Tag Archives: Barbs

Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase and Chiefs’ Pat Mahomes trade barbs over ‘best NFL player’ talk – Cincy Jungle

  1. Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase and Chiefs’ Pat Mahomes trade barbs over ‘best NFL player’ talk Cincy Jungle
  2. When Patrick Mahomes’ father roasted Bengals QB after Chiefs’ win in AFC Championship Game – “I’m smokin on that Joe Burrow” Sportskeeda
  3. LOOK: New safety Juan Thornhill flashes new jewelry at Chiefs’ ring ceremony Browns Wire
  4. Chiefs’ Patrick Mahomes appears to fire back at Bengals’ Ja’Marr Chase amid quarterback comments Fox News
  5. Buffalo Bills fans should be thankful for Mahomes, Chase beef BuffaLowDown
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Matthew Perry Promises to Remove Keanu Reeves Barbs From Future Copies of His Memoir – Rolling Stone

  1. Matthew Perry Promises to Remove Keanu Reeves Barbs From Future Copies of His Memoir Rolling Stone
  2. Matthew Perry is removing controversial mentions of Keanu Reeves from future editions of memoir CNN
  3. Matthew Perry says he will remove Keanu Reeves diss from new editions of his memoir: ‘It was a mean thing to do’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Matthew Perry Vows To Remove Keanu Reeves References From Future Editions Of His Memoir Deadline
  5. Matthew Perry to remove Keanu Reeves’ name from his memoir after insulting ‘John Wick’ actor New York Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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WWE SmackDown results, highlights: Cody Rhodes, Roman Reigns trade final barbs ahead of WrestleMania 39 – CBS Sports

  1. WWE SmackDown results, highlights: Cody Rhodes, Roman Reigns trade final barbs ahead of WrestleMania 39 CBS Sports
  2. Roman Reigns demands Cody Rhodes’ acknowledgement | WWE SmackDown Highlights 3/31/23 | WWE on USA WWE on USA
  3. Roman Reigns On His WWE Future: If They Keep Cutting These Insane Checks, I’ll Stay Around Yahoo Entertainment
  4. WWE WrestleMania 39: Cody Rhodes is seeking VINDICATION as WWE Champion ESPN
  5. “I should be in that position” – 15-time champion is not entirely comfortable with Cody Rhodes’ WWE push Sportskeeda
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Barbs and beards from Babiš as crunch Czech election test looms | Czech Republic

The former Czech prime minister Andrej Babiš faces a potentially career-defining reckoning this weekend when voters deliver their verdict in a presidential election that polls indicate he could lose heavily.

The combative Babiš, who together with his ally the outgoing president, Miloš Zeman, has dominated the central European country’s politics over the past decade, is up against a decorated military figure, Petr Pavel – a retired general and former Nato second-in-command – in a head-to-head runoff that many observers see as pivotal to the future of Czech democracy.

Polls open on Friday and close on Saturday.

Pavel, 61, an ex-army chief of staff, has adopted a statesman-like pose consistent with his vow to restore dignity to a political office that many Czechs feel has been sullied by Zeman’s provocative antics. Zeman once joked with Vladimir Putin that he should “liquidate” journalists, and said on a state visit to China that he was there to learn “how to stabilise society”.

Pavel’s supporters have drawn a contrast by invoking the spirit of the late Václav Havel, the playwright and former dissident who became the first post-communist president of Czechoslovakia after the 1989 Velvet Revolution.

Opinion surveys suggest Pavel’s message is resonating. Two Czech polling agencies, Median and Stem, have shown Pavel ahead by about 58% to 42%. That is a much wider gap than in the first round two weeks ago, when Babiš finished just behind Pavel in a bigger field, though neither candidate won the necessary majority of votes cast to avoid a runoff.

Pavel has also conveyed the impression of popular support by staging mass rallies in Brno and Ostrava, the two biggest Czech cities outside the capital, Prague.

In response, Babiš has resorted to no-holds-barred attack, painting Pavel as a warmonger bent on dragging the Czech Republic into conflict on the side of Ukraine in its fight against Russia – a tactic denounced by critics as misinformation – while portraying himself as a victim of death threats and smears.

A day after his first-round defeat, Babiš – a billionaire tycoon who owns a multi-industry business empire – took aim at Pavel’s military credentials by unveiling a billboard bearing the slogan: “I will not drag the Czech Republic into war: I’m a diplomat, not a soldier.”

Czech presidential candidate Petr Pavel attends the last radio debate before the presidential election in Prague, Czech Republic, 13 January 13. Photograph: David W Černý/Reuters

This was followed by an anonymous text message purportedly from Pavel’s campaign thanking voters for their support in the first-round poll and instructing them to “report to the nearest branch of the armed forces, where you will receive the necessary weapons for mobilisation to Ukraine”.

The texts prompted a police investigation, as Pavel alleged dirty tricks and pointed the finger at Babiš supporters. Pavel has also complained about video footage circulating on social media that appeared to have been carefully edited to falsely depict him advocating war against Russia.

There is no evidence of Babiš’s direct involvement in either episode. Yet the candidate expanded on the theme in headline-grabbing fashion in a Sunday night debate on publicly funded Czech television, which he had initially pledged to boycott before a late change of heart prompted by plummeting poll numbers.

Babiš arrived appearing notably more hirsute than usual. He had allowed his previously close-cropped and barely perceptible goatee beard to sprout, in what may have been an effort to compete with his opponent’s luxuriant, Habsburg-style facial hair.

He then triggered an outcry by appearing to undercut Nato’s article 5 provision on collective security, answering “absolutely not” when asked if he would deploy Czech troops to Poland and the Baltic states in the event of a Russian invasion.

After condemnation from Poland, Babiš issued a clarifying tweet, insisting he respected Nato obligations. But the diplomatic damage was done – and Pavel followed up with his own tweet, in Polish, pledging an early visit to Poland if elected.

Andrej Babiš sitting in a restaurant after a presidential election campaign event in Brno. Photograph: Martin Divíšek/EPA

Babiš announced on Tuesday that he was abandoning public campaigning after receiving a death threat which he reported to the police, days after reporting that his wife had received a bullet in the post, and demanded an end to “hatred and aggression”.

Pavel responded witheringly, issuing an invitation to Babiš on Twitter “to calm the situation” and asserting that the charged atmosphere was “a result of your campaign”.

Jan Hartl, founder of the Stem polling group, called Babiš’s tactics “an improvisation” aimed at wooing late supporters by opening up radical divisions but said they were unlikely to work. “Czech public opinion is not very radical and isn’t showing the kind of radicalisation that Babiš is trying to bring into the race,” he said. “I doubt he can attract many new voters by doing this.”

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Brayden Lape Calls Out Gwen Stefani in One of the Sharpest Barbs of ‘The Voice’ Season!

“I thought that was a good opportunity to mess around with her a little bit,” Brayden said.

For his first song of two on the season 22 The Voice finale, Team Blake Shelton’s Brayden Lape performed “Humble and Kind” by Tim McGraw, which he dedicated to his hometown who he explained had supported him all his life. Keep in mind, he’s only 16.

Then it was time to critique his performance and coach Gwen Stefani started to say, “I was thinking what would I say because I was thinking I was your No. 1 fan on the show.”

Related: The Voice’s Top 16 Artist Bodie Reveals Why He Chose Blake Shelton Over Gwen Stefani As His Coach

When she paused for a second, Brayden, who was a one-chair turn, interrupted her to ask, “Then why didn’t you turn?”

A flustered Gwen said, “What are you talking about? I don’t know. I can’t remember that far back, but I will say this. I always believed in you since the beginning that you had something special. Even outside of your voice. It’s just this thing that I can’t put my finger on, but I was right. Look, you’re in the finals.”

After the show, Parade got a chance to talk to Brayden to ask him what he was thinking when he confronted Gwen.

He explained, “After the show last week, one of my friends reached out to me and told me that I should have said that at one point. So, this week, I was just waiting until she was, ‘I’m such a big fan,’ and then I could mess around with her. I like to have a good time up there and mess around with everyone. I thought that was a good opportunity to mess around with her a little bit.”

Related: Morgan Myles on Why She Almost Couldn’t Finish the Emotional Lady Gaga Song That Got Her to The Voice Finale

Then Brayden went on in a humbler manner. “It’s been an awesome journey so far. I couldn’t be more thankful for everything, but you’ve got to have fun sometimes.”

But how did he know she had a sense of humor?

His explanation was, “If she’s liking Blake, she does.”

A perfect example of what he meant by that is that before his performance in his clip package, Blake had been messing with Brayden and tightened his microphone stand so tight that Brayden couldn’t adjust it to his height. He’s 6 feet tall, and Blake had lowered the mic, so it was the right height for a child—and Brayden got that his coach was messing with him. So, he probably felt turnaround was fair play, only he did it with Blake’s wife.

For his second and final competitive performance on The Voice, Brayden performed “Wild as Her” by Cory Kent.

The winner of The Voice will be announced on Tuesday night at the end of the two-hour special, which will include guest appearances by Kane Brown, Karol G, Kelly Clarkson, Maluma, One Republic, Adam Lambert, BRELAND, and last year’s winner, Girl Named Tom, and will start at 9 p.m. ET/PT on NBC.

Next, Who Will Win The Voice Season 22? After Watching Every Episode, Here Are Our Predictions

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U.S. and allies trade barbs with China, but Ukraine dominates Asia security meet

SINGAPORE, June 11 (Reuters) – The United States and its allies traded barbs with China at Asia’s premier security meeting on Saturday, especially on Taiwan, but the war in Ukraine and a remote speech by President Volodymyr Zelenskiydominated proceedings.

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin earlier told the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singaporethat Washington will do its part to manage tensions with China and prevent conflict even though Beijing was becoming increasingly aggressive in the region.

Zelenskiy, speaking via video link from an undisclosed location in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv, told the delegates that their nations’ support was crucial not just to defeat the Russian invasion, but to preserve the rules-based order. read more

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“It is on the battlefields of Ukraine that the future rules of this world are being decided along with the boundaries of the possible,” he said.

He noted that Russia is blocking ports in the Black Sea and Azov Sea, keeping Ukrainian food exports from the world market.

“If … due to Russian blockades we are unable to export our foodstuffs, the world will face an acute and severe food crisis and famine in many countries in Asia and Africa,” he said.

China and the United States, which have clashed in recent months over everything from Taiwan and China’s human rights record to its military activity in the South China Sea, were again at odds.

Austin and Chinese Defence Minister Wei Fenghe met on Friday and reiterated they want to better manage their relationship but there was no sign of any breakthrough in resolving differences. read more

Austin said the United States would continue to stand by its allies, including Taiwan.

“That’s especially important as the PRC (People’s Republic of China) adopts a more coercive and aggressive approach to its territorial claims,” he said.

China claims self-ruled Taiwan as its own and has vowed to take it by force if necessary.

Austin said there had been an “alarming” increase in the number of unsafe and unprofessional encounters between Chinese planes and vessels with those of other countries.

Australia has said a Chinese fighter aircraft dangerously intercepted one of its military surveillance planes in the South China Sea region in May, and Canada’s military has accused Chinese warplanes of harassing its patrol aircraft as they monitor North Korea sanction evasions.

Taiwan has complained for years of repeated Chinese air force missions into its air defence identification zone, and Austin said these incursions had surged in recent months.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin testifies before the Senate Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Defense in Washington, U.S., May 3, 2022. Win McNamee/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

Lieutenant General Zhang Zhenzhong, a senior Chinese military officer, called Austin’s speech a “confrontation”.

“There were many unfounded accusations against China. We expressed our strong dissatisfaction and firm opposition to these false accusations,” Zhang, vice chief of the joint staff department of China’s Central Military Commission, told reporters.

“The United States is trying to form a small circle in the Asia-Pacific region by roping in some countries to incite against some other countries. What should we call this other than confrontation?”

CLOSED-DOOR MEETING

Earlier this year, Washington said China appeared poised to help Russia in its war against Ukraine.

But since then, U.S. officials have said while they remain wary about China’s longstanding support for Russia in general, the military and economic support that they worried about has not come to pass, at least for now.

Ng Eng Hen, the defence minister of host Singapore, said the ties between China and Russia were discussed at a closed-door meeting of the ministers on Saturday, and that several delegates had asked Beijing to do more to rein in Moscow.

The defence minister of Japan, one of Washington’s closest allies in Asia, told the meeting that military cooperation between China and Russia had sharpened security concerns in the region. read more

“Joint military operations between these two strong military powers will undoubtedly increase concern among other countries,” Nobuo Kishi said at the Singapore meeting.

Canadian Defence Minister Anita Anand also spoke out against China.

“The interceptions by the Chinese of our (aircraft) are very concerning and unprofessional and we need to ensure that the safety and security of our pilots is not at risk, especially when they are simply monitoring as required under U.N.-sanctioned missions,” Anand told Reuters in an interview. read more

New Zealand voiced concern about Chinese attempts to gain influence in the Pacific islands. read more

Australian Defence Minister Richard Marles said it was reasonable to expect China to make clear it did not support the invasion of a sovereign country in violation of the U.N. Charter.

“That China has not done so should give us cause for concern, especially given the investments it is making in military power,” he said at the meeting.

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Reporting by Idrees Ali, Chen Lin, Kanupriya Kapoor and Joe Brock; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by William Mallard and Gerry Doyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Charles Barkley, Warriors fans trade ‘you suck’ barbs after Game 1

Charles Barkley isn’t a fan of San Francisco, and it’s clear that San Francisco isn’t a fan of him, either.

Leading up to Game 1 of the Western Conference finals between the Warriors and Dallas Mavericks at Chase Center, Barkley didn’t make any friends in the Bay as he called San Francisco “hell” during TNT’s “Inside the NBA” show last Sunday.

Later during the same show, Barkley picked the Mavericks to win the series over Golden State.

So it’s safe to say he didn’t receive the warmest welcome in Thrive City outside the arena on Wednesday night, where the TNT crew was positioned for their pregame and postgame shows — especially when Barkley hit Dub Nation with a “Let’s go Mavs!” chant ahead of tipoff. 

After the game, Warriors fans decided to punch back.

As Barkley attempted to give his analysis of the Mavericks’ dismal shooting performance during the Warriors’ 112-87 victory, chants of “Chuck you suck!” could be heard from the crowd of Golden State enthusiasts behind him.

The NBA legend turned and responded in true Barkley fashion.

“Hey, you’re right!” Barkley agreed, then added, “And y’all suck too!”

As the broadcast cut to commercial break, Barkley emphatically told the broadcast crew, “Chuck is here for all the smoke.”

 

But the hilarious exchange wasn’t over yet, as Draymond Green joined the postgame show and the chants continued.

As the camera panned away, Barkley could be heard saying, “I don’t dislike the area, I hate the area.”

RELATED: Barkley taunts Dubs fans with Mavs chant before Game 1

Green hit back with the perfect response.

“The area hates you,” he told Barkley with a laugh.

Dub Nation was certainly feeling themselves after the Warriors’ win, and Barkley invited the fun back-and-forth with a playful attitude. But Green might have just been taking the words right out of the Bay’s mouth.

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Adams, Sliwa close debates with barbs, kind words, rake de Blasio

The two major candidates vying to be the next mayor of New York City faced off Tuesday for the last time before next week’s election, providing a testier version of the debate a week earlier.

Republican longshot Curtis Sliwa again labeled Democratic mayoral nominee Eric Adams as Mayor Bill de Blasio’s “teammate” and the Brooklyn borough president scoffed at his opponent’s “clown-like” behavior.

In a heated exchange during the one-hour ABC-7 debate, the salubrious former NYPD captain, apparently frustrated by Sliwa’s many interruptions, snapped, “You want to be the mayor of the City of New York? Start with discipline.”

After brushing off a question about Adams labeling him a “clown,” Sliwa quickly attempted to turn the tables and draw attention to questions about where Adams actually lives and repeated news stories about inaccuracies in his tax returns.

“But talking about faking, you fake where you live, Eric Adams! We still don’t know where you live; you live in Jersey, most people say,” Sliwa chided. “And then you blame a homeless person for your accounting problems with the IRS.”

“This is an example of the clown-like actions,” Adams shot back. “We’re not his circus, New Yorkers.

“He faked a kidnapping, he faked a robbery,” Adams continued, before digging into Sliwa’s own personal history.

Those included charges from Sliwa’s ex, Mary, that he failed to pay child support.

“He hid money so he wouldn’t have to pay child support,” Adams charged.

That war of words came after Sliwa took a question about the controversial policing tactic stop-and-frisk as an opportunity to draw attention to Adams claiming earlier in the day to have spoken to gang members.

Sliwa said Adams is a “teammate,” of Mayor de Blasio.
ABC

“It’s amazing that my opponent, Eric Adams, just this morning on ‘The Breakfast Club,’ said that he had met with gang leaders ‘with bodies.’ That means gang leaders who killed and gang leaders who kill awaiting trial. Did you stop, question and frisk them? Do you report that to the police?” Sliwa asked, in reference to his morning radio interview.

“Can you tell us who those gang leaders were, and where you met with them and which gangs? I think the public has a right to know from someone who declares himself to be the law-and-order candidate.”

Adams explained that he spoke to “top gang members” with the aim of persuading them to take a different path in life — and to discover what led them to commit crimes.

“I’m speaking to those who have committed crimes to get them out of gangs,” he said “You could find and learn so much [from] those who commit crimes. … It’s time for us to find out what is causing the violence.”

Later, Sliwa insisted Adams is a close ally of de Blasio — who Sliwa gave a grade of “F” and labeled a “miserable failure.”

Curtis Sliwa gave de Blasio a failing grade for his two terms in office in NY.
Eduardo Munoz/Pool Photo via AP

“You’ve been his partner, his teammate,” said the GOP longshot. “You partnered up with him, Eric Adams, for eight years.”

In a lighter moment, when prompted by a debate moderator to “say something nice” about their opponent, Adams lauded Sliwa for being a cat-lover while Sllwa said he admired Adams for becoming a vegan and preaching the benefits of a healthy lifestyle.

“I take my hat off to Curtis, what he’s doing with cats,” said Adams, the Brooklyn borough president and clear front runner in the race for mayor. “I think we need to be humane to all living beings and that includes our animals.”

“His promotion of the vegan way of life to avoid serious medical issues has probably already helped dozens, maybe hundreds, maybe thousands of people,” Sliwa said. “I applaud you for that because I have seen the results of people who end up dying, suffering and in pain because they got caught with all kinds of problems — diabetes, high blood pressure, hypertension.”

Following the lively, often personal match up, Adams’ campaign spokesman Evan Thies said in a tweet: “Short summary of the debate: that was man with a plan versus desperate with no details.”

Curtis Sliwa and Eric Adams made their final cases as Election Day nears.
Eduardo Munoz/Pool Photo via AP

Sliwa’s campaign rep said Adams would serve as “de Blasio 2.0” as mayor.

“Tonight, we saw why Sliwa’s opponent, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams, is known as de Blasio 2.0.,” spokeswoman Maria Sliwa said in a statement. “Eric Adams will continue the legacy of Bill de Blasio, which will forever be remembered for rising crime and declining quality of life, as well as complete disregard for the homelessness and mental health crises affecting our great city,”

Early voting in the race to lead City Hall runs through Oct. 31. Find your voting location on the Board of Elections website at vote.nyc.

Election Day is Tuesday, Nov. 2.



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US and China trade barbs after another high-level meeting but say they want to keep talking

A US delegation led by the Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman met with Foreign Minister Wang Yi and other officials in Tianjin, China, a week after the Biden administration joined an international coalition to condemn China for its global cyberattacks.

The State Department called the meetings “frank and open” — diplomatic code for a skirmish — and painted Beijing as an international outlier that is subverting international norms, listing China’s genocide in Xinjiang and its refusal to cooperate with an international investigation into the origins of the coronavirus.

“The Deputy Secretary underscored that the United States welcomes the stiff competition between our countries—and that we intend to continue to strengthen our own competitive hand—but that we do not seek conflict with” China, State Department spokesman Ned Price said in a statement Monday.

Beijing, describing the talks as “in-depth and frank,” responded with a torrent of condemnation. Chinese officials expressed “strong dissatisfaction” with Washington’s “extremely dangerous China policy” and accused it of hypocrisy on human rights.

‘Confrontation’

Chinese foreign minister spokesperson Zhao Lijian said Chinese officials “demanded that the US immediately stop interfering in China’s internal affairs, stop harming China’s interests, and stop stepping on the red line, stop playing on the fire, and stop orchestrating group confrontation under the guise of values.”

Both countries are trying to gain an advantage as they struggle to manage the world’s most important bilateral relationship and set the stage for the first leaders’ meeting between President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping expected at the G7 summit in October. Despite the assertive language, both sides expressed an interest in continued dialogue.

“The US and China are in a period of strategic competition, relations are overall going downhill, and that trend has continued through the talks today,” said Neil Thomas, a China analyst at Eurasia Group, the political risk advisory and consulting firm. “But the fact that both sides wanted to hold this meeting … shows that that both Biden and Xi Jinping still want to put some kind of floor beneath deteriorating relations, because they both know this is the most important bilateral relationship in the world. It has significant consequences for global stability — for politics, for security, and economically.”
Speaking to The New York Times after her meetings, Sherman said, “On areas where we have common interests, and there are great global interests, we had very substantive discussions, shared some ideas. We will have to see where that goes.”

Sherman’s meetings in China followed a tour through Asia with stops in Japan, Korea, and Mongolia, and came as Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin visited Singapore and Secretary of State Antony Blinken flew to India — all reflecting the importance the Biden administration is placing on Asia.

The deputy secretary’s trip to Tianjin marked the first senior-level meeting since a contentious meeting in March in Alaska between Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan and Wang and senior officials from the People’s Republic of China was partially caught on camera.
The readouts after Sherman’s meetings signaled that the disputes in March not only remain unresolved but will continue to create friction going forward — particularly around the issues of human rights, in the lead up to Beijing hosting the Winter Olympics, and international attempts to determine the origins of the coronavirus.

“The Deputy Secretary raised concerns in private — as we have in public — about a range of PRC actions that run counter to our values and interests and those of our allies and partners, and that undermine the international rules-based order,” Price said in a statement.

“She raised our concerns about human rights, including Beijing’s anti-democratic crackdown in Hong Kong; the ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang; abuses in Tibet; and the curtailing of media access and freedom of the press,” Price continued. “She also spoke about our concerns about Beijing’s conduct in cyberspace; across the Taiwan Strait; and in the East and South China Seas.”

Sherman’s meeting came just days after China rejected the World Health Organization plan for a second phase of an investigation into the origin of the coronavirus.

“The Deputy Secretary reiterated concerns about the PRC’s unwillingness to cooperate with the World Health Organization and allow a second phase investigation in the PRC into COVID-19’s origins,” Price said, adding that Sherman also raised the issue of Americans and Canadians detained in China under exit bans and “reminded PRC officials that people are not bargaining chips.”

A Chinese statement about Sherman’s first meeting with Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Xie Feng said that the vice minister told Sherman the frayed US-China relationship is due not to any of the issues Sherman raised, but to Americans’ portrayal of China as the “imagined enemy.”

‘Extremely dangerous’

Many of Xie’s other comments seemed to be an attempt to flip US criticism of Beijing.

According to the statement, Xie also told Sherman that it is the US that has abandoned the rules-based international order it helped create in the aftermath of World War II, but that China would like to build a “new type of international relations” built on “respect.”

Xie also said the US is in “no position to lecture China on democracy and human rights,” pointing to the American genocide of Native Americans and US military action and said that the US is the “inventor and patent and intellectual property owner” of coercive diplomacy — another criticism Washington has often leveled at Beijing for its approach to smaller, poorer countries.

During the long day of talks on Monday, spokesperson Zhao said at a regular news briefing that China had expressed its “strong dissatisfaction” with Washington’s “extremely dangerous China policy.”

But Zhao also added that the talks were “in-depth and frank,” and that it was beneficial for the healthy development of Sino-US relations.

And Price, the State Department spokesman, said that even as Sherman delivered her critique of China’s actions, “at the same time, the Deputy Secretary affirmed the importance of cooperation in areas of global interest, such as the climate crisis, counternarcotics, nonproliferation, and regional concerns” including North Korea, Iran, Afghanistan, and Burma.

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Barbs fly over satellite projects from Musk, Bezos

The Guardian

‘I want to go home’: Filipina domestic workers face exploitative conditions

Many of the Filipina women we interviewed across Asia, Europe and the Middle East lost jobs or had salaries cut since the pandemic – others were subjected to physical abuse ‘They’ve got no support whatsoever.’ Illustration: Susie Ang/The Guardian This story is published in partnership between the Guardian and the Fuller Project. Every morning, Rowena wakes early on the pile of blankets where she sleeps, curled up against a desk in the corner of the office she used to clean. It’s not yet 7am, but if her manager catches her alone in her pyjamas, he’ll try to grope and stroke her, as he’s tried to do several times a week for the past six months. Rowena, who is 54 and asked to be identified only by her first name, left the Philippines for Bahrain in April 2019. After she had been in the Gulf country for a year, her boss told her that due to the pandemic, he could no longer pay her monthly salary of 120 Bahraini dinar, or BHD (£240). Instead, he would provide her and the three other migrant domestic workers he employed with 10 Bahraini dinar (or £20) for food every fortnight, to be split between four. The same month, Rowena’s flight out of the country was cancelled, and she found herself trapped. In September, her employer stopped giving the women their food allowance too, leaving them with nothing. Rowena and her housemates are not alone: the pandemic has left domestic workers like them further exposed to exploitative working conditions and abuse. The Guardian has interviewed more than a dozen Filipina women across Asia, Europe and the Middle East since April. Most have lost jobs or had salaries cut by their employers since the start of this year. Others have also found themselves suddenly subjected to physical abuse. As Covid started to spread worldwide, the Philippine government organised repatriation flights from Manama to Manila. But Rowena didn’t know about them. In July, three months after her boss first stopped paying her, she wrote on the Philippine government’s Overseas Foreign Workers Help Office’s public Facebook page to ask for help, along with dozens of other Filipina women and men stranded abroad. She also applied for financial support from the Philippine department of labor and employment. Months passed by, but no one replied. “I don’t want to make trouble,” she says via a call over Facebook Messenger. “I want to go home.” ••• The Philippine government says that about one-third of its 10 million citizens overseas are women working in “elementary” jobs – a term widely interpreted as referring to domestic workers like Rowena who are paid low wages to clean homes, and cook meals and care for wealthy families under often horrendous conditions. Human Rights Watch has long described migrant domestic workers, thousands of miles away from home and hidden out of sight in strangers’ houses, as one of the world’s most vulnerable demographics. Now, nearly a year into a global pandemic, thousands of Filipina women are stranded with even fewer options to flee exploitation. According to the International Labor Organisation, there are 11.5 million migrant domestic workers worldwide. By the Philippine government’s own estimate, about one in four is a Filipina woman. International advocacy organisations believe the number would likely be higher if those who are undocumented were taken into account. Together, the women form a scattered community, the majority spread across the Middle East and East Asia, followed by Europe and the United States. Recruited by international agencies who favour English-speaking nannies and cleaners, the women are charged exorbitant fees to find work overseas. For the 60% of Filipina women who work in the Middle East, they’re also subject to the “kafala” system, which generally binds a migrant worker to their employer, resulting in the confiscation of their passports until their contracts come to an end. Maria, 43, is a single mother from the Philippines who has been working in Hong Kong since 2019. In August, her employer lost her temper after Maria (who agreed to speak on the condition of her anonymity) didn’t cook a bell pepper for the family’s baby. “She slapped me on my face, on the right side of my face with her hand, and beat me on [my] bottom [ I think] around three or four times,” she says. “I felt that I was unworthy for her.” In Singapore, Robina Navato hears similar stories daily. A domestic worker for almost 25 years, she also volunteers for the Humanitarian Organisation for Migration Economics (Home), counseling her peers across the city on their rights. At the start of the outbreak, she received calls late into the night from Filipina domestic workers trying to leave their abusive employers. “I told them that the shelter is packed with people already and we cannot accept [them],” she remembers. “So if you can hold on, for like another month, and then run away after that?” ••• The UK issues about 23,000 visas to foreign domestic workers every year, half of whom come from the Philippines, according to reports. British laws enabled their abuse before the pandemic, migrant rights advocates say. But research shows illegal, exploitative working conditions have multiplied in recent months. “They don’t have any access to public funds, or furlough schemes or anything like that. From the perspective of the state, they just don’t exist,” says Dr Ella Parry-Davies, a postdoctoral fellow at the British Academy researching the lives of Filipina domestic workers in Lebanon and the UK. “They’re really pushed to the brink of destitution.” They’re really pushed to the brink of destitution Dr Ella Parry-Davies In the first two months of the coronavirus outbreak, more than half of the Filipino migrant workers surveyed in the UK had lost their jobs, according to a report compiled in June by Dr Parry-Davies and the Kanlungan Filipino Consortium – a London-based consortium of grassroots organisations advocating for Filipino migrants’ rights. Others saw their wages drop to less than £2 an hour, less than a quarter of the UK’s statutory minimum wage. Of those who were infected by the coronavirus, one in four were too scared to ask the NHS for help in case it affected their immigration status in the future. “They’ve got no support whatsoever,” says Dr Parry-Davies, adding that the Filipina women, who clean, nanny and take care of disabled or elderly people, are essentially key workers. “They’re just completely abandoned by the nation.” In 2014, Mimi (who asked to go by a different name to avoid jeopardising her safety) arrived in west London, brought over to the UK by a European family she had previously worked for in Hong Kong. Today, she works from 8am until 8pm, Monday to Friday, taking care of two children under the age of 10, earning about £5 an hour. After finishing her day’s duties, the 52-year-old often crosses High Street Kensington and cleans a neighbour’s house from 8.30pm until one or two in the morning. Then she walks for 30 minutes back to the boarding house she shares with four other Filipina women. Her monthly rent is almost half her salary. “When I am working in the wee hours I am crying, and I am saying: ‘Why am I doing this?’” she says over the phone, late one Friday night. “I know I am being abused. But I cannot complain.” As the country moves in and out of Covid-19 lockdowns, her employers have insisted she continue working, coaching her on what to say to the police if she’s stopped on the street. Their demands have also increased: she has to disinfect the house from top to bottom, clean their three toilets every day and sanitise the kitchen. But although Mimi fears for her safety, she can’t afford to quit. The Philippine president, Rodrigo Duterte, says his administration is helping Filipino citizens stranded overseas, but such support is limited. In April, the department of labor and employment (Dole) released a one-off grant of up to 10,000 Philippine pesos (£156) for displaced foreign workers, and the department of foreign affairs (DFA) has repatriated 277,320 Filipino citizens from countries including Lebanon, Turkey and Bahrain since February. ••• Each of the women the Guardian spoke to sends the majority of her disposable income back to the Philippines. Filipina migrant workers wire back more than £26bn to support their families every year, accounting for 8.8% of the Philippines’ total GDP, according to the World Bank. Since the start of the year, unemployment in the Philippines has doubled and the pressure to send money home is greater than ever. Without Mimi’s income, her 19-year-old daughter won’t be able to finish her civil engineering degree. “There’s nothing left for me,” Mimi says. “I’m working here with no [money] for myself, just for my family.” I’m working here with no [money] for myself, just for my family. Mimi Even if Mimi did decide to hand in her notice, she would risk deportation. Until 2012, an overseas domestic worker visa allowed Filipina women to quit their jobs and find a new employer within the UK without it affecting their immigration status. “But when [Prime Minister David] Cameron and the Conservatives were in power, they removed the rights of the domestic workers to change their employers,” says Phoebe Dimacali, who heads up the Filipino Domestic Workers Association UK, a volunteer organisation of more than 80 women from the Philippines in the UK. “Once they leave their employers they will automatically become undocumented.” In 2020, foreign domestic workers can legally change employers in the UK within the first six months of their arrival. After six months, the only way they can stay in the country is if he or she can prove they have been trafficked. “The reason why that is a problematic response is because we have lots of people that come to see us who have been exploited but haven’t been trafficked,” says Avril Sharp, legal policy and campaigns officer at Kalayaan, a London-based non-governmental organisation advocating for migrant domestic workers’ rights. “But they may well be trafficked later in the future, because their visa – if it hasn’t already – will expire, and then they will lose a lot of … the basic fundamental rights that will keep them safe in the UK.” Many of the women who say they have been trafficked are not allowed to work and have to survive on the national asylum support allowance of £39.60 a week until their visa application is processed, which can take up to three years. Human rights campaigners, along with the Labour MP for Birmingham, Yardley Jess Phillips, are urgently calling for 2012’s overseas domestic worker visa to be reinstated during the pandemic, and to allow thousands of women the right to escape abusive working conditions. “They’re not being fed, they sleep on the floor, they’re not being given the right amount of wages that they need,” says Dimicali. “Nobody knows what is happening inside these big houses in Knightsbridge, inside these big houses in Kensington, in these very wealthy places in London.” A Home Office spokesperson said: “We are committed to protecting migrant domestic workers from exploitation and have already made a number of changes to better protect workers. This includes allowing workers to switch to a different employer and explaining how to raise concerns. We are also proud to provide world-leading support for victims of modern slavery so they can rebuild their lives, including by providing accommodation, financial support and counselling.” ••• After her employer stopped paying for her food in Bahrain in September, Rowena found part-time work cleaning houses in the neighbourhood, earning approximately 16BHD (£30) every week. Her visa has expired, and she’s worried that if she’s caught, she might be sent to jail. “It’s useless,” she said. “Because I’m alone here. This is not my country.” On 4 December, Rowena received 75BHD (£147) in financial support from the Philippine government, seven months after she first applied. The cheapest ticket from Manama to Manila costs more than twice as much as she received. Her boss has promised to pay for her flight home, but he hasn’t told her when. The Phillipine department of foreign affairs did not respond to repeated requests for comment. As rates of Covid-19 continue to climb across the world, neither she nor Mimi have told their children the reality of their lives abroad. When Rowena’s 24-year-old daughter and two-year-old grandson ask how she’s doing, she lies. “She’s asking me: ‘Mama, what date do you come back?’ I say: ‘Very soon …’ But I don’t know, because my boss never says: ‘OK, your ticket is ready now.’” Until he does, Rowena lies on her pile of blankets behind the desk and waits.

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