Tag Archives: UTurn

A Tanker’s Giant U-Turn Reveals Strains in the Market for Russian Oil

Much of that demand is expected to come from Asia. India’s purchases of Russian oil, in particular, has jumped more than 700 percent in the five weeks since the start of the war in Ukraine compared to the previous five weeks, according to data from the Russian Tanker Tracking Group.

As shipments to Asia have risen, Europe has shown a desire to cut purchases of Russian crude, said Reid L’Anson, senior commodity economist at Kpler, said in an email.

Tracking the drifting oil tankers at sea was important to start figuring out the new picture for Russian oil exports, he said. While it wasn’t necessarily out of the ordinary to have some tankers with unknown destinations, “given the situation in Russia, tracking these flows will be critical,” he said. “I’m going to be very interested to see just how much Asia fills the gap left by European buying,” he added.

Part of the West’s shift away from Russian oil has come on the heels of growing public pressure.

When the Minerva Virgo, a 50,000-ton Croatia-flagged tanker carrying Russian petrochemicals, docked in New York last week, the environmental group Greenpeace staged a protest in the harbor, with activists in rubber boats holding up signs that read “Oil Fuels War.”

(Several days later, a smaller tanker carrying Russian chemicals also headed for New York, the Vinjerac, changed its destination to “Drifting” a short distance from the shore and has not docked.)

In the United Kingdom, dockworkers at the Birkenhead Docks in northwest England earlier this month refused to unload a German-flagged tanker. Workers would “under no circumstances unload any Russian oil,” a local union leader told Sky News. The United Kingdom has banned Russian tankers from British ports but the order doesn’t apply to vessels from other countries carrying Russian oil.

In response to the invasion, major oil companies have said they are stepping away from their investments in Russia. Companies like BP, Shell, TotalEnergies and Exxon Mobil have all said they would not sign new oil contracts with Russia.

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Indian farmers in no mood to forgive despite Modi’s U-turn on reforms

MOHRANIYA, India, Nov 19 (Reuters) – Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi may have caved in to farmers’ demands that he scraps laws they say threaten their livelihoods.

But reaction to the shock U-turn in India’s rural north, where Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) faces key elections next year, has been less than positive, a worrying sign for a leader seeking to maintain his grip on national politics.

In the village of Mohraniya, some 500 km by road east of the capital New Delhi and located in India’s most populous state of Uttar Pradesh, farmer Guru Sevak Singh said that he and others like him lost faith in Modi and his party.

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“Today Prime Minister Modi realised that he was committing blunder, but it took him a year to recognise this and only because he now knows farmers will not vote for his party ever again,” said Singh.

For the young farmer, the matter is deeply personal.

Singh’s 19-year-old brother Guruvinder was killed in October when a car ploughed into a crowd protesting against the farm legislation, one of eight people who died in a spate of violence related to the farmers’ uprising.

Thousands of agricultural workers have protested outside the capital New Delhi and beyond for more than a year, shrugging off the pandemic to disrupt traffic and pile pressure on Modi and the BJP who say the new laws were key to modernising the sector.

“Today I can announce that my brother is a martyr,” Singh told Reuters, weeping as he held a picture of his dead brother.

“My brother is among those brave farmers who sacrificed their lives to prove that the government was implementing laws to destroy the agrarian economy,” he added.

Around him were several police officers, who Singh said were provided after his brother and three others were killed by the car. Ashish Mishra, son of junior home minister Ajay, is in police custody in relation to the incident.

Ajay Mishra Teni said at the time that his son was not at the site and that a car driven by “our driver” had lost control and hit the farmers after “miscreants” pelted it with stones and attacked it with sticks and swords.

‘HOW CAN WE FORGET?’

In 2020, Modi’s government passed three farm laws in a bid to overhaul the agriculture sector that employs about 60% of India’s workforce but is deeply inefficient, in debt and prone to pricing wars.

Angry farmers took to the streets, saying the reforms put their jobs at risk and handed control over crops and prices to private corporations.

The resulting protest movement became one of the country’s biggest and most protracted.

Leaders of six farmer unions who spearheaded the movement in Uttar Pradesh and Punjab states said they would not forgive a government that labelled protesting farmers as terrorists and anti-nationals.

“Farmers were beaten with sticks, rods and detained for demanding legitimate rights … farmers were mowed down by a speeding car belonging to a minister’s family … tell me how can we forget it all?” said Sudhakar Rai, a senior member of a farmers’ union in Uttar Pradesh.

Rai said at least 170 farmers were killed during anti-farm law protests across the country. There are no official data to verify his claims.

A senior BJP member who declined to be named said the decision to repeal the laws was taken by Modi after he consulted a top farmers’ association affiliated to his party.

The politician, who was at the meeting when the party agreed to back down, said those present conceded the BJP had failed to communicate the benefits of the new laws clearly enough.

Leaders of the opposition and some analysts said Modi’s move was linked to state elections next year in Uttar Pradesh – which accounts for more parliamentary seats than any other state – and Punjab.

“What cannot be achieved by democratic protests can be achieved by the fear of impending elections!” wrote P. Chidambaram, a senior figure in the opposition Congress party, on Twitter.

But farmers like Singh warned that the government could pay a price for its treatment of farmers.

“We are the backbone of the country and Modi has today accepted that his policies were against farmers,” said Singh. “I lost my brother in this mess and no one can bring him back.”

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Additional reporting and writing by Rupam Jain in Mumbai; Editing by Mike Collett-White

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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UK fuel crisis: Government expected to make U-turn on foreign worker visas

As queues started forming outside filling stations early on Saturday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s office said it was looking at temporary measures to address the shortage of heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers.

Newspapers reported that the government would allow up to 5,000 foreign drivers into Britain on short-term visas, a measure that logistics companies and retailers have demanded for months but which the government had previously ruled out.

The UK’s Road Haulage Association (RHA) says Britain needs 100,000 more drivers if it is to meet demand. The driver shortage has been caused partly by Brexit and Covid-19, and the loss of about a year of driver training and testing.

“We’re looking at temporary measures to avoid any immediate problems, but any measures we introduce will be very strictly time limited,” a spokeswoman for Johnson’s Downing Street office said in a statement.

Downing Street declined to give further details.

Ministers have cautioned against panic buying, and oil companies say there is no shortage of supplies, merely problems delivering the fuel to the gas stations.

However, long lines of vehicles have begun gathering at petrol stations to fill up after BP said it had to close some of its outlets due to the driver shortages.

Some Shell stations have also reported pumps running dry while ExxonMobil’s Esso has also said a small number of its 200 Tesco Alliance retail sites had also been impacted in some way.

EG Group, which runs hundreds of forecourts across Britain, said on Friday it would impose a purchase limit of £30 ($41) per customer for fuel due to the “unprecedented customer demand.”

“We have ample fuel stocks in this country and the public should be reassured there are no shortages,” the Downing Street spokeswoman said.

“But like countries around the world we are suffering from a temporary Covid-related shortage of drivers needed to move supplies around the country.”

The fuel issue comes as Britain, the world’s fifth-largest economy, also grapples with a spike in European natural gas prices causing soaring energy prices and a potential food supply crunch.
Other countries such as the United States and Germany are also dealing with truck driver shortages.

Britain says the long-term solution is for more British drivers to be hired, with the RHA saying better pay and conditions are needed to attract people into the industry.

But the retail industry has warned that unless the government acts to address the shortage in the next 10 days, then significant disruption is inevitable in the run-up to Christmas.

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The push for Haaland, the Inter U-turn, the negotiations

Romelu Lukaku hadn’t been back in pre-season training with Inter Milan for long when he started being bombarded with messages from Belgium international team-mates on his phone.

There was one subject they were looking for clarification on: Was he going to rejoin Chelsea? Their confusion was understandable, because Lukaku had made it clear publicly and privately over the summer that he was very happy at Inter Milan. The new Serie A champions had also insisted he was going nowhere.

Yet the 28-year-old’s replies gave enough of an indication that the situation had changed and a move back to Stamford Bridge was possible. One source suggests the striker intimated he simply ‘couldn’t resist’.

And so it proved. Less than a week off a decade to the day since first signing him from Anderlecht for £18 million, Lukaku has returned as Chelsea’s record buy at £97.

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Vaccines save Provincetown after COVID outbreak that triggered CDC mask U-turn

A famed conservative columnist who lives at the epicenter of the United States’ latest Delta COVID cluster said of the virus ‘Let it rip’ after seeing how mild his vaccinated friends’ symptoms were. 

Writer Andrew Sullivan says the COVID-19 outbreak in Provincetown, Massachusetts, that infected around 900 people and triggered CDC’s mask U-turn was sparked by wild July 4 indoor parties following Pride Week. 

This outbreak was behind the CDC’s sudden backpedal on mask recommendations for vaccinated Americans to wear masks in indoor places in COVID hot spots.  

But now Sullivan says first-hand experience of his friends’ illnesses showed that the Indian Delta variant poses little risk to vaccinated people – and called for restrictions to be lifted once and for all.

Writing his his popular blog, he said: ‘Take the rational precautions – a solid vaccine – and go about your business as you always did,’ Sullivan wrote. 

‘We are at a stage in this pandemic when we are trying to persuade the holdouts – disproportionately white Republicans/evangelicals and urban African-Americans – to get vaccinated. How do we best do this?  

Andrew Sullivan, an influential journalist and Provincetown resident, said COVID-19 outbreak in his town that infected around 900 people and triggered CDC’s mask U-turn was sparked by wild July 4 indoor parties

People walking through Provincetown at the tip of Cape Cod, Massachusetts on July 20 

A sign on a P-town’s Heaven Cafe encourages customers to wear masks until they’re seated

 ‘Endless, condescending nagging won’t help. Coercion is not an option in a free country. Since the vaccinated appear to be able to transmit the virus as well, vaccine passports lose their power to remove all risk. 

‘Forcing all the responsible people to go back to constraining their everyday lives for the sake of the vaccine-averse is both unfair and actually weakens the incentive to get a vaccine, because it lowers the general risk of getting it in the broader society.

‘So the obviously correct public policy is to let mounting sickness and rising deaths concentrate the minds of the recalcitrant. Let reality persuade the delusional and deranged. It has a pretty solid record of doing just that.’ 

Sullivan said many had just come from Pride parties in New York City and packed into bars and dance clubs. 

One of the bars is like a ‘dang dungeon where sweat drips from the ceiling and mold reaches up the walls,’ Sullivan said. 

‘It might have been designed for viral transmission,’ he added. 

But all the friends he described in his post on The Weekly Dish experienced mild symptoms after testing positive. 

Town Manager Andrew Morse confirmed that most of the 900 people connected to the Provincetown COVID outbreak had mild symptoms. Only seven were hospitalized and no one died, Morse said. 

Morse – who was one of the 900 infected – said the popular holiday spot is safe, and expects life to return to normal there over the coming weeks. 

The small town at the tip of Cape Cod – with a population of about 3,000 – is known for its eccentric and LGBTQ-friendly party atmosphere that Sullivan said attracts upwards of 40,000 people during the peak season.  

Walking through the fishing and whale watching town has a Bourbon Street, New Orleans-feel.  

Dressed as Maxine the Vaccine, Poppy Champlin encourages pedestrians to get vaccinated for Covid-19 while promoting her comedy show on Commercial Street in Provincetown 

Only four of the vaccinated people were hospitalized, two of whom had underlying conditions, and there were no deaths showing vaccines are effective even against the Delta variant, which now makes up 83% of all new infections

A new CDC report detailed 469 cases of COVID-19 linked to an outbreak in Provincetown, Massachusetts between July 3 and July 17, of which 74% were in fully vaccinated people

In a good-news-bad-news situation, it’s scary to think that around three-quarters of the people who contracted the virus were vaccinated, but the outbreak is proof that vaccines are effective. 

Dr. Ashish Jha, an epidemiologist and dean of public health at Brown University, said in a nine-tweet thread that he felt the situation was ‘reassuring.’

While the Delta variant is ‘more contagious than Ebola, Spanish Flu and probably chicken pox’ causing breakthrough cases in vaccinated people, the ‘vaccines prevent vast majority of infections, transmission and nearly all hospitalizations (and) deaths,’ Dr. Jha Tweeted. 

‘Yeah, delta variant is bad. Like really bad. Our vaccines are good. Like really good. Breakthrough infections happen. Sometimes they may spread to others. But if enough people get the shot, the pandemic does come to an end.’

Provincetown: How July 4 weekend turned the partygoing playground of New England into the center of a Covid cluster

Located near the northern-most point of Cape Cod, Provincetown – or P-Town – is known for its beaches, artists and as a popular vacation spot for the LGBT+ community. 

It has a population of just under 3,000 people year-round, but this raises to as high as 60,000 in the summer months.

Young party-goers descend on the town to make the most of the plethora of bars and clubs found along it’s famous Commercial Street.

Wealthy tourists usually found in nearby cities such a Boston and Manhattan will often use the town as their playground to spend their hard earned cash – or that of their parent’s.

But a week after crowds descended to celebrate the Fourth of July — the holiday President Joe Biden hoped would mark the nation’s liberation from COVID-19 — the manager of the Cape Cod beach town said he was aware of ‘a handful of covid cases among folks who spent time there’ 

Within weeks, the outbreak rapidly grew until, as of Thursday, 882 people were tied to an outbreak in the town, with 74 per cent of those having had both doses of the vaccine. It was reported that seven people were hospitalised, ABC News reported.  

Before this, health officials were assuming that it was rare for a vaccinated person to become infected with the virus and, if they were, they probably wouldn’t infect others. 

The assumption was based on studies of an earlier virus, and not the new Delta variant, which was first detected in India earlier this year. 

It is indicated that this outbreak is among the new evidence behind the decision to make masks compulsory indoors again, even if they have had both doses of the vaccine.  

The owner of Marine Specialties, a long running Army-Navy store, had been leery of officials dropping virus safety mandates ahead of what many expected would be a busy summer season. He even tried to require customers to mask up in his store through the summer, before finally relenting in June. 

‘If we’d stuck with masks all along, I don’t think we’d be having this conversation,’ Patrick said, adding that he’s required all his staff to be masked and vaccinated. ‘They’re not entirely fun, but we wore them all last summer, and we didn’t have a single case in Provincetown. Now see where we’re at.’

 

It’s a blunt and probably controversial hot take, but Sullivan has made a career of doing just that. 

The longtime journalist and conservative-leaning columnist, who is gay and HIV-positive, has been widely read and highly successful, with fans including Barack Obama.

But he was axed by as a columnist at New York Magazine after four years in 2020 and ripped cancel culture on his way. 

He wrote in his final column that staff writers who weren’t in line with ‘woke’ issues surrounding race, gender, sexual orientation and gender identity were ‘actively, physically harming co-workers merely by existing in the same virtual space.’

‘Actually attacking, and even mocking, critical theory’s ideas and methods, as I have done continually in this space, is therefore out of sync with the values of Vox Media,’ Sullivan wrote. ‘That, to the best of my understanding, is why I’m out of here.’

He has been one of the most influential reporters and columnists since the late ’80s/early 90s and known for his contrarian views. 

While editor of The New Republic magazine in 1994, Sullivan published a cover-story headlined ‘Race and IQ,’ which has seen him face continued criticism over a piece many claimed was racist.     

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Clare Crawley Says She Is Making a ‘U-Turn’ After Being in a ‘Dark Place’ Following Dale Moss Split

Craig Sjodin/ABC Clare Crawley and Dale Moss.

Clare Crawley is speaking out after her split from fiancé Dale Moss.

During an Instagram Live on Friday, the former Bachelorette said that she has been privately “struggling” for a while, particularly with anxiety, but now she’s ready to be more vulnerable with her fans.

“I think when you open yourself up to share what you’re going through, not as a victim, but as like, vulnerability, and more as just like the human side of you, with your friends, with your family, with the public, with people, as much as you want to share — mine more so happens to be a lot more public than most people — but I think when we share our struggles, it gives people the opportunity to relate to it, and to share their struggles,” Crawley said.

The reality star added that as she has opened up, she’s heard from fans that are facing similar situations.

RELATED: Clare Crawley Was ‘Blindsided’ by ‘Painful and Emotional’ Dale Moss Split, Source Says

Crawley thanked fans who have shared their own stories with her, and encouraged people to open up to their loved ones.

“The ones that love you support you,” she said.

However, not everyone has been so supportive, with Crawley saying “you guys would be disgusted at” the messages she was receiving after her season of the Bachelorette, which was cut short when she chose Moss as her final suitor and he proposed.

Crawley said cruel messages combined with being the Bachelorette, the pandemic, and also caring for her mother, who has Alzheimer’s and dementia, has meant she has found herself battling anxiety and experiencing panic attacks.

“I’m getting to the point now where I’m trying really hard to come back from that and make a U-turn because it’s a dark place to be in when you’ve got a lot of stuff compiled on each other.”

However, in her Live on Friday, Crawley said despite going through a tough time, that she is trying to practice gratitude by “listing 10 things before I even opened my eyes in the morning that I’m grateful for.”

“My idea of love and to be loved is to have all of our that we go through, all the stuff that we experienced in life, whether it’s whatever you want to call it, like baggage, experiences, traumas, whatever we go through, whatever we carry with us, show up with it,” she said.

“And to know … in spite of all that, like you are loved and you will be loved by the right person for all that you bring to the table, whether it’s the good, the bad, everything that we bring to the table, the right person is going to love you for that.”

RELATED: The Bachelorette‘s Clare Crawley Breaks Silence After Dale Moss Split: ‘The Truth Is I Am Crushed’

Last week, Moss announced that he and Crawley had broken up.

“I wanted share with you all that Clare and I have decided to go our separate ways. We appreciate the love and support we’ve received from so many people, but this is the healthiest decision for both of us at this time,” he said in a statement on Instagram.

“We strongly believe in leading with love and always remaining true to oneself – something our families have taught and instilled in us throughout our lives,” he added. “We only hope the best things for one another. – DM.”

Crawley, however, said two days later that she was “made aware of a ‘mutual’ statement at the same time you all were.”

“I’ve needed some time to really digest this,” she said, adding that she was “crushed” by the breakup.

A source told PEOPLE that Moss “wasn’t ready for marriage and kids” and that “things only got tougher after the show when they had to start making big life decisions.”

If you or someone you know need mental health help, text “STRENGTH” to the Crisis Text Line at 741-741 to be connected to a certified crisis counselor.



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