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Navy opens investigation after 4 deaths by suicide among aircraft carrier crew

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Navy opens investigation after 4 deaths by suicide among aircraft carrier crew

The investigation can even take a look at any connections or hyperlinks between the deaths, which comes after three of the sailors died by obvious suicide in a single week earlier this month.

The USS George Washington has been in port in Newport Information, Virginia, present process refueling and overhaul. Prior to now 12 months, there have been seven deaths among the many crew.

The 4 most up-to-date deaths, together with three this month, had been both confirmed or obvious suicides, Capt. Sarah Self-Kyler, a spokeswoman for US Fleet Forces Command, advised CNN.

Two of the deaths in Could and October 2021 have been decided to not have been by suicide. The reason for demise one other sailor in July was undetermined, Self-Kyler stated.

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CNN beforehand reported that the Navy was investigating the deaths of three sailors from the provider. Two sailors had been discovered deceased at off-base places on April 9 and 10. A 3rd sailor was discovered unresponsive on board the ship on April 15 and died on the hospital. The Navy decided that these three deaths had been obvious suicides, although a ultimate trigger stays beneath investigation, Self-Kyler stated.

Investigators confirmed {that a} demise final December was a suicide.

The Navy recognized the latest demise as Grasp at Arms Seaman Recruit Xavier Hunter Mitchell Sandor. The Navy recognized the sailor discovered lifeless on April 9 as Retail Providers Specialist third Class Mikail Sharp and the sailor discovered lifeless on April 10 as Inside Communications Electrician third Class Natasha Huffman.

There have been additionally three extra deaths from the ship in late-2019 and 2020. Two of these deaths stay beneath investigation, Self-Kyler stated, however the different demise in December 2020 can also be an obvious suicide.

Although based mostly on the West coast, the USS George Washington has been at Newport Information shipyard since 2017 going via its Refueling and Complicated Overhaul (RCOH), a course of carried out midway via the lifetime of a provider that replenishes its nuclear gasoline and updates its programs. The method was speculated to final two years, however it has been delayed a number of occasions by the pandemic and different setbacks.

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As of April 1, there had been 15 suicides this 12 months amongst active-duty Navy members. The three inside one week earlier this month brings the whole to 18 suicides.

Protection Secretary Lloyd Austin has made addressing the difficulty of army suicides a precedence. Final month, Austin established the Suicide Prevention and Response Impartial Evaluation Committee, which can take a look at Protection Division efforts to take care of suicides amongst troops.

The committee is about to start its work in Could and begin visiting bases and army installations later this summer time. An preliminary report with a preliminary set of suggestions is due by early subsequent 12 months.

“One demise by suicide is one too many,” Austin wrote within the memo asserting the impartial evaluation committee. “And suicide charges amongst our Service members are nonetheless too excessive.”

“We actually need to take a look at issues just like the command local weather and tradition and mission and op-tempo, the tempo at which we’re pushing individuals. All these issues are stressors in life. A few of them might contribute to the issue of suicides. However once more it is a very particular person factor,” Kirby stated at a press briefing Thursday.

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“Every demise is tragic in its personal proper, no matter how. And we, our ideas and prayers proceed to exit to the households, and admittedly the shipmates.”

In 2020, 580 service members dedicated suicide, in response to the Protection Division. The suicide price elevated in all of the army branches over the earlier 5 years.

Editor’s Word: In case you or a beloved one have contemplated suicide, name the Nationwide Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 or textual content TALK to 741741.
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Putin apologises to Azerbaijan for Kazakhstan air crash

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Putin apologises to Azerbaijan for Kazakhstan air crash

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Vladimir Putin has apologised to Azerbaijan for what he described as a “tragic incident” involving an Azerbaijani aircraft in Russian airspace on Christmas Day.

Moscow phoned Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev and the Russian president expressed “deep and sincere condolences” to the families of those affected, the Kremlin’s press office said on Saturday. 

The Azerbaijan Airlines Embraer 190 plane was flying from Baku to Grozny on Christmas Day when it diverted across the Caspian Sea and crash-landed near Aktau, Kazakhstan, killing 38 of the 67 people on board.

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Senior US and Ukrainian officials blamed Russian anti-aircraft fire for the crash.

Although the Kremlin’s statement on Saturday did not explicitly confirm that Russian air defence systems were responsible, it did not deny the allegation. 

The aircraft “repeatedly attempted to land at Grozny airport” while Ukrainian combat drones were attacking nearby cities and Russian air defences were “responding to these attacks”, according to the Kremlin.

“Vladimir Putin apologised for the tragic incident that occurred in Russian airspace”, the statement said.

A Russian investigative committee has opened a criminal investigation into alleged violations of aviation safety regulations, with “civilian and military specialists being questioned”, the statement added. 

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Azerbaijani, Kazakh and Russian officials are already conducting an official investigation, led by Baku.

Putin’s carefully worded acknowledgment sharply contrasts with Moscow’s repeated denial of responsibility for the 2014 downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, which investigators attributed to a surface-to-air missile fired from territory held by Moscow-backed rebels in eastern Ukraine. A court in the Netherlands has found three men with links to the Russian military guilty of murder for their roles in the incident.

Richard Giragosian, director of the Regional Studies Center, a Yerevan-based think-tank, said the Kremlin’s statement “was both unexpected and out of character” for Putin.

He said the move “reveals the overall weakness of Russia’s position” as Moscow pursues its war in Ukraine. Putin clearly “values his relationship with Turkey, Azerbaijan’s patron state, over all else”, he added.

Andrey Kolesnikov, a Moscow-based political scientist, said that as a result of the plane crash, “Azerbaijani society has overnight become anti-Russian”.

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Russia’s main aviation authority had initially suggested that the Kazakhstan crash was caused by a bird strike to the plane’s engine. Azerbaijan’s president said he had been told the plane had been diverted due to poor weather conditions.

On Friday John Kirby, the US National Security Council spokesperson, said there were “early indications” that the plane had been hit by Russian air defences. Rashad Nabiyev, Azerbaijan’s transport minister, said on the same day that the crash had been caused by a weapon impact.

Survivors, including passengers and crew, have described explosions outside the plane as it flew over Grozny.

On Thursday, the head of Russia’s main aviation authority Dmitry Yadrov admitted that air conditions around Grozny had been “very difficult” due to attacks from Ukrainian combat drones.

In response to the catastrophe, five airlines have suspended some flights to Russia.

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Turkmenistan Airlines suspended its route from Ashgabat to Moscow while Azerbaijan Airlines, Kazakhstan’s Qazaq Air and the UAE’s Flydubai all suspended routes to southern Russia. Israel’s El Al has suspended its Tel Aviv to Moscow route.

Additional reporting by Robert Wright in London

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Severe weather could disrupt holiday travel, with tornadoes forecast in the South

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Severe weather could disrupt holiday travel, with tornadoes forecast in the South

Vehicles make their way on a rain soaked highway in Dallas on Thursday.

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LM Otero/AP

Severe weather conditions across the U.S. could disrupt holiday travel this weekend, as millions of people set out to reach their destinations or return home. The National Weather Service is forecasting tornadoes and thunderstorms, heavy rain, and wind in many regions.

An outbreak of severe thunderstorms with tornadoes is possible Saturday in parts of East Texas, the Lower Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley, and central Gulf Coast states. Baton Rouge and Shreveport, La.; Mobile and Tuscaloosa, Ala.; and Jackson, Miss., are among cities under serious threat. Flash flooding, tropical storm strength wind gusts, and up to two-inch sized hail are possible in some places.

National Weather Service meteorologist Frank Pereira says long-range tornadoes could strike some communities from the Texas-Louisiana border, northern and central Louisiana, and into parts of Mississippi.

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“They could stay on the ground for quite a while and they could be very strong tornadoes, EF3, which is really significant,” he said. “Once they touch down, they remain on the ground, and can do damage over quite a length, quite a distance.”

The potential for dangerous storms and twisters comes as many are traveling for the holidays. Auto club AAA projects a record 119 million people are traveling through New Year’s Day. Nearly 107 million are traveling the nation’s highways. About 8 million are estimated to be flying, many through the nation’s busiest airline hubs.

More than 3,000 U.S. flights were delayed as of Saturday morning, according to FlightAware.com.

For parts of western Oregon and northern California, heavy rain and strong winds are in the forecast this weekend, with the worst conditions Saturday. Pereira says the atmospheric river is likely to return to the region and could cause flash flooding and other headaches.

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“By the time we get into Monday, Tuesday, things should start to taper off. We could see an uptick later in the week, Tuesday, Wednesday, but currently that round doesn’t look as heavy as what is currently ongoing,” he said.

Meanwhile, it’s not likely to be a white New Year. Outside of higher elevations in the West, forecasters are not calling for snow. Instead, well-above normal temperatures are expected in much of the country in the coming days.

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Year in a word: Greenlash

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Year in a word: Greenlash

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(portmanteau noun) the backlash against environmental policies. Not to be confused with greenwashing, green hushing or green wishing

It seems it was only yesterday that green policies were on the march. If it wasn’t the US passing the biggest climate law in the country’s history, it was the EU legislating for the world’s first major carbon border tax or the UK pledging to end sales of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030. 

Green progress was especially notable in Europe. By 2022, the EU’s renewable power generation had boomed so much that solar and wind overtook gas for the first time. EU emissions plunged 8 per cent in 2023, the steepest annual fall in decades outside of 2020.

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But as climate promises were becoming a reality, inflation was spurring cost of living anxieties. Net zero-sceptic populist parties seized on these to denounce green policies as a costly elitist plot against working people. 

As 2023 turned into 2024, the green march began to stumble. Companies backed away from green targets. Germany watered down a contentious heat pump law that had helped to push the far-right AFD party’s poll numbers above 20 per cent. Brussels scrapped a plan to halve pesticide use. Green parties were hammered in June’s European parliament elections.  

In the UK, the former Conservative government pushed back the ban on new petrol and diesel cars to 2035. 

Yet the Conservatives still suffered a crushing election loss to the Labour party, which pledged to restore the 2030 target and is still committed to an ambitious decarbonisation agenda. 

That’s a reminder that the greenlash has limits, as does China’s remorseless charge towards green energy supremacy. But with an incoming Trump administration expected to reverse climate policies, and populism showing no sign of easing in Europe, it is clear that fraught green politics are by no means at an end.

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pilita.clark@ft.com

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