Storm drenching California leads to widespread flooding, water rescues and power outages



CNN
 — 

Northern California was inundated with widespread flooding and power outages as a powerful atmospheric river barreled into the region, forcing water rescues, several highway closures, evacuation warnings and shelter-in-place orders.

Despite the issues, the moisture is a bit of relief for drought-stricken California, which saw the driest beginning of the year on record and ended 2022 with drenched roadways, flooding rivers and thick mountain snow.

How much the parade of storms will make a dent in California’s drought conditions, however, remains to be seen.

Meanwhile the storm, which also brought strong winds, knocked out power to more than 300,000 homes and businesses across California and Nevada as of early Sunday, according to Poweroutage.US.

And as streets flooded and river water levels rose, the storm also forced residents of several small communities in northern California out of their homes on New Year’s Eve as evacuation orders and warnings were issued.

On top of urban flooding, several rivers began overflowing, including the Cosumnes and Mokelumne rivers and the Mormon Slough, according to the National Weather Service in Sacramento. Flood warnings were issued for the southern Sacramento Valley and Sierra foothills.

At one point Saturday, officials ordered residents in Wilton – roughly 20 miles from Sacramento – to leave the area immediately, warning that rising water may spill over onto roadways and cut off access to leave the area. Just about two hours later, Wilton residents were told to shelter in place after water made roads “impassable.”

Three communities near the city of Watsonville were also told to evacuate by the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office due to creek flooding, while the rising San Lorenzo River waters prompted evacuations in the communities of Paradise Park and Felton.

In San Ramon, police used an armored rescue vehicle to evacuate residents from floodwaters.

“Flooding impacts continue to escalate as this rain continues with too many road closures to count at this point,” NWS said Saturday, telling residents to stay put amid reports of rock and mudslides across the foothills and road closures across the Sierra passes.

Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District crews were kept busy on Saturday, performing water rescues and responding to fallen trees on homes and cars, and to drivers whose vehicles became disabled after they drove through standing water, officials said.

Calling it “Stormageddon,” the Amador County Sheriff’s Office shared an image of cars up to their doorhandles in floodwaters and said there’s been reports of flooding, mudslides and trees blocking roadways.

Highway 50 was reopened just after midnight, hours after a section between Pollock Pines and Meyers was closed due to flooding from the American River, while another section was closed over Echo Summit for avalanche control work.

Interstate 80 was also partially closed near the Nevada line midday Saturday “due to multiple spinouts over Donner Summit,” according to the California Department of Transportation.

US Highway 101 – one of California’s most famous routes – was also temporarily closed in both directions in South San Francisco with California Highway Patrol reporting “water is not receding due to non-stop rainfall & high tides preventing the water to displace.”

In Sacramento County and adjacent areas, residents were advised to avoid travel as wind gusts of up to 55 mph toppled trees and covered roads with debris, according to a tweet from the National Weather Service in Sacramento.

The county proclaimed a state of emergency, saying the atmospheric river has caused “significant transportation impacts, rising creek and river levels and flooding” in the Wilton area.

An atmospheric river is a long, narrow region in the atmosphere which can transport moisture thousands of miles, like a fire hose in the sky.

Downtown San Francisco received 5.46 inches Saturday, meaning it was on track to become the second wettest day on record for the area, according to the National Weather Service in the Bay Area.

This heavy rainfall is expected to slide southward to Southern California on Saturday and Sunday, accompanied by gusty winds of 30 to 50 mph.

As some parts of Northern California deal with heavy rainfall, mountain areas have received thick snowfall accumulations.

A winter storm warning is in effect until 4 a.m. Sunday in the Sierra Nevada mountains from Yosemite National Park to Tulare County, where the Weather Service warned travel could be very difficult to impossible.

Snow accumulations of 1 to 2 feet were expected above 7,000 feet, and isolated accumulations of 5 feet were possible above 9,000 feet, the Weather Service said.

The UC Berkeley Central Sierra Snow Lab reported 7.5 inches of snow per hour between 4 and 5 p.m. Saturday in Soda Springs, about 30 miles from Lake Tahoe, sharing video of thick snow blanketing the area.

The lab said it had unofficial measurements of more than 30 inches of snow on Saturday.

Over a foot of new snow fell at Mammoth Mountain’s Main Lodge Saturday, the ski resort said on Facebook, adding that work will take place across the mountain since all lifts were coated in ice and “avalanche danger is extremely high.”

At the Nevada State line and Colfax, CHP reported “dangerous and treacherous” driving conditions with dozens of vehicles stuck on the I-80 and county roads.

“Caltrans, CHP and tow operators spent New Year’s Eve pulling out dozens of stranded vehicles,” the California Department of Transportation said.


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Democrat Kathy Hochul sworn in as elected New York governor

Top News: US & International Top News Stories Today | AP News 

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, center, is sworn into office as as New York’s 57th governor by NAACP President Hazel N. Dukes, right, during an inauguration ceremony, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2023, in Albany, N.Y. With them is from left, is Christina Hochul her husband Will Hochul, Katie Hochul her husband Matt Gloudeman, and Bill Hochul. (AP Photo/Hans Pennink)

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York Governor Kathy Hochul was sworn in for her first elected term on Sunday, making history as the first woman elected to the position in the state.

The Democrat, launching her term as the 57th governor of New York, said her goals were to increase public safety and to make the state more affordable.

“Right now there are some fights we have to take on,” Hochul said after taking the oath of office at the Empire State Plaza Convention Center in Albany. “First we must and will make our streets safer.”

Hochul also called for making the state more affordable, citing the high cost of living. Also sworn in Sunday was Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado.

A native of Buffalo, Hochul, 64, defeated Republican congressman Lee Zeldin, an ally of Donald Trump, in November’s election to win the office that she took over in 2021 when former Gov. Andrew Cuomo resigned.

A former congresswoman, she served as Cuomo’s lieutenant governor before taking over in August 2021 and has tried to cast herself as a fresh start from Cuomo. He resigned amid sexual harassment allegations, which he denies.

New York Democratic U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer described her November victory as “breaking the glass ceiling.”

Hub peek embed (NewYork) – Compressed layout (automatic embed)

During her time as governor, New York passed some of the strictest gun laws in the nation, some of which are experiencing court challenges.

Delgado, a former Democratic U.S. representative who identifies as Afro-Latino, took over the position as lieutenant governor in May after Brian Benjamin resigned, and said he couldn’t “wait to get down to business” of “transparent” and “accountable” government.

New York Attorney General Letitia A. James, 64, also took oath Sunday for her second elected term in the position. She made history in 2018 as the first woman elected as the state’s attorney general and the first Black person to serve in the role.

“Four years ago I made a commitment to make this office a force of justice. I promise to fight for all New Yorkers, regardless of your political affiliation,” James, of Brooklyn, said.

Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli was sworn in for his fourth term. “We continue to live in a time of unprecedented challenge of evil and economic uncertainty. But we New Yorkers are resilient,” he said.

___

Maysoon Khan is a corps member for the Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Maysoon Khan on Twitter at: twitter.com/MaysoonKhan.

 

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[Uk] The sermon that became Amazing Grace

Welcome to Olney signImage source, Cowper and Newton Museum
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The words of the well-known hymn were first delivered in the Buckinghamshire market town of Olney

People are being encouraged to sing Amazing Grace on New Year’s Day to mark the 250th anniversary of the day its words were first delivered. How did the famous hymn come to be written in a Buckinghamshire market town?

Long known for hosting the world’s oldest pancake race, Olney also has an association with one of the world’s best-known hymns.

The “Welcome to Olney” sign proudly proclaims it as the “Home of Amazing Grace”.

The words reflect his journey back to his Christian faith.

John Newton portrait by John RussellImage source, Cowper and Newton Museum
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Former slave ship captain, John Newton, was ordained in 1764 and appointed a curate in Olney

Newton (1725-1807) ended up in Buckinghamshire after a life at sea travelling between Liverpool, Africa and the West Indies as part of the transatlantic slave trade.

In March 1748, he was captain of a ship that was caught in a severe storm near the Brazilian coast, which he later credited with the start of his return to Christianity.

After a life on the seas, he was ordained in 1764 and appointed a curate in Olney, where he collaborated with poet William Cowper to publish The Olney Hymns in 1779.

It was in this volume that his Amazing Grace sermon’s words, originally titled Faith’s Review and Expectation, was published.

St Peter and St Paul Church OlneyImage source, Dan Evans
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The words to Amazing Grace were first heard in St Peter and St Paul’s church in Olney

Tim German, a volunteer at the Cowper and Newton Museum in the town, said while Newton said he rediscovered his childhood faith during the storm, the words of Amazing Grace were not an apology for his role in the slave trade but “about his redemptive journey back” to Christianity.

“The ship nearly fell apart and some people died, but he was rescued and had a transformation religiously… his Christian faith started to come back,” he said.

“In Olney, they used to have services every New Year’s Day and it was a tradition where they would look back and look forward.

“He wanted to illustrate the story he was telling [in his sermon] which was reflecting his own life and his transition back to Christianity.

“His journey to saying ‘my role in slavery was totally wrong and I regret it’, came later.”

St Peter and St Paul Church, OlneyImage source, Dan Evans
Image caption,

Newton delivered the words as part of his New Year’s Day sermon at the church

In 1788, Newton published a pamphlet called Thoughts Upon the African Slave Trade, which began with that apology and described what he had witnessed during his time as a trader.

Newton subsequently became an abolitionist and a mentor to William Wilberforce, leader of Britain’s abolitionist movement.

Dr Sean Lang, senior lecturer in history at Anglian Ruskin University, said Newton is now considered a “very important figure” in abolitionist history as he was one of the first people to point out the humanitarian problem with the slave trade.

He was also in the “perfect position” to do it because as a former slave ship captain he had a “unique knowledge of how the system worked”.

“Most people at that time didn’t see a problem with it,” Dr Lang said.

“People knew it was happening but did not know all the details – in fact, many thought they were rescuing Africans, saving them and doing good.

“Churches played an important role in beginning to change opinions and make people see what was in front of their eyes in a new way.

“[Newton] began to give people new eyes… but it took a long time to change [their] outlook.”

Dr Lang pointed out that there was a generation – about 40 years – between Newton’s ordination and the Slave Trade Act of 1807 which prohibited the trade in the British Empire.

“[Abolition] was a huge thing to do, it was a massive business and a daunting task to stop it. You couldn’t do it without changing attitudes and he was one of the first to start doing that,” he said.

“He is to be admired because it’s difficult to be in a minority.

“It was a long slow process and he stuck with it.”

John Newton's grave in the Churchyard of St Peter and Paul, OlneyImage source, Geograph/Alastair Stone
Image caption,

John Newton’s grave is in the churchyard of St Peter and Paul

Over the past 250 years, Amazing Grace has become an international anthem, inspiring countless stars from Elvis Presley to Aretha Franklin and Andrea Bocelli.

The US Library of Congress holds more than 3,000 published recorded performances by different individual musicians or musical ensembles – but the famous tune came later.

Dr Martin Clark, head of music at the Open University, said: “The tune we now find inseparable from the words, emerged from the USA in the early decades of the 19th Century and has only really come to popularity in Britain within the last 50 years.”

He said he thinks it is the relationship between the words and the music that makes it enduringly popular.

“I think some of the words that it focuses on, ideas about grace and hope and redemption are things that speak to people across time,” he said.

Prof James Walvin, Professor Emeritus in history at the University of York, said the hymn “has an unusually profound significance, both devout and secular”.

“It provides solace in times of stress, hope for the downcast and the prospects of salvation for the needy.

“Few other hymns can claim such importance,” he said.

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Amazing Grace – the first verse

Faith's review and expectation - first published in the Olney hymns' hymnal in 1779Image source, Cowper and Newton Museum
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The 1st edition of the Olney hymns’ hymnal where the hymn we now know as Amazing Grace was first published in 1779 under its original title Faith’s review and expectation

Amazing grace how sweet the sound

That saved a wretch like me

I once was lost, but now I’m found

Was blind but now I see.

John Newton, 1773

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On New Year’s Day, a special service is being held at the church where it all began.

Led by the Right Reverend Dr Alan Wilson, the Bishop of Buckingham, people from all four churches in the town have chosen hymns to sing as a combined choir.

“It’s going to be quite remarkable,” Mr German said.

“It’s a big thing in Olney… it’s one of the most popular hymns in the world, so it’s only right that we celebrate that.”

Cowper and Newton Museum, OlneyImage source, Cowper and Newton Museum
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The Cowper and Newton Museum has been at the centre of organising the Amazing Grace celebrations

The Right Reverend Dr Rose Hudson-Wilkin, Bishop of Dover, who will deliver the Amazing Grace sermon at the event, said it was an “iconic hymn for black people”.

“[That is] pretty strange in the sense that it was written by a white man who himself was involved in the slave trade,” she said, “but somehow he managed to write something that speaks of God in a way that as a black woman, and for many black people, in particular African Americans, they could see that God.”

The Right Reverend Dr Rose Hudson-WilkinImage source, Jim Drew
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The Right Reverend Dr Rose Hudson-Wilkin, Bishop of Dover, said it is an “iconic hymn for black people”

As well as the service, singers across the world are being encouraged to join the Amazing Grace 250 Big Sing.

The museum has contacted churches, choirs and community groups to ask them to sing it and share their performances on social media.

Paul Collins, who chairs the museum’s board of trustees, said the Cowper and Newton Museum wanted to “reflect the universal appeal of this hymn”.

Craig McLeish, conductor of gospel choir, Sweet Sound, which has been created especially for the Big Sing, said it is a song that is “available to everybody”.

He said: “I just love the fact that it works in so many contexts and everybody has their own take on it and their own personal story – it belongs to us all.”

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[Uk] Love at first fight: The re-enactors who find romance

Reenactors gatheringImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

When not pretending to kill each other, re-enactors can get along very well

Love can find you in many places. At work, in a bar – or perhaps when you are dressed as a bloodthirsty gladiator.

Re-enactment – getting dressed as civilians and soldiers from the past – is more often associated with metal polish and facial hair than matchmaking.

But some people have found their partners through the smoke of a (risk-assessed) battle or in a shared appreciation of a really good axe.

Peter and Ellie Taylor's weddingImage source, Ellie Taylor
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Peter Taylor said his mead business meant his Viking style wedding went with a swing

Peter Taylor, from York, said: “The joke I always say is ‘I killed her father first and then he introduced us’.

“I was at a re-enactment of the battle of Stamford Bridge in 2019 as a Viking and after ‘killing’ this bloke, we went off for a break and his daughter, Ellie, was there with him.

“His whole family were involved and Ellie had been re-enacting since she was 11.

“I wasn’t expecting to find romance but we hit it off right away.”

Peter and Ellie TaylorImage source, Ellie Taylor
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Peter Taylor said having the same hobby meant they shared unforgettable moments

Peter, 32, runs a mead business – which came in handy when the couple had a Viking-style wedding at Whitby Abbey this summer.

He has no doubts that both having the same hobby has many advantages. “For one thing, you don’t have to worry about explaining where you are going on weekends,” he said.

“And it’s great as she understands that armour does belong in the lounge and doesn’t have to be tidied away as soon as you get back from a long weekend.

“But it’s really about sharing those moments, like being cuddled up in the tent watching the rain come down. Those are memories you never forget.”

Alan Larsen at WaterlooImage source, Getty Images
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Historical cavalry specialist Alan Larsen proposed at the 2015 commemoration of Waterloo

Rosie Sales, 40, from Countesthorpe in Leicestershire, can boast of one of the most dramatic settings ever for a marriage proposal from her partner, Alan Larsen, 62.

“It was at the 200th anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Waterloo in 2015,” she said.

“Alan was the Duke of Wellington, though he didn’t propose during the battle. He waited until we were in the beer tent.”

Rosie Sales and Alan LarsenImage source, Rosie Sales
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Rosie Sales and Alan Larsen met at a party for re-enactment cavalry

The couple own horses and met at a banquet for historical cavalry re-enactors.

“I was dressed for the 17th Century and he was Napoleonic era Royal Dragoons,” she said. “We got chatting, I liked his voice and, of course, he looked very smart.”

Rosie said she could not imagine what it would be like to have a relationship with somebody who was not into re-enacting.

“I guess it might be difficult for them to understand where you were going, why you were doing it,” she said.

Alisa VanlintImage source, Alisa Vanlint
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Alisa and Simon Vanlint had a Roman-style wedding in 2001, complete with armoured honour guard

Alisa Vanlint, 52, who lives in Portsmouth, said she was “totally set on being single” before she met Simon, now 58, in 2001.

In an interesting twist on the usual romantic stories, it was cold steel which brought them together.

“At the time I took the role of a female gladiator and was asked to go to a Roman event at Dover,” she said. “I saw this man dressed as an Optio [Roman army officer] and there was instantly something there.

“I thought ‘Wow, I like this guy’ but I didn’t say anything.

“After seeing him at some other shows, I was wondering if I should make a move and all my friends were ‘Go on.”

Alisa VanlintImage source, Alisa Vanlint
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One of Alisa Vanlint’s favourite roles is to show not all gladiators were men

Things must have worked out as Simon proposed in a museum in Chester in 2003.

Their wedding was, of course, in full Roman costume. Alisa said: “The vicar was so excited. He had never done anything like it before and kept asking questions and asking for pictures.”

Their partnership was truly a meeting of kindred spirits.

“Our house is all decorated in the Roman style,” she said. “We are both retired now but I still do lots of re-enacting, from Romans to World War Two.

“All day, every day it feels like I am making or repairing something. Even though Simon doesn’t do as much as me now, he understands and waves me off each weekend.”

Sara FoxImage source, Sara Fox
Image caption,

Sara Fox said the home she shared with Mark ‘looked like an explosion in a fabric shop’

Sara Fox, 58, who lives in Holmfirth, West Yorkshire, met husband Mark, 56, at a Roman event in York in 2011.

“I liked the look of him – some people just carry the kit well,” she said. “I’d been in a relationship with a 15th Century re-enactor so I knew what I was getting into.”

So committed are they to recreating the past, they now run a company which provides horses and costumes for historical events and filming.

“It means we have a lot of stuff. Some parts of the house look like an explosion in a fabric shop,” she said.

“We have other jobs as well – I work as a theatre lighting technician – but since we have to go here, there and everywhere at weekends, it can be incredibly busy.

“But it calms down during the winter and we get some time to ourselves.”

Jonathan Titterton and Marianne PartridgeImage source, Jonathan Titterton
Image caption,

Marianne Partridge and Jonathan Titterton say they appreciate each other’s love of re-enacting

It was through his interest in recreating life as a rebellious Jacobite that Jonathan Titterton found his perfect match.

Jonathan, 31, from Loughborough, said: “I was looking to expand my kit, particularly the ‘Great Kilt’ they wore.

“As luck would have it someone was selling theirs and I decided to go and have a look. I immediately thought: ‘She is gorgeous’ so I turned on the charm.”

Jonathan is now the partner and full-time carer of Marianne Partridge, 26, who is registered blind. He feels the fact they are both re-enactors means they can appreciate each other more.

“She is practically my mental double anyway,” he said. “We finish each other’s words and sentences.

“We take pride in what we do – Marianne holds our group’s record for an arrow shot by a blind person.”

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Three NYPD officers injured in machete attack near New Year's Eve celebration in Times Square, officials say



CNN
 — 

Three New York City police officers are in stable condition after being struck by a man wielding a machete in an unprovoked attack near Times Square, according to the NYPD commissioner.

The attack occurred just after 10 p.m. Saturday on West 52nd Street and 8th Avenue, outside a Times Square New Year’s Eve security screening zone, Commissioner Keechant Sewell said.

The suspect, identified only as a 19-year-old man, approached an officer and attempted to strike him over the head with a machete, Sewell said. The suspect then struck two additional officers before one fired his service weapon, striking the suspect in the shoulder. The suspect is being treated for his injuries, Sewell said.

The NYPD tweeted this photo investigators say shows the machete at the scene.

The FBI, NYPD and Joint Terrorism Task Force are investigating, officials said in an early New Year’s Day joint news conference.

“I want to be very clear … there is no ongoing threat,” said Mike Driscoll, the FBI assistant director in charge of the New York field office.

“We believe this was a sole individual at this time,” he said, adding, “There is nothing to indicate otherwise.”

One officer, a recent graduate of the police academy, suffered a skull fracture and a large laceration to his head, Sewell said. Another officer, an 8-year veteran, suffered a laceration, the commissioner said. She did not elaborate on injuries to the third officer.

Driscoll said the FBI, through the task force, is working closely with NYPD to determine the nature of the attack and “will run every lead to the ground.”

The authorities did not elaborate on a possible motive and said the investigation is in preliminary stages.

New York Mayor Eric Adams praised the police response, saying responding officers immediately secured the scene and acted “with a level of professionalism that we expect from all of our officers.”

After getting their fellow officers assistance and subduing the suspect, responding officers returned to their posts “because we still had a city we had to protect,” Adams said, referencing New Year’s Eve celebrations.

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[World] Deadly crush during New Year festivities in Uganda

Three people weep following the news of a deadly crowd crush at a New Year event in UgandaImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

A local NTV news broadcast showed people in tears after the deadly incident

At least nine people have died in a crowd crush during New Year festivities in the Ugandan capital Kampala.

A number of children were killed in the incident, which unfolded at a shopping centre that hosted a fireworks display.

One eyewitness explained that people – including his friend – suffocated after getting caught between crowds that were moving in opposing directions.

Big gatherings for New Year’s Eve were allowed for the first time since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Kampala police said people had attended a concert at Freedom City Mall in large numbers.

A crowd surge was said to occurred when partygoers tried to head back inside – having gone outdoors to see the midnight fireworks.

Five people – described as “mostly children, juveniles” – were said to have been killed after being stepped on.

The death toll was later put at nine after a number of people were taken to hospital.

An eyewitness, Ramadhan Aphongo, told local broadcaster NTV that a friend was among the victims: “She was enjoying, she was having fun, but due to loss of breath… eventually she died.”

An investigation is under way.

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Former Pope Benedict XVI dies in Vatican monastery aged 95



CNN
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Pope Francis led tributes to his predecessor on Saturday, after Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI died in a monastery in the Vatican at the age of 95.

“We are moved as we recall him as such a noble person, so kind and we feel such gratitude in our hearts, gratitude to god for giving him to the church, and to the world,” Francis said in Saint Peter’s Basilica while leading traditional vespers ceremony ahead of New Year’s Day.

“Gratitude to him for all the good he accomplished and above all for his witness of faith and prayer, especially in these last years of his life. Only God knows the value of his sacrifices for the good of the church,” Francis added.

Benedict, who was the first pontiff in almost 600 years to resign his position, rather than hold office for life, passed away on Saturday, according to a statement from the Vatican.

“With sorrow I inform you that the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, passed away today at 9:34 in the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery in the Vatican,” the Director of the Press Office of the Holy See, Matteo Bruni said.

Francis went to see Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI soon after he passed away Saturday morning, according to Bruni.

The funeral of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI will be held on Thursday in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican City at 9:30 a.m. local time, Bruni said. The funeral will be led by Pope Francis.

The former pope’s body will lie in state in St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican from Monday for the faithful to bid farewell, Vatican News reported. As per the wish of Pope Emeritus, his funeral will be “simple,” Bruni said.

The funeral of the former pope, pictured on December 25, 2007, will take place on January 5.

News of Benedict’s death came days after Pope Francis asked the faithful to pray for him, saying he was “very sick.”

His health had been in decline for some time.

Benedict stunned the Catholic faithful and religious experts around the world on February 11, 2013, when he announced plans to step down from his position as Pope, citing his “advanced age.”

In his farewell address, the outgoing pope promised to stay “hidden” from the world, but he continued to speak out on religious matters in the years following his retirement, contributing to tensions within the Catholic Church.

Benedict was a powerful force in the Catholic Church for decades. Born Joseph Ratzinger in Germany in 1927, he was the son of a policeman. He was ordained as a priest in 1951, made a cardinal in 1977, and later served as chief theological adviser to Pope John Paul II.

One of his most significant steps up came in 1981 when he took over as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, the Vatican office that oversees “the doctrine on the faith and morals throughout the Catholic world,” according to the Vatican.

Ratzinger became known as “Cardinal No” stemming from his efforts to crack down on the liberation theology movement, religious pluralism, challenges to traditional teachings on issues such as homosexuality, and calls to ordain women as priests.

He was elected pope in April 2005, following John Paul II’s death.

He was known to be more conservative than his successor, Pope Francis, who has made moves to soften the Vatican’s position on abortion and homosexuality, as well as doing more to deal with the sexual abuse crisis that has engulfed the church in recent years and clouded Benedict’s legacy.

The former pope, pictured on September 9, 2007, was known to be more conservative than his successor, Pope Francis.

In April 2019, Benedict discussed the sex abuse crisis in a public letter, claiming that it was caused in part by the sexual revolution of the 1960s and the liberalization of the church’s moral teachings.

In January 2020, Benedict was forced to distance himself from a book widely seen as undercutting Francis as he considered whether or not to allow married men to become priests in certain cases. The book, “From the Depths of Our Hearts,” argued in favor of the centuries-old tradition of priestly celibacy within the Catholic Church. Benedict was originally listed as co-author, but later clarified that he had only contributed one section of the text.

A year later, Benedict came under fire over his time as archbishop of Munich and Freising, between 1977 and 1982, following the publication of a Church-commissioned report into abuse by Catholic clergy there.

The report found that while in the post he had been informed of four cases of sexual abuse involving minors – including two that had occurred during his time in office – but failed to act. It also revealed Benedict had attended a meeting about an abuser identified as Priest X. Following the report’s publication, Benedict pushed back against accusations that he knew in 1980 that this priest was an abuser.

In a letter released by the Vatican amid the furor, Benedict wrote that he was “of good cheer” as he faced “the final judge of my life,” despite his shortcomings. He also issued a general apology to survivors of abuse.

Global leaders paid homage to the former pope, following his death. Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury and head of the Church of England, said he is “mourning” the former pope.

“Pope Benedict was one of the greatest theologians of his age – committed to the faith of the Church and stalwart in its defence,” Welby said in a statement Saturday.

“In all things, not least in his writing and his preaching, he looked to Jesus Christ, the image of the invisible God. It was abundantly clear that Christ was the root of his thought and the basis of his prayer.

“In 2013 Pope Benedict took the courageous and humble step to resign the papacy, the first Pope to do so since the fifteenth century. In making this choice freely he acknowledged the human frailty that affects us all,” he added.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, said he will remember the former pope with “love and gratitude.”

“Saddened to learn of the demise of His Holiness Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI,” European Parliament President Roberta Metsola tweeted Saturday.

“Europe mourns him. May he rest in peace.”

The leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, on Saturday told Pope Francis he had received news of Benedict’s passing with “sorrow,” according to the message shared on the official website of the Moscow Patriarchate.

“His Holiness’s many years of life marked a whole epoch in the history of the Roman Catholic Church, which he led in a difficult historical period, associated with many external and internal challenges,” Kirill said of Benedict.

Kirill added relations between the Russian Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church had “developed significantly” during Benedict’s tenure, in an effort to “overcome the sometimes-painful legacy of the past.”

“On behalf of the Russian Orthodox Church, I express my condolences to you and the flock of the Roman Catholic Church,” he continued.

The Dalai Lama on Sunday offered his condolences to the members of the Catholic Church after Benedict’s death.

“I pray for our spiritual brother,” he wrote, “and offer my condolences to the members of the Catholic Church.”

“At a time when we are seeing tension in several parts of the world, we can take a lesson from the life of Pope Benedict and do what we can to contribute to religious harmony and global peace.”

US President Joe Biden said the late pontiff “will be remembered as a renowned theologian, with a lifetime of devotion to the Church, guided by his principles and faith.”

Biden, the second Catholic to serve as President of the United States, reflected on his meeting with Benedict at the Vatican in 2011, saying he remembered “his generosity and welcome as well as our meaningful conversation.”

“As he remarked during his 2008 visit to the White House, ‘the need for global solidarity is as urgent as ever, if all people are to live in a way worthy of their dignity.’ May his focus on the ministry of charity continue to be an inspiration to us all,” Biden added.

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak also paid tribute. “I am saddened to learn of the death of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI,” Sunak tweeted Saturday.

“He was a great theologian whose UK visit in 2010 was an historic moment for both Catholics and non-Catholics throughout our country.

Global leaders have paid homage to the former German-born pope, pictured on September 12, 2006.

The Archbishop of Canterbury hailed the former Pope, pictured on November 30, 2005, as "one of the greatest theologians of his age."

Italy’s new Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni voiced her admiration for the former pope. “Benedict XVI was a giant of faith and reason. He put his life at the service of the universal Church and spoke, and will continue to speak, to the hearts and minds of men with the spiritual, cultural and intellectual depth of his Magisterium,” she tweeted Saturday.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is leading Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, called the former pope “a staunch defender of traditional Christian values.”

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Suspect in the Idaho college student killings returned home for the holidays weeks after the crime. Here's what we know about him



CNN
 — 

The man arrested in connection with the November killings of four University of Idaho students who were found stabbed to death attended a nearby university in Washington state and traveled across the country in December to spend the holidays with his parents.

Bryan Christopher Kohberger, 28, was arrested in Monroe County, Pennsylvania, on Friday on an arrest warrant for first-degree murder charges issued by the Moscow, Idaho, Police Department and the Latah County Prosecutor’s Office, according to the criminal complaint.

The four slain students – Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Kernodle’s boyfriend, Ethan Chapin, 20 – were each stabbed multiple times in the early morning hours of November 13 at an off-campus house in the small college town of Moscow.

Kohberger was apprehended at his parents’ house in Pennsylvania, where Kohberger went several days before Christmas, Monroe County Chief Public Defender Jason LaBar told CNN. A white Elantra authorities had been looking for in connection with the killings was also at the parents’ house, the attorney added.

“He was home for the holidays,” LaBar said.

Kohberger’s father traveled with him from Washington state to Pennsylvania, according to the public defender and a person who claims to have interacted with the father and son earlier in December.

That person, who asked not to be identified, said they did not know the father and son but engaged in friendly conversation with them at an auto maintenance shop on December 16 in Pennsylvania, while the two were getting their Elantra serviced. (A separate person also confirmed to CNN the father and son did business at the location on December 16.)

The father told the individual he flew to Washington state and made the cross-country trip with Kohberger, adding his son would be traveling to the west coast alone after the holidays. Police have not indicated the suspect’s father is in any way implicated in the killings. CNN has attempted to contact the father for comment.

The person described the younger Kohberger as “a little awkward,” but not suspiciously so. The suspect reportedly told the person he wanted to go into the field of behavioral criminal justice and become a professor.

Bryan Christopher Kohberger

Kohberger is a graduate student at Washington State University’s Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, according to a now-removed university graduate directory, which was seen by CNN earlier Friday.

Kohberger had finished his first semester as a PhD student in the school’s criminal justice program earlier in December, the university said in a Friday statement.

Earlier that day, university police assisted authorities in executing search warrants at his office and apartment, both located on the school’s Pullman campus.

Pullman is about a 15-minute drive from Moscow, where the killings took place.

Kohberger intends to waive his extradition hearing to Idaho, set for January 3, to expedite his transport to the state, LaBar said, adding his client is “eager to be exonerated” of the charges.

Kohberger was previously an undergraduate and graduate student at DeSales University, according to a statement on the school’s website. DeSales is a Catholic university in Pennsylvania, according to its official Facebook page.

He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 2020 and earlier this year completed his “graduate studies for the Master of Arts in criminal justice program,” according to a university spokesperson.

Kohberger’s attorney described his client as “very intelligent,” adding “he understands where we are right now.”

In a post removed from Reddit after the arrest was made public, a student investigator associated with a DeSales University study named Bryan Kohberger sought participation in a research project “to understand how emotions and psychological traits influence decision-making when committing a crime.”

The post said, “In particular, this study seeks to understand the story behind your most recent criminal offense, with an emphasis on your thoughts and feelings throughout your experience.”

CNN reached one of the principal investigators of the study, a professor at DeSales University, but they declined to comment on the matter. The university has not responded to comment.

A spokesperson for Northampton Community College, also in Pennsylvania, confirmed Kohberger was a student there and graduated with an Associate of Arts and Psychology degree in 2018.

Earlier in December, authorities asked the public for information about a white 2011-2013 Hyundai Elantra they believed was in the “immediate area” of the crime scenes around the time of the killings.

After an overwhelming number of tips, investigators narrowed their focus to Kohberger by tracing ownership of the Elantra back to him, according to two law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation.

His DNA also matched DNA recovered at the crime scene, according to the sources, who also explained authorities believed Kohberger left the area and went to Pennsylvania after the crime.

A surveillance team with the FBI tracked the suspect for several days in the area where he was arrested, the sources added.

One law enforcement source said Kohberger is believed to have driven across the country to his parents’ house in the Elantra. Authorities had also been surveilling his parents’ house, the source said.

Authorities kept Kohberger under surveillance while investigators from Moscow’s police department, the Idaho State Police and the FBI worked with prosecutors to develop sufficient probable cause for an arrest warrant.

The suspect’s family is “very shocked,” LaBar, the attorney, said, adding they are in “awe over everything that’s going on” and believed this was “out of character for Bryan.”

Authorities still want to hear from people who may be able to shed more light on Kohberger.

“This is not the end of this investigation, in fact, this is a new beginning,” Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson said Friday. “You all now know the name of the person who has been charged with these offenses, please get that information out there, please ask the public, anyone who knows about this individual, to come forward.”

“Report anything you know about him, to help the investigators, and eventually our office and the court system, understand fully everything there is to know about not only the individual, but what happened and why,” Thompson added.

Authorities received roughly 400 calls in the hour after Kohberger’s arrest was announced, Moscow Police Chief James Fry said, adding he hopes tips will help investigators learn more about the suspect.

“We want information on that individual,” the chief told CNN. “We want that updated information so that we can start building that picture now. Every tip matters.”

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UK climate group calls temporary halt to disruptive protests

Top News: US & International Top News Stories Today | AP News 

FILE – Demonstrators lay in front of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy during a protest organized by the climate activists group Extinction Rebellion in London on Aug. 26, 2021. The U.K. division of climate change protest group Extinction Rebellion says its activists would temporarily stop blocking busy roads, gluing themselves to buildings and engaging in other acts of civil disobedience because such methods have not achieved their desired effects. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali, File)

LONDON (AP) — The U.K. division of climate change protest group Extinction Rebellion says its activists would temporarily stop blocking busy roads, gluing themselves to buildings and engaging in other acts of civil disobedience because such methods have not achieved their desired effects.

“As we ring in the new year, we make a controversial resolution to temporarily shift away from public disruption as a primary tactic,” the group said in a New Year’s Eve website post. “We recognize and celebrate the power of disruption to raise the alarm and believe that constantly evolving tactics is a necessary approach.”

To further its goals of getting politicians, corporations and the public “to end the fossil fuel era,” the group said it would instead focus on broadening its support with actions such as getting 100,000 people to surround the Houses of Parliament in London on April 21.

“In a time when speaking out and taking action are criminalized, building collective power, strengthening in number and thriving through bridge-building is a radical act,” the website post said. “This year, we prioritize attendance over arrest and relationships over roadblocks, as we stand together and become impossible to ignore.”

Hub peek embed (Climateandenvironment) – Compressed layout (automatic embed)

In response to protests by Extinction Rebellion and other direct-action groups, Britain’s Conservative government last year toughened police powers to shut down disruptive protests and increased penalties for obstructing roads, which can now bring a prison sentence.

Even tougher moves were rejected by Parliament, but the government planned to try again to pass a law that would make it a criminal offense to interfere with infrastructure. Civil liberties groups have decried the moves as restrictions on free speech and the right to protest.

In the four years since Extinction Rebellion formed, the group has attracted both praise and criticism with climate demonstrations that were designed to be disruptive and often led to mass arrests while succeeding in snarling road and port traffic.

In April, British police said six people were arrested after activists climbed onto an oil tanker and blocked four London bridges to protest investments in fossil fuel. Extinction Rebellion said at the time that two former British Olympic athletes, gold medal-winning canoeist Etienne Stott and sailor Laura Baldwin, were among the protesters.

In its Sunday post titled “We Quit,” the U.K. branch of Extinction Rebellion said that while the group has helped bring about “a seismic shift” in the climate conversation, “very little has changed. Emissions continue to rise and our planet is dying at an accelerated rate.”

The group said it thinks a confluence of multiple crises made it the right time to try a new approach. In its announcement about the April protest, it said, “Surrounding the Houses of Parliament day after day in large numbers means we can leave the locks, glue and paint behind.”

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Follow the AP’s coverage of climate change at https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment

 

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[World] Lula to be sworn in as Brazil president as Bolsonaro flies to US

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Crowds are gathering in the Brazilian capital, Brasilia, ahead of the inauguration of the country’s next president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

The veteran left-wing politician known widely as Lula held the presidency between 2003 and 2010 and defeated Jair Bolsonaro in October’s poll.

There is tight security for the ceremony amid fears that Bolsonaro supporters will try to disrupt it.

Mr Bolsonaro himself will not attend, having left Brazil on Friday.

The populist incumbent reportedly flew to the US state of Florida after delivering a teary farewell to supporters.

“We have a great future ahead,” he said in a social media video. “Battles are lost, but we will not lose the war.”

Mr Bolsonaro has repeatedly said he did not wish to attend the inauguration of his successor, where he would be expected to hand over the presidential sash in a sign of a stable transfer of power.

Events will kick-off early in the capital and more than 60 artists – including Samba legend Martinho da Vila – are due to perform on two giant stages decorated in the national flag as part of a music festival dubbed “Lulapalooza”.

Formal proceedings will begin at 14:30 (16:30 GMT), when Lula and incoming Vice-President Geraldo Alckmin will parade through the city on an open-top convertible.

The men have spent the past days selecting their cabinet and appointing supporters to key state owned businesses.

In a noted change of policy from the Bolsonaro administration, Marina Silva – one of Brazil’s best known climate activists – was re-appointed to head the environment and climate ministry. She will be expected to achieve Lula’s pledge to reach “zero deforestation” in the Amazon by 2030.

More than 300,000 people are expected to flock to the capital for the inauguration, which will take place at Esplanade of Ministries, home to the country’s congress buildings.

The state of Brasilia has pledged to deploy “100%” of its police force, around 8,000 officers, to the city amid fears that some supporters of Mr Bolsonaro could seek to disrupt proceedings.

Last week, authorities arrested a supporter of the former president after he allegedly placed explosives on a fuel truck near an airport in the capital on Christmas Eve. The man said he hoped to “sow chaos” ahead of the inauguration.

And other supporters of the outgoing leader have remained camped outside army headquarters, where they have been urging the army to launch a coup. Police attempted to remove the demonstrators on Thursday, but withdrew after they reacted violently.

However, Mr Bolsonaro has condemned the protests against his defeats, urging his supporters to “show we are different from the other side, that we respect the norms and the Constitution”.

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WATCH: Brazilian President Lula’s tears at election ceremony

 

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