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Now Expo is over, will District 2020 leave a positive legacy for Dubai?

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Now Expo is over, will District 2020 leave a positive legacy for Dubai?

The occasion got here to an in depth on March 31 with a show from the United Arab Emirates’ Air Pressure’s aerobatics group, and performances by Christina Aguilera, Norah Jones and Yo-Yo Ma. However now the celebration has wrapped up and the visitors have made their closing departure, will the positioning turn out to be a $7 billion “white elephant” — an undesirable area that turns into a burden on town?

Expo 2020 organizers say they deliberate for the legacy of the area from the outset, with 80% of the infrastructure scheduled to transition into District 2020, a mixed-use city group, described as a “human-centric sensible metropolis.”

“It is a full, complete metropolis,” says Ahmed Al Khatib, chief improvement and supply officer for the Expo 2020 web site. The area contains houses, workplaces, leisure amenities, train grounds, a mall, and a metro station. In accordance with Al Khatib, District 2020 can even be the most important metropolis on this planet to be totally lined by a 5G-enabled community.

“Each nook you stroll to, there’s a totally different attraction,” he explains. “The parks, the landscaping, the timber — your entire factor is designed on human wants.”

The concept is for all facilities to be accessible to residents on foot in quarter-hour or much less — “Like an previous conventional metropolis,” says Dina Storey, director of sustainability operations at Expo 2020.

There will likely be 10 kilometers of cycle tracks, 5km of jogging paths and a 4km autonomous automobile public transit route. The location will retain 123 of the Expo constructions and buildings, from the dominating wings of the UAE pavilion, designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, to the large glass and metal façade of the Al Wasl Plaza.

In whole, 260,000 square-meters of repurposed Expo buildings will present houses and workplaces for as much as 145,000 individuals.

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A inexperienced metropolis

Regardless of being constructed on a desert web site, organizers say District 2020 will embrace 45,000 sq. meters of inexperienced area and parks stuffed with native native species, corresponding to drought-tolerant Ghaf timber and Jasmine bushes. The buildings are additionally designed with the surroundings in thoughts, and every is fitted with photo voltaic panels. The Sustainability Pavilion, designed by British Structure agency Grimshaw, is a showpiece of Expo’s eco-friendly imaginative and prescient.

The pavilion is partially submerged, which retains it cool, and has a 440-feet-wide metal cover lined with over 1,000 photo voltaic panels. The constructing can generate as much as 4 gigawatt hours of electrical energy a 12 months — sufficient to energy about 370 common houses — from the photo voltaic panels on the cover and on the 18 “Vitality Timber” across the pavilion.

Learn: This Expo pavilion makes its personal water and power

Within the transition to District 2020 it can turn out to be the Terra Youngsters and Science Middle, a museum and academic facility demonstrating the sensible and sustainable capabilities of the positioning.

In accordance with Storey, District 2020 can even be the primary WELL Licensed group within the area — a normal that evaluates the influence of buildings on well being and wellness. She says that to qualify, “there must be vegan areas, natural areas for consuming, and it actually focuses on the wellbeing of the people who stay right here, the animals, and the biodiversity of the area itself.”

‘It’s essential to have a plan in place’

With earlier World Expos, many websites have turn out to be “white elephants,” says Tim van Vrijaldenhoven, an impartial skilled in city planning, and creator of “Reaching Past the Gold: The Impression of International Occasions on City Improvement.” In these instances, the area hasn’t been wanted by town, and so hasn’t been integrated into wider city improvement. Dubai is totally different, Vrijaldenhoven says, as a result of it is a quickly rising metropolis and the positioning is being built-in into an city grasp plan.

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He provides that it is important that Dubai strikes forward with the event of District 2020 rapidly, earlier than individuals lose curiosity. “After the occasion, with each Expo, the momentum is gone,” he says. “It’s essential to instantly have a plan in place for transformation.”

Vrijaldenhoven questions the feasibility of creating a metropolis pedestrian-friendly in a location the place temperatures usually attain 50 levels Celsius, and provides that websites disconnected from the remainder of a metropolis, threat changing into “finish of the road” places. “Except it is built-in right into a community, with a strategically good location, it is tough for individuals to make the choice to start out residing there,” he explains.

However he is usually impressed with the plans. “I believe that that is lastly a proper reply to the way to cope with the legacy of Expos and never turning into white elephants,” he says.

The Al Wasl dome, the centerpiece of Dubai's Expo 2020, will form part of the new District 2020 urban zone.
Folks and companies will have the ability to transfer onto the Expo web site as of October this 12 months and firms together with Siemens and Terminus have already secured their spots. The UK and the UAE plan to companion to open a hydrogen innovation heart on web site, with the purpose of rushing up decarbonization in aviation and delivery. And Italy’s imposing pavilion will rework into a middle for the preservation of archaeological artifacts and artwork recovered from conflict zones.

“It is loads of schooling, loads of innovation, loads of leisure as properly,” says Al Khatib. “In 10 years, I think about it is a very busy web site.”

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Trump's border czar says immigration raids will begin next week, including in Chicago

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Trump's border czar says immigration raids will begin next week, including in Chicago

Incoming White House “border czar” Tom Homan speaks during Turning Point’s annual AmericaFest 2024 in Phoenix on Dec. 22.

Jos Edelson/AFP via Getty Images


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Jos Edelson/AFP via Getty Images

Incoming “border czar” Tom Homan said large-scale raids as part of President-elect Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration are set to begin as soon as Tuesday.

In an interview with Fox News on Friday night, Homan did not offer further details, but he did confirm that Chicago will be one of the cities targeted.

“On Tuesday, ICE is finally going to go out and do their job. We’re going to take the handcuffs off ICE,” he said, referring to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

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Homan, a former acting head of ICE, added that immigration agents will focus on the “worst first, public safety threats first, but no one is off the table. If they’re in the country illegally, they got a problem.”

The anticipated raids in Chicago were first reported by The Wall Street Journal. It comes after Homan visited the city in December and threatened to prosecute the city’s mayor if he refused to cooperate.

On Saturday, Homan told The Washington Post that the incoming administration was reconsidering launching raids in Chicago because details had leaked in the media, but had yet to make a final decision.

Chicago is one of the hundreds of sanctuary cities and counties in the U.S., which typically prohibit local resources from supporting federal immigration enforcement.

The prospect of raids in Chicago echoes Homan’s past remarks that he will not allow sanctuary jurisdictions to hinder the incoming administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration.

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On Saturday, Beatriz Ponce de León, Chicago’s deputy mayor for immigrant, migrant and refugee rights, said the news that immigration raids could start in Chicago on Tuesday “wasn’t a surprise,” but that “hearing confirmation made it more real, more concrete.”

She said the city is prepared. In addition to community agencies holding “know your rights” events all over, she said Chicago leaders have met with city departments and sister agencies, such as the police and public school district, to detail existing city policies.

An estimated 11 million immigrants live in the U.S. without legal status.

Both Homan and Trump have vowed to carry out the largest deportation operation in U.S. history. But the plan is expected to face legal and logistical hurdles, including where to house millions of people once they are detained.

In Chicago, community organizers and elected officials scramble to encourage residents to not panic

On the city’s Southwest Side, Any Huamani, a community organizer with the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, was fielding requests for Know Your Rights Trainings and leading a rapid response team via private group chat. Team members are ready to be dispatched in case ICE agents arrive in her community.

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“Obviously each scenario is different,” Huamani said. “If they’re there to detain someone, rapid response teams respond in a different way. We have to yell out ‘These are your rights. You know, who can we call? Give us a phone number.’ And we’re also trying to record … ICE agents, if there’s an ICE truck or if it’s an unrecognizable truck.”

Meanwhile, 20 requests for trainings had come in.

The biggest fear among immigrants who don’t have a legal status in the U.S., Huamani said, is leaving their children behind.

During Trump’s first administration, his “zero tolerance” policy separated more than 5,000 children from parents who crossed the border, without systems to track and reunite families. Some also fear being detained or held in cities or states unfamiliar to them. Huamani has been advising people at risk of being detained by ICE to memorize at least three phone numbers so that they can be located if taken into ICE custody.

Organizers are worried that ICE agents could target the city’s Southwest Side and execute workplace raids in nearby suburbs, where there are also large concentrations of immigrants without legal status.

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Garien Gatewood, Chicago’s deputy mayor of community safety, said the police department has been working under a welcoming city ordinance for 40 years, which stipulates that immigration enforcement is up to the federal government.

Chicago’s police department does not document immigration status, nor share information with federal immigration authorities, said spokesman Don Terry in a statement. But he added that police “will not intervene or interfere with any other government agencies performing their duties.”

“From the top down, everybody at CPD understands the roles that they play,” he said. “This is not the first time that they’ve had interactions with federal agents acting about immigration status.”

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office did not provide a response to news that immigration raids were going to start in Chicago next week. The office provided a transcript of the governor’s statement at a Dec. 11 press conference where he said he “believes it is his obligation to protect” immigrants without legal status who have not committed violent crimes.

WBEZ has more on how Chicago is preparing for the incoming Trump administration.

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Thousands Protest Trump’s Return to White House Days Before His Inauguration

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Thousands Protest Trump’s Return to White House Days Before His Inauguration

Some climbed into buses in the wee hours of the morning. Others boarded planes from across the country or drove bleary-eyed through the night. No matter how they got to Washington on Saturday, they shared a common goal: to protest against President-elect Donald J. Trump.

Just two days before Mr. Trump’s inauguration, thousands of people attended the People’s March across Washington. Despite the damp and chilly weather on Saturday, demonstrators came out to rally against Mr. Trump’s hard-right plans for the country and show support for causes like civil rights, racial justice, immigration and gun violence prevention.

“I am angry and frustrated,” said Jillian Wheat, who came to the march from Columbus, Ohio, with her 14-year-old daughter, Emma. “I’m worried that he is going to dismantle our democracy.”

It was a sequel of sort to the Women’s March in 2017, right after Mr. Trump was sworn in for his first term, a protest that focused on women’s reproductive rights. But the march was rebranded and expanded to include more people and a wider range of issues. Various sponsors, including the Sierra Club and Time to Act, a group against authoritarianism, backed the event on Saturday.

With signs that called Mr. Trump a felon, an oligarch and a danger to democracy — one read, “such a disaster that even grandmoms have to take to the streets to resist” — protesters yelled chants such as, “Stand up! Fight back!” and “No justice, no peace, no Trump,” at times injecting an expletive into the chant.

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Many, if not most, attendees said they were nervous that Mr. Trump would try to roll back more rights they valued than he did in his first administration, during which he nominated Supreme Court justices who helped overturn Roe v. Wade. They were hoping that he would not strip away climate change protections and L.G.B.T.Q. rights, and that he would not follow through with his threat to carry out mass deportations of undocumented immigrants.

Debbie Pierce, a gerontologist from Tampa, Fla., wiped tears from her eyes as she held up a photo of a young relative who recently told her that she might be a lesbian.

“I’m here for her,” said Ms. Pierce, referring to her relative. “With this new administration, I don’t know if she will be safe.”

Alana Eichner, co-director of the local chapter of the National Domestic Workers Alliance, came to the march with more than a dozen women who work as caregivers for children and the elderly. She said she hopes that Mr. Trump realizes that domestic workers — including many who are undocumented — are essential to the American economy and help the country function.

“We’re here to make sure these workers are protected and valued,” she said, as the women she came with nodded in agreement.

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On the dawn of a second Trump presidency, marches also were held in other cities, including New York, Nashville and Portland, Ore. All were different — and felt different — than the ones held to protest his first term.

The Women’s March eight years ago was much bigger than the People’s Marches on Saturday. More than 470,000 people had packed into the nation’s capital in 2017, ready and energized to fight after his surprise defeat of Hillary Clinton. The protest turned into a sea of pink as many attendees wore pink knitted hats.

This time, the crowd in Washington was smaller and the pink hats were sparse. Mary Griffin, who flew to Washington from Seattle for both Saturday’s march and the one in 2017, said she was troubled by the lower turnout, adding that people were squished together shoulder-to-shoulder at the 2017 march. She said she suspects that voters for Vice President Kamala Harris are still in shock and “in the doldrums,” frozen about how to show their resistance to the new administration.

“We need to get our energy back,” said Ms. Griffin, a 63-year-old lawyer. “I think once Trump starts moving in the direction I think he’s going in, the pendulum will swing back and people will be energized again.”

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Trump says he will ‘most likely’ give TikTok extension to avoid ban

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Trump says he will ‘most likely’ give TikTok extension to avoid ban

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President-elect Donald Trump said he would “most likely” extend the deadline for ByteDance, the Chinese owner of TikTok, to divest the video app which faces a nationwide ban that is set to come into effect on Sunday.

In an interview with NBC News, Trump said he was considering issuing a 90-day extension to the deadline. His comments come one day after TikTok warned that its 170mn users would face an imminent blackout after the Supreme Court on Friday upheld the divest-or-ban law that Congress passed last year to address China-related national security concerns.

“The 90-day extension is something that will be most likely done, because it’s appropriate,” Trump said. “We have to look at it carefully. It’s a very big situation . . . If I decide to do that, I’ll probably announce it on Monday.”

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On Friday, Trump said he had spoken to President Xi Jinping and discussed TikTok with the Chinese leader. Chinese state media said the two leaders had spoken but did not specify if TikTok was part of the conversation.

The Biden administration on Friday said it would leave decisions about enforcement of the law, which comes into effect at midnight on Saturday eastern time, to the incoming Trump administration.

That means the companies that provide the video platform — including Apple, Google and Oracle — have to decide whether to risk violating the law between the midnight deadline and Trump’s inauguration on Monday.

Apple and Oracle declined to comment, while Google did not immediately respond.

TikTok said statements from the Biden administration “failed to provide the necessary clarity and assurance to the service providers that are integral to maintaining TikTok’s availability to over 170 million Americans”.

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It also warned that the video app would “go dark” on January 19 unless the Biden administration “immediately provides a definitive statement to satisfy the most critical service providers assuring non-enforcement”.

In an overwhelming bipartisan vote last March, Congress passed a law that required ByteDance to divest TikTok to avoid a nationwide ban on the app.

Lawmakers and US security officials believe that Chinese ownership of the app poses a national security risk because it could be used for espionage and disinformation by the Chinese Communist party. TikTok has denied that the Chinese government has any influence over the app.

In his first term, Trump issued an executive order to block TikTok from operating in the US, but it was stymied by the courts at the last minute. In early 2024, he came out in opposition to the congressional divest-or-ban measure on the grounds that it would help Facebook, which banned him from its social media platform for two years.

Trump has appointed several China hawks who oppose Chinese ownership of TikTok to his administration, including Mike Waltz, a former green beret and Florida congressman, who will serve as national security adviser.

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Earlier this week, Waltz said the incoming administration would put “measures in place to keep TikTok from going dark”, saying the legislation allowed for an extension as long as a “viable deal” was on the table.

Following the TikTok statement on Friday, Rush Doshi, a former senior Biden administration China official, wrote on X that the company only had itself to blame.

“TikTok had 268 days to sell itself so it wasn’t operated by China. That would have solved everything. But they didn’t even try. China wouldn’t let them,” Doshi said.

“Now, with time short, they want Biden to ignore a bipartisan law SCOTUS (Supreme Court of the US) upheld 9-0. If they shut down, it’s on them.”

Additional reporting by Hannah Murphy and Michael Acton

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