Rabu, 30 November 2016

ABC: Trump considering Palin to lead Veterans Affairs - AOL News

WASHINGTON, Nov 30 (Reuters) - President-elect Donald Trump[1] is considering former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin for secretary of Veterans Affairs, ABC News reported on Wednesday, citing unidentified sources.

Palin was an early Trump supporter and the Republican Party's vice presidential candidate in 2008.

More on Trump and Palin's relationship through the years

13 PHOTOS

Sarah Palin, Donald Trump in NYC in 2011

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Sarah Palin and Donald Trump sat down for pizza at Famous Famiglia pizza on Broadway at 50th St. Trump said 'she didn't ask me (to run with her) but I'll tell you, she's a terrific woman.' (Photo By: John Roca/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

Sarah Palin and Donald Trump sat down for pizza at a Famiglia pizza on Broadway at 50th St. Trump said 'she didn't ask me (to run with her) but I'll tell you, she's a terrific woman,' (Photo By: Andrew Savulich/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

Supporters watch Sarah Palin and Donald Trump sit down for pizza at a Famous Famiglia pizza on Broadway at 50th St. (Photo By: Andrew Savulich/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

Donald Trump, Sarah Palin and Melania Trump sat down for pizza at a Famiglia pizza on Broadway at 50th St. Trump said 'she didn't ask me (to run with her) but I'll tell you, she's a terrific woman,' (Photo By: Andrew Savulich/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

Sarah Palin and Donald Trump sat down for pizza at a Famiglia pizza on Broadway at 50th St. Trump said 'she didn't ask me (to run with her) but I'll tell you, she's a terrific woman,' (Photo By: John Roca/NY Daily News via Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 31: Former U.S. Vice presidential candidate and Alaska Governor Sarah Palin (R), and Donald Trump walk towards a limo after leaving Trump Tower, at 56th Street and 5th Avenue, on May 31, 2011 in New York City. Palin and Trump met for a dinner meeting in the city. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 31: Former U.S. Vice presidential candidate and Alaska Governor Sarah Palin (R), and Donald Trump walk towards a limo after leaving Trump Tower, at 56th Street and 5th Avenue, on May 31, 2011 in New York City. Palin and Trump met for a dinner meeting in the city. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 31: Former U.S. Vice presidential candidate and Alaska Governor Sarah Palin (C), shakes hands with a supporter while Donald Trump (L), waits after leaving Trump Tower, at 56th Street and 5th Avenue, on May 31, 2011 in New York City. Palin and Trump met for a dinner meeting in the city. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 31: Former U.S. Vice presidential candidate and Alaska Governor Sarah Palin (R), shakes hands with a supporter while Donald Trump (L), waits after leaving Trump Tower, at 56th Street and 5th Avenue, on May 31, 2011 in New York City. Palin and Trump met for a dinner meeting in the city. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

Donald Trump makes a point as he walks with former governor of Alaska Sarah Palin in New York City as they make their way to a scheduled meeting Tuesday, May 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

FILE - In this May 31, 2011 file photo, Donald Trump walks with former governor of Alaska Sarah Palin in New York City. The Republican presidential front-runner Trump received a key endorsement from conservative heavyweight Sarah Palin, Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle, File)

Donald Trump makes a point as he walks with former governor of Alaska Sarah Palin in New York City as they make their way to a scheduled meeting Tuesday, May 31, 2011. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

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(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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Charlotte police officer who fatally shot Keith Scott 'acted lawfully,' won't be charged - Washington Post

The officer who fatally shot a Charlotte man in September will not be charged for the shooting, prosecutors said Wednesday, concluding that the man was armed and that the officer acted lawfully during the encounter.

"It's a justified shooting based on the totality of the circumstances," R. Andrew Murray, district attorney for Mecklenburg County, said during a news conference.

The shooting of Keith Lamont Scott on Sept. 20 set off days of heated, sometimes violent protests[1] in Charlotte, some of the most intense demonstrations seen nationwide amid an increased fo cus on how police use deadly force.

Murray said that the recommendation from 15 career prosecutors in this case was unanimous. He said that he informed Scott's family of the decision earlier Wednesday.

"It was a difficult decision," Murray said. "However, the family was extremely gracious."

Scott's family said they were "profoundly disappointed" by the announcement. They also thanked Murray and investigators for sharing information about how the probe unfolded and concluded.

Charles Monnett, an attorney for the family, suggested during a news conference that Scott's relatives may still seek a civil lawsuit against the police department or the city for the shooting, adding: "We look forward to someday obtaining justice for Keith and his family."

Police have said that Scott raised a gun at officers before Brentley Vinson, a black plainclothes officer in Charlotte, fired the fatal shots.

Scott's family has disputed that the 43-year-old pointed a gun at the officer and whether he had a gun. After the shooting, police released photos of a gun and ankle holster, and authorities said that gun was loaded and had Scott's fingerprints and DNA.

During the news conference, Murray pored over details from the day of the shooting, ultimately saying he had no doubt that Scott had a gun during the encounter. He also said the gun — a Colt. 380 semi-automatic — was loaded, the safety was off and a bullet was in the chamber .

"There's been some speculation in the community regarding whether Mr. Scott was armed," Murray said. "All of the credible and available evidence suggests that he was, in fact, armed."

In a letter[3] to Bob Schurmeier, head of the North Carolina Bureau of Investigation, and Kerr Putney, chief of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg police force, Murray said that evidence included DNA on the gun's grip and slide, officers discussing seeing the gun on the radio before the shooting and a person admitting they illegally sold Scott the same gun found at the shooting scene.

Police had previously released a photo of a "blunt" from the scene. Authorities said officers in an unmarked car in the apartment complex where the shooting occurred were conducting surveillance in an unrelated case when they saw Scott, in his own car, rolling the blunt with marijuana.

Murray said Wednesday that while police said they were not going to act on the marijuana, they decided to move on Scott when they saw him raise a gun while sitting in his car.

Vinson was not wearing a recording device at the time of the shooting, police said, but the department released other videos[4] from the scene after intense pressure. Murray said Wednesday that none of the videos showed Scott with the gun in his hand when he got out of his car, something all four officers at the scene reported seeing.

However, Murray said that videos did appear to show that Scott's pant leg was pulled up above where police said they recovered the ankle holster. During the briefing, Murray also showed surveillance video footage from the same day showing a bulge in Scott's ankle that he said was consistent with a holster and a gun.

In a recording of the shooting[5] taken by Scott's wife, Rakeyia, she can be heard yelling at the officers that her husband was unarmed while pleading with them not to fire.

"Don't shoot him," she says in the video. "Don't shoot him. He has no weapon. He has no weapon. Don't shoot him."

In his report on the shooting, Murray said that officers called on Scott to drop his gun 10 times before he got out of his SUV and continued saying it after he was out of the car.

Vinson told authorities that he felt Scott was "an imminent threat" to him and the other officers. During an interview with a Charlotte detective conducted a day after the shooting, Vinson said he fired because Scott was looking at the officers like he was "trying to decide who he wanted to shoot first."

"I felt like if I didn't do anything right then at that point it's like he…he was gonna shoot me or he's gonna shoot one a my buddies, um, and it was gonna happen right now," Vinson said during the interview, according to a transcript released by Murray's office.

Footage from a body camera worn by another officer at the scene captured part of the encounter, but it lacked audio[6] because the officer did not activate it until after the shooting. Investigators and the public were therefore unable to learn some key details about what happened before the shots were fired.

An autopsy showed that Scott had four gunshot wounds[7], including one to his back.

According to Murray, investigators spoke to a number of people who said they saw the shooting, but some of them gave conflicting statements. Three of these people had said on social media or told reporters they thought Scott was unarmed, but investigators determined they never saw the shooting, Murray said.

The State Bureau of Investigation put 63 agents on this probe, and they spend more than 2,300 hours on the case, Murray said.

While initial accounts said that Scott was reading a book[8] when he encountered police, state investigators found no evidence he had a book with him when he was shot.

Police in Charlotte, N.C., released video from one body camera and one dashboard camera on Sept. 24th of the fatal Keith Scott shooting. (Editor's note: This video contains graphic content.) (Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department)

Scott's family, as well as attorneys representing them, called on anyone who protests the decision to do so peacefully.

"While we understand that many in the Charlotte area share our frustration and pain, we ask that everyone work together to fix the system that allowed this tragedy to happen in the first place," the Scott family said in a statement released through their attorneys. "All our family wanted was justice and for these members of law enforcement to understand that what t hey did was wrong."

By 7 p.m. Wednesday, a small group of protesters gathered in the rain outside the Charlotte police headquarters, wearing ponchos and discussing a tornado warning that ended at 7. No police officers were guarding the crowd, although they erected barricades to block the parking lot.

"We recognize that for some members of our community, this news will be met with different reactions," the city of Charlotte said in a statement Wednesday. "No matter where you stand on the issue, the events surrounding the Scott shooting have forever changed our community, and we intend to learn from and build a stronger Charlotte because of it."

The unrest set off by Scott's death left the city reeling and struggling to return to normal[9]. Some small protests continued after the demonstrations that garnered national media coverage, while downtown streets remained unsettled in the aftermath of peaceful protests that had descended into chaos.

"The lives of both the Scott and Vinson families have been changed forever," the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said in a statement Wednesday. "One of our officers' had to make the difficult but split second decision to use their service weapon and as a result a life was lost. In these circumstances, it is important that we remain focused on our sworn duty and unwavering commitment to protecting our community along with serving it."

Vinson was placed on administrative leave after the shooting. A police spokes woman did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding his status after Murray's announcement.

Scott is one of 875 people fatally shot by police officers so far this year, according to a Washington Post database[10] tracking such shootings.

Charges against officers who fatally shoot people are rare, but this number has increased recently[11] after waves of protests prompted by high-profile deaths involving police in New York, Baltimore, Cleveland and Baton Rouge.

Earlier this month, prosecutors in Minnesota said they were charging an officer[12] with manslaughter for fatally shooting man during a July encounter partially streamed on Facebook. In September, while Charlotte was still roiled by protests, a Tulsa police officer was charged with manslaughter[13] for shooting and killing an unarmed black man four days before Scott was killed.

Lisa Rab in Charlotte contributed to this article, which has been updated through the day.

Further reading:

Amid pressure, Charlotte police release videos in shooting of Keith Lamont Scott[14]

Charlotte struggles in the aftermath of the shooting and protests[15]

Autopsy shows Keith Lamont Scott had four gunshot wounds — including one in the back[16]

Trump announces he will leave business 'in total' — leaving open how he will avoid conflicts of interest - Washington Post

President-elect Donald J. Trump tweeted Wednesday morning that he would soon leave his "great business in total" to focus on the presidency, a response to growing worries over the businessman-in-chief's conflicts of interest around the globe.

Shortly after, the official Twitter account[1] of the Office of Government Ethics, the traditionally staid federal agency that often works closely with presidential transition teams, issued a rapid-fire series of tweets celebrating that Trump had committed to fully divesting his company stake — though Trump has publicly said no such thing.

The back-to-back tweetstorms raised more questions than they answered: whether Trump's move would focus on severing his ownersh ip ties, or simply his management responsibilities; and whether the OGE was releasing new information or simply the victim of a hacker, prankster or official gone rogue.

The OGE's messages were deeply out of character for a federal ethics agency that is famously quiet and unadventurous. Among the nine tweets: "@realDonaldTrump Bravo! Only way to resolve these conflicts of interest is to divest . Good call!" The tweets were first posted Wednesday morning, then deleted within an hour. They then reappeared at 1 p.m., for unknown reasons.

In a 1:30 p.m. statement from the OGE's email account, attributed to OGE spokesman Seth Jaffe, the agency said, "Like everyone else, we were excited this morning to read the President-elect's twitter feed indicating that he wants to be free of conflicts of interest. OGE applauds that goal, which is consistent with an opinion OGE issued in 1983. Divestiture resolves conflicts of interest in a way that transferring con trol does not. We don't know the details of their plan, but we are willing and eager to help them with it."

A second statement at 3:30 p.m. added, "The tweets that OGE posted today were responding only to the public statement that the President-elect made on his Twitter feed about his plans regarding conflicts of interest. OGE's tweets were not based on any information about the President-elect's plans beyond what was shared on his Twitter feed. OGE is non-partisan and does not endorse any individual."

Phone messages left with a dozen agency executives and representatives seeking verification or more details were not returned.

OGE lawyers have been influential in past presidents' decision making, but their advice has almost always been kept confidential. If nothing else, the OGE's tweets have publicly revealed federal-ethics officials' preference for the president-elect to completely divest — a form of lobbying that is potentially unprecedented for the agency.

The messages surprised many who had worked with the agency in the past: Brett Kappel, a Washington campaign-finance lawyer who has worked with OGE, said the agency "never tweets about an individual federal official's ethics issues unless they are announcing the conclusion of an enforcement action."

.@realDonaldTrump[2] this divestiture does what handing over control could never have done.

The tweets followed Trump's morning announcement, which appeared to echo his long insistence that he would cede the company's management to his children, a way of putting distance between his private interests and public power.

But it remained unclear whether the new arrangem ent would include a full sale of Trump's stake in the company. Ethics advisers said a management hand-off to his children would not resolve worries that the business could still influence his decisions in the Oval Office.

"I will be holding a major news conference in New York City with my children on December 15 to discuss the fact that I will be leaving my great business in total in order to fully focus on running the country in order to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" Trump tweeted[3].

"While I am not mandated to do this under the law, I feel it is visually important, as President, to in no way have a conflict of interest with my various businesses. Hence, legal documents are being cr afted which take me completely out of business operations. The Presidency is a far more important task!"

Vice President-elect Mike Pence and President-elect Donald Trump's chief of staff Reince Priebus on Nov. 20 addressed Trump's potential conflicts of interest. (Bastien Inzaurralde/The Washington Post)

Presidents are not bound by the strict conflict-of-interest laws governing most U.S. elected officials. But most modern presidents have agreed to sell or sequester their assets in a blind trust, led by an independent manager with supreme control, in order to keep past business deals, investments and relationships from influencing their White House term.

Giving company management to his adult children — Donald Jr., Eric and Ivanka — would still leave open the potential for Trump to make presidential decisions for their benefit. The children have already played a key part in Trump's governing preparations, serving on the transition team now selecting key appointees and sitting in on meetings with foreign heads of state.

Trump spokespeople did not immediately return requests for more details on the move. But Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush, said the move did not appear to offer enough of a divisio n to keep entanglement worries at bay.

"That's business operations, not ownership. The problem is, we need to resolve the conflicts of interest that arise from his ownership. And we're hearing nothing about how that's getting resolved," Painter said.

"Even if he does not operate the businesses, you're going to have lots of people working for the business running around the world trying to cut deals," Painter added. "And it's critical that none of those people discuss U.S. business in a way that could be interpreted, or misinterpreted, of offering quid pro quo … or soliciting a bribe on the part of the president."

If Trump's family does take over management of the business, Norman Eisen, the chief White House ethics lawyer for President Obama from 2009 to 2011, said an "ethics firewall" would need to be put in place to combat the "risk of improper preferential relationships and treatment for the Trump Organization with the United States government and foreign ones."

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said Wednesday on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" that he was not "ready to reveal" whether the move would include Trump truly severing ties to his business or whether he would simply leave the day-to-day operations to his kids.

"It's not the easiest thing to work out," Priebus said. "What you see in those tweets is the person at the top that understands and is willing and showing the American people that he's working hard on it and he's taking it seriously."

Others in the president-elect's orbit have shared little more on his plan. Asked Wednesday if he would take over the business, Eric Trump said, while walking through Trump Tower, "You'll hear it soon enough."

Asked how the new arrangement would be set up, Anthony Scaramucci, a member of the transition team's executive committee, said, "I don't want to steal Mr. Trump's or the children's thunder on that, so let's wait for Dec. 15." He added, "At age 70, after having this phenomenal life and building this phenomenal business in this great tower, he's going to be a hundred percent focused on working for the American people and for the United States."

The weeks since Trump's electoral victory have been marked by a series of entanglements between his private ventures and public ambitions.

Trump welcomed a group of Indian business executives to meet with him and his family at Trump Tower, where talk turned to the potential[6] for new real-estate deals. Trump and his daughter, Ivanka, who will likely play a key part in running the company, met with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during Trump's first meeting as president-elect with a foreign government leader.

His company, the Trump Organization, has over the years sealed lucrative real-estate and branding deals for business in at lea st 18 countries and territories across the world, including in places where the U.S. has sensitive diplomatic ties, such as Turkey, Azerbaijan and India.

Trump's company is also pitching[7] foreign diplomats on his new luxury hotel in Washington as a place to book rooms and hold meetings. But such entreaties eventually could run afoul of an "emoluments" clause in the U.S. Constitution that bars the president from accepting gifts from foreign leaders — even if he is not actively running the company.

Eric Trump also traveled to Turkey this week to hunt wild deer at the invitation of a Turkish businessman, according[8] to Turkish newspaper Hurriyet. Trump's company has made millions off licensing the name to Trump Towers Istanbul, a luxury project in a country under close scrutiny by U.S. diplomats.

Buffeted by entanglement worries, Trump has largely dug in, arguing "the law's totally on my side, meaning, the president can't have a conflict of interest" last week in an interview[9] with the New York Times.

"In theory I could run my business perfectly, and then run the country perfectly," Trump said. "But I would like to do something. I would like to try and formalize something, because I don't care about my business."

Peter Schweizer, a conservative author who raised alarms in the book "Clinton Cash" about Hillary Clinton's possib le conflicts of interest because of donations to her family's foundation, said Trump will face an equally skeptical public, not just about his entanglements but those of his children as well.

"It's incumbent on the president of the United States, particularly one who is seemingly committed to 'draining the swamp,' to remove any questions about financial transactions involving him or his family," said Schweizer, who is also close to Trump senior adviser Stephen K. Bannon, who served as chairman of the Government Accountability Institute, where Schweizer is president.

"Foreign entities look at family members as a route to gaining influence and getting special favors. It's not a question of if it's going to happen — it's going to happen. The best thing he could do is set up mechanisms now to avoid those pitfalls that invariably surround presidential families."

He suggested both Trump and his adult children voluntarily submit t o quarterly in-depth disclosures about their financial holdings and major Trump Organization financial transactions, even though the law does not require it.

He also proposed that Trump's charitable foundation cease accepting donations from non-family members and that Trump's children agree they will not accept paid speaking engagements for fees larger than those they were paid before their father was elected president.

Stuart E. Eizenstat, who served as former President Jimmy Carter's domestic policy chief and helped guide his transition to the White House, called Trump's announcement today "an important first step showing that he recognizes the concerns of the press and the public."

Eizenstat recalled that Jimmy Carter put his interest in a peanut warehouse in a blind trust before inauguration day and that Carter agreed to recuse himself from discussion of Agriculture Department policy towards peanuts and limit his involvement in sugar — the latter playing a critical role in the fortunes of Coca-Cola, a leading home state industry.

Trump presents a unique challenge from an ethics perspective because of his wide ranging business interests and because his name is used so widely in pursuit of those interests around the globe. "We are navigating in uncharted waters," Eizenstat said.

Eizenstat, who also held several major positions in the Clinton administration,  said the blind trust approach might be unworkable for Trump given those wide-ranging interests, his name brand on his companies and the active involvement of his children in the business.

He spoke approvingly of the idea of an independent monitor as a possible way to reassure the public. But he said that a monitor can be cumbersome and expensive. Given those hurdles, the best way to deal with the public policy challenges of Trump's vast business portfolio may be to simply encourage "a free and unfettered press" to investig ate Trump's holdings and potential conflicts — along with his disclosure statements.

"The power of a free press is what separates our country from non-Democratic countries and the vibrancy of the press would be the best instrument" to deal with Trump's international holdings and the constitutional prohibition against his receiving favors from foreign leaders.  In addition, Eizenstat said that Trump's honesty and credibility in discussing his holdings is critical.

"In the end, he is going to want to be sure that he is seen by the public as a president animated by the national interest," Eizenstat said. "I am hopeful he will meet that standard."

Michael Toner, who served as general counsel to the Bush-Cheney transition in 2000, recalled the 10-week post-election period as a time for setting broad ethical policy — and considering specific safeguards for the incoming president — that would set the tone for the incoming administration .

At the time of the Kennedy-Johnson transition, Lyndon Johnson separated himself from the Texas radio stations he operated, drawing up new ownership documents putting his wife, Lady Bird, in charge and removing himself, at least officially, from the company's operations. After his election in 1976, Jimmy Carter set up elaborate arrangements to remove himself from the family peanut business, its management and knowledge of day to day decisions.

For decades incoming presidents and vice presidents have used the inaugural period to meet with federal ethics officials to take steps, such as setting up blind trusts, to remove themselves from their previous business activities and investments. The idea, Toner and others said, is to avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest.

One of Trump's most visible potential entanglements, even under a potentially new business arrangement, would be Trump International Hotel Washington, D.C., the new luxury hot el he opened in the White House's backyard.

Charging his children with running the Trump Organization also does not necessarily protect against potential contractual or constitutional violations his presidency may trigger in regards to his D.C. hotel, legal experts say. Trump remains the majority owner of the project, which the company leases from the federal government.

Trump opened the hotel this fall after spending $42 million of his own money and borrowing another $170 million to foot the cost of construction. There is a provision in the lease allowing Trump to sell or transfer his stake in the hotel to "any Trump Family Member." Selling it to an outside entity would likely require approval by the General Services Administration.

If Trump chooses not to sell, his ownership stake could create two problems once he steps into office. A boilerplate 88-word lease measure may require that the government terminate the deal because it bars "an elect ed official of the Government of the United States" from having "any share or part of this Lease."

Procurement experts Steven L. Schooner and Daniel I. Gordon have argued the GSA ought to terminate its deal with Trump because of that clause, writing in The Post a week after the election that "having the president's adult children negotiate with the staff of the president's appointee at GSA presents what any reasonable person would view as the appearance of a conflict of interest."

Schoone r, a George Washington University law professor, said in an email Monday that he worried GSA officials wouldn't terminate the lease out of risk of financial penalties or "intimidation" from the incoming president.

But Steven J. Kelman, a former administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy in the Office of Management and Budget, said the passage may apply only to elected officials at the time of lease negotiations.

Even if it's not a violation of the lease, putting his children in charge would leave them to negotiate with Trump administration officials over the deal going forward. The official who oversaw the selection of Trump for the project, Robert A. Peck, said recently that he couldn't imagine the average federal employee feeling much empowered to negotiate with one of Trump's children while they also advised their father in the White House, if he holds on to the property.

"It would be one thing if his kids ran the busine ss, if his kids didn't also want to be White House advisers," Peck said. "But even then, the specter of some … contracting officers sitting across the table from Eric Trump. How does that feel?"

Rosalind S. Helderman, Jonathan O'Connell and Tom Hamburger contributed to this report.

Donald Trump, Fidel Castro, Mosul: Your Thursday Briefing - New York Times

The choice for national security adviser, retired Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, an outspoken critic of political Islam, has described China, North Korea, Russia, Cuba and Venezuela[1] as pro-jihadist anti-Western conspirators.

Here's a list[2] of those picked for cabinet positions and other candidates — including Sarah Palin for Veterans Affairs. And here's the latest on the transition[3].

_____

Photo
Credit Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Iraqi security forces retaking territory from the Islamic State are uncovering mass graves[4] on a despairingly regular basis. Most of the dead were executed recently, after the campaign for Mosul began.

In Syria, thousands of desperate p[5]eople are fleeing eastern Aleppo[6] following grim warnings of being "annihilated" as forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad gain ground.

_____

Photo
Credit Gilles Sabrie for The New York Times

• America's uncertain policy has given China a leading role in addressing climate change.

But worries about power supplies are pushing China to mine and burn more coal[7].

_____

Photo
Credit Korean Central News Agency, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The United Nations capped North Korea's coal exports, stiffening sanctions[8] that have so far failed to throttle the country's nuclear program.

The penalty required the approval of China, North Korea's principle patron and coal customer, which wants to express its displeasure without upending the country's economy or creating flows of refugees across its borders.

_____

Business

Photo
Credit Ronald Zak/Associated Press

OPEC reached a deal to cut production by 1.2 million barrels a day[9], its first cut in eight years, sending oil prices soaring.

• China releases its purchasing managers index, or P.M.I., data for November, providing some insight into how the country's manufacturing sector is faring.

• Samsung Electronic's stock reached its highest in 40 years[10] after it announced it was looking into a plan to convert itself into a holding company.

Valeant shares dropped more than 7 percent on reports that talks to sell its Salix [11]gastrointestinal-drugs division to Takeda Pharmaceutical Co.[12] had fallen apart.

An outbreak of bird flu has hit South Korea hardest, forcing the cull of millions of poultry[13].

• Banks across India are preparing for the worst[14] as 20 million people are expected to line up for payday next week amid cash shortages.

American drug regulators approved large-scale clinical trials[15] to study MDMA, the illegal party drug better known as Ecstasy, as treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

• U.S. markets were mixed as energy prices rose and technology and health care shares fell[16]. Here's a snapshot of global markets[17].

In the News

Photo
Credit Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

China's 30 million "missing girls" may simply have not been registered, not aborted or killed after birth, American and Chinese researchers say. [The Washington Post[18]]

• The United States and China overtook Russia in space launches this year. [Moscow Times[19]]

Three Chinese rights activists have disappeared in what appears to be a crackdown. [The New York Times[20]]

• Australia's leading rabbis called on leaders at Yeshivah institutions to step down after a ro yal commission found sweeping child sexual abuse at two branches. [The Sydney Morning Herald[21]]

• Sitting for the last day in session for the year, Australia's Senate is expected to pass a law allowing convicted terrorists to be kept in prison up to three years after the completion of their sentence.

Photo
Credit Al Drago/The New York Times

• Nancy Pelosi retained leadership of Democrats in the House of Representatives, fending off a challenge driven by the party's election losses. [The New York Times[22]]

• South Korean lawmakers are considering whether to allow the embattled president, Park Geun-hye, to step down in April. [The New York Times[23]]

• India's highest court ruled that national anthem must play before films in all movie theaters, to inspire "a sense of committed patriotism and nationalism." [The New York Times[24]]

• Another high court ruling allows women to pray in Mumbai's Haji Ali Dargah mosque for the first time sin ce 2011. [Thomson Reuters Foundation[25]]

Noteworthy

Video

On Castro's Old Campus, Students Pay Tribute

Hundreds of students joined a memorial service at the University of Havana, where Fidel Castro had immersed himself in radical politics in the 1940s.

By HANNAH BERKELEY COHEN, TIM CHAFFEE and VEDA SHASTRI on Publish Date November 30, 2016. Photo by Mauricio Lima for The New York Times. Technology by Samsung.. Watch in Times Video »[26]

• The Times first wrote Fidel Castro's obituary in 1959, and it required more work hours[27] over the years than any other we've published. Sixteen Times journalists recount their work on the historic article.

"The years of preparation paid off," one said.

Separately, our latest 360 video[28] shows students paying tribute to Mr. Castro at the University of Havana, where he immersed himself in radical politics in the 1940s.

A few months ago, our reporter Diaa Hadid chronicled her first hajj[29] for readers. This week, she shares her experience of returning to Alexandria, Egypt, where her mother was raised.

"As the country has plunged into a downward spiral, Alexandria is even more diminished," she writes[30]. "Once Egypt's exuberant gateway to Europe, the city has been neglected for decades."

• And at a moment when technology has made cultivating relationships easier, but also shallower, one writer considers the importance of true friendships[31].

Back Story

Photo
Credit Prensa Latina, via Agence France Presse-Getty Images

More than 30 years ago, a cow set a record for the most milk produced in 24 hours[32].

Ubre Blanca (White Udder) was said to yield more than 100 liters that day. Her master was Fidel Castro.

The supercow is one of many tales Cubans will remember as they say goodbye[33] to their longtime leader this weekend.

Ubre Blanca was part of Mr. Castro's effort to solve a milk shortage. Long before Dolly the sheep[34] or goats engineered to produce silk[35], Mr. Castro used artificial insemination to combine the Asian Zebu's hardiness with a Holstein's[36] high yield.

Ubre Blanca was born in 1972 to instant stardom. Daily reports of her progress became news, though in the end, she was more or less the only success from the breeding experiment.

Mr. Castro had a love for all things dairy, which included "Cuban Camembert[37]" and a quest to build an ice cream parlor, Coppelia, to rival the American restaurant chain Howard Johnson's.

His ice cream obsession was also the closest the United States got to a successful assassination attempt – poison was to be slipped into Mr. Castro's milkshake, but froze[38] to the side of the freezer instead.

As for Ubre Blanca, she died in 1985. At the time of her death, a government official commended[39] her.

"She gave her all for the people," he said.

_____

Photographs may appear out of order for some readers. Viewing this version of the briefing[40] should help.

Your Morning Briefing is published weekday mornings.

What would you like to see here? Contact us at asiabriefing@nytimes.com[41].

Continue reading the main story[42]

References

  1. ^ has described China, North Korea, Russia, Cuba and Venezuela (www.nytimes.com)
  2. ^ Here's a list (www.nytimes.com)
  3. ^ here's the latest on the transition (www.nytimes.com)
  4. ^ uncovering mass graves (www.nytimes.com)
  5. ^ thousands of desperate p (www.nytimes.com)
  6. ^ eople are fleeing eastern Aleppo (www.nytimes.com)
  7. ^ pushing China to mine and burn more coal (www.nytimes.com)
  8. ^ stiffening sanctions (www.nytimes.com)
  9. ^ re ached a deal to cut production by 1.2 million barrels a day (www.nytimes.com)
  10. ^ reached its highest in 40 years (www.bloomberg.com)
  11. ^ talks to sell its Salix (www.bloomberg.com)
  12. ^ gastrointestinal-drugs division to Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. (www.bloomberg.com)
  13. ^ the cull of millions of poultry (www.straitstimes.com)
  14. ^ preparing for the worst (www.bloomberg.com)
  15. ^ approved large-scale clinical trials (www.nytimes.com)
  16. ^ technology and health care shares fell (www.nytimes.com)
  17. ^ global markets (markets.on.nytimes.com)
  18. ^ The Washington Post (www.washingtonpost.com)
  19. ^ Moscow Times (themoscowtimes.com)
  20. ^ The New York Times (www.nytimes.com)
  21. ^ The Sydney Morning Herald (www.smh.com.au)
  22. ^ The New York Times (www.nytimes.com)
  23. ^ The New York Times (www.nytimes.com)
  24. ^ The New York Times (www.nytimes.com)
  25. ^ Thomson Reuters Foundation (news.trust.org)
  26. ^ Watch in Times Video » (www.nytimes.com)
  27. ^ more work hours (www.nytimes.com)
  28. ^ our latest 360 video (www.nytimes.com)
  29. ^ her first hajj (www.nytimes.com)
  30. ^ she writes (www.nytimes.com)
  31. ^ considers the importance of true friendships (www.nytimes.com)
  32. ^ most milk produced in 24 hours (latinamericanhistory.oxfordre.com)
  33. ^ goodbye (www.nytimes.com)
  34. ^ Dolly the sheep (www.scientificamerican.com)
  35. < small>^ goats engineered to produce silk (www.bbc.com)
  36. ^ Holstein's (www.britannica.com)
  37. ^ Cuban Camembert (warisboring.com)
  38. ^ froze (www.nytimes.com)
  39. ^ commended (www.telegraph.co.uk)
  40. ^ this version of the briefing (mobile.nytimes.com)
  41. ^ asiabriefing@nytimes.com (www.nytimes.com)
  42. ^ Continue reading the main story (www.nytimes.com)