are unprecedented. At the same time, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, your interior immigration enforcement, had the lowest levels of removals.

And that's not by accident. As I said many times, its by design. As far as Antony Blinken going to Central America, its a waste of time. Its pure ignorance, because all they've got to do is reverse what they're doing. Go back to the Trump policies.

Their policies are driving this surge at the border. Even the president of Mexico said that. When you say you're going to open your border up, you're not going to detain, youre going to put a moratorium on deportations, you're going to reward amnesty and DACA and at the same time offer free health care. That's what's causing this crisis. It's the Biden administration's policies and that's clear.

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Homan rips 'pure ignorance' of Biden admin on border crisis: 'All they have to do' is reverse policies - Fox News

Second wave of Covid-19 has left migrant workers in India with no savings and few job opportunities – Scroll.in

Sudhir Paswan, 29, is back to square one in his village in Bihars Muzaffarpur district, counting his losses. It has been more than a week since he returned, after failing to secure a job in Delhi.

A labourer who loaded and unloaded goods in Delhis Okhla Industrial Area, he would earn between Rs 200 and Rs 700 a day. Since the lockdown, there was no work and access to food and essentials became difficult. I had to leave the city, he said. Over 8,00,000 migrants left Indias capital, for instance, for their hometowns in 2021. Paswan is just one of them.

Jobs have been hit harder since the lockdowns of 2021, put in place to control the second wave of Covid-19. May has shown double-digit unemployment figures, said Mahesh Vyas, chief executive officer of Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, a think-tank.

More than 97% of Indias population became poorer compared to where they were in terms of income, he said. Its effect on the informal sector, which had barely recovered from the effect of the first lockdown in 2020, has been debilitating.

Paswan returned home with his wife and their ailing three-year-old son, whose treatment at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences they had to discontinue midway. They had to borrow money from family and friends for their train journey.

Like Paswan, Rabiya (she uses one name), a 35-year-old single mother of three from Kanpur, who has been working in Gurugram, is struggling to make ends meet. She had been earning Rs 7,000 at a facility manufacturing motorcycle parts when work came to a halt with the April 2021 lockdown. She now gets work only if there is a need to clean machine parts at the facility.

Besides job precarity, the migrant workforce is facing another grim reality hunger. Rabiyas ration card to access subsidised foodgrains has not been active since she moved from Uttar Pradesh to the National Capital Region nearly three years ago. I have no family support and need rations to feed my children. It is becoming difficult to get by, she said.

None of the migrant workers IndiaSpend spoke to had ration cards with them their cards were with their families in their villages or hometowns. I left the card with my parents who stay in the village, said Gobardhan Adivasi, a mason from Tikamgrah in Madhya Pradesh, who works in Faridabad. By the time we finish work in the evening, we have to buy dry rations in black because of the lockdown. His contractor owed him money for three days work, he complained.

Every state in India has announced mini-lockdowns or extended them to curb the rise of record infections in the country. The current lockdowns have been tougher for migrant workers compared to last years all-India lockdown, workers in Delhi-NCR told IndiaSpend months of unemployment in 2020 had left them with little or no savings, and now jobs are scarce and living costs have rocketed.

The number of Indians reporting less than the national floor-level minimum wage of Rs 375 increased by 23 crore due to the pandemic. The Stranded Workers Action Network, with a presence across the country, has been running a helpline to support stranded migrants since March 2020.

Nearly 58% of the roughly 5,000 workers who called the helpline, for whom data were available, said their families had less than two days of ration left. More than half said they had less than Rs 100 in their pockets, according to the networks analysis.

As India reports a record number of Covid-19 cases and deaths, the migrant crisis has continued. The story is the same across the country of workers struggling to return to their home states, their inability to access adequate and often basic food essentials in cities where they work and coping with a fall in income, activists and researchers told IndiaSpend.

I am trying to get work, but there are no jobs, said Rakesh (he uses one name), 29, a migrant from Bihar who has been a construction worker in Delhi. Before the lockdown, he would earn Rs 350 a day. Job losses and the struggle to recover them were more for younger workers, and women, IndiaSpend reported in January.

Although employment rates recovered, the quality of employment deteriorated, with individuals moving into less secure self-employment in agriculture, construction and small-scale trade, the report had noted.

Rakesh rents a room for Rs 3,200 a month for his family of four. NGOs have been helping him buy food supplies. But the situation is not tenable. I did not go back during the national lockdown last year because I had some savings. This time when I want to go back home, I do not have any money to buy train tickets.

Migrant workers have been left to fend for themselves more during this lockdown than last year, Shreya Ghosh, an activist with the pan-India Migrant Workers Solidarity Network, told IndiaSpend. Unlike last year when there were trains and relief measures, workers seem to be left on their own despite Supreme Court orders to ensure support for them, she added.

Last time there were Shramik trains, but this time there is nothing of that nature, said Benoy Peter, executive director of Centre for Migration and Inclusive Development, a Kerala-based non-profit. Many migrants went back with their families but returned alone because of the fear of disease and lack of relief measures.

On May 20, 93% of 221 workers in NCR who called Stranded Workers Action Networks helpline (1,260 migrants and families) reported that both daily and contractual work has stopped due to locally declared lockdowns, 59% of workers said they had not received their full wages for the previous month and only 9% had received any money from their employer since the work had stopped.

Indias labour force participation that is, the number of people working or looking for employment shrank by 11 lakh in April to 42.46 crore compared to 42.58 crore in March, according to a May 10 CMIE report. In spite of this smaller labour force looking for employment, a greater proportion failed to find employment [in these two months], it said. The unemployment rate increased by 1.5 percentage points to 8% over the month in April, said the report.

With lesser work available since the national lockdown, workers savings have been depleted, said Ghosh. They were paying back debt from the last lockdown, which also included a backlog of rent.

The impact of the second wave is likely to be more serious because people have not yet recovered from the first waves impact, scholars at the Centre for Sustainable Employment believe. This is cause for concern. The Indian middle class was estimated to have shrunk by 3.2 crore in 2020 as a consequence of the pandemic-related economic slowdown, a Pew Research Center analysis of March had found.

Unfortunately, its lessons have not been learnt, Rajendran Narayanan, economist, Azim Premji University told IndiaSpend, recalling the widespread distress witnessed due to the national lockdown. Government accountability is central for a rights-based approach to work, and shying away due to lack of administrative capacity is at odds with the stated objective of developing a rights-based approach, he added.

Last year we got some cash and rations from some NGOs and friends, said Paswan. But this time I could not get any support from them or from the government. People who hold permanent jobs can still earn even if there is a lockdown, but a daily wage earner like him cannot, he added.

Migrant welfare groups such as Stranded Workers Action Network and Migrant Workers Solidarity Network had written to the Centre and the state governments warning of food insecurity and demanding that they ensure rations for migrants including those who do not have public distribution system cards or ration cards, as per May 13 and May 24 Supreme Court orders. The Court asked states to file affidavits, indicating the mechanism by which the dry rations should be distributed to those migrant workers, who do not possess a ration card.

Migrant Workers Solidarity Network has received requests from more than 4,600 workers and their families asking for immediate and urgent supply of rations, according to its May 24 letter to the Delhi government. For nearly one-and-a-half months, no measures have been taken to address the migrant crisis, it added.

Both Rabiya of Gururgram and Rakesh of Delhi are managing with a bare minimum of food. These days, we eat aloo bhujiya or some potato dish or the other. We used to give our infant Cerelac, but we now just about manage to give him some milk, Rakesh said. Rabiya spends Rs 2,000 on rent and Rs 3,000 on food. She has debts to pay.

In May 2020, the Centre announced a Rs 1.7-lakh-crore Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana relief package for the poor. This included free rations for beneficiaries under the National Food Security Act, which was extended until November. On April 23, the Centre approved an allocation of additional foodgrain for beneficiaries under the National Food Security Act for May and June.

The first wave saw some relief measures from the central government in the form of Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana, which was a combination of provisions, subsidies, and cash transfers, said Chitra Rawat, research assistant at India Migration Now. The second wave, on the other hand, has not seen targeted interventions towards migrant workers.

On May 18, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal announced that rations would be distributed even without ration cards. Although the government announced guidelines for the distribution of rations for those without cards, it did not announce when the distribution would start.

The initial procurement and allocation will be made for 2,00,000 beneficiaries, it said. The guideline has estimated a procurement for upto 20 lakh probable beneficiaries. In 2020, nearly 70 lakh non-PDS beneficiaries were given free rations by the state government following the national lockdown.

We do not know how that will be allocated, it seems to be on a first-come-first-serve basis, said Ghosh of Migrant Workers Solidarity Network. There is apprehension over the rollout since the total number of non-ration cardholders in Delhi is clearly way higher by the governments own estimates, she added.

Government policies on migration will only make a difference if implemented on the ground, said Peter of Centre for Migration and Inclusive Development, adding that NITI Aayogs draft national policy on migrant workers is still not in the public domain.

In May 2020, the Centre had announced that it would achieve 100% national portability of the public distribution system by March. But the benefits of national portability are likely to be small. Most people want their food rations where they live, and not far away, said Jean Dreze, economist and social activist, in June 2020. Even migrant workers will generally prefer that their ration cards be used by their families at home rather than for themselves.

Portability is a problem, said Seema Mundoli, a Stranded Workers Action Network volunteer in Karnataka. When they approach a PDS shop, they are unable to access rations. Many migrant workers are single men and their names may be on their parents cards, she added. The Karnataka government announced a Rs 1,250-crore relief package in May for farmers, workers from the unorganised sector, auto and cab drivers and street vendors, and is considering a second one to help the unorganised sector.

It is now certain that the health crisis will be followed by a livelihood crisis, especially for migrant workers, said Rawat.

The Right to Food campaign had demanded an immediate universalisation of the PDS of foodgrains, distribution of additional 5 kg of foodgrains per person, 1.5 kg of pulses and 800 gm cooking oil under the PDS for at least six months. Narayanan agreed that the PDS must be universalised. A wage compensation of Rs 7,000 per month for four months for every poor household must be immediately announced, he added.

This article first appeared on IndiaSpend, a data-driven and public-interest journalism non-profit.

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Second wave of Covid-19 has left migrant workers in India with no savings and few job opportunities - Scroll.in