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CP Foods Moves Towards Low-Carbon Organization, Help Driving the “Decade of Ecosystem Restoration”

Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL (CP Foods) moves forwards to its Climate Change Action Plan prioritizing on increasing productivity by lowering energy consumption, promoting renewable energy, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, decreasing food loss and zero food waste, as well as conserve, protect and restore watershed and mangrove forests through the low-carbon organization goal in bid to drive the United Nations’ target the “Decades of Ecological Restoration.”

Mr. Wuthichai Sithipreedanant, Senior Vice President – Corporate Social Responsibility and Sustainable Development of CP Foods, said that the Company realizes on the importance of operating business in line with the conservation and restoration of environmental balance sustainability.

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Under business challenges including climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic, the Company has launched six climate change action plans aimed at driving forward to achieve “Low-carbon Organization.”

The action plans comprise:

  1. Increase production efficiency by reducing energy consumption per production unit by 15% by 2025, compared to base year 2015.
  2. Promote the use of renewable energy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Currently, the company’s renewable energy consumption accounted for 26% of its total energy consumption.
  3. Develop ecological-friendly products such as Meat Zero products, an innovative plant-based meat, as alternative food to serve environmentally conscious consumer, low-carbon products, environmentally friendly animal feed innovations, etc.
  4. Efficiency logistic system planning.
  5. Reduce food loss and food waste in the Company’s manufacturing processes to zero within 2030.
  6. Promote nature-based solutions through responsible sourcing, such as using maize from the area that does not damage the environment, sourcing fish meal materials from legal producers both domestic and overseas to produce aquatic feed with international traceability practice, as well as biodiversity protection through conservation, protecting, restoring watershed and mangrove forests and increasing green area around factories, which now already achieved over 10,000 rai.

CP Foods is committed to mitigating impacts and protecting the environment along with its sustainable strategies through circular economy principles.

To the strategies, in 2020, the company achieved operational goals to support global conservation approaches, such as reducing water withdrawal per production units by 36% in 2020 compared to base year 2015, utilizing reused and recycled water accounted for 42% of total water consumption.

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Moreover, the company’s food plastic packaging are reusable or recyclable or upcyclable or compostable reached 99.99%, reducing greenhouse gas emissions by more than 580,000 tons carbon dioxide equivalent. The successful of lower carbon emission derived from increasing energy efficiency and promoting renewable energy throughout the supply chain.

“The world is facing a major health crisis from the covid-19 pandemic and climate change that affect global economy and society to step forward slowly. We all need to work together to balance of nature sustainability,” Mr. Wuttichai said.

The World Environment Day on June 5, this year, The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has set out its campaign for a “The UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration”, to draw collaboration of world community to conserve and restore environment. As one of the world leading integrated agro-industrial conglomerate, CP Foods strives to be a part of ecosystem restoration to ensure sustainable food security missions.

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Keep Dreaming of Summer in Thailand With Marriott Bonvoy

Guests offered generous rates, free breakfast, daily hotel credit, bonus points and flexible booking conditions at properties across the Kingdom.

Marriott Bonvoy is inviting guests to enjoy even more sensational staycations in Thailand this summer – and beyond – with added value at Marriott International’s hotels and resorts all across the Kingdom.

Under the “Summer Dreaming” promotion, which has now been extended for stays until the end of March 2022, travelers who book a stay at more than 40 participating properties* in Thailand will benefit from preferential rates, complimentary breakfast for two, and generous daily resort credit! To offer extra flexibility to guests, all bookings can be cancelled without charge up to 24 hours before the check-in date.

Marriott Bonvoy members will also receive 5,000 bonus Marriott Bonvoy points! Not a member yet? Click here to sign-up for free.

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Guests can maximize their stay with THB 1,000 of hotel credit per room per night, which can be redeemed for memorable meals at the hotel’s restaurants, sunset drinks at the bars, soothing spa treatments, room upgrades and more. So the longer you stay, the more rewarding your stay becomes!

A wide range of desirable destinations are available. Travelers can book an exciting urban adventure in Bangkok, a blissful beachfront break in Phuket, Hua Hin, Pattaya, Rayong, Khao Lak or Koh Samui, or a captivating cultural retreat in Chiang Mai or Chiang Rai. Alternatively, golfers can tee-off in a wide range of destinations across all the country.

The “Summer Dreaming” promotion is now valid for bookings made between 1 June and 31 August 2021, for stays taken before 31 March 2022. Reservations must be made direct via https://hotel-deals.marriott.com/summer-dreaming-thailand-en using the promotional code A1764.

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Gulf Provides Essentials to Communities in Fight Against COVID-19

Gulf Energy Development Plc. (GULF) has donated food and other essentials such as rice, vegetable oil, drinking water, UHT milk, baby diapers. incontinence pads, absorbent sheets and medicine cabinet essentials to people in 50 districts in Bangkok, covering more than 1,800 households affected by COVID-19. GULF has also provided the communities with disinfectant fogging machines, sanitizing chemicals, temperature scanners with stands and fingertip pulse oximeters for the fight to prevent the spread of COVID-19. The total value of the donation is 1,300,000 baht.

Mr. Sitamon Ratanavadi..
Mr. Sitamon Ratanavadi.

Mr. Sitamon Ratanavadi, on behalf of Mr. Sarath Ratanavadi, Chief Executive Officer, Gulf Energy Development plc, said: “GULF is deeply concerned about people in many communities that might face difficulties from the economic impact of this unprecedented pandemic. We hope that these essential supplies will alleviate hardship, especially for those families with people with disabilities, bedridden individuals, the elderly, and young children. Later, community leaders or assigned coordinators can properly distribute the items to people in their community. This also reduces crowding in small areas. Gulf Group is committed to continuing to help and support Thailand in mitigating the impact of COVID-19.”

In the past few months, GULF has supported various sectors in the fight against this pandemic, including donating 10 million baht to the Faculty of Medicine Ramathibodi Hospital, to fund the procurement of medical equipment and expenses to cover the ‘hospitel’, which accommodates COVID-19 patients.

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Global Glitch: Swaths of Internet Go Down After Cloud Outage

In this Thursday, May 6, 2021 file photo, a sign for The New York Times hangs above the entrance to its building, in New York. Photo: Mark Lennihan, File / AP

LONDON (AP) — Multiple websites went offline briefly across the globe Tuesday after an outage at the cloud service company Fastly, revealing how critical a handful of companies running the internet’s plumbing have become.

Dozens of sites including the New York Times, CNN, some Amazon sites, Twitch, Reddit, the Guardian, and the U.K. government’s home page, could not be reached.

In Asia, cities like Hong Kong and Singapore were also affected, with users unable to access the CNN website. In China, where most foreign media websites are blocked, there was little discussion on the outage on social media platforms such as Weibo.

San Francisco-based Fastly acknowledged a problem just before 6 a.m. Eastern. It said in repeated updates on its website that it was “continuing to investigate the issue.”

About an hour later, the company said: “The issue has been identified and a fix has been applied. Customers may experience increased origin load as global services return.” A number of sites that were hit early appeared to be coming back online.

Fastly said it had identified a service configuration that triggered disruptions, meaning the outage appeared to be caused internally.

Still, all major futures markets in the U.S. dipped sharply minutes after the outage hit almost exactly a month after a cyberattack that caused the operator of the largest fuel pipeline in the U.S to halt its operations.

Internet traffic measurement by Kentik show that Fastly began to recover from the outage roughly an hour after it struck at mid-morning European time – and before most Americans were awake.

“Looks like it is slowly coming back,” said Doug Madory, an internet infrastructure expert at Kentik. He said “it is serious because Fastly is one of the world’s biggest CDNs and this was a global outage.”

Fastly is a content-delivery network. It provides vital but behind-the-scenes cloud computing “edge servers” to many of the web’s popular sites. These servers store, or “cache,” content such as images and video in places around the world so they are closer to users, allowing them to fetch it more quickly and smoothly instead of having to access the site’s original server. Fastly says its services mean that a European user going to an American website can get the content from 200 to 500 milliseconds faster.

The impact of Fastly’s trouble highlights the relative fragility of the internet’s current architecture given its heavy reliance on Big Tech companies – such as Amazon’s AWS cloud services – as opposed to a more decentralized model.

“Even the biggest and most sophisticated companies experience outages. But they can also recover fairly quickly,” said Madory.

When the outage hit, some visitors trying to access CNN.com got a message that said: “Fastly error: unknown domain: cnn.com.” Attempts to access the Financial Times website turned up a similar message while visits to the New York Times and U.K. government’s gov.uk site returned an “Error 503 Service Unavailable” message, along with the line “Varnish cache server,” which is a technology that Fastly is built on.

Down Detector, which tracks internet outages, posted reports on dozens of sites going down and said “there may be a widespread outage at Fastly.”

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Story: Kelvin Chan. Frank Bajak in Boston and Zen Soo in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

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Foreigners Vaccine Registration Kicks Off With Chaos and Confusion

A vaccination center for expats at Vimut Hospital on June 7, 2021.
A vaccination center for expats at Vimut Hospital on June 7, 2021.

BANGKOK — An agency tasked with giving centralized information on the COVID-19 pandemic sowed more public confusion on Monday as it contradicted itself on how foreign nationals can sign up for inoculations.

The government’s pandemic response center had previously announced that foreigners would have to come to designated hospitals to get their queue for the free vaccinations, but the center’s spokesman said Monday they are now required to make the appointment online instead.

“No walk-ins will be available,” Natapanu Nopakun, spokesman of the government’s COVID-19 Situation Administration, said during Monday’s news briefing. “You have to register on this website first for all vaccination venues [listed] on this website. We advised you to register two weeks in advance of your intended vaccination date.”

Thailand kicked off their long-awaited mass vaccination program for its citizens on Monday as the country battles its third and deadliest wave of coronavirus outbreak. Despite reports of vaccine shortage at some hospitals, the health ministry said over 300,000 people were vaccinated on the first day of the inoculation drive.

Monday was also the first day of vaccine registration for the approximately three million foreign nationals living in Thailand. Several people showed up at Vimut Hospital, one of the designated hospitals for foreigners’ vaccination in Bangkok, only to find out that walk-in registrations were no longer accepted.

“It’s very confusing,” Australian expat Christine Horne said. “I read from the Bangkok Post and it said we can go to Vimut Hospital or Bangrak Health Center. Once I came here, the staff had to help me register online. Mine went through eventually, but the website was very slow because everybody was trying to get on it at the same time.”

American expat Brett Barrett said he managed to have his vaccination booked, but turned out it was cancelled when he checked in at the hospital.

“The staff told me my appointment was canceled,” Barrett said. “They don’t know why.”

A website for COVID-19 vaccination registration was opened for foreigners aged over 60 or those with certain underlying conditions on Monday. Some users reported they experienced issues when they were trying to make appointments, while others said they could not access the site at all.

Registrations for those aged 18 to 59 will open “at a later period,” Natapanu said.

“The policy keeps changing everyday,” Krittavith Lertutsahakul, CEO of Vimut Hospital, said. “We’d like to advise against walk-ins because it’s difficult to manage the queue. Things may not go smoothly on the first day due to the lack of coordination, but I believe things will become better in the next few days when everyone knows the process.”

Last month, Vimut Hospital opened its own online vaccine registration form for expats living in Bangkok, which was closed due to overwhelming demands. Krittavith said those who are interested in getting the jab at his hospital must now sign up on the government’s website, which will allocate available slots for them.

Foreign nationals in Bangkok were previously advised to register for the shots in person at Vimut Hospital and Bangrak Health Center, while those living in the provinces would need to register at the hospital which has their health records, the government’s pandemic response center said on May 21.

Some provinces such as Chiang Mai and Phuket have launched their own registration schemes for expats that run separately from the centralized system operated by the Department of Disease Control.

Thai citizens follow a separate process to sign up for the vaccination program, which is available online and offline. Immunizations for migrant workers are administered by the Social Security Office.

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Journalists Who Fled Myanmar Find Third-Country Refuge

In this May 9, 2021, file photo released by the San Sai District Administrative Office, a Thai officer checks the temperature of journalists working for Democratic Voice of Burma, at San Sai District in Chiang Mai province north of Thailand. Photo: San Sai District Administrative Office via AP, File

BANGKOK (AP) — Three journalists from military-ruled Myanmar who were convicted of illegal entry after they fled to Thailand have been sent to a third country where they are safe, their employer said Monday.

The three staff members of the Democratic Voice of Burma, better known as DVB, were arrested on May 9 in the northern Thai province of Chiang Mai along with two other people from Myanmar described as activists. On May 28, they were each sentenced to a 4,000 baht ($128) fine and seven months’ imprisonment, suspended for a year.

Rights groups and journalists’ associations had urged Thai authorities not to send them back to Myanmar, where it was feared that their safety would be at risk from the authorities. Thailand’s government has relatively cordial relations with Myanmar’s military regime.

Myanmar’s junta seized power in February by ousting the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, and has attempted to crush widespread opposition to its takeover with a brutal crackdown that has left hundreds dead. It has tried to silence independent news media by withdrawing their licenses and by arresting journalists.

All five people convicted in Chiang Mai of illegal entry left Thailand recently for the third country, Aye Chan Naing, DVB’s executive director and chief editor, said in an emailed statement. He said, without elaborating, that he could not mention where they had been sent “as the entire case remains very sensitive.”

He expressed gratitude to “everyone in Thailand and around the world that helped to make their safe passage possible and for campaigning for a positive outcome,” and said the employees would resume their duties in the near future after “recovering from their ordeal.”

At least two other DVB journalists have been sentenced to prison for their reporting. DVB, an independent broadcast and online news agency, was among five local media outlets that were banned in March from broadcasting or publishing after their licenses were canceled. Like other banned media outlets, it continued operating.

According to Myanmar’s Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, about 90 journalists have been arrested since the takeover, with more than half still in detention, and 33 in hiding. Those still being held include two U.S. citizens, Danny Fenster and Nathan Maung, who worked for Myanmar media.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the U.S. has had contact with Maung in detention but has not yet had consular access to Fenster. “We are pressing this in every way that we can,” Blinken said in congressional testimony Monday in Washington.

He reiterated the U.S. was working on trying to bring the detained journalists home.

Fenster, the managing editor of the news and business magazine Frontier Myanmar, was detained at the Yangon airport while trying to head to the Detroit area to see his family.

Maung is editor in chief of the Myanmar news website Kamayut Media. New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists, citing accounts in Myanmar media, said he was arrested in March.

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Canadian Police Say Muslim Family Targeted by Deadly Attack

People attend a memorial at the location where a family of five was hit by a driver, in London, Ontario, Monday, June 7, 2021. Four of the members of the family died and one is in critical condition. A 20-year-old male has been charged with four counts of first degree murder and count of attempted murder in connection with the crime. Photo: Brett Gundlock / The Canadian Press via AP

TORONTO (AP) — A driver plowed a pickup truck into a family of five, killing four of them and seriously injuring the other in a deliberate attack that targeted the victims because they were Muslims, Canadian police said Monday.

Authorities said a young man was arrested in the parking lot of a nearby mall after the incident Sunday night in the Ontario city of London. Police said a black pickup truck mounted a curb and struck the victims at an intersection.

“This was an act of mass murder perpetuated against Muslims,” Mayor Ed Holder said. “It was rooted in unspeakable hatred.”

The extended family issued a statement identifying the dead as Salman Afzal, 46; his wife Madiha, 44; their daughter Yumna, 15; and a 74-year-old grandmother whose name was withheld. The hospitalized boy was identified as Fayez.

“Everyone who knew Salman and the rest of the Afzal family know the model family they were as Muslims, Canadians and Pakistanis,” the statement said. “They worked extremely hard in their fields and excelled. Their children were top students in their school and connected strongly with spiritual their identity.”

A fundraising webpage said the father was a physiotherapist and cricket enthusiast and his wife was working on a PhD in civil engineering at Western University in London. Their daughter was finishing ninth grade, and the grandmother was a “pillar” of the family, the page said.

The family said in its statement that the public needs to stand against hate and Islamophobia.

“This young man who committed this act of terror was influenced by a group that he associated with, and the rest of the community must take a strong stand against this, from the highest levels in our government to every member of the community,” the statement said.

Nathaniel Veltman, 20, was in custody facing four counts of first-degree murder. Police said Veltman, a resident of London, did not know the victims.

Detective Supt. Paul Waight said police had not determined if the suspect was a member of any specific hate group. He said London police were working with federal police and prosecutors to see about potential terrorism charges. He declined to detail evidence pointing to a possible hate crime, but said the attack was planned.

About a dozen police officers combed the area around the crash site looking for evidence Monday. Blue markers on the ground dotted the intersection.

“We believe the victims were targeted because of their Islamic faith,” Police Chief Stephen Williams said. “… There is no tolerance in this community who are motivated by hate target others with violence.”

Canada is generally welcoming toward immigrants and all religions, but in 2017 a French Canadian man known for far-right, nationalist views went on a shooting rampage at a Quebec City mosque that killed six people.

One woman who witnessed the aftermath of the deadly crash said she couldn’t stop thinking about the victims. Paige Martin said she was stopped at a red light around 8:30 p.m. when a large pickup roared past her. She said her car shook from the force.

“I was shaken up, thinking it was an erratic driver,″ Martin said.

Minutes later, she said, she came upon a gruesome, chaotic scene at an intersection near her home, with first responders running to help, a police officer performing chest compressions on one person and three other people lying on the ground. A few dozen people stood on the sidewalk and several drivers got out of their cars to help.

“I can’t get the sound of the screams out of my head,” Martin said.

From her apartment, Martin said she could see the scene and watched an official drape a sheet over one body about midnight. “My heart is just so broken for them,” she said.

Zahid Khan, a family friend, said the three generations among the dead were a grandmother, father, mother and teenage daughter. The family had immigrated from Pakistan 14 years ago and were dedicated, decent and generous members of the London Muslim Mosque, he said.

“They were just out for their walk that they would go out for every day,” Khan said through tears near the site of the crash. “I just wanted to see.”

Qazi Khalil said he saw the family on Thursday when they were out for their nightly walk. The families lived close to each other and would get together on holidays, he said.

“This has totally destroyed me from the inside,” Khalil said. “I can’t really come to the terms they were no longer here.”

The National Council of Canadian Muslims said Muslims in Canada have become all too familiar with the violence of Islamophobia. “This is a terrorist attack on Canadian soil, and should be treated as such,″ council head Mustafa Farooq said.

Nawaz Tahir, a London lawyer and Muslim community leader, said, “We must confront and stamp out Islamophobia and Islamic violence — not tomorrow, today, for the sake of our children, our family, our communities.”

The mayor said flags would be lowered for three days in London, which he said has 30,000 to 40,000 Muslims among its more than 400,000 residents.

“To the Muslim community in London and to Muslims across the country, know that we stand with you. Islamophobia has no place in any of our communities. This hate is insidious and despicable — and it must stop,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted.

Story: Rob Gillies

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Harris Targets Corruption, Immigration on Latin America Trip

Vice President Kamala Harris and Guatemala's Minister of Foreign Affairs Pedro Brolo wave at her arrival cermony in Guatemala City, Sunday, June 6, 2021, at Guatemalan Air Force Central Command. Photo: Jacquelyn Martin / AP

GUATEMALA CITY (AP) — With Kamala Harris visiting Guatemala and Mexico on her first foreign trip as vice president, the Biden administration is expected to announce new measures to fight smuggling and trafficking, and hopes to announce additional anti-corruption efforts as well on Monday, a senior administration official said.

The official, who briefed reporters traveling with Harris on Sunday, spoke on condition of anonymity to preview announcements before they have been made public. No further details were provided.

Harris has been tasked by President Joe Biden with addressing the root causes of the spike in migration to the U.S.-Mexico border, and her aides say corruption will be a central focus of her meetings with Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei on Monday and Mexico’s Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Tuesday.

“Corruption really does sap the the wealth of any country, and in Central America is at a scale where it is a large percentage of GDP across the region,” said special envoy Ricardo Zuniga.

“We see corruption as one of the most important root causes to be dealt with,” Zuniga added.

The trip got off to a rocky start when Harris’ plane returned to Joint Base Andrews in Maryland about 30 minutes after takeoff because of what her spokesperson said was a problem with the landing gear. She departed on another plane and landed late Sunday in in Guatemala City, where she was met by Foreign Minister Pedro Brolo.

Harris is seeking to secure commitments from Guatemala and Mexico for greater cooperation on border security and economic investment, and aides say she will also discuss vaccine sharing during her meetings. But corruption in the region — a far more intractable challenge — will complicate her efforts.

It’s already had a significant impact on her work in Central America. Harris has yet to engage substantively with the leaders of Honduras and El Salvador, who are both embroiled in corruption scandals.

Giammattei has faced criticism over corruption within his own government. Zuniga acknowledged that the U.S. government faces a challenge in working with him but argued Harris was in the country in part to have a direct conversation with the president about this and other issues.

“The best way to deal with these cases where you have a very complex relationship in a country like Guatemala is to talk clearly and plainly as partners, as countries that have to get along” he said.

Harris has laid out an approach centered on creating better opportunities and living conditions in the region through humanitarian and economic aid. She announced plans to send $310 million to provide support for refugees and address food shortages, and recently secured commitments from a dozen companies and organizations to invest in the Northern Triangle countries to promote economic opportunity and job training.

Washington won some goodwill through its vaccine diplomacy this past week. Giammattei and López Obrador both received calls from Harris on Thursday telling them the U.S. would be sending 500,000 doses and 1 million doses, respectively, of COVID-19 vaccine.

While in Guatemala, Harris also plans to meet community leaders, innovators and entrepreneurs. In Mexico, she will speak with female entrepreneurs and hold a roundtable with labor workers.

She’s underscored the need to address corruption in public remarks and events. In a May meeting with a number of leading voices on Guatemala’s justice system, she noted her work as a prosecutor and said that “injustice is a root cause of migration.”

“Part of giving people hope is having a very specific commitment to rooting out corruption in the region,” she said.

Harris has also raised the issue during virtual meetings with the leaders of both countries, and aides say she will do it again during meetings on her trip. During their past conversations, they have discussed areas of mutual interest — improving port security, fighting smuggling networks, going after corrupt actors — and the goal of this trip is to turn that talk into action, aides say.

While the vice president will make announcements concerning new efforts at cooperation and new programs, she’s not expected to announce any new aid during her trip.

While in Latin America, Harris will also have to navigate the politics of immigration. Congressional Republicans have criticized both Biden and Harris for deciding not to visit the border, and contend the administration is ignoring what they say is a crisis there. April was the second-busiest month on record for unaccompanied children encountered at the U.S.-Mexico border, following March’s all-time high. The Border Patrol’s total encounters in April were up 3% from March, marking the highest level since April 2000.

Conservatives will be watching Harris closely for any missteps, hoping to drag her into further controversy on an issue that they see as a political winner.

In her efforts to win commitments on corruption from the region’s leaders, Harris can point to a number of moves by the Biden administration last week.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasized the problem during his own recent trip to Central America. The White House issued a memo elevating foreign corruption to a major national security issue, and directed all federal agencies to prioritize it and modernize their foreign corruption-fighting tools.

Eric Olson, director of policy at the Seattle International Foundation, which works to promote good governance in Central America, said that addressing corruption will take particular diplomatic skill. Harris will need to hold the leaders of Guatemala and Mexico accountable while also deepening trust and cooperation with the two nations.

“The challenge that she faces is how to, on the one hand, have a conversation, keep the door open — while not seeming to ignore the obvious elephant in the room, which is this incredible penetration of the state by corrupt actors,” he said.

In Mexico, López Obrador continues to face a complicated security situation in many parts of the country. Nearly three-dozen candidates or pre-candidates were killed before this weekend’s midterm elections as drug cartels sought to protect their interests. The government’s inability to provide security in parts of the country is of interest to the U.S. in an immigration context, both for the people who are displaced by violence and the impact it has on a severely weakened economy trying reemerge from the pandemic.

The number of Mexicans encountered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection rose steadily from December through April. Mexico remains a key U.S. ally in trying to slow immigration, not only of its own citizens, but those crossing its territory. Successive U.S. administrations have effectively tried to push their immigration enforcement goals south to Mexico and Guatemala.

Nongovernmental organizations placed Guatemala’s widespread corruption at the top of their list of concerns before Harris’ visit.

Last month, two lawyers who are outspoken critics of Giammattei’s administration were arrested on what they say were trumped-up charges aimed at silencing them.

The selection of judges for Guatemala’s Constitutional Court, its highest, was mired in influence peddling and alleged corruption. Giammattei picked his chief of staff to fill one of the five vacancies. When Gloria Porras, a respected force against corruption, was elected to a second term, the congress controlled by Giammattei’s party refused to seat her.

Harris’ visit comes with high expectations, but experts say clear progress on corruption may be elusive.

“These are societies built on corruption,” said Olson. “You’re not gonna have an impact in six months.”

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Story: Alexandra Jaffe and Christopher Sherman. Sherman reported from Mexico City. Associated Press writer Sonia Pérez D. in Guatemala City contributed to this report.

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Last Of Soviet Soldiers Who Liberated Auschwitz Dies at 98

In this Friday, May 8, 2015 file photo, Soviet war veteran David Dushman, 92, center, speaks to people holding Ukrainian flags as he attends a wreath laying ceremony at the Russian War Memorial in the Tiergarten district of Berlin, Germany. Photo: Markus Schreiber, File / AP

BERLIN (AP) — David Dushman, the last surviving Soviet soldier involved in the liberation of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz, has died. He was 98.

The Jewish Community of Munich and Upper Bavaria said Sunday that Dushman had died at a Munich hospital on Saturday.

“Every witness to history who passes on is a loss, but saying farewell to David Dushman is particularly painful,” said Charlotte Knobloch, a former head of Germany’s Central Council of Jews. “Dushman was right on the front lines when the National Socialists’ machinery of murder was destroyed.”

As a young Red Army soldier, Dushman flattened the forbidding electric fence around the notorious Nazi death camp with his T-34 tank on Jan. 27, 1945.

He admitted that he and his comrades didn’t immediately realize the full magnitude of what had happened in Auschwitz.

“Skeletons everywhere,” he recalled in a 2015 interview with Munich newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung. “They stumbled out of the barracks, they sat and lay among the dead. Terrible. We threw them all of our canned food and immediately drove on, to hunt fascists.”

More than a million people, most of them Jews deported there from all over Europe, were murdered by the Nazis at Auschwitz-Birkenau between 1940 and 1945.

Dushman earlier took part in some of the bloodiest military encounters of World War II, including the battles of Stalingrad and Kursk. He was seriously wounded three times but survived the war, one of just 69 soldiers in his 12,000-strong division.

His father — a former military doctor— was meanwhile imprisoned and later died in a Soviet punishment camp after falling victim to one of Josef Stalin’s purges.

After the war, Dushman helped train the Soviet Union’s women’s national fencing team for four decades and witnessed the attack by eight Palestinian terrorists on the Israeli team at the 1972 Munich Olympics, which resulted in the deaths of 11 Israelis, five of the Palestinians and a German policeman.

Later in life, Dushman visited schools to tell students about the war and the horrors of the Holocaust. He also regularly dusted off his military medals to participate in veterans gatherings.

“Dushman was a legendary fencing coach and the last living liberator of the Auschwitz concentration camp,” the International Olympic Committee said in a statement.

IOC President Thomas Bach paid tribute to Dushman, recounting how as a young fencer for what was then West Germany he was offered “friendship and counsel” by the veteran coach in 1970 ”despite Mr Dushman’s personal experience with World War II and Auschwitz, and he being a man of Jewish origin.”

“This was such a deep human gesture that I will never ever forget it,” Bach said in a statement.

Dushman trained some of the Soviet Union’s most successful fencers, including Valentina Sidorova, and continued to give lessons well into his 90s, the IOC said.

Details on funeral arrangements weren’t immediately known. Dushman’s wife, Zoja, died several years ago.

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“Daikin” Brings Clean Air to Families With “Streamer” Technology That Eliminates Novel Coronavirus Through New Ad Campaign

The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted consumers to become more aware of healthy living and look for products that can ensure healthy environment and wellbeing. In response to this rising trend, Daikin, the world’s leader in air conditioning technology, has significantly shifted its marketing strategies to stress its “perfecting the air” philosophy while delivering pure, clean air through innovations with health benefits.

Mr. Sarawut Tempattarasak.
Mr. Sarawut Tempattarasak.

Mr. Sarawut Tempattarasak, Corporate Planning Assistant General Manager of Siam Daikin Sales Co., Ltd., said that Daikin has celebrity endorser Nadech Kugimiya since 2015 and has since become known among broader consumers with much more brand awareness in Bangkok and upcountry.

With this emerging new trend, the commercial plan for this year will focus on communication about the importance of air, the life-sustaining substance around us, which is often overlooked especially when it comes to cleanliness and humidity. Air is as important as three meals and eight glasses of water a day. And while most people are concerned about food and water quality and cleanliness, less can be said about air.

Earlier in March, the new commercial was launched with concept stories of clean air by three KOLs (key opinion leader) whose different characters resonate with different demographics. They are KOLs with prominent social media presence, including forward thinker Sarawut “Roundfinger” Hengsawad, perfectionist and family man Tharisorn “Boom” Toranavikrai, and technology lover Saranee “Faunglada” Sanguanruang.

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“The commercial which was launched in March asks key questions to the consumers. Roundfinger, which is revered as modern thinker, ponders the definition of good air which a lot of people might not think about, while Boom and Faunglada give their ideas of what good, clean air is like. It concludes with the part where Daikin ZETAS is the answer to all those questions.”

Earlier, Daikin launched Daikin ZETAS that is equipped with patented Streamer technology, whose efficacy in deactivating SARS-CoV-2 has been proven by The University of Tokyo and Okayama University of Science in Japan.

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Daikin also worked closely with Department of Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Engineering of King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi to test the efficacy of Streamer technology in Daikin ZETAS to further ensure the Thai consumers.

In terms of commercial trend for air conditioners, Mr. Sarawut commented that most brands focus on similar strengths, which are mainly design and energy saving. Daikin, on the other hand, also adds Better Life Value that gives consumer clean, pure air without PM 2.5 as well as viruses.

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Streamer technology, which is featured in Daikin air conditioner and air purifier, draws the air in, where particles of contaminants will be intercepted at the filter. The technology then releases high quality electrons to the unwanted particles, deactivating them externally and centrally, allowing the products to deactivate viruses, bacteria and allergens. The air that goes through Streamer electrons is thoroughly filtered.

The Streamer technology also helps prolong the service life of filter as it constantly cleans, unlike ion technology in air conditioners and air filters that randomly releases ions which slowly capture contaminants and only deactivates unwanted particles at their external level.

“Prior to the pandemic, most people were worried about PM2.5. And with the current situation where you have to wear face masks when going outside to protect yourself from the virus makes it very inconvenient and uncomfortable to breathe. With Streamer technology in Daikin ZETAS, consumers can breathe clean, virus-free air comfortably in the comfort of their home.”

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Mr. Sarawut also adds that Daikin’s marketing communication plan has always highlighted Daikin’s many outstanding strengths that cater to the needs of consumers. These include the high-functioning and environmentally friendly R32 refrigerant, new circuit board that withstands power dip and power surge as well as pest and insect proof design for condenser.

“We work hard to figure out what the pain point is and develop a product that counteracts that pain point. Our strengths are often ahead of time, and many times were followed by other brands.”

This time around with the highlight of “clean air”, narrated through three famous KOLs in a new commercial, Daikin is dedicated to emphasizing on the important of “air quality” around us in the home.

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Mr. Akihisa Yokoyama, President of Siam Daikin Sales, says that the Daikin’s patented Streamer technology, which has been verified for its efficacy to eliminate SARS-CoV-2, sets a new standard for household air conditioner in the Thai market, and emphasizes our philosophy of not just creating cool, comfortable air but also “perfecting the air”.

Moreover, it raises the standard of air conditioner industry, inspiring the development and technological breakthroughs to reach higher and proven efficiency to create decent products with efficient technologies for all consumers.

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