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North Korea Finds New Leverage in the Ukraine War

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For Kim Jong-un, the leader of North Korea, a rare trip to Russia this month to discuss military aid for President Vladimir V. Putin’s Ukraine war effort could provide two things the North has wanted for a long time: technical help with its weapons programs, and to finally be needed by an important neighbor.

North Korea has not been used to getting a lot of attention other than global condemnation for its nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile tests. But Russia’s urgency to make new gains in the war is offering Mr. Kim a bit of the geopolitical spotlight — and a new way to both irk the United States and draw closer to Moscow and Beijing.

Though Russia has long been a crucial ally for the isolated North, relations between the two countries have at times grown tense since the disintegration of the Soviet Union. And Russia accounts for very little of the economic trade that North Korea needs; China alone provides nearly all of that.

Now, common interests and worldview are bringing the neighbors closer.

The White House has repeatedly warned that North Korea was starting to ship artillery shells and rockets to Russia and negotiating for more arms deals. And Western officials’ claims this week that Mr. Kim will travel to Russia soon indicate that they fear the process is moving forward with more intent.

For its part, North Korea faces critical technological hurdles in its nuclear and missile programs, as well as dire economic need, and Russia could help more on those fronts.

“It’s a win-win situation for both sides,” said Lee Byong-chul, a North Korea expert at the Institute for Far Eastern Studies at Kyungnam University in Seoul.

One question hanging over such a deal is just how much North Korean aid could move Russia’s war effort forward, especially given the North’s economic difficulties and chronic food shortages. In recent weeks, Mr. Kim has visited a series of munitions factories, exhorting the officials there to step up production, according to state media.

But Mr. Lee said the North may have a large surplus of ammunition already available, as it has not fought a war since the Korean War armistice in 1953. And with armaments largely based on Soviet weapons systems, North Korean munitions are widely compatible with Russia’s arsenal.

“It’s shocking news for the U.S. and countries in Europe hoping for an early end to the war in Ukraine,” Mr. Lee said. “North Korean munitions can add fuel to the fire.”

A deal with Russia could also further raise tensions around the Korean Peninsula, helping North Korea advance its nuclear weapons program and pushing both South Korea and Japan to strengthen their own military cooperation with the United States, analysts say.

“Kim is looking for technological shortcuts for his military satellite and missile programs that have been frustrated by economic sanctions,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul. He added that increased military exchanges between Russia and North Korea “would undermine peace and security in Europe and Asia, and demonstrate Moscow and Pyongyang’s willingness to blatantly enable each other’s violations of international law.”

Mr. Kim’s potential trip to Russia would be the first since he made an initial official visit there by armored train in 2019.

Since taking power in 2011, the North Korean leader has sought parallel goals: building a nuclear arsenal and reviving his country’s decrepit economy. He first focused on his weapons programs, conducting four underground nuclear tests and launching ICBMs. He tried to use his country’s growing military threat as leverage to force Washington to ease sanctions so he could improve its economy.

That hope evaporated with the collapse of his diplomacy with Mr. Trump in 2019. And Mr. Kim has since struggled to chart a new course. Soon, he bet his luck on a changing world order he termed a “neo-Cold War,” seeking to align his country more closely with Beijing and Moscow against the “unipolar” world order dominated by the United States.

His strategy has already reaped benefits, allowing his country to conduct a series of ICBM and other missile tests with impunity despite resolutions by the United Nations Security Council. Though the North has traditionally offered Russia and China at least as much trouble as comradeship, both countries wielded their veto power at the Council when the United States and its allies tried to adopt new penalties against the North in recent months.

Both Russia and China sent high-ranking officials — Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu came from Russia, and the Communist Party Politburo member Li Hongzhong from China — to Pyongyang in July. In a scene symbolic of deepening ties among the countries, the two officials joined Mr. Kim on a balcony as North Korea held a military parade.

The parade was to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of the Korean War, celebrated in North Korea as “Victory Day.” The Korea conflict was the last war in which the three nations fought together against the United States and its allies. And by bringing them together again, Mr. Kim sought to evoke an intensifying trilateral alliance to counter the three-way partnership among Washington, Tokyo and Seoul, analysts said.

“Kim Jong-un is jumping on the ‘new Cold War’ bandwagon,” said Sung Ki-young, an analyst at the Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank affiliated with South Korea’s National Intelligence Service. “There is no better time for him to elevate his relevance by aligning closely with Russia.”

During his trip, Mr. Shoigu suggested joint military drills with North Korea and China to counter trilateral military cooperation in the region by the United States, South Korea and Japan, according to South Korean lawmakers who were briefed by the South’s National Intelligence Service on Monday.

And in August, Mr. Kim and Mr. Putin exchanged letters pleading to expand “bilateral cooperation in all fields” and build “a longstanding strategic relationship in conformity with the demand of the new era,” according to state media.

Moscow currently offers little in economic aid or trade to the North: North Korea only imported 5,380 tons of corn and flour from Russia in the first five months of this year, compared with 102,000 tons of rice imported from China, according to South Korean government economists.

But Russia has crucial technologies that could help advance North Korea’s weapons programs. Although North Korea has launched multiple ICBMs since 2017, Western experts still doubt that the country has all the technology needed to make its nuclear warheads small and light enough to traverse an intercontinental range.

North Korea has also twice attempted to launch its first military spy satellite into orbit since March, but both attempts failed. The country is also trying to build its first ballistic missile submarine and is believed to face technical hurdles there as well.

“I don’t think that any economic assistance from Russia could be more than symbolic,” Mr. Sung said. “But North Korea needs technological help from Russia. North Korea’s five major weapons projects are all based on original Russian technology.”

Los desafíos de la covid persistente para los adultos mayores

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Pregúntale a Patricia Anderson cómo está, y quizá no obtendrás una respuesta rutinaria. “Hoy trabajo y estoy bien”, dijo un martes reciente. “El sábado y el domingo estuve postrada en cama. La covid prolongada es una montaña rusa”.

Antes de la pandemia, Anderson practicaba artes marciales y no tenía auto, sino que caminaba y tomaba autobuses en la zona de Ann Arbor, Míchigan, donde trabaja como bibliotecaria médica. Justo antes de contraer COVID-19 en marzo de 2020, había acumulado —sí, lleva la cuenta— 11.409 pasos en un día.

El virus le causó escalofríos extremos, dificultad para respirar, un trastorno del sistema nervioso y tal deterioro cognitivo que, durante meses, Anderson fue incapaz de leer un libro.

“Estuve muy enferma durante mucho tiempo y nunca mejoré”, afirmó. Algunos días, el cansancio reducía su número de pasos a tres dígitos. Los intentos de rehabilitación trajeron avances, y luego recaídas.

Las decenas de síntomas conocidos de manera colectiva como covid prolongada, o pos-covid, pueden dejar fuera de juego a cualquiera que haya sido infectado. Pero afectan sobre todo a algunos pacientes de edad avanzada, que pueden ser más propensos a ciertas formas de la enfermedad.

Alrededor del 11 por ciento de los adultos estadounidenses ha desarrollado covid prolongada después de una infección, informaron los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades (CDC, por su sigla en inglés) el mes pasado, por debajo del casi 19 por ciento registrado entre junio de 2022 y junio de 2023. La cifra sugiere que algunos adultos dejan atrás el síndrome a medida que pasa el tiempo.

Las personas mayores de 60 años en realidad tienen tasas más bajas de covid prolongada en general que aquellos de entre 30 y 59 años. Esto podría reflejar tasas de vacunación y refuerzo más elevadas entre los estadounidenses de más edad, o un comportamiento más precavido, como usar cubrebocas y evitar aglomeraciones.

“También puede haber factores biológicos que aún no comprendemos”, aseguró Akiko Iwasaki, inmunóloga e investigadora de la Facultad de Medicina de Yale. Aunque el conocimiento que hay de la covid prolongada ha aumentado, añadió, aún queda mucho por saber sobre la enfermedad.

Solo recientemente Anderson, de 66 años, ha recuperado la mayor parte de sus funciones cognitivas y algunas físicas; ahora puede dar entre 3000 y 4000 pasos diarios. Pero usa un cubrebocas N95 siempre que sale y un bastón con asiento plegable para sentarse, de modo que “si voy de compras y me quedo sin fuerzas a mitad del pasillo, puedo descansar”.

Y se preocupa. Su jefe le ha permitido seguir trabajando a distancia, pero ¿y si la biblioteca empieza a exigirle más de su actual jornada semanal de manera presencial? “No puedo jubilarme”, señaló. “Me da mucho miedo”.

Según los CDC, la covid prolongada comienza cuando los síntomas persisten un mes o más después de la infección. Pero la Organización Mundial de la Salud la define como “la continuación o el desarrollo de nuevos síntomas” tres meses después de la infección inicial, los cuales duran al menos dos meses sin ninguna otra explicación.

La extensa lista de síntomas de la covid prolongada incluye dificultades respiratorias, enfermedades cardiovasculares y metabólicas, enfermedad renal, trastornos gastrointestinales, pérdida cognitiva, fatiga, dolor y debilidad muscular y problemas de salud mental.

“Casi no hay sistema orgánico al que no afecte la covid prolongada”, explicó Ziyad Al-Aly, investigador clínico de salud pública de la Facultad de Medicina de la Universidad de Washington y autor principal de un estudio reciente que demuestra que estos síntomas pueden persistir durante dos años.

“Puede afectar a casi todo el mundo, desde niños hasta adultos mayores, a lo largo de toda la vida”, afirmó.

Aunque es más probable que la covid prolongada afecte a personas que enferman gravemente de covid y requieren hospitalización —y los síntomas de la covid prolongada duran más en esos pacientes—, también puede aparecer tras infecciones leves. Puede aparecer tras el primer brote de covid, o tras el segundo o el cuarto.

Aunque, en general, las personas mayores no son más propensas a padecer covid prolongada, la investigación de Al-Aly, realizada a partir de grandes bases de datos del Departamento de Asuntos de los Veteranos, muestra que tienen más riesgo de padecer cuatro grupos concretos de síntomas:

  • Problemas cardiovasculares, como cardiopatías, infartos y arritmias como la fibrilación auricular.

  • Problemas gastrointestinales, como diarrea y estreñimiento, pancreatitis y enfermedades hepáticas.

Jane Wolgemuth contrajo COVID-19 en junio de 2022, junto con su marido. “Él lo superó en dos días”, recordó. “Yo estuve en cama una semana”.

Ambos se sintieron mejor tras tomar el antiviral oral Paxlovid. Sin embargo, meses después, Wolgemuth, de 69 años, empleada jubilada de un banco de Monument, Colorado, empezó a notar problemas cognitivos, sobre todo al conducir.

“No reaccionaba con la rapidez suficiente”, relató. “La niebla cerebral se estaba apoderando de mí”.

Las personas mayores pueden confundir la covid prolongada con otras afecciones comunes a la edad avanzada. “Pueden pensar: ‘Tal vez solo estoy envejeciendo o necesito ajustar mi medicación para la presión arterial’”, dijo Mónica Verduzco-Gutiérrez, catedrática de medicina de rehabilitación en el Centro de Ciencias de la Salud de la Universidad de Texas en San Antonio. Es coautora de las directrices de la Academia Americana de Medicina Física y Rehabilitación para el tratamiento de la covid prolongada.

La covid prolongada también puede agravar los problemas de salud que ya padecen muchas personas mayores. “Si tenían un deterioro cognitivo leve, ¿pasan a la demencia? Lo he visto”, aseguró Verduzco-Gutiérrez. Una afección cardiaca leve puede agravarse, reducir la movilidad de una persona mayor y aumentar el riesgo de caídas.

“La mejor manera del mundo de prevenir la covid prolongada es prevenir la covid”, afirmó Al-Aly. A medida que aumentan las tasas de infección en todo el país, usar cubrebocas de nuevo en lugares cerrados y comer al aire libre en restaurantes puede ayudar a reducir el contagio.

“Definitivamente, hay que vacunarse”, señaló. “La vacunación y los refuerzos reducen, pero no eliminan, el riesgo de covid prolongada”, entre un 15 y un 50 por ciento, según los estudios.

“Hazte la prueba para asegurarte de que se trata de covid, luego llama a un proveedor lo antes posible y comprueba si eres apto para recibir Paxlovid”, dijo. El tratamiento antivírico también reduce el riesgo de contraer la covid prolongada en aproximadamente un 20 por ciento para las personas de 60 años, y en un 34 por ciento para las mayores de 70.

Dado que aún no hay estudios longitudinales todavía, no está claro si las personas mayores se recuperan más lentamente de la covid prolongada. Pacientes como Anderson y Wolgemuth han probado toda una serie de tratamientos: suplementos, electrolitos, prendas de compresión y diversos regímenes de fisioterapia. “Pero no disponemos de un medicamento que haya demostrado revertirla”, concluyó Iwasaki.

Ciertos enfoques de rehabilitación han demostrado ser efectivos, señaló Verduzco-Gutiérrez, pero no hay suficientes programas o clínicas con experiencia en covid prolongada. Algunos médicos descartan los síntomas prolongados, según informaron los pacientes.

Eso los deja, en gran medida, buscando soluciones por su cuenta.

“Se están organizando juntos para abogar por la investigación y encontrar tratamientos”, dijo Iwasaki, comparando a los pacientes con covid prolongada con los activistas contra el sida de la década de 1980. Codirige el estudio LISTEN de Yale, que trabaja con pacientes con covid prolongada para comprender mejor sus condiciones.

El gobierno de Joe Biden anunció recientemente una nueva oficina federal para liderar investigaciones sobre la covid prolongada y están comenzando más ensayos clínicos. Sin embargo, por ahora, muchos pacientes dependen de grupos como Long Covid Support y Covid-19 Longhauler Advocacy Project, y participan en Patient-Led Research Collaborative.

Sheila McGrath, de 71 años, que vive en Herndon, Virginia, se recuperó de su primera infección por covid en febrero de 2020, pero ha sufrido desde su segundo episodio cinco meses después. Aunque su salud ha mejorado, “no he vuelto a ser la misma de antes”, dijo.

Ahora ella y Anderson son copresentadoras de un chat en línea de apoyo a covid prolongada. “A menudo alguien termina llorando”, dijo McGrath. “Están muy frustrados porque no los escuchan, no los validan, les dicen que es psicosomático y les niegan el tratamiento. Ninguno de nosotros quiere estar enfermo”.


Putin and Erdogan Meet, Showcasing Cooperation but Little Progress on Grain Deal

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Rustem Umerov, whom President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine named as next minister of defense, will be overseeing the Ukrainian army as it is engaged in some of the fiercest fighting of the war with Russia. But his background is not military.

Instead, the appointment of Mr. Umerov, a former telecommunications executive, underscores another side of Ukraine’s war effort: managing a sprawling military budget.

In announcing his decision on Sunday, Mr. Zelensky was brief and did not elaborate on his choice. “Mr. Umerov,” he said, “does not need any additional introductions.”

But Ukraine now spends about half of its national budget on security and defense, and Western allies have raised worries about money being siphoned off in corruption. The shake-up at the Defense Ministry follows a series of revelations of mismanaged contracts for weapons and basic supplies such as food and winter coats.

Mr. Umerov, 41, a member of the Crimean Tatar ethnic group who is set to be Ukraine’s first Muslim government minister, founded an investment firm before running for Parliament in 2019. In Parliament, he led a commission with oversight over Ukraine’s use of foreign aid and, last summer, led a separate committee monitoring foreign weapons donations.

Anticorruption groups saw as a welcome and overdue step Mr. Zelensky’s appointment of a minister with financial and anticorruption credentials to strengthen the army by plugging leaks in military spending.

For the past year, Mr. Umerov has been the chairman of Ukraine’s State Property Fund, which is responsible for the privatization of state assets. In the first quarter of 2023, the fund reported its highest proceeds in 10 years, bringing in roughly $24 million from auctioning off state assets, including the Ust-Dunaisk commercial seaport in the Odesa region.

Mr. Umerov’s deputy at the property fund, Oleksandr Fedorishyn, said in an interview that financial management, more than military expertise, was needed at the ministry, and that Mr. Umerov’s “deep experience” in accounting and finance would help the war effort.

He will most likely pursue changes to make contracting more transparent at the ministry, similar to those he undertook at the property fund, Mr. Fedorishyn said.

Vitaliy Shabunin, the director of the Anti-Corruption Action Center, said the appointment would “probably be the best decision of the president” because Mr. Umerov had deftly managed the privatization agency, a corner of government once plagued with corruption and insider dealing.

Though he is a member of an opposition political party, Mr. Umerov has taken on several critical roles for the government since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. He was the chief Ukrainian negotiator of the Black Sea grain deal and a prominent negotiator on prisoner exchanges.

Mr. Umerov is a lawmaker with the Holos political party, which is in opposition to Mr. Zelensky’s Servant of the People party. He served as a key negotiator for Ukraine in peace talks with Russian diplomats in the early months of the war, and was one of several people, including the Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich, who reportedly suffered symptoms associated with poisoning just before negotiations in Istanbul in March last year.

The Crimean Tatars have been persecuted since Russia illegally annexed the Crimean Peninsula in 2014, and Mr. Umerov has been clear that he is aligned with Mr. Zelensky on refusing to cede any Ukrainian territory to Russia. Crimea and the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine are “our red lines,” he told the Turkish state news agency Anadolu last year, adding, “We will not give up our people or our land.”

In Ukraine, his Tatar roots drew attention as a signal to politicians and policymakers in Europe and the United States who have suggested that Ukraine cede Crimea in exchange for peace. It would be more difficult, Ukrainian commentators noted, to ask a Crimean Tatar to surrender the peninsula.

Like many Tatars, Mr. Umerov was born in Uzbekistan, where his family lived in exile after Stalin expelled the Tatars from Crimea, an injustice Tatars have compared to persecutions today under the Russian occupation.

Valerie Hopkins contributed reporting.

Julio Urias, L.A. Dodgers Pitcher, Is Charged With Domestic Violence

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The Dodgers pitcher Julio Urias was arrested late Sunday night and charged with a domestic violence felony after a physical altercation with his wife at a stadium in South Los Angeles, the authorities said on Monday.

The altercation took place following a Major League Soccer match at the BMO Stadium, according to Assistant Chief Chris Carr of the Exposition Park Department of Public Safety, which manages the stadium and surrounding area.

Urias, 27, was arrested just after 11 p.m. and released on $50,000 bail just before 5 a.m. on Monday, according to a booking document from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. He is scheduled to appear in court on Sep. 27.

Further information regarding the details of the arrest were not immediately available.

On Monday, the Los Angeles Dodgers said it was “aware of an incident” involving the player.

“While we attempt to learn all the facts, he will not be traveling with the team,” the team said in a statement provided by Jon Weisman, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Dodgers. “The organization has no further comment at this time.”

Neither Major League Baseball nor Urias’s agent immediately responded to requests for comment on Monday afternoon.

The arrest comes four years after Urias, a star Dodgers player who earns more than $14 million a year, was placed on administrative leave following a similar incident in which he was arrested by the Los Angeles Police Department on suspicion of “intimate partner battery.”

Urias, then 22, was involved in an altercation with a woman in a shopping center parking lot, according to a 2019 article in The Los Angeles Times. The city prosecutor agreed not to file misdemeanor charges so long as Urias was not arrested again for violent criminal behavior that year, the newspaper reported.

Major League Baseball’s domestic violence and sexual abuse policy, implemented in 2016, provides for the possibility of discipline, including suspensions, even if the legal process is not completed.

The policy states that players may be placed on paid administrative leave for up to seven days while the commissioner’s office investigates accusations against them, but the leave has been extended in past cases.

Urias was suspended for 20 games, or around three weeks, following the 2019 incident, Mr. Weisman said by email. He did not comment on whether Urias would be suspended as a result of Sunday’s arrest.

Graft in Ukraine Military Spending Becomes a Headache

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The removal of Ukraine’s minister of defense after a flurry of reports of graft and financial mismanagement in his department underscores a pivotal challenge for President Volodymyr Zelensky’s wartime leadership: stamping out the corruption that had been widespread in Ukraine for years.

Official corruption was a topic that had been mostly taboo throughout the first year of the war, as Ukrainians rallied around their government in a fight for national survival. But Mr. Zelensky’s announcement Sunday night that he was replacing the defense minister, Oleksii Reznikov, elevated the issue to the highest level of Ukrainian politics.

It comes at a pivotal moment in the war, as Ukraine prosecutes a counteroffensive in the country’s south and east that relies heavily on Western allies for military assistance. These allies have, since the beginning of the war, pressured Mr. Zelensky’s government to ensure that Ukrainian officials were not siphoning off some of the billions of dollars in aid that was flowing into Kyiv.

Just last week, the United States’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, met with three high-ranking Ukrainian officials to discuss efforts to stamp out wartime corruption. It comes as some lawmakers in the United States have used graft as an argument for limiting military aid to Ukraine.

Mr. Zelensky has responded to the pressure from allies and criticism at home with a flurry of anticorruption initiatives, not all of them welcomed by experts on government transparency. The most controversial has been a proposal to use martial law powers to punish corruption as treason.

Mr. Reznikov, who has held a range of positions during Mr. Zelensky’s tenure, submitted his resignation Monday morning. He has not been personally implicated in the allegations of mismanaged military contracts. But the widening investigations at his ministry posed a first significant challenge for the government on anti-corruption measures since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“The question here is, ‘Where is the money?’” said Daria Kaleniuk, the executive director of the Anti-Corruption Action Center in Ukraine, a group dedicated to rooting out public graft that is now focused on war profiteering.

“Corruption can kill,” Ms. Kaleniuk said. “Depending on how effective we are in guarding the public funds, the soldier will either have a weapon or not have a weapon.”

At one point this year, about $980 million in weapons contracts had missed their delivery dates, according to government figures, and some prepayments for weapons had vanished into oversees accounts of weapons dealers, according to reports made to Parliament. Though precise details have not emerged, the irregularities suggest that procurement officials in the ministry did not vet suppliers, or allowed weapons dealers to walk off with money without delivering the armaments.

Ukrainian media reports have pointed to overpayments for basic supplies for the army, such as food and winter coats.

The public revelations of mismanagement so far have not directly touched foreign weapons transferred to the Ukrainian Army, or Western aid money, but they are nonetheless piercing the sense of unquestioning support for the government that Ukrainians had exhibited throughout the first year of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

Two officials with the Defense Ministry — a deputy minister and the head of procurement — were arrested during the winter over the reports of the purchase of overpriced eggs for the army. Mr. Zelensky fired the heads of military recruitment offices last month after allegations emerged that some took bribes from people seeking to avoid the draft.

His proposed initiative to treat corruption as treason set off a wave of criticism that it could lead to an abuse of martial law powers.

Oleksii Goncharenko, a member of Parliament in the opposition European Solidarity party, said of Mr. Zelensky’s record, “I cannot praise his efforts in fighting corruption during the war period.”

Government officials acknowledge that some military contracts failed to produce weaponry or ammunition, and that some money has vanished. But they say that most of the problems arose in the chaotic early months of the invasion last year and have since been remedied.

Mr. Reznikov, the departing defense minister, said last week that he was confident the ministry would return prepayments to suppliers that have gone missing.

Military spending now accounts for nearly half of Ukraine’s national budget, and the reports of contracting scandals point to a shift in the sources of public corruption.

Before the full-scale invasion, the primary source of embezzlement had been poorly run state companies, of which there were more than 3,000 on the government’s balance sheet. Money was siphoned off through myriad schemes by wealthy insiders, while the national budget, propped up by foreign aid, absorbed the losses.

Anticorruption groups say the huge influxes of funds to support the war has prompted them to shift their focus to military spending.

Ukrainian investigative journalists have highlighted overpayment for basic supplies for the army, like eggs for 17 hryvnia, or 47 cents, each — far above prevailing prices, according to a report in Dzerkalo Tyzhnia, a Ukrainian newspaper. Canned beans were bought from Turkey at more than the price for the same cans in Ukrainian supermarkets, the newspaper reported, even though the military would be expected to purchase at less than retail prices.

The ministry also bought thousands of coats that turned out to be insufficiently insulated for Ukraine’s bitter winters.

Western donors are closely watching how Ukraine tackles the problem, the chairwoman of the Ukrainian Parliament’s anticorruption committee, Anastasia Radina, said in an interview.

Particularly worrying is the proposal to punish corruption as treason because it could allow the domestic intelligence agency, the S.B.U., which is under direct control of the president, to investigate official corruption.

The meeting last week with Mr. Sullivan, the American national security adviser, included the heads of a specialized investigative agency, a prosecutorial office and a court that were set up after Ukraine’s Western political pivot in 2014, with help from the United States and international lenders such as the International Monetary Fund. These are the Ukrainian agencies that could lose power under Mr. Zelensky’s treason proposal.

Western governments are wary of the agencies’ potential weakening, Ms. Radina said, adding that if the proposal goes forward, “most likely they will object.”

But, overall, Ms. Radina, a member of Mr. Zelensky’s governing Servant of the People party, defended the government’s efforts to fend off graft in wartime.

The arrest this past weekend of Ihor Kolomoisky, one of Ukraine’s richest men, was seen as a sign of the drive to curb oligarchs’ political influence. Suspected of fraud and money laundering, Mr. Kolomoisky supported Mr. Zelensky’s 2019 election campaign, but since the war began, the president has appeared to break all ties with him.

In other crackdowns this year, investigators pursued one of their highest-profile prosecutions ever for bribery, against the chief of Ukraine’s Supreme Court, who was ousted and arrested in May. In addition, a deputy economy minister is on trial, accused of embezzling from humanitarian aid funds.

That high-level cases of corruption are coming to light is positive, said Andrii Borovyk, director of Transparency International in Ukraine, rather than an indication of a nation bogged down by insider dealing; it shows that the country can fight the war and graft at the same time, he said.

“Scandals are good,” he said. “The war,” Mr. Borovyk added, “cannot be an excuse to stop fighting corruption.”

Worcester high school student dies of complications from social media challenge, family says

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A Worcester family is in mourning after a 14-year-old high school student died suddenly.

The family says on a GoFundMe page Harris Wolobah passed away after taking part in the “One Chip Challenge” which involves eating an extremely spicy chip made from some of the hottest peppers in the world.

Wolobah went to the nurse’s office after feeling sick on Friday at Doherty Memorial High School, school officials told Boston 25 News. His parents picked him up and drove him home.

Worcester Police confirmed to Boston 25 News that Wolobah passed away in his home on Rustic Drive with Worcester police officers and paramedics at the scene.

“The pain our family is experiencing is unimaginable. Harris was a light that lit up the room with his presence and subtle charm. He was an intelligent, quirky and incredibly talented young man who loved video games and playing basketball!” the Lama & Wolobah families wrote on GoFundMe.

Worcester Police say while there is no official cause of death yet, it appears he did eat the infamously scorching chip earlier in the day.

The Paqui 2023 Carolina Reaper + Naga Viper Pepper Chip contains two of the hottest peppers in the world.

On their website, Paqui asks “How long can you last before you spiral out (Before you eat or drink anything for relief?” along with the social media hashtag “#OneChipChallenge.”

Worcester Schools Superintendent Rachel Monarrez released the following statement:

“It is with a heavy heart I share that we lost a rising star, Harris Wolobah, who was a sophomore scholar at Doherty Memorial High School. As a mother and educator, I cannot imagine how hard this is on his family, friends and teachers. My heart goes out to all who knew and loved him.

“Worcester Public Schools is offering counseling and social emotional support for those who have been impacted by this tragedy. If you are a WPS student or staff member in need of grief support, please let a caring adult know at your school. We are here to help. “It is during the most trying times that the community of Worcester comes together and this is one of those times. May we stay focused on allowing the grief and healing process during this difficult time.”

At Doherty, counselors will be made available to talk to students and staff affected by the teen’s sudden passing.

Last October, school officials in Wellesley sent a letter home to parents warning them about the dangers of the “One Chip Challenge.”

Health officials say the challenge can cause serious side effects including severe coughing, asthma, serious burning of the eyes and mouth, and vomiting.

The chip also causes the tongue to turn blue.

Boston 25 News has learned the medical examiner will conduct an autopsy to determine exactly how Wolobah died.

If you would like to donate to the family, you may do so by clicking this link.

Download the FREE Boston 25 News app for breaking news alerts.

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Menopause Retreats Are the Latest in Wellness Travel

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With a growing number of women approaching the age of hormonal changes — by 2025, approximately 1.1 billion women worldwide will have experienced menopause — the travel industry is catering to a new niche: Women who want help dealing with everything from hot flashes to mood swings, with perhaps some classic spa treatments thrown in.

Menopause-centered offerings vary widely, from mindfulness techniques to herbal remedies to nutritional guidance and exercise. Sometimes, the most important activity is just the chance to bond with other women facing the same issues, experts say. “There’s a great healing and discovery when a group of people are going through a similar circumstance,” said Melissa Biggs Bradley, the founder and chief executive of Indagare, a membership-based travel company that recently announced its first midlife and menopause retreat.

At the Six Senses Hotel & Spa in Portugal’s Douro Valley, I recently took part in a three-day bespoke menopause retreat to deal with my night sweats, migraines, joint pain and mood swings, and to get a greater understanding of the hormonal roller coaster I’ve been on (rooms starting at 850 euros or about $924). After a health screening, I was given a tailored agenda to nurture and balance my aging, changing body. First up was a personalized strength training session — squats, lunges, planks and resistance band exercises — to remedy my joint pain and build bone.

For my excessively dry skin, I was given a collagen-boosting facial — collagen production decreases with the loss of estrogen that accompanies menopause — replete with serums and a mask for hydration. To reduce inflammation, I trembled during a daily cold plunge, followed by 15 minutes in an infrared sauna. The finale consisted of a 30-minute bio-hacking treatment, during which I wore thigh-high compression boots — think pulsating, vibrating currents moving up and down your legs — to enhance lymphatic drainage and relax sore muscles; listened to a guided meditation through headphones while wearing an eye-mask; and experienced infrared light stimulation on my face, which is said to heal the cell renewal process and again, stimulate collagen.

At the end, my entire body felt relaxed, but what it all added up to is hard to say. Dr. Lauren Streicher, a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University and host of the Menopause Podcast, is skeptical when it comes to claims that spa treatments will reduce the symptoms of menopause. Dr. Streicher warns women to beware of medical claims made by spas. “It’s OK if you want to talk to other menopausal women, share information and get support,” she said. “The problem is when information is presented as if it’s scientific. It can be manipulative to say a smoothie will make your vagina less dry.”

If you’re seeking medical advice about your symptoms — which some destinations offer — Dr. Streicher advises knowing what specifically you are seeking to address, and recommends consulting with a licensed physician if you are considering long-term solutions, such as hormone replacement therapy.

Ms. Biggs Bradley said she decided to offer a menopause retreat because “so many conversations on our trips have steered to the physical changes of the 40s and 50s and how to navigate them. Women were starved for information.”

When it comes to menopause travel, Dr. Heather Hirsch, founder of the Menopause & Midlife Clinic at Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and author of “Unlock Your Menopause Type,” sees the greatest benefits in terms of self-care, community and education. “The fact that you’re carving out this time and resources for yourself, which women in midlife don’t do very often, is an important thing,” said Dr. Hirsch.

There are all sort of products claiming to reduce symptoms, and a retreat can be a good way to get ideas and test products before committing to a purchase. These getaways are unlikely to alleviate your consistent, long-lasting symptoms, but Dr. Hirsch said, “even if the infrared mask makes your skin feel great for a few weeks, it is the combination of self-care, community and education that will stay for much longer.”

Here are a few getaways with specific perimenopause and menopause programs. What they all have in common is a focus on facing the inevitable hormonal changes that come with the aging female body.

The Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health, in Stockbridge, Mass., will be hosting its first menopause-focused retreat from Sept. 15 to 17, called “Unearthing the Wisdom of Menopause Rituals for Self-Care and Discovery.” The weekend — guided by two members of Kripalu’s lead faculty — will focus less on symptoms and more on adjusting to overall bodily change. There will be a combination of discussion, sharing circles, yoga, breath practices, tools from Ayurveda (the holistic approach of India’s ancient medical system), and a fire ritual to celebrate the “journey of transformation.” The retreat includes meals and access to the center’s grounds ($299 plus accommodations; rooms starting at $145).

In the Jaavu Spa at the Amilla Maldives Resort, the four-day Pause menopause retreat is offered three times in September. Led by Claire O’Sullivan, a women’s health and nutrition coach, this retreat is structured around four themes — balance, move, relax and evolve. In addition to one-on-one coaching, the retreat includes treatments such as reflexology and light therapy. There are yoga and meditation sessions, and seminars on intuitive movement, stress reduction and hormone balancing ($5,915, including room, meals and treatments).

Indagare’s Wise Women retreat at Canyon Ranch Berkshires in Lenox, Mass., is the company’s first to focus on midlife and menopause. The five-day retreat, from Oct. 29 to Nov. 2, will be hosted by Dr. Robin Noble, an OB-GYN, specializing in the menopausal transition. There will be private consultations and daily group sessions addressing the impact of hormonal shifts on sleep, mood, bone and heart health, metabolism, fitness and sexual activity. Each morning, guests have the option to choose among Canyon Ranch’s offerings, such as yoga, hiking, meditation and spa treatments; afternoons and evenings are reserved for cooking classes and workshops on topics such as how to become your own health advocate, optimizing sexual function and strategies for navigating life’s shifting roles (starting at $4,500, including room, meals and activities).

The Raj Ayurveda Health Spa, in Fairfield, Iowa, offers a Menopause Program using ayurvedic treatments. A five-day program, offered year-round, begins with a private wellness consultation, including an ayurvedic pulse assessment from which a treatment plan is created. Guests spend several hours a day in herbal body treatments to restore balance and remove impurities. There is time for yoga and meditation, and personalized sessions with resident experts to monitor progress and devise a take-home plan to help maintain daily routines for nutrition, herbal therapies, yoga and meditation. The Raj offers the choice of eating at a table with other guests or dining alone (starting at $3,900, including room, meals and treatments).

Targeted at “active, performance-minded women in and beyond the menopause transition,” the weekend-long Feisty Menopause retreat — from Nov. 16 to18 — will take place at the Lake Nona Wave Hotel in Orlando, Fla. Led by a fitness coach-trainer and an orthopedic surgeon, it will welcome two dozen women seeking to address the health and fitness goals that shift during menopause so they can stay active and avoid injury. The gathering will focus on exercise, strength-training and nutrition, and includes a full body musculoskeletal analysis to look at movement patterns and areas of weakness. Activities also include suspension yoga, which is performed in a fabric sling, resistance and barbell training, and even time for dancing (starting at $2,500, including accommodations and some meals).

Les Margeurites is a five-day retreat based at a boutique hotel in Alet-les-Bains in southwestern France. The retreat is facilitated by a nurse and a therapist, who are working to change the narrative around perimenopause and menopause — not just the hormonal changes, but also how they impact women’s lives and relationships. Capped at six women, the retreat will include workshops and coaching sessions, plant-based meals to build estrogen, meditation, massage, tincture-making with an herbalist and yoga. Retreats will be held in November, and in April and September 2024 (starting at 1,350 British pounds, or about $1,698, including room and meals).

In 2005, Paula Gallardo and Tania Smith co-founded Mamaheaven, a retreat for new mothers. Fast forward nearly 20 years, and they are now running Menoheaven, twice-yearly retreats in October and May that gather up to 12 women at the Florence House, a Victorian inn one hour south of London. With a naturopath, nutritionist and yoga teacher leading discussions, the retreat aims to “destigmatize and demystify” the symptoms of perimenopause and menopause. This three-day retreat includes sharing circles, organic meals, healing massages, yoga, cold-water swimming and workshops that cover topics from stress and sleep to libido and brain-fog (starting at 550 British pounds, including room and meals).

The Preidlhof spa hotel in South Tyrol, Italy, has a weeklong Menopause-Wellness retreat offered during the months of February, March, June and September. The program includes 22 treatments — ranging from massages and acupuncture to deep breathing and holistic coaching sessions. The retreat offers medical wellness sessions, and spa treatments accompanied by real-time biofeedback and data analysis to assess biological age. There are dance and voice classes, forest bathing (a form of meditation in nature) and many outdoor trails nearby (1,987 euros, not including room and meals; room and meals starting at 212 euros).

Camiral, a wellness resort located an hour from Barcelona, will offer its five-day Renew and Harmonize Retreat, in March 2024. Each day focuses on a theme: Reconnect highlights the body-mind connection; Energize focuses on movement, strengthening and ways to alleviate menopausal symptoms; Nourish concentrates on ways to nourish the body to maximize bone density and cardiac health; Recover concentrates on mindfulness and stress reduction; and Grow features treatments and a debrief with a nutritionist around managing hormonal changes. The retreat is led by a fitness specialist, a physician and a nutritionist, and includes treatments such as cryotherapy and hyperbaric oxygen therapy (starting at 2,128 euros, including room and meals).


Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram and sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to get expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places to Go in 2023.

A Curtain Call for Racing Season in Upstate New York

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You might think of Saratoga Race Course as a theater.

There is the backstage area, known in racing as the backstretch. In the morning, well-to-do horse owners mix with trainers, exercise riders and grooms as they prepare for the afternoon show. Horses are washed and brushed. Tours come through with curious fans eyeballing the whole scene.

On the other side of the curtain is the racetrack, where expensive thoroughbreds race for tens of thousands of dollars, or more, 10 times a day, and the grandstand, which has its own mingling of hard-core horseplayers alongside local families on a cheap day out.

Fans arrive in the early morning hours to stake out a picnic table, whose value soars nearly to priceless by the time racing starts. On a big day, space is at a premium, with the well-heeled and dressed-up sitting in private boxes with names like Whitney and Phipps on them and the less fortunate scrambling for a place at the rail.

Once a four-week sprint, Saratoga’s race meeting has grown so popular that it has been expanded to nearly eight weeks, with the country’s most important summer racing. The biggest race, the Travers Stakes on Aug. 26, was won by Arcangelo, the Belmont Stakes winner, defeating Mage, the Kentucky Derby winner, and National Treasure, the Preakness winner.

Still, the celebratory mood has been dampened by the deaths of a dozen horses, which has sparked medical reforms and consideration of a change to the track’s surface.

The meet ends on Monday with the Hopeful Stakes, for 2-year-olds whose owners are dreaming of next year’s Triple Crown and Travers.

Shane Bryan – Aviation Professional – Launches His Debut Novel -“Cleared for Time Travel” – Immediately Garners Rave Reviews

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“From beginning to end, the plot builds continuously from scene to scene. The story has elements of an amateur sleuth who battles the acceptance of her father’s past. Jackie is firmly grounded, independent and a strong woman who has to trust her gut when given foreign details about her existence.” – Lettie C.

Mesa, Arizona, September, 3, 2023, There are thousands of books published each year, amongst them are only a small number of truly mesmerizing plots and characters. First time author, Shane Brian, hit it out of the park with his debut novel, “Cleared for Time Travel”. His book follows the story of two sister’s living in their dream town of Bluefin Cove, Maine. They enjoy their community involvement, small town gossip, and down east Yankee hospitality until a research vessel locates their father’s missing jetliner, which disappeared off of coastal radar in 1971.

As the wreckage is recovered from the seafloor, the United States Government informs Jackie and her sister, Candice, of a deep, dark family secret about their father’s work with the government and the airline, Americonic International Airlines.

Jackie’s normal everyday life is quickly diverted to a new foreign destination with the help of Agent Taylor, who works for a top-secret organization within the US Government. She must endure the turbulence and accept her challenges in order to save her dad from disappearing in the Atlantic.

Join the sisters as they depart on a journey to discover the untold truth of classified information that has been in a holding pattern since 1971. “Fasten your seatbelts, we’ve been cleared to time travel.”

Editorial Reviews really tell the story. This is what Norma O, had to say, “A wonderful experience for this reader. The book would not leave my hands until I finished reading to the last page. The main character is strong and an intelligent woman who wants to find the truth about her father and herself.”  

Sherri B. had this to say, “Very interesting concept with a turn or a twist every few pages. The characters are developed to the point where I felt as if I was in the story myself. I would recommend this book to all readers as the story is exciting to the end.”

About the Author:

Shane Bryan was born and raised outside of the city of Phoenix, Arizona. In the beautiful East Valley near the majestic Superstition Mountains. Shane considers aviation his first love. From a small age, he could tell the airline and aircraft type of most commercial jets that flew overhead. If he isn’t spending time at the airport for a well-established airline, he is spending time with family and friends.

Shane will be appearing at a Barnes & Noble Bookstore book signing event on September 30th, 11am to 2 pm, at 1446 N. Litchfield Road, Goodyear, AZ 85395

For complete information visit:  https://authorsb.com/

Media Contact:

Shane Brian
Attn: Media Relations
Mesa, AZ
602-571-9193
AZ7372021@gmail.com

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Shane Bryan – Aviation Professional – Launches His Debut Novel -“Cleared for Time Travel” – Immediately Garners Rave Reviews 2

Book&Bilias Publishing Announces Global Release of “We the Other People: The Beggars of the Mercury Lights” by Author William Castaño-Bedoya

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A New Voice in American Social Literature Explores the Complex Link Between Political Power and Invisible Poverty in Today’s Society

Coral Gables, Florida, September 2, 2023, Book&Bilias Publishing is delighted to introduce the highly anticipated novel, We the Other People: The Beggars of the Mercury Lights, authored by William Castaño-Bedoya. This thought-provoking work offers profound insights into political power, resilience, and social injustice.

The novel traces the Newman family’s journey through economic hardship, despair, and transformation, delving deep into themes of conservative values and social inequality. It explores the impact of extremism and celebrates the resilience of the human spirit, all while avoiding an excessive emphasis on the politicization of human suffering.

Set against the backdrop of a turbulent political landscape, We the Other People resonates with the current sociopolitical climate in America, reflecting the challenges and opportunities the nation faces at this pivotal moment in its history.

In the words of Castaño-Bedoya, ‘I aimed to craft a narrative that speaks to the heart of the social issues we confront today through the Newman family’s journey.’ This novel extends an invitation to readers to delve into the depths of human resilience and discover the potential for positive change.

Key Features of We the Other People:

  • Available in both English and Spanish versions on leading online platforms, ensuring accessibility to readers worldwide.
  • Offered in multiple formats, including hardcover, paperback, and eBook, allowing readers to choose their preferred reading experience.

About the Author:

William Castaño-Bedoya is an exceptional American writer born in Armenia, Colombia, and raised in Bogotá. After immigrating to the United States in the 1980s and becoming an American citizen, he now resides in Coral Gables, Florida. With a background in marketing, he transitioned to a full-time writer in 2018. His writing delves into the intricacies of human existence, addressing themes such as social injustice, complacent conformity, and the struggle for survival.

Castaño-Bedoya’s works include We the Other People: The Beggars of the Mercury Lights, The Galpon, Flowers for Maria Sucel, and Ludovico’s Monologues.

To obtain the complete press kit in English or Spanish, as well as images from the book, author photographs, and both Spanish and English eBook versions, simply visit:

https://bookandbilias.us/mediakitcentral-wtpo and click on the “Download” button.

We the Other People is also available on Amazon here.

Media Contact: For media inquiries and/or interviews.

Book&Bilias Publishing USA
Attn: Camila Castano
Coral Gables, Florida
+1 786 351-7570 (For text messages)
literaryworld@bookandbilias.us

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Book&Bilias Publishing Announces Global Release of "We the Other People: The Beggars of the Mercury Lights" by Author William Castaño-Bedoya 6