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Tokyo schools drop controversial dress code on hair and underwear color

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Tokyo schools drop controversial dress code on hair and underwear color

For many years, being a scholar in Tokyo meant you needed to look a sure means. Beneath the general public faculty system’s costume code, all college students needed to dye their hair black, sure hairstyles had been prohibited and even their underwear needed to be a chosen shade.

However these guidelines, which have lately come underneath scrutiny and been criticized as outdated, will now be abolished, the town’s authorities introduced this week.

A complete of 5 guidelines shall be dropped by practically 200 public colleges throughout the Japanese capital, together with rules on hair and underwear shade, and a ban on “two block” hairstyles, that are lengthy on high and brief on the again and sides — a method at present in style in lots of nations.

Different guidelines being minimize embrace the follow of punishing college students with a type of home arrest, and ambiguous language within the pointers on what is taken into account “typical of highschool college students.”

The coverage adjustments go into impact initially of the brand new tutorial yr on April 1. The transfer got here after Tokyo’s board of schooling performed a survey final yr that requested colleges, college students and fogeys about their views on the insurance policies.

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Tokyo is not the one Japanese metropolis with a strict costume code — related guidelines are in impact across the nation, with many colleges requiring college students to put on footwear and socks of a chosen shade.

Faculties in Fukuoka, on the island of Kyushu, even have guidelines limiting college students’ hairstyles and dictating each the colour and sample of their underwear, in accordance with Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun.

Like Tokyo, Fukuoka performed a public survey final yr, during which college students complained that the costume code triggered them stress and restricted their self-expression, Asahi reported.

The problem was thrust into the highlight in 2017 when a highschool scholar in Osaka prefecture sued her faculty, a case that attracted nationwide consideration and prompted widespread public debate on restrictive costume codes.

She alleged that she had been pressured to dye her naturally brown hair black when she first joined the college, and was informed to re-dye it each time her brown roots grew again, in accordance with Asahi. She was ultimately given tutorial penalties for not dyeing it usually sufficient.

Her lawsuit complained that the frequent coloring had broken her hair and scalp, and triggered her psychological misery. Final yr, she received 330,000 yen (about $2,790) in damages.

Different college students and households have since spoken out with related complaints, whereas a number of colleges have introduced adjustments to their costume codes.

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This spring, a faculty in Ube, Yamaguchi prefecture, will develop into the primary within the metropolis to introduce a “genderless” uniform, with college students of all genders given a selection between slacks and skirts, Asahi reported — a significant break from the strictly gendered costume codes nonetheless widespread in Japan.

This text was up to date to make clear that April 1 is the beginning of a brand new tutorial yr and that Asahi Shimbun is a Japanese newspaper.

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UK and EU locked in intense talks over key terms of post-Brexit reset

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UK and EU locked in intense talks over key terms of post-Brexit reset

Britain and the EU are locked in intense haggling over key details of their revamped relationship, including on fisheries, food trade and youth mobility, ahead of a historic first joint summit since Brexit.

The summit at Lancaster House in London on Monday will see both sides sign a security and defence partnership, the centrepiece of the “reset” in relations, but talks in Brussels on other details ran late into Sunday night.

The EU offered Britain a new open-ended deal to lower barriers to trade in agrifood, but only in exchange for a 10-year rollover of a current deal allowing EU fishermen to operate in UK waters.

Downing Street, which had previously offered a five-year extension, declined to comment on the offer, confirmed by officials on both sides. Sir Keir Starmer, UK prime minister, knows he risks being accused of “selling out” by British fishermen.

The summit is due to start at 10am on Monday, and EU ambassadors will meet early on Monday to consider the results of the last-minute horse-trading by UK officials and European Commission negotiators.

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One senior EU diplomat said there would be a deal, adding: “They will need to find a solution, even if it takes the whole night.”

Starmer is scheduled to sign the defence pact and a communiqué promising deeper economic co-operation during a two-hour meeting with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and European Council president António Costa.

The EU-UK summit, the first since Brexit took effect in 2020, is expected to emphasise a spirit of reconciliation, but the tense talks in Brussels on Sunday were a reminder that the relationship is now highly transactional.

British officials said on Sunday evening that “huge progress” had been made in some areas but that “negotiations are going down to the wire”.

Details of the EU-UK deal are highly politically sensitive. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has warned that Starmer is about to “surrender” British interests.

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British officials admitted that the EU would not agree to an open-ended deal to remove post-Brexit barriers to trade in food and animals — one of the biggest “asks” of the UK — unless Brussels was satisfied with a deal on fish.

“We want to give confidence to business,” said one UK official, admitting that a time-limited veterinary deal — known as a sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) agreement — would leave too much uncertainty for farmers and supermarkets.

Brussels had insisted that any SPS deal should only last for as long as Britain agreed to maintain current fishing rules for EU boats. European diplomats viewed the offer of an unlimited SPS deal in exchange for a 10-year fisheries agreement as a significant concession.

Meanwhile Britain has conceded that removing barriers to trade in foodstuffs will require the UK to “dynamically align” with rules made in Brussels, and also make payments to the EU to fund work on food and animal standards. Conservatives claim this is a “betrayal” of Brexit.

The EU is also trying to get Britain to sign up to an ambitious youth mobility scheme — including better access for students to UK universities — in a “common understanding” communiqué to be issued alongside the defence pact.

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The EU has warned Starmer that it will not make it easier for British touring musicians to travel across national borders in Europe or for UK travellers to use passport e-gates unless he is bolder on youth mobility, according to officials briefed on the talks.

Starmer has conceded that a youth mobility scheme will happen, but is trying to keep the language in the communiqué vague, allowing detailed talks about controversial areas such as numbers and student fees for further negotiations later this year.

Downing Street said the Lancaster House summit would include an agreement to cut “queues on holiday”, with European relations minister Nick Thomas-Symonds confirming on Sunday he was looking for a deal to allow the use of e-gates at borders.

But a second EU diplomat denied the request — which was also previously made by Starmer’s predecessor Rishi Sunak — had been granted.

“Starmer sees some of the outcomes of the summit as a done deal already which is not the case, and he wants to appear as a dealmaker,” the diplomat said. “UK negotiators need to show they really want a reset on a ‘win-win’ basis, and not only look at potential gains for one side only.”

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One person involved in talks on the EU side said the discussions had always been expected to go to the wire. “The British are tough negotiators. But we should get a deal in the end.”

EU diplomats complained of Starmer’s recent tactics to force a deal. Last week British ministers called counterparts in EU capitals to push for a deal, bypassing the commission — which one diplomat dubbed a “divide and rule tactic”.

Issues that are unresolved overnight could be “kicked into the long grass” for further talks, British officials say, although the EU wants to extract as many firm commitments as possible from London now.

Details of the final text are due to be published at midday on Monday, but Starmer and his EU interlocutors will be at pain to stress areas of agreement, rather than tensions exposed by the painful last-minute talks.

Additional reporting by Barbara Moens in Brussels

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FBI says primary suspect in Calif. fertility clinic bombing likely died in the blast

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FBI says primary suspect in Calif. fertility clinic bombing likely died in the blast

A damaged building is seen after an explosion in Palm Springs, Calif., on Saturday.

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Eric Thayer/AP

Guy Edward Bartkus, 25, has been identified as the primary suspect in the fatal explosion outside a California fertility clinic Saturday morning.

Investigators also said that they suspect Bartkus was the sole fatality in the Palm Springs blast, which injured four others.

“We are working through some other technical means to positively identify the decedent here, but we believe at this moment based on the evidence that we’ve gathered that that is Mr. Bartkus as the decedent here,” Akil Davis, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office, said at a Sunday morning press conference.

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Davis reiterated that law enforcement is treating the bombing as an act of terrorism and said investigators have gathered some clues showing Bartkus’ state of mind, including online posts and other writings that investigators are now examining. “The subject had nihilistic ideations, and this was a targeted attack against the IVF facility.”

FBI spokesperson Laura Eimiller confirmed that the agency was also investigating evidence “indicating antinatalist views.” Antinatalism refers to a belief system that suggests it is wrong to have children.

Davis added that investigators believe Bartkus was attempting to live stream the bombing.

Law enforcement officials also executed a search warrant in Bartkus’s hometown of Twentynine Palms, nearly 60 miles northeast of Palm Springs.

Davis said this was the first time Bartkus had appeared on the FBI’s radar but that he may have had contacts with other law enforcement agencies.

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The bomb used was powerful enough “to throw pieces of vehicle hundreds of feet in the air and then several blocks away. You can use your imagination for how big that that bomb device was,” Davis said. He would not comment on the type of materials used in the bomb, saying it was still under investigation. Bartkus was driving a silver 2010 Ford Fusion sedan, Davis said.

A firefighter stands at the scene of an explosion in Palm Springs, Calif., on Saturday.

A firefighter stands at the scene of an explosion in Palm Springs, Calif., on Saturday.

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Eric Thayer/AP

Palm Springs Police Chief Andrew Mills said Sunday that the public was not in any more danger. “I am absolutely confident that this city is safe. There is no continuing threat to our community as a result of this incident,” he said.

American Reproductive Centers said Saturday in a post on Facebook that a vehicle had exploded in the parking lot near its Palm Springs facility earlier in the day. The clinic said no staff members were hurt and there was no damage to any of its eggs, embryos and reproductive material.

“This moment has shaken us—but it has not stopped us,” the post reads. “We will continue to serve with strength, love, and the hope that brings new life into the world.”

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Attorney General Pam Bondi said Saturday evening that she had been briefed on the explosion. “We are working to learn more, but let me be clear: the Trump administration understands that women and mothers are the heartbeat of America,” she said in a post on X. “Violence against a fertility clinic is unforgivable.”

Bomb technicians were scouring the blast site over the weekend as part of the ongoing investigation, which was being led by the Joint Terrorism Task Force.

First responders arrived at the scene around 11 a.m. local time Saturday morning to find a debris field stretching over 250 yards, Davis said.

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Video: One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

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Video: One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

new video loaded: One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

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One Person Dead in Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic

The mayor of Palm Springs, Calif., said it was unclear how or whether the victim was connected to a blast that damaged a fertility clinic.

“It’s kind of hard to see.” “It’s hard to tell if it was just the car.” “The explosion was so crazy, it blew out the glass of this liquor store. Look at this liquor store. Oh, my God. Look at this, dude. Damn. Crazy explosion. Glass and everything everywhere.”

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