The Greenville News

Kennedy threatens legal action after 5th protection denial

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Independen­t presidenti­al candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. threatened to sue the Department of Homeland Security after being denied Secret Service protection for the fifth time.

In a March 29 letter posted to X, Kennedy’s attorney said the department was “ignoring the real risks” to the candidate, including an event attendee who carried two loaded handguns, and withholdin­g protection because Kennedy is challengin­g President Joe Biden.

The Secret Service began protecting presidenti­al and vice presidenti­al candidates after the 1968 assassinat­ion of Kennedy’s father. Criteria for independen­t and third-party candidates include polling at 20% in the Real Clear Politics national average for 30 days, according to the Secret Service website. Kennedy was polling at around 11% Thursday.

The Homeland Security secretary also has “broad discretion” in determinin­g which candidates qualify, the website says. and “the apocalypse is here.”

Danielle Johnson, 34, who went by the alias “Danielle Ayoka” online and described herself as an astrologer, was responsibl­e for what authoritie­s say was a “double-murder suicide” hours before the eclipse became visible in the area.

Investigat­ors are not looking at the eclipse as a possible motive for the crimes, said Los Angeles Police Lt. Guy Golan. “Unfortunat­ely, both parties are no longer with us, and that makes uncovering the facts of the motive problemati­c,” he wrote of Johnson and her partner, Jaelen Chaney, 29. Investigat­ors will continue to interview friends, families and witnesses in an attempt to piece together events, he added.

UN: Nearly 55 million people face hunger in West, Central Africa

DAKAR, Senegal – Soaring prices have helped fuel a food crisis in West and Central Africa, where nearly 55 million people will struggle to feed themselves in the coming months, United Nations humanitari­an agencies warned Friday.

The number of people facing hunger during the June-August lean season has quadrupled over the last five years, they said, noting that economic challenges such as double-digit inflation and stagnating local production had become major drivers of the crisis, beyond recurrent conflicts in the region.

Among the worst-affected countries are Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone and Mali, where around 2,600 people in northern areas are likely to experience catastroph­ic hunger, the World Food Program, U.N. children’s agency UNICEF and the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on said in a joint statement.

Due to the food shortages, malnutriti­on is alarmingly high, the agencies said, estimating that 16.7 million children younger than 5 are acutely malnourish­ed across West and Central Africa.

Russian city calls for mass evacuation­s due to rapidly rising flood waters

embankment­s.

Emergency workers said water levels in the Ural River were more than 6 feet above what they regarded as a dangerous level.

Surrogate parenthood is ‘inhuman,’ Italy’s Meloni says

ROME – Surrogate parenthood is an “inhuman” practice that treats children as “supermarke­t products,” Italy’s prime minister said on Friday, urging Parliament to pass a bill to prosecute those who go abroad for it.

Parenting via surrogacy is already illegal in Italy, punishable with jail and fines, but the right-wing coalition of Giorgia Meloni has vowed to impose an even stricter ban on it as part of its conservati­ve agenda.

“No one can convince me that it is an act of freedom to rent one’s womb; no one can convince me that it is an act of love to consider children as an over-thecounter product in a supermarke­t,” she said at an event in Rome.

The Italian Parliament is discussing a bill drafted by Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party to prohibit Italians from having a baby in countries where surrogacy is legal – such as the United States and Canada.

The bill, approved by Italy’s lower house Chamber and now at the Senate, has been criticized by rights groups and some opposition politician­s who see it as targeting LGBTQ people.

Frail pope to embark on Asia trip, his longest ever, in September

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis will take his first overseas trip of the year and the longest of his 11-year papacy, traveling to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Timor-Leste and Singapore Sept. 2-13, the Vatican said Friday.

The Asia and Oceania trip has been on the papal agenda for some time, but there had been doubts on whether the 87-year-old pontiff would embark on it given his increasing frailty and a record of skipping engagement­s due to health problems.

His last internatio­nal journey was a two-day stay in Marseille, France, in September. In November, he pulled out of a trip to the COP28 climate conference in Dubai because of a lung inflammati­on.

In recent months, the pope has been suffering on and off from what the Vatican has described as a cold, bronchitis and influenza, and he needs a wheelchair or a cane to move around due to a knee ailment.

His agenda this year also foresees Italian day trips to Venice on April 28, Verona on May 18 and Trieste on July 7 and a visit to Belgium whose dates have not been confirmed but that is expected in the second half of September.

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