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Proud Boys did not ‘stand back, stand by’ on Jan 6: US prosecutor

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Proud Boys did not ‘stand back, stand by’ on Jan 6: US prosecutor

Former Proud Boys chief Enrique Tarrio and 4 lieutenants charged with seditious conspiracy within the Capitol assault “took intention on the coronary heart” of United States democracy on January 6, 2021, a federal prosecutor instructed jurors as their high-profile trial opened in Washington.

Jurors started listening to opening statements on Thursday, greater than two years after members of the far-right group joined a pro-Donald Trump mob in attacking the Capitol.

Assistant US Legal professional Jason McCullough mentioned the Proud Boys knew that the prospects of a second time period in workplace for Trump had been shortly fading as January 6 approached. So the group leaders assembled a “preventing pressure” to cease the switch of energy to Joe Biden, McCullough mentioned.

Tarrio noticed a Biden presidency as a “menace to the Proud Boys’ existence”, the prosecutor mentioned.

“These males didn’t stand again. They didn’t stand by. As a substitute, they mobilised,” McCullough instructed jurors, invoking the phrases of Trump when he infamously instructed the Proud Boys to “stand again and stand by” throughout a 2020 presidential debate with Joe Biden.

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The trial got here on the heels of the seditious conspiracy convictions of two leaders of the Oath Keepers, one other US far-right group. A number of different Oath Keepers members had been charged with plotting to cease the peaceable switch of presidential energy from Trump to Biden.

The case towards Tarrio and his 4 associates is among the most consequential to emerge from the January 6 riot on the Capitol. The trial will present an in-depth take a look at a gaggle that has grow to be an influential pressure in mainstream Republican politics.

Defence attorneys have mentioned there was by no means any plan to enter the Capitol or cease Congress’s certification of the electoral vote gained by Biden.

“Over and again and again and over the federal government has been instructed by witnesses there was no plan for January 6,” mentioned Nicholas Smith, lawyer for Ethan Nordean, a Proud Boys chapter president from Auburn, Washington. Nordean went into the Capitol on the lookout for pals and didn’t harm something or damage anybody there, he mentioned.

The defence has additionally accused prosecutors of making an attempt to silence potential protection witnesses. Tarrio’s attorneys haven’t mentioned whether or not he’ll take the stand in his defence.

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Tarrio’s different co-defendants are Joseph Biggs, of Ormond Seashore, Florida, a self-described Proud Boys organiser; Zachary Rehl, who was president of the Proud Boys chapter in Philadelphia; and Dominic Pezzola, a Proud Boy member from Rochester, New York.

The Division of Justice has charged almost 1,000 folks throughout the US in relation to the lethal January 6 riot, and its investigation has continued to develop.

The Proud Boys’ trial is the primary main trial to start for the reason that Home committee investigating the rebellion urged the division to convey legal fees towards Trump and associates who had been behind his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss.

Whereas the legal referral has no actual authorized standing, it added to political stress already on Legal professional Basic Merrick Garland and the particular counsel he appointed, Jack Smith, who was conducting an investigation into January 6 and Trump’s actions.

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Jury choice within the case took two weeks as a slew of potential jurors mentioned they related the Proud Boys with hate teams or white nationalism.

The Capitol could possibly be seen within the distance from elements of the courtroom, the place a second group of Oath Keepers had been additionally on trial for seditious conspiracy, which carries as much as 20 years behind bars upon conviction.

Tensions bubbled over at occasions as jury choice slowed to a crawl and defence attorneys complained that too many potential jurors had been biased towards the Proud Boys.

Defence attorneys challenged jurors who expressed help for causes equivalent to Black Lives Matter, saying that would point out prejudice towards the Proud Boys.

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Attorneys and the decide clashed throughout typically chaotic pretrial authorized wrangling to the purpose the place two defence attorneys threatened to withdraw from the case. US District Decide Timothy Kelly, a Trump appointee, lashed out after defence attorneys repeatedly interrupted and talked over him on Wednesday, warning that he would discover them in contempt if it continued.

Tarrio, who’s from Miami, was not in Washington on January 6 as a result of he was arrested two days earlier than the riot and charged with vandalising a Black Lives Matter banner at a historic Black church throughout a protest in December 2020. He was ordered to go away the capital, however prosecutors mentioned he remained engaged within the far-right group’s planning for January 6.

Prosecutors had been anticipated to inform jurors that because the Proud Boys’ anger in regards to the election grew, in addition they started to show towards police over Tarrio’s arrest and over the failure to convey fees within the stabbing of one other Proud Boy throughout clashes the month earlier than the riot.

Communications cited in courtroom papers present the Proud Boys discussing storming the Capitol within the days earlier than the riot. On January 3, somebody steered in a gaggle chat that the “predominant working theater” be in entrance of the Capitol. “I didn’t hear this voice observe till now, you wish to storm the Capitol,” Tarrio mentioned the following day in the identical chat.

Tarrio’s lieutenants had been a part of the primary wave of rioters to push onto Capitol grounds and cost previous police barricades in the direction of the constructing, in response to prosecutors. Pezzola used a riot protect he stole from a Capitol Police officer to interrupt a window, permitting the primary rioters to enter the constructing, prosecutors alleged.

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Prosecutors mentioned Tarrio cheered on the actions of the Proud Boys on the bottom as he watched from afar. “Do what have to be finished. #WeThePeople.” he wrote on social media because the riot unfolded. “Don’t [expletive] depart,” Tarrio wrote in one other submit.

Flyers referring to former Proud Boys chief Enrique Tarrio on the Conservative Political Motion Convention in Dallas, Texas, August 5, 2022 [File: Shelby Tauber/Reuters]

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Earthquake 50 miles from Mount Everest leaves at least 95 dead in Tibet

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Earthquake 50 miles from Mount Everest leaves at least 95 dead in Tibet

A powerful magnitude 7.1 earthquake centered about 50 miles from Mount Everest left at least 95 dead in Tibet on Tuesday, reports say. 

Another 130 people have been injured on the Chinese side of the border, state broadcaster CCTV reported, citing the vice mayor of Shigatse. 

Rescue workers climbed mounds of broken bricks, some using ladders in hard-hit villages, as a search is now ongoing for survivors. More than 1,000 homes are believed to have been damaged in the region. 

Videos posted by China’s Ministry of Emergency Management showed two people being carried out on stretchers by workers treading over the uneven debris from collapsed homes. 

CDC MONITORING POSSIBLE SPIKE OF HMPV CASES IN CHINA 

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People stand among damaged houses in the aftermath of an earthquake in southwestern China’s Tibet Autonomous Region on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025.  (Xinhua/AP)

The morning quake also woke up residents in Nepal’s capital of Kathmandu – about 140 miles from the epicenter – and sent them running out of their homes into the streets. 

The U.S. Geological Survey said the earthquake measured magnitude 7.1 and was relatively shallow at a depth of about six miles. 

Search ongoing for survivors following Tibet earthquake

Rescue teams sift through rubble in the aftermath of an earthquake in Shigatse City in Tibet on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (Tibet Fire and Rescue/Reuters)

About 50 aftershocks were recorded in the three hours after the earthquake, and the Mount Everest scenic area on the Chinese side was closed, according to The Associated Press. 

CHINA ROLLS OUT ITS CRIME-FIGHTING BALL TO CHASE DOWN CRIMINALS 

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Kathmandu earthquake

People in Kathmandu, Nepal, rushed out of their homes on Tuesday following the earthquake. (AP/Sunil Sharma)

The news agency cited CCTV as saying that more than 3,000 rescuers were deployed to the region to help with disaster relief. 

About 7,000 people live in three townships and 27 villages within 12.5 miles of the epicenter on the Chinese side, state media added. The average altitude in the area is about 13,800 feet, the Chinese earthquake center said in a social media post. 

On the southwest edge of Kathmandu, a video viewed by the AP showed water spilling out into the street from a pond in a courtyard with a small temple. 

Search for survivors after Tibet earthquake

Rescue workers search for survivors in the aftermath of an earthquake in Changsuo Township in southwestern China on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. (Xinhua/AP)

 

“It is a big earthquake,” a woman can be heard saying. “People are all shaking.” 

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The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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‘We didn’t have anybody there’: Kyiv’s troops struggle as Russia advances

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‘We didn’t have anybody there’: Kyiv’s troops struggle as Russia advances

Kyiv, Ukraine – As Ukrainian forces fight in the western Russian region of Kursk, they are encountering a new enemy – elite North Korean servicemen.

On Sunday, Ukrainian infantry and armoured vehicles resumed an offensive in three directions in Kursk, trying to fence their toehold in the district centre of Sudzha that they had seized in August.

By Tuesday, they occupied at least three villages northeast of Sudzha – and inflicted losses on the North Koreans that fight in separate units under Russian command.

“We thinned their ranks – they have losses, although Kim didn’t just send ordinary servicemen,” a Ukrainian soldier told Al Jazeera, referring to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

He did not disclose his name, details and exact whereabouts of the battles in accordance with wartime regulations.

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South Korean and US officials have said Kim deployed more than 10,000 elite soldiers to Kursk. Hundreds are understood to have been killed there already.

More than 450km (280 miles) south of Kursk, another Ukrainian serviceman keeps repelling waves of Russian infantrymen near the key southeastern city of Pokrovsk.

“Looks like they send a new brigade every day,” the serviceman told Al Jazeera.

Russians keep advancing despite a reported lack of tanks and armoured vehicles.

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“They keep pushing. The only problem they have is their equipment, they can’t throw it around the way they did three or four months ago,” he said.

But the biggest problem his unit – as well as all of Ukraine’s armed forces – faces is a dire shortage of manpower.

Last week, Ukrainian troops retreated from the eastern town of Kurakhove, which Russian troops claimed control of on Monday.

A soldier holds up a Russian flag in Kurakhove, Donetsk Region, Ukraine in this screen grab taken from a social media video released on January 5, 2025, obtained by Reuters. Social Media/via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. OVERLAY FROM SOURCE.
A soldier holds up a Russian flag in Kurakhove, in the Donetsk region, in this screengrab taken from a social media video released on January 5, 2025 [Social Media via Reuters]

Kyiv’s forces have also lost a key coal mine near Pokrovsk and could be about to lose Ukraine’s biggest lithium deposit in Shevchenkove.

“The Kurakhove defence installations have been taken over just because we didn’t have anybody there,” the serviceman said. “The most motivated soldiers have been killed, the new ones lack training and motivation.”

He also cited poor decisions made by commanding officers, alleging they want to appease their superiors and do not value the lives of servicemen.

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“I’ve been wounded so many times because of the commanders’ stupidity,” he said.

Russians ‘looting’ in Donetsk town

The Russian forces that seized Kurakhove are looting abandoned apartments, a local woman alleged.

“They’re breaking into apartments that haven’t been damaged by shelling, they steal everything they can carry away,” Olena Basenko, a former sales clerk from Kurakhove who is looking for her elderly aunt who refused to leave the town, told Al Jazeera.

“Some ‘liberators’ they are,” she said sarcastically referring to Moscow’s pledge to “liberate” Ukraine from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s “neo-Nazi junta” – Russian claims that have been debunked throughout the war.

Ukraine’s shortage of manpower has led some analysts to doubt Kyiv’s push to resume the Kursk offensive.

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“Zelenskyy’s strategy is to amass brigades with equipment in the rear only to solemnly lose them in the land of Kursk to gain 1.5km [1 mile] of farmland,” Nikolay Mitrokhin, a researcher with Germany’s Bremen University, told Al Jazeera.

The units that are advancing in Kursk could instead have been used to defend Kurakhove, he said.

However, others see the Kursk offensive as a chance to gain an important bargaining chip.

A nun walks outside St. Iveron Monastery, which was heavily damaged by artillery and gun fire during battles for the local airport, as believers attend the Orthodox Christmas service in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, January 7, 2025. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
A nun walks outside St Iveron Monastery, which was heavily damaged by artillery and gunfire during battles for the local airport, as believers attend the Orthodox Christmas service in the course of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine [Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters]

Ukraine may try to seize a Russian nuclear power plant in the town of Kurchatov that lies about 70km (45 miles) northeast of Sudzha and could attempt to seize Kursk’s regional capital 30km (20 miles) farther away.

If successful, the takeover of Kurchatov may become a significant strategic gain, according to the former deputy head of Ukraine’s general staff of armed forces.

“We didn’t want to make things worse, but we need to,” Lieutenant General Ihor Romanenko told Al Jazeera.

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Kyiv may also invade the nearby Russian region of Bryansk, dealing a heavy blow to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s domestic reputation, he said.

“It will be painful to Putin, and if there is an offensive somewhere in Bryansk or some other regions, it will make him think,” Romanenko said.

Some Russians ridicule Putin’s policies that led to the first foreign invasion of western Russia since World War II.

“If the grandpa from the bunker is so wise, why do we have Ukrainians on Russian land? Something must be wrong,” Roman, a 48-year-old Muscovite who served in a tank unit in the 1990s, told Al Jazeera, deriding the Russian president.

Arina, 15-years-old, and her mother Alina, 47-years-old, hold banners as they attend a rally calling for the return of her cousins Kyrylo, 25-years-old, and Anton, 21-years-old, and other Ukrainian Marines who defended the Azovstal and are currently prisoners of war, from Russian captivity, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine January 6, 2025. REUTERS/Alina Smutko
Arina, 15, centre, and her mother Alina hold banners as they attend a rally calling for the return of her cousins Kyrylo and Anton, and other Ukrainian Marines who defended the Azovstal and are currently prisoners of war, from Russian captivity [Alina Smutko/Reuters]

Bryansk borders Ukraine and has been repeatedly attacked by two Ukrainian military units made up of pro-Ukrainian Russian fighters.

Romanenko said Putin’s decision to ramp up Russia’s offensive in southeastern Ukraine signifies a “fiasco” of Trump’s “peace plan”.

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“This approach ended with a fiasco because Putin rejected the version proposed by Trump’s team,” he said.

Trump has offered few details of the plan, but, according to his team, it may include the establishment of a “demilitarised zone” along the current front line, Kyiv’s ceding of Russia-occupied areas and a delay of Ukraine’s NATO membership.

Ukraine’s sea drone weapons

At the end of last year, Ukraine scored a small victory that may herald huge losses in Russian navy bases and civilian seaports.

On December 31, Ukrainian sea drones, or un-piloted vessels armed with small missiles, attacked Russian helicopters in the bay of Sevastopol, the main naval base in annexed Crimea.

Ukraine claimed to have shot down two helicopters, killing all 16 crew members.

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Moscow acknowledged no losses but said its forces destroyed four Ukrainian unmanned aircraft and two sea drones.

The attack showed that sea drones could wreak havoc on Russian port and naval infrastructure along the Black Sea, Bremen University’s Mitrokhin said.

Furthermore, Kyiv could use sea drones for attacks on the Russian navy in the Baltic, Barents and White Seas and in the Pacific.

“There is so much infrastructure there that it will be hard to cover it even with boom barriers, let alone protect them from all sides like in Sevastopol or [the Crimean port of] Feodosiya,” he said.

A serviceman of 13th Operative Purpose Brigade 'Khartiia' of the National Guard of Ukraine prepares to fire a Giatsint-B howitzer towards Russian troops at a position on a front line, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv region, Ukraine January 6, 2025. REUTERS/Sofiia Gatilova
A serviceman of the 13th Operative Purpose Brigade ‘Khartiia’ of the National Guard of Ukraine prepares to fire a Giatsint-B howitzer towards Russian troops at a position on a front line in the Kharkiv region [File: Sofiia Gatilova/Reuters]

Meanwhile, the ongoing war of attrition tests Ukraine and Russia’s economies.

The Russian economy has “partially adapted to the pressure from [Western] sanctions, but it currently enters the inflation shock of overheating and slower growth” because of the Central Bank’s high percentage rates, Kyiv-based analyst Aleksey Kusch said.

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The Ukrainian economy is “in shock” because of severely damaged energy infrastructure and a lack of labour force, he said.

But hydrocarbon exports help Russia’s economy recover from the shock, while Ukraine is kept afloat by Western financial aid.

“It creates a certain parity effect amid resistance to war,” Kushch told Al Jazeera.

Russia's President Vladimir Putin attends the Orthodox Christmas liturgy at the Church of St. George the Victorious on Poklonnaya Hill in Moscow, Russia January 7, 2025. Sputnik/Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Pool via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY.
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin attends the Orthodox Christmas liturgy at the Church of St George the Victorious on Poklonnaya Hill in Moscow, January 7, 2025 [Vyacheslav Prokofyev/Sputnik via Reuters]
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The next round of bitter cold and snow will hit the southern US

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The next round of bitter cold and snow will hit the southern US

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — The next round of bitter cold was set to envelop the southern U.S. on Tuesday, after the first significant winter storm of the year blasted a huge swath of the country with ice, snow and wind.

The immense storm system brought disruption even to areas of the country that usually escape winter’s wrath, downing trees in some Southern states, threatening a freeze in Florida and causing people in Dallas to dip deep into their wardrobes for hats and gloves.

By early Tuesday, wind chill temperatures could dip into the teens to low-20’s (as low as minus 10.5 C) from Texas across the Gulf Coast, according to the National Weather Service. A low-pressure system is then expected to form as soon as Wednesday near south Texas, bringing the potential of snow to parts of the state that include Dallas, as well as to Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana.

The polar vortex that dipped south over the weekend kept much of the country east of the Rockies in its frigid grip Monday, making many roads treacherous, forcing school closures, and causing widespread power outages and flight cancellations.

Ice and snow blanketed major roads in Kansas, western Nebraska and parts of Indiana, where the National Guard was activated to help stranded motorists. The National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings for Kansas and Missouri, where blizzard conditions brought wind gusts of up to 45 mph (72 kph). The warnings extended to New Jersey into early Tuesday.

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A Kentucky truck stop was jammed with big rigs forced off an icy and snow-covered Interstate 75 on Monday just outside Cincinnati. A long haul driver from Los Angeles carrying a load of rugs to Georgia, Michael Taylor said he saw numerous cars and trucks stuck in ditches and was dealing with icy windshield wipers before he pulled off the interstate.

“It was too dangerous. I didn’t want to kill myself or anyone else,” he said.

The polar vortex of ultra-cold air usually spins around the North Pole, but it sometimes plunges south into the U.S., Europe and Asia. Studies show that a fast-warming Arctic is partly to blame for the increasing frequency of the polar vortex extending its grip.

Temperatures plunge across the country

The eastern two-thirds of the U.S. dealt with bone-chilling cold and wind chills Monday, with temperatures in some areas far below normal.

A cold weather advisory will take effect early Tuesday across the Gulf Coast. In Texas’ capital of Austin and surrounding cities, wind chills could drop as low as 15 degrees (minus 9.4 C).

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The Northeast was expected to get several cold days.

Transportation has been tricky

Hundreds of car accidents were reported in Virginia, Indiana, Kansas and Kentucky, where a state trooper was treated for non-life-threatening injuries after his patrol car was hit.

Virginia State Police responded to at least 430 crashes Sunday and Monday, including one that was fatal. Police said other weather-related fatal accidents occurred Sunday near Charleston, West Virginia, and Monday in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Kansas saw two deadly crashes over the weekend.

More than 2,300 flights were canceled and at least 9,100 more were delayed nationwide as of Monday night, according to tracking platform FlightAware. Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport reported that about 58% of arrivals and 70% of departures had been canceled.

A record 8 inches (more than 20 centimeters) of snow fell Sunday at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, leading to dozens of flight cancellations that lingered into Monday. About 4 inches (about 10 centimeters) fell Monday across the Cincinnati area, where car and truck crashes shut at least two major routes leading into downtown.

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More snow and ice are expected

In Indiana, snow covered stretches of Interstate 64, Interstate 69 and U.S. Route 41, leading authorities to plead with people to stay home.

“It’s snowing so hard, the snow plows go through and then within a half hour the roadways are completely covered again,” State Police Sgt. Todd Ringle said.

The Mid-Atlantic region had been forecast to get another 6 to 12 inches (15 to 30 centimeters) of snow on Monday. Dangerously cold temperatures were expected to follow, with nighttime lows falling into the single digits (below minus 12.7 C) through the middle of the week across the Central Plains and into the Mississippi and Ohio valleys.

In North Texas, 2 to 5 inches (about 5 to 13 centimeters) of snow was expected beginning Thursday, according to the National Weather Service. Snow could also hit Oklahoma and Arkansas, with some parts potentially getting more than 4 inches (about 10 centimeters).

Classes canceled in several states

School closings were widespread, with districts in Indiana, Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri and Kansas canceling or delaying the start of classes Monday. Among them was Kentucky’s Jefferson County Public Schools, which canceled classes and other school activities for its nearly 100,000 students.

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Classes were also canceled in Maryland, where Gov. Wes Moore declared a state of emergency Sunday and announced that state government offices would also be closed Monday. Government offices also were closed Monday in Kentucky, where Gov. Andy Beshear declared a state of emergency.

Tens of thousands are without power

Many were in the dark as temperatures plunged. More than 218,000 customers were without power Monday night across Kentucky, Indiana, Virginia, West Virginia, Illinois, Missouri and North Carolina, according to electric utility tracking website PowerOutage.us.

In Virginia’s capital city, a power outage caused a temporary malfunction in the water system, officials said Monday afternoon. Richmond officials asked those in the city of more than 200,000 people to refrain from drinking tap water or washing dishes without boiling the water first. The city also asked people to conserve their water, such as by taking shorter showers.

City officials said they were working nonstop to bring the system back online.

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Whittle reported from Portland, Maine. Associated Press journalists Bruce Schreiner in Shelbyville, Kentucky; Dylan Lovan in Louisville, Kentucky; Ben Finley in Norfolk, Virginia; Lea Skene in Baltimore; Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire; Julie Walker in New York; Sophia Tareen in Chicago; Kimberly Chandler in Montgomery, Alabama; Zeke Miller in Washington, D.C.; John Raby in Charleston, West Virginia; Summer Ballentine in Columbia, Missouri; and Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed.

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Read more of the AP’s climate coverage at http://www.apnews.com/climate-and-environment

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