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Norway Registered Unemployment nsa registered at 4%, below expectations (4.2%) in April – FXStreet

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Norway Registered Unemployment nsa registered at 4%, below expectations (4.2%) in April - FXStreet

Sheep Breeders Round Table to take place in November – Agriland.co.uk

The Sheep Breeders Round Table is confirmed to take place between Monday 15, and Friday 19, November 2021.

The Sheep Breeders Round Table is an industry initiative, with collaboration from AHDB Beef and Lamb, AgriSearch, the National Sheep Association (NSA), Hybu Cig Cymru (HCC) and Quality Meat Scotland (QMS).

It is open to anyone with an interest in sheep production and always attracts a varied audience of farmers, breeders, researchers and vets.

While the country finds its way out of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Sheep Breeders Round Table committee has taken the decision to host the event as an online conference this year, so as not to restrict attendee numbers.

This provides an exciting opportunity to invite a wide and global audience to join in with the programme of activities organised.

The event is free of charge and links for registration can be found on the AHDB website.

The move from a face-to-face event to its virtual sphere this year, means that the programme will run over a week, opening with a lunchtime session on Monday, November 15, followed by four evening sessions, each hosted by a different levy board from the four UK nations.

AgriSearch will host the Northern Ireland session which will take place on Thursday, November 18 at 7:00p.m.

The NSA will conclude the event programme with a Friday lunchtime session.

The programme starts with a practical guide for all to explain how and why estimated breeding values (EBVs) can be used effectively within a commercial flock.

Each evening from 7:00p.m, levy boards will provide an update on major projects they are involved with.

Topics include breeding for maternal performance, the hill ram scheme, terminal sire breeding, and future proofing your sheep business.

The NSA conclude the week discussing the future of sheep breeding, using genetics to meet the requirements of farmers, society and policymakers.

A range of international speakers, breeders and commercial farmers will join each session to provide a view from overseas and an open and honest first-hand experience from pedigree breeders and commercial farmers involved in the various projects.

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Sheep Breeders Round Table to take place in November - Agriland.co.uk

Sheep-worrying campaign stepped up as farmer survey reveals alarming statistics on livestock worrying; National Sheep Association launches public…

Signage on farms helps raise awareness but is not always effective.

More than two-thirds of the UKs sheep farmers responding to a recent survey have experienced an increase in sheep worrying attacks by dogs during the past year.

The troubling statistic is part of a "concerning" set of findings released by the National Sheep Association (NSA) from its recent farmers survey assessing the incidence and impact of sheep worrying by dog attacks.

NSA received a record-breaking response for its 2021 survey specifically aimed at farmers who had experienced dog attacks in the past year. The increase in contributions indicates the scale of the serious problem.

On average, each respondent to the survey experienced seven cases of sheep worrying during the past year resulting in five sheep injured and two sheep killed per attack.

Estimated financial losses through incidents of sheep worrying of up to 50,000 were recorded with an average across all respondents of 1570. However, most respondents received no or very little compensation.

But in addition to the threat to animal welfare and the farmers income perhaps the most concerning finding to be taken from the survey is the effect the issue is having on the mental wellbeing of the countrys sheep farmers. Farmers completing the survey reported feelings of anxiety, anger, upset, stress and frustration as a result of sheep worrying by dog attacks with more than half recognising that this was causing a moderate to severe impact on their mental health.

NSA chief executive Phil Stocker says: NSAs own survey results combined with recently reported figures from industry partners both show a concerning increase in the number of sheep worrying by dogs cases during the past year.

"There is much evidence suggesting this is a result of the various periods of national lockdown that have been experienced as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic with dog ownership increasing and the general public enjoying more time in the countryside as one of the few outdoor pursuits still able to be enjoyed.

The issue is receiving more attention from the media but there is still much work to do to continue the education of the dog owning public to ensure the future safety and welfare of both farmers sheep flocks and pet owners much loved dogs and this needs to come from strengthened countryside use guidelines and stricter legislation.

The urgent need for a review of legislation surrounding the issue is highlighted in the survey.

Some 80 per cent of respondents agreed that the rest of the UK should follow the recent change in Scottish law that sees stricter enforcement including fines of up to 40,000 and/or 12 months imprisonment acting a stronger deterrent to dog owners responsible for allowing attacks to happen.

A full summary of NSAs survey results can be found on the NSA website at https://go.nationalsheep.org.uk/surveyresults.

The survey results have been shared as NSA launches its two-week long 2021 campaign #LeadOn aiming to increase awareness of the issue amongst the general dog owning public.

The sheep farming charity hopes the alarming survey results will help demonstrate the extent of the issue to the general public.

It is also working hard to raise understanding that any breed and temperament of dog can be a threat to sheep and therefore the only way to tackle the issue is to ensure dogs are kept on a lead whenever sheep could be nearby, even if they are out of sight.

Highland police issue warning to dog owners

'Horrific' injuries from dog attacks prompts new warning

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Sheep-worrying campaign stepped up as farmer survey reveals alarming statistics on livestock worrying; National Sheep Association launches public...

GOP Rep. Claims Trump Wing Is Pushing to Oust Cheney Because She Won’t ‘Lie’ The Madison Leader Gazette – The Madison Leader Gazette

The Guardian

When Mike Beck developed a rare form of Parkinsons US intelligence concluded he was the victim of a hi-tech weapon Havanna Syndrome illustrating the use of suspected micro/radio waves Composite: Guardian Design/Getty When the first reports surfaced of a mysterious disorder that was afflicting dozens of US diplomats in Cuba, Mike Becks reaction was one of recognition and relief. Beck, a retired National Security Agency counterintelligence officer, was at his home in Maryland, scrolling through the days news on his computer when he spotted the story, and remembers shouting out to his wife. I got excited because I thought: well, its coming out now that its not a mirage, Beck said. I felt bad for the victims but thought: Now Im no longer one of one. Im one of many. Beck had been forced into retirement in late 2016 by a rare early-onset, non-tremor form of Parkinsons disease, and he had evidence, supplied by the NSA and the CIA, that he could have been the victim of a deliberate attack from a microwave weapon. After years of lonely struggle, he now feels vindicated. Last December the National Academy of Sciences published a report finding that the scores of CIA and state department officials affected by Havana syndrome in Cuba, China and elsewhere, were most likely suffering the effects of directed, pulsed radio frequency energy. After years of playing down the reports and failing to provide proper medical care for the victims, Washington is now clearly alarmed at the implications of the attacks. The Democratic and Republican leadership on the Senate intelligence committee put out a bipartisan statement on Friday, saying: This pattern of attacking our fellow citizens serving our government appears to be increasing. The statement came the day after the White House said it was looking into unexplained health incidents after reports that two of its own officials had been targeted in the Washington area. The CIA and state department have launched taskforces to investigate and it was reported last week that the Pentagon had launched its own inquiry into suspected microwave attacks on US troops in the Middle East. Earlier this month, the senior director for the western hemisphere in the national security council, Juan Gonzalez, voiced concern over the lingering risk to US diplomats from microwave weapons in Cuba, in an interview with the CNN Spanish language service. The reality is that this has been an intelligence community issue for decades Mark Zaid But what is so striking about Becks case is that its origins were two decades earlier and that it produced official confirmation more than eight years ago that such weapons had been developed by Americas adversaries. That raises more questions about why the CIA and state department were so reluctant to believe their own officers could have been targeted by such weapons when cases appeared in Cuba and then China in 2018 and elsewhere around the world. The reality is that this has been an intelligence community issue for decades, said Mark Zaid, a lawyer representing both Beck and Havana Syndrome victims. An NSA statement declassified in 2014 for Becks work injury compensation case stated: The National Security Agency confirms that there is intelligence information from 2012 associating the hostile country to which Mr Beck traveled in the late 1990s, with a high powered microwave system weapon that may have the ability to weaken, intimidate or kill an enemy, over time, and without leaving evidence. The 2012 intelligence information indicated that this weapon is designed to bathe a targets living quarters in microwaves, causing numerous physical effects, including a damaged nervous system. Beck is still not allowed to name the hostile country he visited in 1996, but said he and a colleague, Charles Chuck Gubete, had gone to make sure a US diplomatic building under construction was not bugged. It was a sensitive assignment, Beck told the Guardian. So we knew what we were getting into from the standpoint of the hostile country being a critical threat environment. On arrival, he and Gubete were detained at the airport and then put up in adjoining rooms in a budget hotel after their release. On their second day on the project, they expanded their sweep to a neighbouring building and came across what he calls a technical threat to the equity we were there to protect. A worker looks at a huge concrete Cuban flag being built in front of the US embassy in Havana last month. Photograph: Yamil Lage/AFP/Getty Images They reported the device to their superiors and left it in place. The next day, they were passed a message from a local translator working with the Americans that the host country authorities, in Becks words, had seen what we did and that was not a good thing. The next day, Beck said: I woke up and I was really, really groggy. I was not able to wake up routinely. It was not a normal event. I had several cups of coffee and that didnt do a thing to get me going. The symptoms passed by the time Beck and Gubete returned to the US. But 10 years later, when Beck was in the UK, on secondment to General Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), Britains NSA counterpart, he came down suddenly with crippling symptoms. The right side of my body started freezing up. I was limping and I couldnt move my arm, he said. He was referred to a neurologist who diagnosed Parkinsons. At the time, Beck was 45. I thought this is not coincidental that were both presenting the same variant of Parkinsons at the same time Mike Beck Shortly afterwards, he was visiting NSA headquarters and happened to bump into Gubete. Beck was shocked by what he saw. He was walking like an old man, he recalled. He was slumped over and walking really awkwardly. I went up to him and said: Whats going on? Within a few days, Gubete, 55 at the time, was diagnosed with the same form of Parkinsons disease as Beck. Ive worked in counter-intelligence for the predominance of my career, Beck said. I thought this is not coincidental that were both presenting the same variant of Parkinsons at the same time. This is not happenstance. The cause of their shared plight was a total mystery to Beck until 2012 when he saw US intelligence communications about a microwave weapon with potentially debilitating neurological effects developed by the country he and Gubete visitedtogether. He was able to get part of that intelligence declassified for his labor department claim in 2014 but by then it was too late for Gubete. He had died at home, of a suspected heart attack the previous year. Mike Beck. Photograph: Handout Even with the declassified intelligence, the NSA leadership continued to oppose Becks claim, so he arranged a briefing by CIA experts who came to NSA headquarters in the spring of 2016. Their opinion was based upon information that they had and that NSA didnt have access to and they supported my affirmation that I had been attacked in the hostile country with a microwave weapon, Beck recalled. They said it was a no-brainer that this medical condition was due to an attack. On 24 August 2016, according to Beck and his lawyer, Zaid, the head of NSA security and counter-intelligence, Kemp Ensor, sent an email to the NSA chief of staff, Liz Brooks, supporting Becks account. The NSA did not respond to a request for comment. There are still many unanswered questions about the Beck case. Gubete had a family history of Parkinsons and any causal effect between microwave radiation and the disease is unknown, and differs from the more recent cases. But it is clear from the Beck case that when the wave of Havana syndrome injuries began in 2016, US intelligence agencies knew much more that they admitted to. My head was spinning, incredible nausea, I felt like I had to go to the bathroom and throw up. It was just a terrifying moment Marc Polymeropoulos It took a three-year campaign by CIA and state department employees targeted by the attacks to have their illnesses taken seriously, to receive proper treatment and for the mysterious attacks to be properly investigated. That its taken me three years to get treatment is disgraceful, ethically and morally, said Marc Polymeropoulos, a former senior officer in the CIAs clandestine service,. You make a pact when you join the Central Intelligence Agency particularly in the operations side, the silent service. They asked me to do some really unusual and risky things over the years, in some pretty bad places but you always had a pact with your leadership that if you got jammed up, they would have your back, he said. Polymeropoulos was visiting Moscow in 2017, as deputy chief of operations of the CIAs Europe and Eurasia Mission Centre, when he experienced crippling symptoms of an attack. I was woken up in the middle of the night with an incredible case of vertigo, he said. My head was spinning, incredible nausea, I felt like I had to go to the bathroom and throw up. It was just a terrifying moment for me. I had tinnitus which was ringing in my ears, and the vertigo was really what was incredibly debilitating and I really wasnt sure what was happening. I couldnt stand up. I was falling over. Since that incident, I have had a headache 24/7 for three years and theres a mental health challenge in this too, Polymeropoulos said. I was able to work for two hours every morning but then Id be spent. Even having a conversation like this, I would be exhausted after that. The US embassy in Moscow in 2012. Photograph: Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images He is convinced that Russia is behind the attacks, and also says he is certain that Russia is the unnamed country in the Beck case. In 1996, the US was in the process of tearing down the top two storeys of its Moscow embassy because the building was so full of bugging devices. Four new floors were constructed with the aim of creating a secure environment. The new CIA director, William Burns, assured Congress earlier this month that he was taking the problem seriously and that he had appointed a senior officer to run a taskforce ensuring people get the care they deserve and need, and also making sure we get to the bottom of this. Polymeropoulos, who is now being treated at Walter Reed military hospital and is pushing for other CIA victims to get similar treatment, said he was cautiously optimistic. Under Bill Burns, there seems to be a sea change. We have to see actions now, not just words. But I have hope, he said. Meanwhile, a quarter-century after his ill-fated trip to a hostile nation, Michael Beck is still fighting for workers compensation. The Department of Labor has turned down his claim but the one-year window for appeal is still open. Im not suing anyone, he said. Im just looking for whats right out of this.

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GOP Rep. Claims Trump Wing Is Pushing to Oust Cheney Because She Won't 'Lie' The Madison Leader Gazette - The Madison Leader Gazette

Day 1 of the End of the U.S. War in Afghanistan – The New York Times

KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan A gray American transport plane taxied down the runway, carrying munitions, a giant flat screen television from a C.I.A. base, pallets of equipment and departing troops. It was one of several aircraft that night removing what remained of the American war from this sprawling military base in the countrys south.

President Biden has said that the United States will withdraw from Afghanistan by Sept. 11, ending the countrys longest war on foreign soil but the pullout has already begun.

The United States and its NATO allies spent decades building Kandahar Airfield into a wartime city, filled with tents, operations centers, barracks, basketball courts, ammunition storage sites, aircraft hangars and at least one post office.

Once the base is stripped of everything deemed sensitive by its American and NATO landlords, its skeleton will be handed over to the Afghan security forces.

And the message will be clear: They are on their own in the fight against the Taliban.

The scenes over the weekend were almost as if a multitrillion-dollar war machine had morphed into a garage sale. At the airfields peak in 2010 and 2011, its famous and much derided boardwalk housed snack shops, chain restaurants, a hockey rink and trinket stores. Tens of thousands of U.S. and NATO troops were based here, and many more passed through as it became the main installation for the U.S.-led war in Afghanistans south. It stood beside rural villages from which the Taliban emerged; throughout it all, the province has remained an insurgent stronghold.

Now, half-demolished outdoor gyms and empty hangars were filled with nearly 20 years worth of matriel. The passenger terminal, where service members once transited between different parts of the war, was pitch black and filled with empty, dust-covered chairs. A fire alarm detector its batteries weak chirped incessantly. The mess halls were shuttered.

The boardwalk was nothing more than a few remaining boards.

On the other side of the base that morning, an Afghan transport aircraft arrived from Kabul. It was loaded with mortar shells, small-arms cartridges and 250-pound bombs to supply Afghan troops under frequent attack by the Taliban in the countryside.

The American withdrawal, almost quiet, and with a veneer of orderliness, belies the desperate circumstances just beyond the bases wall. On one end of Kandahar Airfield that day, Maj. Mohammed Bashir Zahid, an officer in charge of a small Afghan air command center, sat in his office, a phone to each ear and a third in his hands as he typed messages on WhatsApp, trying to get air support for Afghan security forces on the ground and in nearby outposts threatened by Taliban fighters.

Yesterday, you wouldnt have been able to sit down because things were so chaotic, he said. I fell asleep with my boots on and my gun in my holster.

Sitting in his U.S.-built air-conditioned office, Major Zahid said he expected that one day soon his requests for help from the Americans would be met with silence. On Saturday, he didnt even ask. He concentrated instead on what Afghan helicopters and bombers he could reach.

His anger at the U.S. departure was not about the lack of air support but rather, pointing to pictures on his phone, about the sport utility vehicles that he said the Americans had destroyed at the airfield because they couldnt leave with them.

Now, this is what really upsets me, Major Zahid said, looking exhausted and encapsulating the sense of desperation of most Afghan soldiers. The Americans most likely destroyed the vehicles to prevent them from being sold off, given the rampant corruption in much of the ranks.

Major Zahid thought that the Americans were destroying more of those vehicles when an explosion echoed across the runway at around 2 p.m.

The blast was a rocket, fired from somewhere outside the base and landing somewhere inside, killing no one. The announcement from the base loudspeaker was distant and practically indecipherable in the can-shaped building that housed Major Zahids operations center. Nobody moved, phones rang, work continued.

Even though the rockets landed on the Afghan side, the Americans viewed it as a Taliban attack on them. The Trump administration had agreed to fully withdraw all forces from Afghanistan by May 1 in a deal with the Taliban signed in February 2020. In recent weeks, the Taliban said that any American presence in the country on or beyond that date would be considered a breach of the deal.

The U.S. military had been expecting some kind of assault as it left despite the diplomatic overtures from American negotiators in Doha, Qatar, who had tried to convey to the Taliban that the military was in fact leaving, and that attacking American troops was a fools errand.

The American response was not subtle.

A flight of F/A-18 fighter jets, stationed aboard the U.S.S. Eisenhower, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, were in the air, making their way toward Afghanistan from the Arabian Sea a roughly two-hour flight up what is called the boulevard, a corridor of airspace in western Pakistan that serves as an air transit route.

Having received approval to strike, the jets swooped in, dropping a GPS-guided munition a bomb that costs well over $10,000 on the additional rockets that were somewhere in Kandahar, mounted on rudimentary rails and aimed at the airfield.

Inside the American headquarters building at the airfield, two Green Berets part of the shrinking contingent who work there now pulled up the video of the afternoon airstrike on one of their phones.

Make sure that goes in the nightly brief, one of them said. The Special Forces soldiers, bearded and clad in T-shirts, ball caps and tattoos, looked out of place among what was left of the cubicles and office furniture around them, much of which was being torn apart.

Televisions had been removed from walls, office printers sat on the curb, the insignia once plastered on the stone wall that heralded who was in charge of the headquarters, long gone. Even though there would soon be fewer and fewer service members around each day, one soldier noted that the flow of care packages from random Americans had not slowed down. He now possessed what seemed like an infinite supply of Pop-Tarts.

A group of American soldiers, tasked with loading an incoming cargo flight didnt know when they were going home. Tomorrow? Sept. 11? Their job was to close Kandahar before moving on to the next U.S. base, but there were only so many installations left to dismantle. A trio of them played Nintendo while they waited. One talked about the dirt bike he was going to buy when he got home. Another traded cryptocurrency on his iPhone.

When asked about Maiwand, a district only about 50 miles away where Afghan forces were trying to fend off a Taliban offensive and Major Zahid was desperately trying to send air support, a U.S. soldier responded, Whos Maiwand?

In the evening, the base loudspeaker chimed as one of the transport planes departed. Attention, someone out of view said. There will be outgoing for the next 15 minutes. The dull thud of mortar fire began. At what was unclear.

The end of the war looked nothing like the beginning of it. What started as an operation to topple the Taliban and kill the terrorists responsible for the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, had swelled over 20 years into a multitrillion-dollar military-industrial undertaking, infused with so much money that for years it seemed impossible to ever conclude or dismantle.

Until now.

The Talibans often-repeated adage loomed over the day: You have the watches, we have the time.

In one of the many trash bags littering the base, there was a discarded wall clock, its second hand still ticking.

Najim Rahim and Jim Huylebroek contributed reporting.

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Day 1 of the End of the U.S. War in Afghanistan - The New York Times