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Fighting for Her Life, Far From Ukraine

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A 5-year-old Ukrainian woman with a mind tumor was one in all a number of kids introduced for remedy in america after their nation was invaded by Russia.

MEMPHIS — When Russia invaded Ukraine, Marija Pyzhyk was nonetheless nervous primarily about her 5-year-old daughter, Khrystyna, who was being handled for a mind tumor. The household lived in Lviv, the western metropolis close to Poland, removed from the rockets raining down within the east.

Quickly, nevertheless, Ms. Pyzhyk was knowledgeable that the hospital was about to expire of the treatment to deal with her daughter; she must be evacuated instantly for care in a foreign country, the physician advised her.

“I had actually believed we might proceed our medical remedy in Ukraine,” Ms. Pyzhyk recalled.

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Khrystyna’s situation, optic glioma, a most cancers commonest in younger kids, may cause blindness and even dying with out constant remedy to shrink or stabilize the tumor. Khrystyna requires each day oral chemotherapy.

On March 16, Ms. Pyzhyk, Khrystyna and her son, Sergei, 10, bid farewell to her husband, Volodymyr, and boarded a bus to Poland, the place they joined a number of different evacuated households with ailing kids. Whereas different households had been directed to hospitals throughout Europe, Ms. Pyzhyk and her kids had been advised they might be flown to america.

“We’re so removed from household and associates and our homeland,” Ms. Pyzhyk mentioned this week at a hospital in Memphis, the place her daughter is now a affected person. She didn’t hesitate, she mentioned, as a result of Khrystyna’s life relied on it.

Among the many hundreds of thousands of displaced Ukrainians are 1000’s of sick kids who might not be handled there. Greater than 400 Ukrainian pediatric most cancers sufferers have handed via Poland en path to medical facilities in different nations.

Khrystyna was amongst eight Ukrainian kids who arrived in late March at St. Jude Youngsters’s Analysis Hospital, an establishment specializing in childhood most cancers that’s funded by personal donors. The hospital had arrange a triage clinic in Poland to determine kids in want of care and place them with partnering hospitals, primarily in Europe.

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“If all these kids stayed in Ukraine, they had been going to die of their illness, complication of the remedy of their illness, or battle,” Dr. James Downing, the chief government of St. Jude, mentioned in an interview.

Pediatric most cancers remedy requires a fast succession of medication with excessive depth, he mentioned. “Any interruption of remedy considerably will increase threat for failure, relapse and in the end dying from the illness. It’s a timing difficulty.”

Six days after that they had left Ukraine, the Pyzhyks checked right into a two-bedroom condominium at Goal Home, the Memphis hospital’s residential facility, with two suitcases and two small luggage.

After a go to to the hospital, throughout which Khrystyna acquired vaccinations required earlier than commencing her oral remedy, Dr. Ibrahim Qaddoumi requested his little Ukrainian affected person what the Barbie doll she acquired on the hospital was cooking. “Ukrainian borscht,” an interpreter replied.

On an outing later to a world market with two different households, Ms. Pyzhyk looked for buckwheat and bitter yogurt. As they ready to take a look at, the proprietor of the market mentioned they didn’t have to pay. “I’ve been via battle. Two of them,” he mentioned.

At their subsequent cease, an American-style grocery store, they had been dazzled by the big selection of produce. On the deli counter, staff provided them samples of salami. “Take your time,” one attendant mentioned.

Ms. Pyzhyk has been commonly getting ready Ukrainian dishes at their condominium. However Khrystyna and Sergei most get pleasure from consuming on the hospital cafe, the place they will order cheeseburgers, macaroni and cheese and even fried catfish, a Southern traditional. Their favourite is hen strips and fries.

Khrystyna is conscious that Ukraine is at battle, mentioned her mom. “It’s not possible for her to not know what’s going on. She was uncovered to air raid warnings,” she mentioned. “However I don’t suppose she is aware of what which means.”

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Again house in Lviv, her husband has fretted about what is going on to his household on the opposite aspect of the world, however he mentioned in a cellphone name that his daughter has been courageous all through her yearslong remedy. “My daughter is a powerful persona,” he mentioned. “She is a real Ukrainian.”

Khrystyna and Sergei have a detailed and tender bond. He’s his sister’s protector, holding her hand once they enter the hospital, stroll to the physician’s workplace or sit down for English classes.

Sergei mentioned he beloved his sister from delivery. “I felt I had a brand new buddy for all times,” he mentioned. “I deal with her, however generally we argue like regular individuals. It by no means takes too lengthy for us to be associates once more.”

He’s keenly conscious of his sister’s vulnerability. Glioma can have an effect on the attention, and Khrystyna’s left eyelid is half closed; the realm above her eye bulges barely.

Not lengthy after they arrived, Ms. Pyzhyk took her kids and Marya, one other Ukrainian youngster, on their first journey to a zoo. They lingered close to the giraffes, lions and zebras, in awe.

However by the top of the second week, the fact that they weren’t on a trip, and that house was very distant, began to set in.

“Will we fly house immediately?” Khrystyna requested her mom at dinner, solely to burst into tears when she heard the response. Sergei tried to consolation his sister, gently massaging her again.

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To a defiant Biden, the 2024 race is up to the voters, not to Democrats on Capitol Hill

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To a defiant Biden, the 2024 race is up to the voters, not to Democrats on Capitol Hill

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — To a defiant President Joe Biden, the 2024 election is up to the public — not the Democrats on Capitol Hill. But the chorus of Democratic voices calling for him to step aside is growing, from donors, strategists, lawmakers and their constituents who say he should bow out.

The party has not fallen in line behind him even after the events that were set up as part of a blitz to reset his imperiled campaign and show everyone he wasn’t too old to stay in the job or to do it another four years.

On Saturday, a fifth Democratic lawmaker said openly that Biden should not run again. Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota said that after what she saw and heard in the debate with Republican rival Donald Trump, and Biden’s “lack of a forceful response” afterward, he should step aside “and allow for a new generation of leaders to step forward.”

Craig posted one of the Democrats’ key suburban wins in the 2018 midterms and could be a barometer for districts that were vital for Biden in 2020.

With no public schedule on Saturday, the president and his aides were taking a step back from the fervor over the past few days. But Biden will head out campaigning again on Sunday in Philadelphia. And this coming week, the U.S. is hosting the NATO summit and the president is to hold a news conference.

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Vice President Kamala Harris planned to campaign Saturday in New Orleans.

What to know about the 2024 Election

The president’s ABC interview on Friday night stirred carefully worded expressions of disappointment from the party’s ranks, and worse from those who spoke anonymously. Ten days into the crisis moment of the Biden-Trump debate, Biden is dug in.

With the Democratic convention approaching and just four months to Election Day, neither camp in the party can much afford this internecine drama much longer. But it is bound to drag on until Biden steps aside or Democrats realize he won’t and learn to contain their concerns about the president’s chances against Trump.

Even within the White House there were concerns the ABC interview wasn’t enough to turn the page.

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Campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez has been texting lawmakers and administration officials are encouraging them not to go public with their concerns about the race and the president’s electability, according to a Democrat granted anonymity to discuss the situation.

Most Democrats have stayed quieter in recent days, allowing the president’s team the space to show them — and Americans — he is up for the job with the rallies, interview and flurry of public events.

But Democratic leaders in the House and Senate, without breaking with Biden at this point, are pulling together meetings with members in the next few days to discuss options. It was clear that discontent among Democrats on Capitol Hill has not subsided, and privately many would prefer to see the president not run.

Many lawmakers are hearing from constituents at home and fielding questions. One senator was working to get others together to ask him to step aside.

Yet some senior lawmakers were now trying to bring the party behind their presumptive nominee. “Biden is who our country needs,” Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, who had raised questions about Biden in the aftermath of the debate, said after the interview.

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Following the interview, a Democratic donor reported that many of the fellow donors he spoke with were furious, particularly because the president declined to acknowledge the effects his aging. Many of those donors are seeking a change in leadership at the top of the ticket, said the person, who spoke to AP on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.

Biden roundly swatted away calls Friday to step away from the race, telling telling voters at a Wisconsin rally, reporters outside Air Force One and ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that he was not going anywhere.

“Completely ruling that out,” he told reporters the rally.

Biden dismissed those who were calling for his ouster, instead saying he’d spoken with 20 lawmakers and they had all encouraged him to stay in the race.

Concern about Biden’s fitness for another four years has been persistent. In an August 2023 poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, fully 77% of U.S. adults said Biden was too old to be effective for four more years. Not only did 89% of Republicans say that, but so did 69% of Democrats. His approval rating stands at 38%.

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Biden has dismissed the polling, citing as evidence his 2020 surge to the nomination and win over Trump, after initially faltering, and the 2022 midterm elections, when polls suggested Republicans would sweep but didn’t, largely in part over the issue of abortion rights.

“I don’t buy that,” when he was reminded that he was behind in the polls. “I don’t think anybody’s more qualified to be president or win this race than me.”

At times, Biden rambled during the interview, which ABC said aired in full and without edits. Asked how he might turn the race around, Biden argued that one key would be large and energetic rallies like the one he held Friday in Wisconsin. When reminded that Trump routinely draws larger crowds, the president laid into his opponent.

“Trump is a pathological liar,” Biden said, accusing Trump of bungling the federal response to the COVID pandemic and failing to create jobs. “You ever see something that Trump did that benefited someone else and not him?”

Republicans, though, are squarely behind their candidate, and support for Trump, who at 78 is three years younger than Biden, has been growing.

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And that’s despite Trump’s 34 felony convictions in a hush money trial, that he was found liable for sexually abusing advice columnist E. Jean Carroll in 1996, and that his businesses were found to have engaged in fraud.

___

Miller and Mascaro reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Joey Cappelletti in Saugatuck, Michigan, and Aamer Madhani in Washington contributed to this report.

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$20M in gold stolen from Canadian airport likely overseas already, police say

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$20M in gold stolen from Canadian airport likely overseas already, police say

A police department in Canada believes over 6,500 gold bars have disappeared overseas after being stolen from an airport last year. 

The incident, which took place in April 2023 at Toronto’s Pearson International airport, was perhaps the most valuable gold heist in history. Police reported more than CA$20,000,000 worth of gold was stolen in the form of 6,600 serialized bars. 

“We believe a large portion has gone overseas to markets that are flush with gold,” lead investigator Det. Sgt. Mike Mavity said at a June 21 meeting of the Peel Police Service Board, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 

CANADIAN POLICE SAY 9 PEOPLE WILL BE CHARGED AFTER $20 MILLION WORTH OF GOLD WAS STOLEN LAST YEAR FROM AIRPORT

Police officers open the back of a recovered truck during a press conference regarding Project 24K — a joint investigation into the theft of gold from Pearson International Airport, in Brampton, Ontario. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

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He continued, “That would be Dubai, or India, where you can take gold with serial numbers on it, and they will still honor it and melt it down.”

Mavity said he believes the gold was handed over to another party and melted down very shortly after the heist.

Suspects in the case include a jewelry store owner, a former Air Canada manager, and a warehouse employee. A total of nine individuals have been arrested in connection with the case.

TORONTO AIRPORT HEIST: $15M CONTAINER OF GOLD, VALUABLE ITEMS STOLEN FROM CARGO FACILITY

Canada Gold Heist Toronto Pearson Airport

A photo of the falsified seafood order that was used to gain access to the Air Canada warehouse is displayed on a monitor. Peel Regional Police and the US Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau announced details and arrests made concerning the theft of 20 million dollars in gold from Pearson International Airport. (Richard Lautens/Toronto Star via Getty Images)

The suspects reportedly used a completed bill for a seafood pick-up to forge paperwork that was given to a warehouse attendant.

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Authorities believe a small amount of precious metal was melted down in the basement of a Mississauga jewelry store immediately following the heist. Only CA$90,000 has been recovered from the heist.

Police have attempted to draw connections between the stolen gold and cross-border gun trafficking, citing dozens of firearms seized from suspects in the investigation.

 

Canada Gold Heist Toronto Pearson Airport

Sgt Mike Mavity of the Peel police, a lead investigator in the case, speaks to the media with the sum total of the gold so far recovered projected beside him. (Richard Lautens/Toronto Star via Getty Images)

Two fully automatic weapons and several untraceable firearms were recovered, but authorities have not yet offered substantial evidence of connections to the illegal gun trade.

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France overseas residents begin voting in second-round of elections

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France overseas residents begin voting in second-round of elections

Sunday’s legislative elections in mainland France will be decisive, with parties fighting to steal votes from a strong far-right force.

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Voters in France’s overseas territories and living abroad started casting ballots Saturday in parliamentary run-off elections that could hand an unprecedented victory to the nationalist far right.

Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigration party National Rally came out on top of first-round voting last Sunday, followed by a coalition of centre-left, hard-left and Greens parties – and President Emmanuel Macron’s centrist alliance in a distant third.

The first polling stations opened in Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon at noon Paris time this Saturday. In the territory’s only constituency, Stéphane Lenormand, who came well ahead of the others on the right, will face Frédéric Beaumont of the Socialist Party.

Elsewhere, residents of French Guiana, Saint-Barthélemy, Saint-Martin, Guadeloupe, Martinique, French Polynesia and French citizens living on the American continent will start voting in the afternoon. The second round in New Caledonia will start at 10 p.m. Paris time. French citizens living abroad were also able to vote by Internet on Wednesday and Thursday.

The elections wrap up Sunday in mainland France. Initial polling projections are expected when the final voting stations close at 8 p.m. Paris time, with early official results expected late Sunday and early Monday.

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Macron called the snap legislative vote after the National Rally won the most votes in France in European Parliament elections last month.

The party, which blames immigration for many of France’s problems, has seen its support climb steadily over the past decade and is hoping to obtain an absolute majority in the second round. That would allow National Rally leader Jordan Bardella to become prime minister and form a government that would be at odds with Macron’s policies on Ukraine, police powers and other issues.

Preelection polls suggest that the party may win the most seats in the National Assembly but fall short of an absolute majority of 289 seats. That could result in a hung parliament.

Macron has said he won’t step down and will stay president until his term ends in 2027, but is expected to be weakened regardless of the result.

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