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Author Salman Rushdie stabbed in neck on stage at Chautauqua Institution

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Author Salman Rushdie stabbed in neck on stage at Chautauqua Institution

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CHAUTAUQUA — Creator Salman Rushdie, whose writing led to loss of life threats from Iran in 1989, was stabbed on stage shortly after 10:45 a.m. as we speak on the Chautauqua Establishment amphitheater.

An endocrinologist within the viewers who supplied help stated Rushdie suffered “a number of stab wounds” to his neck however was alive and did not obtain CPR, based on the New York Occasions. Rushdie was flown by helicopter to UPMC Hamot hospital in Erie, Pa.






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Legislation enforcement officers detain an individual exterior the Chautauqua Establishment amphitheater on Friday, Aug. 12, 2022, after creator Salman Rushdie was attacked and stabbed within the neck by a person who rushed the stage as Rushdie was about to provide a lecture. Rushdie’s e-book, “The Satanic Verses,” led to loss of life threats towards Rushdie from Iran in 1989. (Charles Fox by way of AP)




The Booker Prize-winning creator was sitting on stage close to Henry Reese, co-founder of Metropolis of Asylum, a Pittsburgh residency program for writers residing in exile beneath menace of persecution, when the assault occurred.

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Reese “suffered a minor head damage,” state police stated.

Persons are additionally studying…

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A state trooper assigned to the occasion “instantly took the suspect into custody,” state police stated. The suspect’s title has not been launched.

Emergency medical technicians have been on web site and rapidly tended to Rushdie.

Andrew Wylie, Rushdie’s literary agent, stated in an announcement that the creator is present process surgical procedure. 

Rushdie, 75, a local of Mumbai, India, was accused of blasphemy in 1989 and marked for loss of life in a fatwa issued by the Ayatollah Khomeini of Iran for the e-book “The Satanic Verses,” which the creator stated was impressed by the lifetime of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

Witnesses stated introductions have been simply beginning when a person rushed from the left aspect of the stage carrying a black masks worn for Covid-19 and commenced to assault Rushdie, additionally was on the identical aspect of the stage.

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“We noticed the person race just a few steps throughout the stage and there was horror – the entire viewers reacted, and doubtless 15 spectators raced onto the stage to attempt to attend to him, or so it appeared,” stated Tonawanda resident Paula Voell, a former Buffalo Information reporter. “It was fairly clear immediately that he was being attacked.”

Voell stated Rushdie was on the bottom for presumably 5 minutes when two males, one on both aspect, helped him stroll to the again of the stage and out of view.

A couple of minutes after the assault, Deborah Sunya Moore, vp of programming, requested the viewers to calmly go away the amphitheater. Shortly afterward, a prayer circle of about 40 individuals prayed in English and Hebrew. 

Steve Davies was sitting within the first row when the assault occurred.

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He, too, noticed the assault happen by a person with a black masks, he stated. He noticed 10 or extra spectators descend on the stage to subdue the attacker, who he stated was “pummeling” Rushdie along with his proper hand however could not inform if he was holding a knife.

I really feel like I did after 9/11, that it was an assault on the Chautauqua Establishment and never simply Salman Rushdie,” Davies, who lives in Brooklyn, stated of {the summertime} instructional and cultural venue. “Hopefully it’s one thing we will overcome and get previous. That is the antithesis of what Chautauqua stands for.”

Liz Kolkien, who lives year-round at Chautauqua, was working a little bit late and obtained to the principle entrance when she heard gasps from the gang. She turned away.

“I had been at Tops two hours earlier than the taking pictures, so I’ve had sufficient violence,” Kolkien stated, referring to the Might 14 assault by an avowed white supremacist that killed 10 Black individuals in a Buffalo grocery store. 

The assault is beneath investigation by state police. 

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“The FBI has supplied help to the native authorities in that space,” stated Jennifer Zientowski, a spokesperson for the FBI Buffalo workplace.

Gov. Kathy Hochul issued an announcement on Twitter about an hour after the assault, saying the creator was “alive.”

“He’s a person who has spent a long time talking fact to energy,” she  stated. Somebody who has spent a long time talking fact to energy”

The governor additionally thanked the swift response of the State Police and first responders.

“Our ideas are with Salman & his family members following this horrific occasion,” she stated. “I’ve directed State Police to additional help nonetheless wanted within the investigation.”

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After the publication of “The Satanic Verses” in 1988, often-violent protests towards Rushdie erupted world wide, together with a riot that killed 12 individuals in Mumbai.

The novel was banned in Iran, the place the late chief Khomeini the next 12 months issued the fatwa, or edict, calling for Rushdie’s loss of life.

A bounty of $3.3 million was supplied by a semiofficial non secular group to  anybody who kills Rushdie.

The loss of life threats and bounty led Rushdie to enter hiding beneath a British authorities safety program, together with a round the clock armed guard. Rushdie emerged after 9 years of seclusion and cautiously resumed extra public appearances, sustaining his outspoken criticism of non secular extremism general.

State Sen. George Borrello, R-Sundown Bay, was at Chautauqua Establishment earlier Friday and had simply left when the assault occurred. He recalled shopping for “The Satanic Verses” when it was first launched. He stated his “ideas and prayers are with Mr. Rushdie.  

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“I purchased the e-book, as did so many others, as a present of help for Mr. Rushdie and for the essential human proper of free speech,” Borello stated.

Rushdie and Reese have been about to start a dialog about the US as an asylum for writers and different artists in exile and as a house for freedom of inventive expression when the assault occurred.

“We will consider no comparable incident of a public violent assault on a literary author on American soil,” stated Suzanne Nossel, CEO of PEN America, a corporation that seeks to guard free expression in the US and worldwide.

Rushdie is a former president of the group.

“Simply hours earlier than the assault, Salman had emailed me to assist with placements for Ukrainian writers in want of secure refuge from the grave perils they face,” Nossel stated.

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“Salman Rushdie has been focused for his phrases for many years however has by no means flinched nor faltered,” she stated. “He has devoted tireless vitality to aiding others who’re susceptible and menaced.” 

“We ask on your prayers for Salman Rushdie and Henry Reese, and persistence as we totally deal with coordinating with police officers,” the Chautauqua Establishment stated in a quick assertion. 

Republican gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin referred to as the incident a “horrific assault.” He was attacked however not injured whereas on stage for a marketing campaign occasion in Fairport final month.

“We should maintain the perpetrator of this violence accountable to the fullest extent of the regulation,” Zeldin stated.  

Karen Rumsey of Eden stated Friday was the primary time she had been at Chautauqua since summer time 2019.

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“I so appeared ahead to coming again,” Rumsey stated. “And now I am speechless.”  

The Related Press contributed to this report. 

Mark Sommer covers preservation, improvement, the waterfront, tradition and extra. He is additionally a former arts editor at The Information. 

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Live news: Australia enacts ‘world leading’ children’s social media ban

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Live news: Australia enacts ‘world leading’ children’s social media ban
K-pop band NewJeans attends the Billboard Women in Music Awards in the US last March © Mario Anzuoni/Reuters

Shares of Hybe, South Korea’s leading K-pop agency, fell nearly 5 per cent on Friday morning as its popular idol group NewJeans plans to break up with the music powerhouse in a move that could spark a legal dispute.

The band said on Thursday night that they will end their exclusive contract with Ador, an affiliate of Hybe, due to the management agency’s alleged breach of contract. The contract was supposed to endure until 2029.

The decision comes after months-long disputes between Min Hee-jin, the producer of the idol group and the former chief executive of Ador, and Hybe, who accused Min of trying to seize control of the label.

Min has denied the accusations and Ador said there was no breach of contract.

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Vito the pug is the first of his breed to win National Dog Show's top prize

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Vito the pug is the first of his breed to win National Dog Show's top prize

Vito the pug and handler Michael Scott are presented with Best in Show honors at the 2024 National Dog Show.

Steve Donahue/seespotrunphoto.com


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Vito, a pug, has won the Best in Show at the 2024 National Dog Show, the first time the breed has won the top honor at the show since it was first televised in 2002.  Vito beat out more than 1,900 dogs representing more than 200 breeds and varieties that competed in this year’s event. 

Vito, a small breed dog from Chapel Hill, N.C., craned his neck to look up at his handler, Michael Scott, when the award was announced, as if trying to understand what all the excitement was about. Show judge George Milutinovich, who said Vito had beautiful expression and movement, asked Scott if the pug knew he had won. 

“He’s very smug,” said Scott. “I think he knows.”

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 Vito the award-winning pug stands on the floor of the National Dog Show.

Vito the award-winning pug stands on the floor of the National Dog Show.

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Vito beat out six other finalists for best in show at the annual canine event, hosted by the Kennel Club of Philadelphia and broadcast by NBC on Thanksgiving Day, including a clumber spaniel named Houston from the sporting group, The Zit, an Ibizan hound from the hound group, a Berger Picard named Rupert from the herding group, a giant schnauzer named Monty from the working group, and JJ, a Lhasa apso from the non-sporting group. Verde, a rust and black colored Welsh terrier from the terrier group captured the second place prize, known as Reserve Best in Show.  

According to the American Kennel Club, pugs live to love and to be loved. Once the mischievous companion of Chinese emperors, the “small but solid” pug is adored by millions of fans around the world, says the AKC. 

The National Dog Show was founded in 1879 and has been held annually since 1933. It’s been televised since 2002, and has become a popular Thanksgiving tradition, with an estimated 20 million animal lovers tuning in to watch, according to Purina, which presented the show.  This year, a new breed, the Lancashire heeler, made a debut at the show, after it joined the AKC’s list of official dog breeds in January.

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Maps Pinpoint Where Democrats Lost Ground Since 2020 in 11 Big Cities

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Maps Pinpoint Where Democrats Lost Ground Since 2020 in 11 Big Cities

To offset gains that Donald J. Trump made in rural and suburban America in 2024, Kamala Harris needed to do better than Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s strong 2020 electoral performance in cities. But she ended up doing worse in urban America — getting 15 percent fewer votes than Mr. Biden in some cities. A New York Times analysis of precinct-level election results — the most detailed available publicly — across 11 cities shows how it happened.

In Atlanta and its suburbs, both candidates found new voters, but Ms. Harris’s gains in precincts where white voters were the largest racial or ethnic group were canceled out by losses elsewhere. Mr. Trump’s uptick in support from voters of color across Atlanta, along with improved performance in the state’s rural areas, was enough for him to win Georgia — a swing state he narrowly lost to Mr. Biden in 2020.

Chicago is emblematic of the chief problem the Harris campaign faced in urban areas — a big decline in votes in Democratic strongholds. Even though Ms. Harris won the city by a 58-point margin, she lost ground in nearly every precinct. She picked up just 127,000 votes in Mexican and Puerto Rican neighborhoods, 47,000 fewer than Mr. Biden earned in 2020. Mr. Trump made small gains across the board, but Ms. Harris’s losses were much steeper.

In Wayne County, which includes Detroit, Ms. Harris struggled to capture the support of Arab-American voters, many of whom had been turned off by the Biden administration’s Middle East policies. In a swath of voting precincts spanning Dearborn and Hamtramck, which have the nation’s highest concentration of people of Arab ancestry, Mr. Trump picked up thousands of votes compared with 2020, while the Democratic Party lost an even bigger number. Countywide, precincts with high shares of Arab residents made up just 6 percent of the electorate but accounted for more than 40 percent of the decline in Democratic votes.

The story in Houston was more about Ms. Harris underperforming Mr. Biden’s 2020 vote totals than about Mr. Trump achieving sharp gains, especially in Latino neighborhoods and lower-income areas. Ms. Harris’s vote total was down 12 percent overall from Mr. Biden’s in 2020, and 28 percent in low-income neighborhoods where Latino voters are the largest group.

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In this rapidly growing area, red shifts were most evident in Latino neighborhoods. While Ms. Harris matched Mr. Biden’s vote total overall, Mr. Trump made significant gains throughout the area.

Mr. Trump was already popular with the county’s large Cuban American population, but in this election, his support surged with Latino voters from other groups as well. He received 20 percent more total votes in Latino neighborhoods where Cubans are not the predominant Latino group, like those with large populations of Nicaraguans or Colombians. This helped him flip Miami-Dade County for the first time since 1988, further cementing Florida as a decisively red state.

Mr. Trump saw gains on the city’s South Side, where there are Latino precincts with large Mexican populations, and his increased support coincided with Ms. Harris’s losses there. Ms. Harris picked up votes in some white neighborhoods, but those gains were erased by the losses elsewhere, allowing Mr. Trump to cut into the Democratic margin and flip the state back to the Republican column.

Latino neighborhoods accounted for nearly half of Mr. Trump’s total gains in his home city compared with 2020. While Ms. Harris won these precincts by a 40-point margin, that fell short of Mr. Biden’s 66-point margin in 2020. In a city with a diverse population of Latinos, Mr. Trump’s vote share grew among all of them — Puerto Rican neighborhoods, Dominican neighborhoods and Mexican neighborhoods alike.

Ms. Harris outperformed Mr. Biden in some parts of the city — especially in white precincts near the downtown area. White voters were the largest racial or ethnic group in 24 of the 25 precincts where she gained the most votes. But Ms. Harris lost some support in Latino and Black neighborhoods elsewhere in the city, and the Democratic margin fell to 59 points, from 64 points in 2020.

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More than half of the Democratic vote decline occurred in Latino neighborhoods, even though these precincts accounted for just 16 percent of the overall vote total. Ms. Harris still won Latino neighborhoods by 23 points, but it was a 12-point drop from the 2020 margin of Mr. Biden, who narrowly won Arizona, a Republican stronghold won only twice by Democrats since 1952.

Even this city — known for its liberalism and its importance to Ms. Harris’s career — swung toward Mr. Trump. Ms. Harris’s losses were especially noticeable in the city’s Asian neighborhoods, which are predominantly Chinese but include thousands of voters from other groups. Though Ms. Harris still won the city by a 68-point margin, Mr. Trump gained more than 6,000 votes on top of her vote losses.

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The 2024 precinct results are from: Georgia’s Secretary of State (Atlanta); Chicago’s Board of Election Commissioners; Wayne County Clerk (Detroit); Harris County Clerk (Houston); Clark County Election Department (Las Vegas); Miami-Dade County’s Supervisor of Elections (Miami); Milwaukee County Clerk; New York City Board of Elections; Philadelphia City Commissioners; Maricopa County Recorder’s Office (Phoenix); San Francisco’s Department of Elections (San Francisco). The 2024 precinct boundary files are from state and local officials.

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For Milwaukee’s 2020 precinct results, The Times used a data set by John Johnson, a research fellow in the Marquette Law School Lubar Center, based on the county clerk and the Wisconsin Legislative Technology Services Bureau. For New York City, estimates for 2020 election results within 2024 precinct boundaries are from an analysis by the Center for Urban Research at CUNY.

For all other areas, the 2020 precinct results are from the Voting and Election Science Team. In these areas, The Times used data from the 2020 decennial census to create a population-weighted estimate of the 2020 vote within 2024 precinct boundaries. These estimates were used to calculate the change in the number of votes and the shift in margin for each candidate in 2024, compared with 2020.

The city of Detroit reports its absentee votes in counting boards, which often span multiple precincts. For the 2024 data, The Times obtained a list of precincts that correspond to each counting board from the Detroit City Clerk, and precinct results were aggregated into Counting Boards. For 2020, the list of precincts that correspond to each counting board was obtained from OpenElections.

Precinct-level estimates for income and education, as well as broad groupings of race and ethnicity, are based on the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2018-22 American Community Survey and information from L2, a nonpartisan voter data vendor. The Times calculated these statistics, which approximate the average demographics of the electorate in a given precinct, by obtaining the demographics of each registered voter’s census block group and aggregating this data to the precinct level.

Precincts are listed as white, Black, Asian or Latino if that group is the most populous. Some precincts are further identified by a subgroup. For example, a precinct is identified as Chinese if a majority of people in the precinct are Asian, and Chinese are the most populous of the Asian subgroups and also represent at least 25 percent of the neighborhood’s population.

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Likewise, Arab precincts in Wayne County were selected if at least 25 percent of residents identified as a member of an Arab ancestry group and Arab ancestry is more common than any other major ancestry group.

The arrow maps showing the shift in margin from 2020 to 2024 exclude precincts where fewer than 100 votes were cast in 2024 across the two candidates.

Changes in the number of ballots cast in a given area could be attributed to many factors, including changes in population. Some cities, like Milwaukee and Philadelphia, have experienced population decline since 2020, while others such as Las Vegas and Phoenix have seen sharp growth. Because it is difficult to estimate with precision the changes in voter population at the precinct level over the years, The Times analysis of turnout examines total votes cast.

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