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Ecuador vows to regain control of prisons amid wave of violence

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CNN
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Ecuador is on heightened security amid an intensifying wave of violence that has left multiple police officers dead and forced president Guillermo Lasso to declare a 45-day state of emergency in provinces Guayas and Esmeraldas.

National Security Secretary Diego Ordoñez vowed Thursday that the government would take back control of Ecuador’s penitentiaries – sites of repeated bloodshed – and implement other anti-crime operations, following an emergency meeting of the council.

At least five Ecuadorean police officers have been killed in explosive attacks, Fausto Salinas, Ecuador’s chief of police, announced Tuesday during a press conference.

Salinas said there were three detonations recorded in the city of Esmeraldas on the same day: two car bombings and one in the surroundings of the Community Police Unit. He added that the wave of attacks began in response to the transfer of dozens of inmates to other prisons in the country.

President Lasso has repeatedly blamed organized drug gangs for violence inside prisons and throughout Ecuador, which is a key transit point on the route that brings cocaine from South America to the US and Asia.

At least five Ecuadorean police officers were killed on Tuesday in explosive attacks in Guayas and Esmeraldas provinces.

Ecuador’s prisons are chronically overcrowded. In July 2021, then-prison chief Eduardo Moncayo told local media that the Litoral Penitentiary was the most overcrowded in the country, with more than 9,000 inmates in a facility l planned for 5,000.

The prison system has been on high alert since September 2021 prison clashes involving automatic weapons and even grenades.

More than 300 inmates were killed in prison violence in 2021, according to figures from Ecuador’s prison service SNAI, and in May a prison riot in the country’s north left more than 23 dead.

Ecuadorian government ministers have blamed the attacks on the government’s attempt to tackle organized crime.

“We are not going to lower our guard, they are not going to lower the morale of the police. The force of the state cannot give in to organized crime. The police cannot appear overwhelmed,” Minister of the Interior, Juan Zapata, said on Tuesday morning.

According to Ecuador’s prison service, SNAI, the reason for transfers that began on Tuesday is “to reduce overcrowding, improve infrastructure and security conditions.” SNAI also wrote in a tweet that 1,002 inmates were transferred from Ecuador’s most violent prison Guayaquil to prisons around the country.

A police officer puts up tape at a crime scene where colleagues were killed in response to prisoner transfers from overcrowded prisons.

Minister of Defense, Luis Lara said the attacks were carried out in response to the “firm decision of the national government to take back control of the prisons and eradicate the drug business in the country.”

She said the violence in Guayas and Esmeraldas is associated with drug trafficking and organized crime.

Some 1,400 Armed Forces personnel have been deployed in Guayaquil, and that more will be added this week, she added.

“What happened in Guayaquil and Esmeraldas is devastating. Criminal groups will not be able to take over the country,” Foreign Minister Juan Carlos Holguín wrote in a tweet Tuesday. “All the support to our president Guillermo Lasso, to our Armed Forces, to the Police. This must be a national crusade. International support has been key to this crusade.”

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Bolsonaro silent after Brazil presidential vote loss

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CNN
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More than a day after Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was pronounced the winner of Brazil’s 2022 presidential election, incumbent Jair Bolsonaro has yet to publicly acknowledge his loss.

The President’s delay in conceding Sunday’s race has contributed to fears that he will not cooperate with a transfer of power, amid scattered protests by his supporters. Ahead of the vote, Bolsonaro and some of his allies had made unfounded claims about electoral fraud and unfair treatment by the press.

“Anywhere else in the world, the president who lost would have called me by now and conceded,” Lula da Silva told supporters on Sunday night, explaining that he was “part happy, part worried” about the transfer of power.

“He still hasn’t called, I don’t know if he will and I don’t know if he will concede,” he said.

But public concession or not, experts say it’s already out of the outgoing President’s hands.

Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva speaks after the election results were announced on Sunday.

It is Brazil’s Supreme Electoral Court that officially validates election results and communicates them to the Senate, Chamber of Deputies and State Assemblies.

A press officer for the Electoral Court told CNN that the vote’s results are already considered validated, since the court’s declaration of the outcome on Sunday. A court session at a later point will formally confirm the win, but no date has been set for it yet, he said.

Electoral Court President Alexandre de Moraes on Sunday personally called both Lula da Silva and Bolsonaro to inform them of the results and congratulate them on their participation in the democratic process, according to a press release by the Court.

De Moraes also said he did not see much room for the election to be contested. “The result has been proclaimed, accepted and those who were elected will take office on January 1,” he said in the release.

Jair Bolsonaro pictured on election day.

Brazilian Senate President Rodrigo Pacheco has already publicly congratulated Lula da Silva and his supporters, as has Chamber of Deputies President Arthur Lira – a close Bolsonaro ally.

Foreign leaders from across the globe also swiftly expressed their support for Lula da Silva’s win.

“I send my congratulations to Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on his election to be the next president of Brazil following free, fair, and credible elections,” US President Joe Biden said after Sunday’s vote.

And Russian President Vladimir Putin sent congratulations in a message reported by Russian state news agency TASS, adding: “The vote’s results confirm your high political authority.”

The President-elect’s diplomatic work is already underway, with Lula da Silva meeting Argentine President Alberto Fernandez – one of the first foreign leaders to congratulate him – in Sao Paulo on Monday.

At least twice before, Brazilian leaders have refused to participate in the transfer of power.

At the start of the Brazilian republic in the late 19th century, army marshall Floriano Peixoto did not attend the inauguration of his successor, Prudente de Moraes.

And almost a century later, the last of the unelected military presidents, João Batista Figueiredo, snubbed the inauguration of his successor José Sarney.

In both cases, the boycott was largely symbolic. The same would be true if Bolsonaro were to refuse to concede the presidency in a public statement, according to legal expert Augusto de Arruda Botelho.

“Not acknowledging the result is a non-starter from the political point of view, because at the end of the day, it is the Electoral Court that hands over power to the winner of the election,” he told CNN.

“[Bolsonaro] can kick and scream as much as he wants,” he added.

Plus it is in Bolsonaro’s political interest to appear the good sport, political scientist Camila Rocha told CNN.

Rocha’s reseach shows that refusing to concede would be damaging for Bolsonaro’s public image among his own supporters. “Even the most extreme pro-Bolsonaro supporters, like those I interviewed last year in Santa Catarina for my research, say that if Bolsonaro lost he would have to accept the result,” she told CNN.

“So it is very clear that if Bolsonaro refuses to accept Lula’s victory, it could have a negative impact even among his supporters. He would certainly be perceived as a bad loser.”

Supporters of Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro blocking a highway near Abadiania, central Brazil.

Nevertheless, since Sunday evening, pro-Bolsonaro truck drivers and other supporters have been blocking roads and highways, causing major delays and disruption in at least 19 states across the country, according to affiliate CNN Brasil.

The roadblocks so far have occurred in states including São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Bahia, Minas Gerais and Amazonas.

A CNN crew said access to São Paulo International Airport had been disrupted with close to 100 protesters blocking a highway leading up to the airport. Some people had left their taxis and had started walking along the side of the highway to reach the terminal, the crew said. Very few cars had pulled up outside terminal 3 at the airport, suggesting that most cars had been caught in the blockade.

A protester in Varginha, Minas Gerais state, waves a Brazilian flag.

São Paulo International Airport informed passengers to check the status of their fights in a tweet noting that access to airport terminals may be difficult due to the protest. A number of flights have been delayed, according to an airline agent who spoke to CNN. Airline pilots and crew have not been able to make it to the airport because the blockade is causing significant delays at the airport, the agent told CNN.

Some police officers on the road leading to the airport told CNN that they were afraid of upsetting the protesters and were trying to avoid confrontation.

Several protesters have made clear they do not believe the election result.

“We have a President that won at the ballot box and they defrauded the ballot boxes and put the other candidate ahead and we’re against that,” said Luis Valejo, a Bolsonaro supporter.

Another, Jurandir Santos, said that even if Bolsonaro accepts the results, “the people will not accept it.”

In the first public comments by any member of Bolsonaro’s inner circle since his election defeat, Bolsonaro’s son, Sen. Flavio Bolsonaro, took to Twitter on Monday afternoon to thank his father’s supporters, and urged them not to “give up.”

“Thank you to everyone who helped us rescue patriotism, who prayed, prayed, took to the streets, gave their sweat for the country that is working and gave Bolsonaro the biggest vote of his life! Let’s raise our heads and let’s not give up on our Brazil!” he wrote.

“God is in charge!” he added.

Military police attempt to clear a roadblock in Novo Hamburgo, southern Brazil, on Tuesday.

The federal supreme court later ordered the clearance of all public roads and highways.

The order came after Brazil’s National Transport Confederation (CNT) said the roadblocks caused “inconvenience and damage to the whole society,” and said the protests should be categorized as “anti-democratic” and potential violations of the democratic rule of law.

As of 8 a.m. ET on Tuesday, Brazil’s Federal Police said its officers had removed at least 246 roadblocks from the country’s federal highways, but a number of highways remain blocked.

Later Tuesday morning local time, the federal supreme court issued an order calling for state military police to be used to disperse roadblocks, as well as to identify and arrest people responsible under the provision that their actions are a “crime against the democratic institution.”

Those responsible could be fined around $20,000 (R$100,000) per hour of blockade, according to the order.

Sao Paulo state governor Rodrigo Garcia called for state military police to disperse protesters, and to use force if necessary.

“We will eventually arrest those protesters that resist to the clearing of the roads and, if necessary, use force (on them),” Garcia said in a news conference.

“It will not be a demonstration or a riot that will make society reject the result of the elections. Those who lost have to acknowledge defeat,” said Garcia.

Meanwhile, Bolsonaro supporters have called for a protest on Tuesday in front of federal government buildings in Brasilia at 2 p.m. ET.

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Sonu Sood wins Nation’s Pride Award from CM Eknath Shinde at Society Achievers Awards : Bollywood News

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Sonu Sood became a national hero during the first COVID-19 lockdown of 2020 when he arranged to help poor migrant workers return to their respective hometowns. His services were recognized at the Society Achievers Awards 2022 where he was conferred with the Nation’s Pride Award.

Sonu Sood wins Nation’s Pride Award from CM Eknath Shinde at Society Achievers Awards

The award was presented to the actor, producer and philanthropist by the Chief Minister of Maharashtra Eknath Shinde while the stage was also graced by the Deputy Chief Minister of the state Devendra Fadnavis at a grand event in Mumbai last evening. It was attended by a list of celebrities, including Hema Malini, Farah Khan, Rohit Shetty, Tamannah Bhatia, Madhur Bhandarkar, Zareen Khan, etc.

Sharing his happiness at winning the Nation’s Pride Award, Sonu said at the event, “My goal has always been to transform the lives of the disadvantaged by empowering them with tools required to lead a healthy and productive life. I’m glad Sood Charity Foundations’ endeavours are getting recognised today.”

Sonu was looking dapper at the event in a neat grey suit and dark blue tie as he posed for the paparazzi.

At the work front, Sonu was last seen in the role of Chand Bardai in Yash Raj Films’ historical drama Samrat Prithviraj. Directed by Dr Chandraprakash Dwivedi, the film saw Akshay Kumar play the titular role. He will next be seen in an action avatar in Fateh.

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T-Series files police complaint against imposters who posed as Bhushan Kumar and harassed industry members : Bollywood News

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T-Series has sought the help of Mumbai police to nab an imposter who posed as their CEO Bhushan Kumar. In an official statement released by the production house, they opened up about how a number has been contacting fellow members in the industry, posing as Bhushan Kumar, and sending distasteful messages. In the complaint registered by them, they have also accused the imposters of doing this with the intention of maligning the reputation of Mr. Kumar.

T-Series files police complaint against imposters who posed as Bhushan Kumar and harassed industry members

T-Series files police complaint against imposters who posed as Bhushan Kumar and harassed industry members

Their official statement read, “T-Series has filed a complaint for impersonation, forgery and fraud against certain unknown accused who are attempting to malign our Managing Director, Mr. Bhushan Kumar. Through the use of foreign phone number+32 460258213 & other number, accused imposters, posing as Mr. Kumar, reached out to several persons through distasteful messages. The bluff of the accused imposters was promptly called out by persons who are personally known to Mr. Kumar. Further, the persons targeted immediately alerted Mr. Kumar of the incidents that had occurred.”

The statement continued, “Upon receipt of this information, T-Series swiftly filed an FIR against the accused imposters. In light of the same a police investigation is currently underway. The motive behind this campaign to injure Mr. Kumar’s reputation is evident, and such disgraceful and vindictive behaviour will be dealt with appropriately by official authorities. Mr. Kumar has no role to play in these events and is being targeted by persons acting out of malicious intent. Should anyone be contacted by these accused imposters, we urge them to not engage in any conversation or transaction with any such imposters. The good faith and reputation that Mr. Kumar has built for himself through this organisation and his other work remain unscathed by these weak attempts at damaging his character.”

The investigation is expected to be currently under process.

Also Read: Armaan Malik collaborates with T-Series for the song ‘Bas Tujhse Pyaar Ho’

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Brazil military finds no fraud in election, but refuses to rule it out

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CNN
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Brazil’s military has found no sign of vote-rigging in the country’s 2022 elections, according to a new report released this week. Yet worries persist that the report could fuel tensions among supporters of outgoing President Jair Bolsonaro, who repeatedly made unfounded claims about potential fraud on the campaign trail.

Leftist former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva won the presidential vote in a runoff last month, leading some supporters of the far-right Bolsonaro to take to the streets in anger.

This week’s report, made public by Brazil’s Defense Ministry, showed no fraud or inconsistency in the electoral process, but refused to rule out the possibility entirely.

Instead, it described potential for a hypothetical security threat in the coding of programs for Brazil’s electronic voting machines. Because its audit didn’t have complete access to the programs’ source code, the Defense Ministry could not rule out the influence of a malicious code, it said.

“It is not possible to guarantee that the programs that were executed in the electronic voting machines are free from malicious insertions that alter their intended function,” the ministry said, offering no evidence to suggest such issues existed. The ministry also called on Brazil’s Electoral Court to carry out its own investigation.

In a statement published on the court’s website, chief electoral authority Alexandre de Moraes wrote that the court “received with satisfaction the final report from the Ministry of Defense, which, like all other supervisory bodies, did not point out the existence of any fraud or inconsistency in the electronic voting machines and in the 2022 electoral process.”

“The suggestions forwarded to improve the system will be analyzed in due course,” he added.

President-elect da Silva meanwhile condemned the involvement of the military as “deplorable” during a Thursday conference with political allies in Brasília.

“Yesterday, something humiliating, deplorable happened to our armed forces. A president of the republic, who is the supreme commander of the Armed Forces, did not have the right to involve the Armed Forces in setting up a commission to investigate electronic ballots, which is something for civil society, the political parties and national Congress,” he said, referring to Bolsonaro.

João Cezar de Castro Rocha, professor at Rio de Janeiro State University, told CNN that he believed there was an “underlying strategy” for the report to generate doubt about the election results.

“In this specific case, the deliberately ambiguous tone of the Ministry of Defense – “there is no evidence of fraud, but it is said that there could be fraud!” – aims to keep (Bolsonaro) supporters mobilized,” he added.

Bolsonaro, a former army captain who made much of his ties to Brazil’s military, has not publicly commented on the report or its origins. Asked about the report by CNN, Bolsonaro’s Liberal Party declined to comment.

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Khuda Haafiz: Chapter ll – Agni Pariksha Movie Review: KHUDA HAAFIZ CHAPTER 2

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Khuda Haafiz: Chapter ll – Agni Pariksha Review {2.0/5} & Review Rating

KHUDA HAAFIZ CHAPTER 2 – AGNI PARIKSHA is the story of a man trying to protect his family. After the events of the first film, Sameer (Vidyut Jammwal) and Nargis (Shivaleeka Oberoi) return to Lucknow after the former successfully rescues the latter from the flesh trade. One year has passed. Nargis still gets nightmares of her traumatic experience in Noman. She is taking therapy and also under medication. Sameer is trying his best but Nargis has become lifeless. She has changed multiple jobs due to her Noman experience and often gets taunted for it. Meanwhile, Deepak (Deepak Tokas), a friend of Sameer, faces a huge tragedy. His brother and sister-in-law pass away in an accident, leaving their five-year-old daughter Nandini (Riddhi Sharma) behind. Deepak is unable to take care of Nandini and wants to put Nandini up for adoption. Sameer stops him from doing so. He decides to adopt her and brings her home. Nargis, at first, is aloof but later warms up to Nandini. The three start living together happily. Thanks to the new member of their family, Nandini also gets better and rekindles her romance with Sameer. All is going fine until one day, Nandini is returning with Seema (Anushka Marchande), a teenage classmate in her school, like everyday. Suddenly, Basheshwar Thakur aka Bacchu (Bodhisattva Sharma) and his pals kidnap Seema. Nandini tries to stop them and even she’s taken hostage. Bacchu, a student in Seema and Nandini’s school, had tried to woo Seema. Since Seema rejected her advances, he abducted her. Both the kidnapped students are taken to a place outside Lucknow. Bacchu and his friends rape not just Seema but also Nandini. Then they take them to an abandoned field and are assaulted. When Sameer finds out about the kidnapping and when he realizes that the cops are not taking the matter seriously, he decides to find the girls himself. He successfully manages to locate both the girls in the field. They are taken to the hospital. While Seema survives, Nandini dies. Sameer and Nargis are shattered. Sameer finds out that Bacchu is the grandson of the very powerful Sheela Thakurji (Sheeba Chaddha). Sameer is advised to forget about the episode and move on as it’s impossible to take action against her or Bacchu. What happens next forms the rest of the story.

Khuda Haafiz: Chapter ll - Agni Pariksha

Faruk Kabir’s story is clichéd and at the plot level, it’s a routine revenge drama. Faruk Kabir’s screenplay is fine at parts but with the story being so predictable and without any twist, the writing doesn’t impress. Faruk Kabir’s dialogues are sharp in several places.

Faruk Kabir’s direction is decent. He has executed several scenes very well, especially in the first half. He also knows how to handle scale and enhance tension in scenes. The negative characters are quite intriguing and the way they get introduced, one expects a crackling second half, especially when Sameer goes on a revenge spree. Unfortunately, the director fails to do justice to them. The baddies get eliminated fairly easily. In fact, the manner in which Sameer is able to kill so many people, in India and abroad, and even gets bail, despite finishing off a gangster inside the prison, is very unconvincing. On top of it, the second half has no surprises. The first part had an interesting twist with regards to the cop character. Here, the second half is all about Sameer’s various killing episodes. Lastly, the violence is extremely gruesome and might put off even the male frontbenchers, who usually have a taste for such films.

Vidyut Jammwal has put in a lot of hard work, and it shows. Shivaleeka Oberoi has a fine screen presence, though she is relegated to the backseat in the second half. Sheeba Chaddha is quite menacing as the villain. Sadly, the director hasn’t done justice to her arc. Riddhi Sharma is cute while Anushka Marchande doesn’t get much scope. Bodhisattva Sharma is fine. Rajesh Tailang (Ravi Kumar) is excellent and it’s refreshing to see the character of a sensitive journalist in a Hindi film. Rukhsar Rahman (Dr Roshni Acharya) is adorable. Ritik Ghansani (Saaharsh, Seema’s brother), Ashwath Bhatt (Kamlesh Thakur) and Ishtiyak Khan (Shailendra Thakur; Thakurji’s driver) are wasted. Danish Hussain (Talha Ansari; Sameer’s cellmate in the prison), Bachchan Pachehra (Shivram, Ice-cream seller) and Satish Sharma (Inspector Amit Tyagi) leave a mark. Dibyendu Bhattacharya (Rashid Qasai) does well but his character is hardly there. Siddharth Bhardwaj (Badar Khalu; Talha’s brother) and Monica Sharma (Kalki; Thakurji’s keep) are fair. Varun Pande (Jaiswal; Prison don) is scary. Deepak Tokas is okay.

Khuda Haafiz: Chapter ll – Agni Pariksha | Trailer | Vidyut Jammwal, Shivaleeka Oberoi

Music fails to entice. ‘Rubaru’ and ‘Chaiyaan Mein Saiyaan Ki’ are well shot and the same goes for ‘Haq Hussain’. ‘Junoon Hai’ and ‘Aaja Ve’ fail to leave a mark. Amar Mohile’s background score is better.

Jitan Harmeet Singh’s cinematography is appropriate. Faruk Kabir and Yannick Ben’s action design, Yannick Ben, Amin Khatib, Vidyut Jammwal and Faruk Kabir’s action choreography and Andrew Mckenzie’s stunts are very gory and full of bloodshed. Ashwini Shrivastav’s production design is realistic. NY VFXWaala’s VFX is neat. Preeti Sharma’s costumes are authentic. Sandeep Francis’s editing could have been slicker as the film is slow.

On the whole, KHUDA HAAFIZ CHAPTER 2 – AGNI PARIKSHA fails to reach the level of the first part and disappoints due to the predictable storyline and disturbing action scenes. At the box office, it’ll face a tough time.

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She left the dangers of Ukraine only to be killed riding a bike close to home. Hundreds will ride in her honor to demand change

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CNN
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On Thursday, Dan Langenkamp marked 12 weeks since his wife, Sarah, was killed.

To honor her, Dan and his two young sons do what they do every day at around 4:05 p.m., the time Sarah died: They drop whatever they are working on, gather together, hold hands and talk to her, sharing details about their day. They tell her they love her, they miss her, and they hope she’s proud of them.

Sarah Debbink Langenkamp was killed August 25 while riding her bike on a Bethesda, Maryland, road. She was traveling on the biker’s lane when the driver of a flatbed truck alongside her made a right turn into a parking lot and ran over the 42-year-old, police said. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

“I’ve tried to make sense of what happened to Sarah, and since I started looking into it, I’ve realized this is not a freakish accident,” Dan Langenkamp said. “What happened to her is part of a huge, worsening trend in America of people getting killed in traffic crashes. There’s an epidemic of traffic violence against people walking or biking.”

The accident came just weeks after the couple, both diplomats, moved back to the US after spending roughly a year and a half in Ukraine and later in Poland, on the border. They were part of a small group of US government employees who stayed behind after Russia’s invasion but ultimately made the difficult decision to leave, so they could reunite with their two sons – Oliver, 10 and Axel, 8 – whom they had sent to their grandparents in California when the war first started.

The couple spent a few weeks in Washington DC before moving to Bethesda, where they were eagerly preparing for the start of a new chapter. Sarah enrolled in a master’s degree course and, three days after their move there, attended an open house at her son’s new elementary school. A few minutes before she got on her bike to return home that evening, she called Dan to share her impressions. It was the last call she ever made.

“We’ve lived in dangerous places,” Langenkamp said. “The last thing we expected was that one of us would die or get hurt in Bethesda.”

Dan and Sarah Langenkamp, with their two sons, Axel, now 8, and Oliver, now 10, in a 2014 picture.

His anger, Langenkamp said, has been a driving force to push for change in bike safety. A GoFundMe campaign Langenkamp created has raised more than $289,000 to help local and national cycling safety organizations in their efforts to advocate for safer bike routes.

And on Saturday, hundreds of people biked to Congress in Sarah’s honor in a 10.5-mile Ride for Your Life event her husband organized and led. Just feet from the Capitol, a line of speakers, including Langenkamp, spoke to a sea of bikers at the end of their journey retracing Sarah’s route on the day she died.

The group’s requests to lawmakers include funding for the Active Transportation Infrastructure Investment Program, which was authorized by Congress but not funded and which can help local governments invest in bike lane infrastructure. They’re also asking for more measures around truck safety, including mandating better training and requiring side and front guards on large trucks to prevent people from getting caught underneath.

“I get comfort knowing that, maybe through all of this work, some other mother will ride home safely after riding her bike to work,” Langenkamp said. “And that’s meaningful to me.”

Sarah Langenkamp seen here with her arm raised, during

For many advocates, the fight for safer roads has been long and difficult, even amid worsening trends for biker and pedestrian safety. The problems have only been exacerbated by increased driver recklessness during the pandemic and bigger, heavier – and deadlier – vehicles on the roads, said Colin Browne, a spokesperson for the Washington Area Bicyclist Association.

More than 930 cyclists were killed on American roads in 2020, a 9% increase from the prior year, and more than 38,800 were injured, according to data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Nearly 80% of fatal bicyclist crashes that year were in urban areas, the agency said. At least 985 cyclists were killed in 2021, a 5% increase from 2020, according to early estimates from the NHTSA. Since 1975, deaths among cyclists 20 or older have nearly quadrupled, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

“It’s a public health crisis,” Browne said. “Even more so because this is, from a technical standpoint, not a challenging problem to solve. The tools and the engineering to make the streets safer to use is out there, it’s tested, it’s proven.”

But creating safer streets for bikers and pedestrians and regulating large vehicles has often proved a politically unpopular move, which has led to slow action from local leaders, he added.

“We could give (funding) to buses and people on bikes and scooters, but we have sort of built an infrastructure that assumes the majority of people will drive,” Browne said.

Anna Irwin also rode her bike with her 10-year-old daughter at Saturday’s event to honor Sarah’s memory. She told CNN she was moved by the size of the crowd and the sound of bike bells ringing to show their support for Langenkamp.

“It was unbelievably powerful,” she said. “One of the things that I learned very quickly when I got into bike advocacy is this community is so passionate. And they show up.”

Anna Irwin and her daughter rode with hundreds more on Saturday in honor of Sarah.

Irwin founded the Bethesda BIKE Now coalition, a local group created in response to a 2017 decision from local leaders to shut down a popular bike trail which ran through Bethesda during the construction of a rail line.

In these five years, the group has called for the completion of a network of protected bike routes – formed by two major paths – running from one side of Bethesda to the other, while the existing trail remains closed. But progress has been slow, Irwin said.

“Here we are, in 2022, and neither one of the routes is completed,” Irwin said. “They’ve done some work, but in five years they can’t build a protected bike lane to cover two miles of heavily trafficked area?”

The Montgomery County Department of Transportation told CNN it recently completed the first phase of two segments in the network and more bike lanes are either being designed or under construction, adding “we are building them as fast as we can.”

The department is also working with the Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration, which controls River Road, where Sarah was killed.

The highway administration said Friday it is committed to the safety of all highway users but did not answer CNN’s specific questions on bike trail projects, including if there are plans for construction on River Road. On Saturday, the department added it has begun a “comprehensive needs analysis” for a stretch of the highway which will help identify strategies to “address pedestrian and bicycle network needs, enhance safety, and improve travel conditions.” In the meantime, officials are considering solutions including a speed limit reduction or sign upgrades in that part of the road, it noted.

The agency last month announced it started construction on another road in North Bethesda, where an 18-year-old cyclist was killed in June and a 17-year-old cyclist was killed in 2019.

“These things could have been prevented,” Irwin said. “We have got to just keep educating people about the need for protected bike lanes. You can’t just paint the road and then expect cars to give us the space that we need. It’s not safe.”

Langenkamp has said his fundraising effort will also help advocate for the state’s transportation department to create a safer bike lane on River Road, where Sarah was killed.

“Such bike lanes – lacking proper barriers, truck/auto driver education, laws, and law enforcement – are only death traps,” Langenkamp wrote on his GoFundMe page.

A memorial has been set up at the site of Sarah's crash, featuring a white bicycle embedded with flowers.

The fight for change has given Langenkamp purpose in what otherwise has been an unbearable three months. Adjusting to life as a single father hasn’t been easy, he said. Just a few days ago, his son noted he had no clean pants for school, and Langenkamp realized he hadn’t done laundry for a week. He often worries what holidays and Mother’s Day will look like for the children.

Sarah loved their two boys, he said. Even amid a demanding job which took the family all around the world – including to Baghdad, the Ivory Coast and Uganda – she was always able to turn off work and focus on her family, Langenkamp said. While working from Poland during Russia’s war on Ukraine, Sarah flew to California for a weekend over the summer to surprise her oldest son on his birthday. She returned to Europe when the weekend was over. And in the weeks before her return to the US, she wrote heartfelt postcards to her boys, sharing she couldn’t wait until they were reunited.

She was equally incredible at her job, her husband said, adding, “She was everybody’s favorite colleague.”

The two met in their Foreign Service orientation class in 2005 and were married a year later. “She had this quiet confidence, and a very down-to-earth, friendly demeanor that just really made her easy to get along with,” Langenkamp said. “She was the kind of boss that everybody loves. Just really smart.”

And she was never afraid to go to the places where other diplomats were sometimes unwilling to go, telling her husband it was “where we were needed.”

During their time in Ukraine, Sarah headed the US Embassy’s programs on corruption and law enforcement and was responsible for equipping and supplying its national police and border guard. And she was a “critical player” in Ukraine’s defense efforts and helped Ukrainian police and border guard forces receive equipment like helmets and body armor after the invasion, Langenkamp added. After her killing, letters of appreciation poured in from US leaders including President Joe Biden, Attorney General Merrick Garland and Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

“She was our guiding light, really, and our moral compass,” Langenkamp said. “It was her judgment that helped us through everything.”

Sarah Langenkamp with her two sons, Oliver and Axel, on July 4, 2017.

Three months since her death, reminders of Sarah are everywhere around the family’s Bethesda home, Langenkamp said.

There’s a corner – a part of the home Langenkamp refers to as a “shrine” to his wife – where a candle remains lit by her urn, surrounded by pictures of the family, notes Sarah’s sons wrote to their mom after her passing, jewelry she used to wear, cards from family and friends. Nearby, pictures of Sarah are taped right up to the ceiling. “We just try to have her around, everywhere,” her husband said.

There’s also a picture Sarah gifted to her husband at their wedding. It’s a picture of a bike with the words, “Life is a beautiful ride. Dan and Sarah, est. 2006,” the year of their wedding.

“Biking was a thing for us,” he said. “It was a central part of our lives,” a mode of transportation which was “down-to-earth, healthy and environmentally friendly,” Langenkamp added.

Wherever the couple found themselves, they tried to commute by bike when possible, he added. Choosing this fight for safety since his wife’s death was almost like an “impulse,” Langenkamp said.

“If the least I can do to honor her, a person who had so much potential in her life. If we can do a little bit of good as a result of this, I’ll have been consoled slightly,” he said.

“It won’t bring her back,” Langenkamp added. “But at least it will help, a little bit.”

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Miss Argentina and Miss Puerto Rico reveal that they’re married

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CNN
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A new power couple has taken the stage.

A former Miss Argentina and former Miss Puerto Rico shocked and delighted fans by announcing their surprise marriage on Instagram.

Mariana Varela and Fabiola Valentín met at the 2020 Miss Grand International competition in Thailand, where they represented Argentina and Puerto Rico, respectively. After making it to the pageant top 10, the two beauty queens appeared to remain close friends on social media. What fans didn’t know is they were secretly dating the whole time.

The pair posted matching Instagram Reels showing moments from their relationship, including romantic walks on the beach, candid cuddles, champagne toasts and a proposal with gold and silver balloons spelling out, “Marry me?”

The main image of the post shows the pair outside of the city courthouse in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where they married on October 28.

“After deciding to keep our relationship private, we opened the doors on a special day,” the caption reads in Spanish.

Fans, celebrities and fellow pageant figures congratulated Varela and Valentín on their picture-perfect love.

“Congratulations,” wrote Ghanaian singer and beauty queen Abena Akuaba, who won Miss Grand International 2020. “MGI brought together a beautiful union.”

“Thanks for all the love!” Varela wrote in reply to the well-wishes. “We are very happy and blessed.”



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Brazil authorities investigate video of crowd doing apparent Nazi salute

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CNN
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Brazilian authorities say they are investigating video of a rally in the Brazilian city of Sao Miguel do Oeste, in which people are seen performing a “Nazi salute.”

The rally, which took place in front of a military office in the city, appeared to be one of several rallies organized outside military bases on Wednesday as supporters of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro protested the results of Sunday’s presidential run-off vote, which saw Bolsonaro’s bid for reelection defeated by leftist former leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

The video, which was posted to Twitter, shows a crowd of people, some carrying and others draped in the Brazilian flag, with many apparently performing a Nazi salute as the Brazilian national anthem plays.

It’s unclear who posted the video and CNN has not been able to verify its authenticity.

Nazi incitement is a crime in Brazil. The Federal Prosecutor’s office of Santa Catarina State said in its statement that is already working “to identify people who gave the Nazi salute during rallies that were supposed to be democratic and peaceful.”

“Once identified, a report will be produced and the information will be forwarded to the Public Prosecutor for accountability of those involved,” prosecutor Marcela de Jesus Fernandes said.

CNN has reached out to Bolsonaro’s office for comment.

Brazilian authorities will investigate the video.

A Brazilian Jewish organization, the Brazilian Israeli Confederation, released a statement condemning the image as “disgusting.”

“Brazilian society cannot tolerate gestures like this. Making this gesture while wearing the Brazilian national team shirt is also an offense to our Armed Forces, which fought bravely against Nazi forces in Europe during World War II,” the group tweeted.

In addition to the Bolsonaro supporters calling for “federal intervention” in front of Brazilian military headquarters, protesters across the country have blocked roads and highways since the release of the election results.

On Tuesday, the Brazilian Supreme Court judge ordered military police to intervene in clearing roads, but the blockades continued into Wednesday – a day after Bolsonaro spoke publicly for the first time since the results were announced, saying he would abide by the constitution.

Bolsonaro on Wednesday called on protesters to clear the roads in a video released on his official Facebook account, where he also said he was not involved in starting the demonstrations.

“The blocking of highways in Brazil impairs people’s right to come and go, it is in our constitution,” Bolsonaro said, adding that “from the beginning” his government had sent “our Federal Highway Police to unblock” the roads.

“I want to appeal to you, clear the highways,” the outgoing leader said.

There are currently at least 146 partial or total roadblocks across Brazil’s highways, according to the latest report from the Federal Highway Police. That is down from the more than 320 roadblocks in place earlier this week.

Bolsonaro said that while he understands the legitimate concerns of the protests, “you have to respect the rights of other people who are moving, in addition to affecting our economy.”

“Brazilians who are protesting all over Brazil – I know you are upset, you are sad. You expected something else. I’m also just as upset, as sad as you are,” Bolsonaro said.

He encouraged Brazilians to “feel free” to protest and continue with demonstrations that are happening in other parts of Brazil, such as in public squares. “It is, I repeat, part of the democratic game,” Bolsonaro said.

Santa Catarina – a largely pro-Bolsonaro state – and Mato Grosso are among the states most affected by demonstrators’ roadblocks.

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Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro does not concede, but signals cooperation with transfer of power in speech

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CNN
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Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro said Tuesday that he would “continue to fulfill all the commandments of our constitution” in a short speech at the presidential palace in Brasilia, after days of silence following his election loss to the leftist former leader Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

He did not explicitly concede defeat, though the event appeared to signal his intention to cooperate with the transfer of power.

Taking the podium after the President, chief of staff Ciro Nogueira said that he would work with the new government and is waiting for Lula da Silva’s transition team to begin the handover.

“President Jair Messias Bolsonaro authorized me, when it is time, based on the law, to start the transition process,” Nogueira said.

Notably, Bolsonaro’s brief address did not contest the vote result. Instead, he thanked those who voted for him and hit out at critics. “I have always been labeled undemocratic and, unlike my accusers, I have always played within the four lines of the constitution,” he said.

Protesters are currently blocking Brazil's highways at 267 points across the country.

He did not congratulate Lula da Silva, who won with 50.9% of the vote, while Bolsonaro gained 49.1%.

The President-elect received the most votes in Brazilian history – more than 60 million votes, breaking his own record from 2006 by almost two million votes, according to the election authority’s final tally.

screengrab lula speech

Hear what Lula said after narrowly beating Bolsonaro

Bolsonaro’s initial silence had contributed to fears that he would not cooperate with the transfer of power, after making unfounded claims prior to the vote about electoral fraud.

While his speech on Tuesday was short, experts speculated the reasons to why he refrained from explicitly conceding or contesting the election result.

“Bolsonaro wants to maintain this illusion that he was wronged, and that’s why he lost. He wants to show strength and in the culture of this movement, admitting you lost is to show weakness,” Brian Winter, the editor in chief of Americas Quarterly, told CNN.

“By saying that he’s going to respect the Constitution and by discouraging violence at some of the protests that have been happening, I think that (Bolsonaro) essentially paves the way now for a relatively normal transition,” Winter said.

Bruna Santos, a senior advisor at the Wilson Institute’s Brazil Center, said Bolsonaro was likely thinking of the long-term future of his movement.

“Bolsonarismo is a strong opposition force and got even stronger after this election despite Bolsonaro’s loss,” she said.

In the last legislative elections, Bolsonaro’s Liberal Party increased its representatives in the lower house from 76 to 99, while in the Senate it doubled from seven members to 14. Though Lula da Silva’s Workers’ Party has also increased representation in both houses, conservative-leaning politicians will dominate the next legislature overall.

Aerial view showing supporters of President Jair Bolsonaro, mainly truck drivers, blocking Castelo Branco Highway, on the outskirts of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Brazilian lawmakers and some Bolsonaro allies have already recognized Lula da Silva’s win. Brazilian Senate President Rodrigo Pacheco publicly congratulated Lula da Silva and his supporters, as has Chamber of Deputies President Arthur Lira – a close Bolsonaro ally.

Some pro-Bolsonaro Telegram groups seemed to take encouragement from Bolsonaro’s speech, which described ongoing protests as “the result of indignation and a feeling of injustice at how the electoral process took place.”

CNN saw messages from supporters lauding Bolsonaro for not accepting defeat, and green lighting protests.

“He didn’t recognize the defeat! He didn’t greet his opponent! He reaffirmed his respect for the Constitution! Let´s go out to the streets, more than ever, safe and certain!” one user wrote.

Protesters have wreaked havoc on the country’s highways since Sunday. Brazil’s highway police said Tuesday morning that protesters had blocked roads at 267 points across the country.

The highway police agency itself has faced criticism within Brazil over its response, after videos circulating on Brazil’s social media appeared to show officers telling protestors that they would not disrupt or shut down their protests.

In a press conference on Tuesday morning, highway police executive director Marco Antonio de Barros defended his agency’s actions, saying clearing the roads was a “complex operation.”

“Groups of up to 500 protesters, with children on their laps, elderly are participating in it. So the PRF had to act with plenty of caution,” he said, using an acronym for the highways agency.

Highway police general inspector Wendel Matos added the institution does not support the protests or the shutdown of federal highways, and that any potential breaches of protocol were being investigated. “Sometimes two or three officers speak or act in a way that is incompatible with our orders. We are investigating if there has been any misconduct by those officers,” Matos said.

After Bolsonaro spoke, Brazil’s Federal Supreme Court said that it was important to emphasize the “President of the Republic’s speech in guaranteeing the right to come and go in relation to blockades, and, when determining the beginning of the transition, in recognizing the result of the elections.”

President-elect Lula da Silva has not commented on the protests, though he expressed disappointment on Sunday evening at Bolsonaro’s initial failure to concede.

The leader of Lula da Silva’s Worker’s Party, Gleisi Hoffman, said on Tuesday that the party was confident protests would not interfere with the eventual transfer of power. “We trust Brazilian institutions,” she said.



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