Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Home. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Home. Mostrar todas las entradas

When Russia invaded her home country of Ukraine, Maria decided she had to get there and help defend it — even if it meant leaving her fiancé behind in Chicago days after getting married.

Maria and her fiancé, David, married Saturday before about 20 people in the backyard of an Oak Park home — the venue offered last minute after Maria asked for advice in a neighborhood Facebook group. The couple met last year and got engaged in October.

On Monday, she plans to fly to Poland, then make her way to the Ukrainian border, ultimately aiming to volunteer to fight for her home country.

“People are running out of there and she is running in,” said a friend at the wedding, Pamela Chinchilla of Lombard.

Seven guests at the wedding brought medical supplies, masks and other items for Maria to take to Ukraine. People hugged each other, and Maria at one point spoke with family members in Odesa.

Maria, who asked that her last name not be published because she fears for her family’s safety in Ukraine and the U.S., said she lived with her parents in Kyiv until 1991 when the family moved to Poland.

For Maria, a previous marriage ended in divorce. She met her ex-husband while studying music in Austria and more than 20 years ago they moved to his hometown of Chicago — which has the second-largest Ukrainian-born population among U.S. cities.

Since the war began, she used messages and calls through Facebook to keep in touch with her parents, who have been sheltering in a parking garage during attacks on Ukraine’s largest port city of Odesa. But she said she has been unable to reach cousins in Kyiv in recent days.

Pamela Chinchilla looks through donations before Maria and David get married at a home, March 5, 2022, in Oak Park, Ill.

Pamela Chinchilla looks through donations before Maria and David get married at a home, March 5, 2022, in Oak Park, Ill.

Three days into the invasion, Maria made up her mind to return to Ukraine, determined to find some way to be useful. She said she doesn’t have medical or military training but worries that a Russian takeover of Ukraine will embolden the country to threaten more places around the world.

“I have to go,” Maria, 44, said. “I can’t do protests or fundraising or wave flags. We’ve done this since 2015, Ukrainians, and I just can’t do it anymore.”

Her fiancé refused to stay behind despite Maria’s resistance to him accompanying her. But since David first needs to apply for a passport, she plans to leave Monday and wait in Poland before crossing the border.

“He knows how stubborn I am and knew he’d have no chance to convince me otherwise,” Maria said.

David, 42, said he feels a responsibility to do what he can to keep her safe.

“Because complacency and compliance are pretty much the same thing,” he said. “And you can only turn a blind eye to people being bullied for so long. And if it happens to them, it might be you next.”

He also asked that his last name not be published to avoid endangering Maria’s family.

Ukraine’s forces are outnumbered and outgunned, but their resistance did prevent a swift Russian victory. Ukrainian leaders called on citizens to join in guerrilla war this week as Russian forces gained ground on the coast and took over one major port city.

Associated Press reporters at the border checkpoint in Medyka in southeastern Poland found Ukrainians lining up to return from other countries in Europe in recent days in response to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s call for volunteers to come assist the country’s military.

The White House has since urged Americans not to travel to Ukraine, but Maria and David said that didn’t change their plans.

Newlywed Maria toasts with friends during her wedding ceremony at a home, March 5, 2022, in Oak Park, Ill.

Newlywed Maria toasts with friends during her wedding ceremony at a home, March 5, 2022, in Oak Park, Ill.

The couple had planned to be married at a courthouse on March 5, a nod to Maria’s grandmother’s birthday.

After deciding they would try to reach Ukraine, they accepted the offer to hold a backyard celebration. They also asked people to purchase items needed by Ukrainian troops through an Amazon list that includes rain ponchos, medical supplies and boots rather than wedding gifts.

Maria said she’s not certain what she will have to do after arriving at the Polish border with Ukraine; friends who live near border crossings have told her it’s taking days to get through. Her parents also questioned her decision to volunteer, she said, because they don’t want to be worried about her safety on top of their own.

“If the army doesn’t take us, we’ll be as close as possible,” Maria said Wednesday. “There’s always a need for volunteers. I’m pretty strong, I’m not afraid of blood, I’m good under pressure.”

Natalia Blauvelt, a Chicago immigration attorney who has assisted dozens of clients trying to help family leave Ukraine and Russia in recent weeks, said she hasn’t heard of others seeking to get into Ukraine in order to join the country’s defense.

But she advised that anyone considering it contact the Ukrainian Embassy in the U.S. and speak with an immigration attorney to talk through plans for returning to the U.S.

The already challenging path to bringing home Americans jailed in Russia and Ukraine is likely even more complicated now with a war overwhelming the region and increasingly hostile relations between the United States and the Kremlin.

Marine veteran Trevor Reed and corporate security executive Paul Whelan are each serving lengthy prison sentences in Russia, but their families have long held out hope for some sort of deal — including a possible prisoner exchange — that could get their loved ones home.

Now, though, that seems a much harder ask.

“I can’t help but think that this is not going to help Trevor get released sooner, obviously,” Reed’s mother, Paula Reed, said in an interview with The Associated Press.

The war with Ukraine has not only occupied global attention, but it has also led to punishing economic sanctions by the U.S. and escalating Russian aggression in the face of international condemnation over its invasion. Though the conflict has not closed off avenues for bringing home Reed and Whelan, the prospect of concessions by either side anytime soon is eclipsed by the likelihood of continued antagonism by Russia.

“If this becomes long and drawn out, and they take over Ukraine, then the Western countries and the United States are going to be at odds with Russia for a long time,” said Reed’s father, Joey Reed. “That could lead to additional charges against our son, if he lives, and keep him there indefinitely, which is not uncommon in Russia.”

He said he was particularly concerned about a loss of communications between the two superpowers that could foreclose any possibility of the U.S. government getting him home.

“We’ve been told that even during the Cold War, they kept channels open. Even Kennedy was able to talk to Khrushchev during the Cuban missile crisis,” Reed said. “Anyone that’s advocating for closing embassies and cutting them off, that’s a gigantic mistake when two major nuclear powers are not speaking and are at odds with each other.”

State Department principal deputy press spokeswoman Jalina Porter, asked by the AP Thursday about how the war affected the cases of all three men, said only that the administration’s top priority is the “safety and security of all Americans,” including Reed and Whelan.

“This is something that the secretary works on day in and day out,” she said.

FILE - Joey and Paula Reed pose for a photo with a portrait of their son Marine veteran and Russian prisoner Trevor Reed at their home in Fort Worth, Texas, Feb. 15, 2022.

FILE – Joey and Paula Reed pose for a photo with a portrait of their son Marine veteran and Russian prisoner Trevor Reed at their home in Fort Worth, Texas, Feb. 15, 2022.

Reed, who is from Texas, was sentenced to nine years in prison in 2020 on charges that he assaulted police officers who were driving him to a police station after picking him up following a night of heavy drinking at a party. He has struggled with health issues behind bars, most recently coughing up blood this week, his father said.

He is regarded by the U.S. government as a wrongful detainee, as is Whelan, a Michigan corporate security executive sentenced in 2020 to 16 years in prison on espionage-related charges that his family says are entirely bogus.

Whelan’s sister, Elizabeth, said she’s been “doom-scrolling” news about the war on Twitter like everyone else, concerned about the impact of the war on her brother and the possibility of another “Iron Curtain” falling in the region.

She said the U.S. could use the conflict as a fresh opportunity to press for the release of Reed and Whelan by making it a condition of any lifting of the sanctions against Russia, though it is not clear that that would happen.

“I can’t imagine that all of these oligarchs whose families are now being affected, whose assets and goods are now being affected, wouldn’t consider the release of Paul and Trevor a very small price to pay in order to get some relief themselves,” Whelan said.

Ukraine, meanwhile, is holding North Dakota farmer Kurt Groszhans, accused in a plot to assassinate a current member of the country’s political cabinet. His family and supporters say the charges are trumped up, and were designed to silence Groszhan’s own allegations of government corruption in Ukraine.

Kristi Magnusson, Groszhan’s sister, said in a statement provided to AP that she was concerned that the State Department was not “advocating for his release because it would be inferring that Ukraine is engaged in corrupt activities right at a time when State is focused on being as supportive as possible of Ukraine against the Russians.

“We support the Ukrainian people against Russia as well, but our brother is a sitting duck in that prison and we need him to be released so at least he can try to survive on his own,” she added.

Unlike Reed and Whelan, the U.S. has not designated Groszhans as a wrongful detainee.

President Joe Biden comes to his first State of the Union address Tuesday night with tough words for his autocratic adversaries and a balm for his beleaguered population, battered by a grueling pandemic, rising prices and bitter political divides.

The escalating conflict between Russia and Ukraine, the tireless pandemic and as always, the economy, are likely to dominate Biden’s first run at this constitutionally mandated address. He had previously addressed a joint session of Congress, but this is his first State of the Union speech.

The White House says he plans to mince no words against belligerent leaders such as Russian President Vladimir Putin, who last week ordered an invasion of neighboring Ukraine.

“Throughout our history, we’ve learned this lesson — when dictators do not pay a price for their aggression, they cause more chaos,” reads an excerpt provided by the White House Tuesday evening. “They keep moving. And the costs and threats to America and the world keep rising.”

The evolving crisis in Ukraine has overshadowed much of the speech preparations, with Biden being compelled to deliver three speeches on the U.S. reaction to the conflict. The U.S. and NATO allies have leveled several rounds of bruising sanctions at Russia and at Putin personally, but he remains undeterred.

The White House also announced that Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s ambassador to the United States, will join first lady Jill Biden in her viewing box. Earlier this week, the first lady wore a face mask bearing the image of a sunflower, Ukraine’s national flower.

In the past week, Biden has repeatedly addressed the escalating crisis in Ukraine. But in his own deeply politically divided nation, he has been met with a frosty reception when talking about what he describes as the greatest threat to global security since World War II.

Biden’s fiercest American critics have also spared no words in lobbing critiques at him, with former President Donald Trump on Tuesday saying that “there should be no war waging now in Ukraine, and it is terrible for humanity that Biden, NATO and the West have failed so terribly in allowing it to start.”

Biden’s speech will be followed by the Republican Party’s response, delivered by Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds.

‘Building a better America’

On the economy, administration officials say Biden will focus on four steps he plans to take: increasing manufacturing in the U.S. and strengthening supply chains; working to bring down prices of goods; promoting fair competition in order to protect small businesses; and eliminating barriers to well-paying jobs.

In the White House preview of the speech, Biden shares his economic vision for the country.

“I have a better plan to fight inflation. Lower your costs, not your wages. Make more cars and semiconductors in America. More infrastructure and innovation in America. More goods moving faster and cheaper in America. More jobs where you can earn a good living in America. And instead of relying on foreign supply chains — let’s make it in America. Economists call it ‘increasing the productive capacity of our economy.’ I call it building a better America.”

This speech is usually a showcase for some pomp and reflection on what it means to be American. This year is no different. The first lady will be joined in her box by eight guests who the White House says were selected “because they represent policies or themes to be addressed by the president in his speech.”

They include Americans who represent union labor, parents attending college, the health care workforce, technological innovators, military families, Indigenous Americans, and the future of America.

The youngest among them is 13-year-old Joshua Davis of Midlothian, Virginia, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes as a baby. At the age 4, he advocated for the Virginia General Assembly to pass a bill making school safer for children with Type 1 diabetes.

Tuesday, March 01, 2022

They never imagined that the Manzanares Police would also be dream builders.

Guided by a true vocation for service, uniformed men from the Manzanares Police Station, decided to rebuild the house, with the collaboration of the community and merchants.

The dream of the family of Luz Marina Sánchez began to come true 2 months ago, when the Police of the quadrant in their daily patrols and in that door to door through the Lombo de Manzanares neighborhood, observed these people living in a house of ephemeral conditions , where 6 people live, doña Luz, her husband, two children and two grandchildren.

Thus, Lieutenant Jaiver Hernández Ramírez with his work team made up of Mayor Mauricio Ochoa Rodríguez and Patrolman Dubian Palacio Tabarez, took the initiative to carry out a large donation in the municipality, in order to knock on the doors of solidarity of its inhabitants and merchants.

The response was not long in coming, one by one the aid arrived, the policemen took turns putting on work overalls, as the days went by the uniformed men received more primary elements such as wood, iron, bricks, cement among other materials, In this way, little by little, the new house of Luz Marina and her family was reflected.

The knowledge as master builders of the uniformed men helped significantly in the construction of the house. Without neglecting the tasks of surveillance and control, they contribute with their free time, they stopped sharing with their families to help in the erection of the beams, columns and walls.

This Manzanareña now has a decent place to live, in the company of her husband, her two children and two grandchildren, her house of 60 square meters, has 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bathroom and large windows where she appreciates life with a future and hope, grateful to God and the supportive hand of the National Police, who accompanied her for the well-being of her entire family.

The Colombian National Police will continue working alongside its community, linking directly to the creation of projects that allow citizens to improve their quality of life.

#ItsAnHonorToBePolice

close


close

Itent of asault

Moment when two of the criminals approach the home.

Photo:

Security camera

Moment when two of the criminals approach the home.

The criminals intimidated him with a firearm to steal his motorcycle and even fired shots.

A young homemaker was about to be injured by criminals who attacked him in an untimely manner on a street in the Limonar neighborhood, in commune 6 of Neiva, Huila.

A video recorded the moments of anguish of the householder who was traveling by motorcycle to deliver an order but was shot at by criminals who were traveling on two motorcycles without license plates.

Seeing himself in danger, the boy abandoned his motorcycle to run fast down a street and at that moment he was chased by two of his attackers, who at the same time shot him with firearms.

After making this young man flee, one of the thieves boarded the motorcycle to steal it, since that would be the object of the assault, but -instantly- he gave up his idea of ​​stealing it and threw it to the ground.

Finally, The 4 criminals fled on their motorcycles without any clues to their whereabouts or identities being known so far.

Inhabitants of this neighborhood pointed out that in the flight the criminals fired several shots to intimidate onlookers. The homeowner was unharmed.

More content from Colombia:

Jail for man who beat his partner because he dreamed he had a lover

Aircraft crashes at the Ernesto Cortissoz airport in Barranquilla

keep going down
to find more content

The cyclist Egan Bernal was released from a clinic in Colombia where he was hospitalized for several weeks after he suffered a serious accident in which his life was compromised.

The Colombian “beetle” had to undergo several surgeries to treat the multiple fractures caused by the strong impact it had against an inter-municipal bus on the highway that leads from Bogotá to the city of Tunja.

The general director of the La Sabana Clinic, Juan Guillermo Ortiz Martínez, reported that the athlete is in the third phase of the trauma and is ready to start the rehabilitation process.

Egan Bernal was discharged
Egan Bernal was discharged after undergoing several surgeries. Photo: La Sabana University Clinic.

“Today, on the day of his discharge, we want to recognize his courage, strength and joy, we wish him the best success in his rehabilitation. Likewise, we want to recognize our interdisciplinary medical team for their great teamwork,” explained Ortiz.

For his part, Egan Bernal was very grateful to the medical team that treated himHe gave and did everything possible to treat the serious injuries that this accident left him.

“If it weren’t for you, the story would be different. So I want to thank you for allowing me to have a second chance,” Bernal explained.

Reveal video of the accident

The RCN News portal revealed an unpublished video of the accident where it can be seen that Egan Bernal was advancing at high speed and abruptly colliding with the inter-municipal bus that was parked on the road.

In this way, the images would show that the cyclist would not have realized that the vehicle was stopped due to the position he had on his time trial bike in which he was traveling at more than 60 kilometers per hour.

The young Colombian was preparing his 2022 season with the aim of participating in the Tour de France and other European races with his British team INEOS Grenadiers.

In the accident, the athlete suffered fractures in some vertebrae, in the femur, the right patella and several ribs. He also had a perforation in one of his lungs and had to undergo surgery on his spine several times.

In this way, the current champion of the Giro d’Italia and winner of the Tour de France will now have to start a long rehabilitation process due to the seriousness of his injuries.

See also: “I could have been paraplegic”: Egan Bernal speaks for the first time after his serious accident

After this serious accident, it is unknown if Egan Bernal will be able to run this season. Doctors and relatives have assured that at this time the important thing is that the successful cyclist is recovering; since his life was compromised with this shock.

The cyclist’s followers have sent him hundreds of messages of support on networks; and they also hope that he will recover satisfactorily so that he can practice the sport that he is passionate about and that has given Colombia so much joy.

We invite you to follow our Facebook accountwhere you will find more news like this.

It may interest you:

Dogs on boards, chickens in arms and bird cages on the ground were some of the images that were seen on a par with the rescue of survivors of the landslide that leaves 16 people dead in Pereira. Now, everyone is looking for a home, because some lost it and others are still unclaimed.

During the tragedy, pets have had their own rescuers and receive care in various parts of the city. One of them is the Acción Animal clinic, which is donating veterinary care, but asks for donations of supplies and food to continue serving them.

Several channels have been arranged to receive donations, other foundations have also offered themselves as foster homes, but the general call is for adoption.

A mobile from the Ukumarí Biopark also moved to the scene of the tragedy, who treated various animals on the spot and took others to their facilities.

Sandra Milena Correa, the manager of Ukumarí reported that since yesterday they have been caring for 150 animals that arrived at the place.

Sliding in Pereira

Dosquebradas Firefighters rescued dozens of animals during the emergency.

Photo:

Dosquebradas firefighters

There are 110 birds such as chickens, ducks, birds and 23 dogs and cats. We know that many have owners, that is why we will publish the photos on social networks so that they can look for them and have them back.

“There are 110 birds such as chickens, ducks, birds and 23 dogs and cats. We know that many have owners, so we will publish the photos on the website and social networks so that they can look for them and have them back,” he said.

For her part, the social manager of Pereira, Ángela Aguirre, said that there are many other animals ready to adopt, since they were homeless or their families died.

We invite all Pereirans to adopt, because if they do, they open space for other animals to be cared for.“, he added.

More content from Colombia:

The voices that warned of the Pereira tragedy and were not heard

Australian citizen was murdered at his home in San Agustín, Huila

The success of the Colombian telenovela ‘Yo soy Betty, la fea’ has transcended from generation to generation, has been broadcast several times by the RCN channel and is part of the catalog of productions offered by Netflix.

Its iconic characters managed to stand out thanks to its funny characteristics and are still remembered by many people, despite the fact that it premiered for the first time on Colombian television more than 20 years ago.

Dora Cadavid is one of the most remembered and beloved actresses after she gave life to ‘Inesita’; who was the seamstress in the workshop of ‘Hugo Lombardi’ in the telenovela by Fernando Gaitán.

After the success of ‘Yo soy Betty, la fea’, Cadavid had several roles in different Colombian television productions, such as ‘No one lives here’ or ‘I’m going to teach you to love’.

Photo: RCN Television.

Dora Cadavid walked away from the screen in 2017

Her acting career lasted until 2017 and since then viewers have not heard from her; until her family confirmed her death on January 31, 2022.

The news generated great sadness in the artistic world, since Dora Cadavid had become an icon of national television for the remembered roles she played throughout her life.

Cadavid’s career began in the middle of the 20th century where she stood out as an announcer on a station in Antioquia. After a few years, she arrived in Bogotá where she began her career in the acting world, playing her first roles in plays.

In 1954 he appeared in his first novel called ‘Espectros’ and since then he has participated in more than 40 productions such as ‘Rasputin’, ‘Señora Bonita’, ‘Romeo y buseta’, ‘Café con aroma de mujer’ and ‘Yo soy Betty, la ugly’; where she made her most beloved and remembered character by viewers.

Dora Cadavid went to live in a nursing home after the death of her son

Dora Cadavid
Dora Cadavid with Estefanía Gómez, Luces Velásquez and Marcela Posada. Photo: Instagram/ marcelaposada10

After the death of her son, also an actor Moisés Cadavid, Dora was under the care of her nieces and daughter-in-law; however, she felt that she would eventually become a burden to them.

“We were living in La Calera and then we began to travel throughout Colombia and when we reached a final destination, I think it was Cúcuta, I told them that I no longer wanted to continue traveling. My nieces were very worried that I lived alone. You know that one with age should not be alone anywhere and I do not want to be a burden to anyone “; she told the actress a while ago during an interview with Channel 1.

“Then they, very intelligently, looked for a place where I would be comfortable and here they found me. I cannot sacrifice her life to a daughter-in-law and a granddaughter with me”, added Dora.

You may also be interested in: Television is in mourning: Dora Cadavid, ‘Inesita’ in ‘Betty, la fea’, died at the age of 84

Since then, the emblematic Colombian actress spent her days in a nursing home where she assured that she felt happy and cared for.

Ugly Betty
Dora Cadavid with the Colombian presenter Iván Lalinde. Photo: Instagram/ marcelaposada10

Cadavid, in said interview, affirmed that he has a lot of respect for death and asks God to “reach him” when she is asleep.

“It’s not that I don’t fear him, I have a lot of respect for him. And I ask God that when he gives it to me, he gives it to me asleep and I don’t realize it, because maybe I’ll give him half back”; Dora Cadavid told at that time.

Precisely, Dora Cadavid died at the age of 84 and, despite the fact that she was away from the small screen, viewers will always remember her for her roles in productions that entertained and marked several generations in the country.

We invite you to read more articles of interest through Google news.

It may interest you:

close


close

assassinated social leader

Víctor Manuel Pacheco, social leader murdered in Fortul, Arauca.

Víctor Manuel Pacheco, social leader murdered in Fortul, Arauca.

The first versions suggest that the president of the JAC of Brucelas was shot in his house.

Victor Pachecopresident of the Community Action Board of the Brucelas district, in Fortul, Araucawas killed -apparently- by criminals who came to his house and shot him multiple times.

The Fortul Mayor’s Office issued a message of condolences to Pacheco’s family and expressed its rejection of this act of violence that once again mourns the municipality and the entire border department.

The victim was known in the village as ‘El Mocho’, and had left the region since the armed confrontation began, but a few days ago he had returned to his farm, where armed men arrived and killed him with several gunshot wounds. of fire.

With the murder of Pacheco and according to figures from Indepaz, so far in 2022, 18 social leaders have been murdered in Colombia, Arauca and Cauca have been the departments where the most leaders have been murdered in just one month and three days.

News in development…

keep going down
to find more content

The authorities and security agencies are investigating the murder of the president of the Córdoba Municipal Council, Julio César Bravo, which occurred on Tuesday night in a rural area of ​​that jurisdiction located south of Nariño.

The Municipal Mayor’s Office confirmed the unfortunate event by informing the entire community of that municipality that “there really are no words to describe the loss of a great community leader. The only thing that consoles the soul is keeping in our memory the model of their struggles and good deeds that were shared and admired in life”.

(Also read: What is known about the ‘narcobus’ that transported 212 kilos of cocaine)

The Secretary of the Government of Córdoba, Armando Cuarán, repudiated and lamented the councilman’s crime, whom he recognized for his leadership and community work, for which he had earned the appreciation and admiration of a large sector of the population.

He pointed out that this morning the authorities were summoned to an extraordinary security council, in order to analyze the possible causes surrounding the incident, as well as to adopt the security measures that are going to be implemented in that locality. from the Department.

councilman murdered

Julio César Bravo, murdered councilman.

As far as I am concerned, I do not have further details of the motives for his death, so far we do not know the circumstances of the event. He was shot in his room“, indicated the official and said that the author or authors of the murder that mourns that Nariñense town that has historically been characterized by having a very calm and peaceful community is still unknown.

(Also read: In a Cali neighborhood they cry and cry out for justice for the death of the cat Emma)

The event would have been recorded around 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday at the Guitungal villagedistant about 15 minutes from the municipal seat.

Bravo had been elected as a councilor for the AICO movement and in recent months he had worked with the municipal administration to move forward with the construction project for the aqueduct treatment plant, as well as the improvement of the road that leads to the municipalities. Potosí and Puerres, south of Nariño.

The crime is recorded when the political debate for the election of Congress and President of the Republic advances in the department.

MAURICIO OF THE ROSE
PASTURE

A diagnosis of dementia has a great impact on the family. After receiving it, it is important to learn to care for both the affected family member and oneself

How to act when dementia reaches the family circle?

A health worker with a mask holds the hand of a resident of an Alzheimer’s home in Pitkovice, Czech Republic. EFE/EPA/MARTIN DIVISEK

Some 50 million people live with a diagnosis of dementia in the world and every year about 10 million new cases are registered, underlines the World Health Organization (WHO). In fact, this entity forecasts that there will be 82 million people with dementia in 2030 and 152 million in 2050.

It is the elderly who mainly suffer from dementia. However, it is not an inevitable consequence of aging because “many older adults live their entire lives without presenting dementia”, emphasize specialists from the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Alzheimer’s, the most common dementia

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia diagnosis, accounting for 60-70% of cases. However, there are more types of dementia such as vascular dementia or Lewy body dementia, among others.

“Dementia affects memory, thinking, orientation, comprehension, calculation, learning ability, language and judgment. Impairment of cognitive function is often accompanied, and sometimes preceded, by impairment of emotional control, social behavior, or motivation.

World Health Organization

In this sense, it specifies that the first symptoms are usually the tendency to forget things, the loss of the notion of time and spatial dislocation, even in familiar places.

Nicolasa Santiago, a 74-year-old Zapotec indigenous woman who suffers from Alzheimer’s. EFE/ Daniel Ricardez

Nowadays There is no treatment that can cure dementia or reverse its progression. However, there are different interventions to facilitate the day-to-day life of people with dementia, which is why it is important to diagnose it early.

“Receiving a diagnosis of dementia is news that causes a great impact on the affected family. A wide variety of emotions and reactions can arise; Among the first, there is usually concern and insecurity due to ignorance of the new situation that arises. There may also be feelings of anguish at the thought that they will not be able to cope,” he says. Beatriz Canseco de la Rosa, psychologist at Accountants Room Center.

“On some occasions, especially when there is an early diagnosis, confusion and confusion appear, and they even minimize the symptoms and deny the seriousness of the problem. On the other hand, in others, the family feels calm when putting a name to what happens to their relative”.

Add the psychologist.

The specialist emphasizes that in order to assume the diagnosis it is necessary to know the disease. This involves learning about your symptoms and how they are progressing.

“It can be very helpful to contact people who are going through the same situation, as well as going to an association to learn strategies that help manage daily situations in relation to living together and caring for the affected family member,” he says.

Changes in routines, roles and some tips

Likewise, Canseco emphasizes that the new situation implies changes in routines, roles and functions within the family environment.

“The family will have to face the changes and alterations in the behavior and reactions of the affected loved one, in addition to modifying the care and communication guidelines throughout the process.”

Expresses the expert Canseco de la Rosa.

In this sense, the psychologist reminds that the progressive evolution of the disease will worsen the symptoms and the person will require more attention and dedication.

As he explains, for the family, “The most difficult changes to accept are those related to behavior and personality, as well as delusional reactions and behaviors due to episodes of memory loss. In addition, it is difficult to face that the family member will lose their faculties and abilities, ceasing to be themselves”, he adds.

old people in the park diagnosed dementia
Stock image of old people in a park. EFE/JL Cereijido

For all this, the psychologist offers some advice for caregivers of a person diagnosed with dementia.

1. Try to preserve the autonomy of the affected person in the activities that he is still capable of carrying out on his own.

“You have to adapt the necessary help to their limitations and avoid overprotective attitudes. For this, it is beneficial to establish a daily routine, simplify the instructions and enable the spaces”, he points out.

2. Stimulate the person with dementia with cognitive and leisure activities that are within their reach.

3. Involve the affected family member in the conversations and keep them informed of events to avoid isolation and disconnection with the environment.

“You must not speak for him or speak of him as if he were not present,” he warns.

4. Family members must adopt a flexible, patient and warm attitude towards the affected person.

“When they address the patient, they should use simple language with short sentences and easy-to-understand questions. They have to repeat the information with the same words and make use of non-verbal communication”, he details.

5. In addition, it is very important that family members know how to take care of themselves.

To do this, the expert recalls that there must be unity and cooperation between them.

“They have to be able to ask for help, seek support or delegate some functions among family members. It is necessary that they give themselves time, take care of their rest and preserve their social relationships”.

Concludes Beatriz Canseco de la Rosa.

Fourth-generation corn and soybean farmer Jeff Frank doesn’t feel rich, but simply based on the skyrocketing value of his land in northwest Iowa, it’s an apt way to describe him, even if he laughs at the idea.

He lives in the same nearly century-old house, grows veggies in the family garden and shops at the same grocery store about 15 miles (24 kilometers) down the road. “We live the same way we have all of our lives,” he said.

Still, even if Frank’s life hasn’t changed, the several hundred acres he owns about 80 miles (129 kilometers) northwest of Des Moines have suddenly made him worth millions of dollars.

It may come as a surprise to city dwellers excited by their home values that countless farmers like Frank are actually experiencing a real estate boom that makes residential prices pale in comparison. While median existing-home prices rose by 15.8% in the U.S. last year, farmland values went up about double that rate in places like Iowa.

“I’m definitely surprised by the magnitude,” said Wendong Zhang, an economist at Iowa State University who oversees an annual farmland value survey.

The rising values, especially in the Midwest, are due to high prices being paid for the key commodity crops of corn and soybeans, plentiful harvests in recent years coupled with low interest rates and optimism the good times will continue.

But they’re a mixed blessing. They’re enriching farmers who already have a lot of land, but making it much harder for small operators or younger farmers starting out to get land unless they happen to inherit it.

Most purchases are by operations that see the value of larger scale, seizing the chance to buy nearby land.

“If you miss this opportunity, you may not get another chance,” Zhang said, describing the current mood.

As for consumers, higher land costs typically don’t affect grocery prices.

Historically, farmland values rise and fall, but in the past couple decades they have mostly risen, and in the past year they have risen a lot — 33% in Frank’s part of the state and 29% throughout Iowa, one of the nation’s top agricultural states. Agricultural prices also have soared elsewhere in the Midwest and have climbed in most other parts of the country, too.

Federal Reserve Banks in Chicago and Kansas City reported double-digit increases in Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Missouri and Nebraska.

In Iowa, average farmland has risen from $7,559 an acre in 2020 to $9,751 an acre in 2021.

Nationally, farmland was up an average of 7% but that doesn’t include the last half of 2021, when prices really took off in many areas.

Farmland prices have even climbed in California despite concerns about persistent drought. In 2021, the average prices of $10,900 an acre was up 9% from 2020.

The land purchases augment an existing national trend of more agricultural production coming from ever-larger farms.

Dan Sumner, an agricultural economist at the University of California-Davis, credits some of the rising value in switching to higher-value crops, such as replacing alfalfa with nut trees.

Overall, though, Sumner said farmers are feeling good about their future.

“It reflects confidence in the economics of agriculture,” he said.

The upswing follows tumultuous years of trade wars, market breakdowns due to the coronavirus pandemic and drought in much of the West.

For individual farmers, the biggest benefit of rising values is that they can borrow money at better rates for annual needs like seed and fertilizer and longer-term investments like tractors and even more land.

The high prices have prompted plenty of people to buy and sell land, leading to a record of $765 million in agricultural land sales last year overseen by Farmers National Company, one of the nation’s largest landowner services companies.

Randy Dickhut, a Farmers National real estate broker in Omaha, Nebraska, said a more typical year would see about $500 million in sales.

“It’s been very busy,” Dickhut said. “It’s certainly easy to sell.”

But Holly Rippon-Butler, who runs a dairy with her parents in upstate New York, called the farmland prices increases “just nuts.”

“The hard reality is, buying land is almost impossible unless you have some preexisting source of generational family wealth,” said Rippon-Butler, who works with the National Young Farmers Coalition, an organization the among other priorities advocates for policy changes and public funding that would enable more people to have access to land.

Given high land prices, Rippon-Butler said beginning farmers she encounters typically work as little as a quarter-acre of land and see 20 acres as a relatively large operation. Many farmers also rent land, and as values rise, so do rental rates.

Frank, the farmer in northwest Iowa, said that even though he’s technically wealthier now, it hard for him to expand his holdings as he prepares to pass along the property to the next generation.

“I have a son who farms with me and of course he’d like to expand but buying farmland right now is a big undertaking,” he said. “Even for a small farm you’re talking about millions of dollars.”

“China’s long arm is everywhere in its own society, and it’s now coming abroad,” said Li Gang, a former real estate developer in China’s central city of Wuhan.

Involved in planning disputes with local authorities, Li told VOA Mandarin that the Wuhan officials accused him of corruption and threatened him with prison.

The disputes, starting in 2002, lasted five years, and in 2009, Li moved to an undisclosed location in the United States with his family. In 2017, Chinese authorities formally charged him with corruption and inciting subversion of state power, a move that required him to return to China to stand trial.

Li refused. And once the charges had been filed, men claiming to be from the FBI showed up at his home. Li told VOA Mandarin in a 2020 interview that FBI officials had told him they had done no such thing.

Li is one target of Sky Net, Beijing’s global crackdown on Chinese officials suspected of corruption, financiers suspected of wrong dealings and citizens suspected of money laundering. Beijing launched Sky Net in 2015, and according to China’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the number of “voluntarily returned” people has increased annually, from 1,023 in 2015 to 1,229 in 2020.

A new report says Sky Net uses methods outside the international legal framework to identify and repatriate individuals targeted by Chinese authorities.

The report, titled Involuntary Returns: China’s Covert Operation to Force ‘Fugitives’ Overseas Back Home, was published Tuesday by Safeguard Defenders, a Madrid-based group focused on promoting human rights in Asia. Last year, the nongovernmental organization spoke out against China’s airing of forced confessions on TV.

‘Involuntary returns’

China claims that from 2014-21, more than 10,000 “fugitives” have “voluntarily returned” to China from 120 countries, according to the Safeguard Defenders report. In its Sky Net campaign, Beijing almost never uses formal legal procedures, such as requesting extradition.

“Instead, these involuntary returns (IR) account for the vast majority of Sky Net’s track record: in 2018, IR stood for some 64% of the claimed successful returns, while extradition — the appropriate judicial channel for such returns — represented but 1%,” the report said. As used in the report, the term “involuntary returns” refers to people who have been forced through nontraditional means to come back to China.

And although Sky Net’s official targets are businesspeople and officials suspected of economic crimes, the report said it found many cases of Beijing using extrajudicial tactics to repatriate dissidents and human rights defenders.

China’s tactics are like those used by the U.S. During the 1980s, U.S. officials “developed an alternative approach to circumvent the proper diplomatic channels” to accomplish renditions, according to the Human Rights Policy Lab at the University of North Carolina School of Law. After the 9/11 attacks, the practice transformed “into what is now referred to as the extraordinary rendition program,” which has drawn international condemnation.

Russia also operates a rendition program.

Preferred strategies

China favors three tactics: threatening family in China, targeting victims outside China by using threatening agents in the target’s country, and kidnapping the people it wants repatriated, according to Safeguard Defenders, whose report examined 62 cases of attempts, successful and unsuccessful, to engineer involuntary returns.

Chen Yen-Ting, an author of the report, told VOA Mandarin in a phone interview on Monday that these tactics might be carried out separately or together to pressure the targeted individual. “In some cases, the Chinese government sends agents to the host country and at the same time puts pressure on the targeted individual’s family in China,” he said.

The report cited the case of Xie Weidong, a onetime Supreme Court judge who resigned in 2000 and ended up in Canada in 2014, the year the Huanggang Municipal Public Security Bureau charged him with accepting a bribe of 1.4 million yuan ($221,000) to settle a 1999 civil case in favor of a particular company, according to a 2019 article by Canada’s National Post.

Xie claimed Beijing targeted him “when he failed to abide by government interventions in cases he heard. Then after leaving China he spoke out about problems in its legal system,” according to an Interpol ruling dismissing China’s request. The Post reported that Interpol found China’s request for Xie’s arrest was politically motivated.

To persuade Xie to return to China voluntarily, Chinese police detained his sister and then his son, according to the Safeguard Defenders report. Chinese authorities also contacted his ex-wife and his former business partner, hoping to use them as leverage.

Li Jinjin, a New York-based lawyer who represents some targets of the Sky Net operation, told VOA Mandarin on Monday that the Chinese government often freezes the property in China of the target’s family members.

In other cases, Li said, Beijing will send its police or hire agents to visit an overseas target. Using promises or threats, their goal is to force the target to return to China.

In 2020, this tactic backfired when the U.S. Justice Department charged eight people with conspiring to act as illegal agents for the Chinese government and force U.S. residents to return to Beijing. These people were “allegedly acting at the direction and under the control of PRC (People’s Republic of China) government officials, conducted surveillance of and engaged in a campaign to harass, stalk, and coerce certain residents of the United States to return to the PRC,” the Justice Department said.

Safeguard Defenders expect China will intensify its Sky Net efforts in 2022 if the Western governments fail to act against Beijing, Chen told VOA Mandarin. “It will be a significant obstacle to legitimate judicial cooperation to counter cross-border crime,” he said.

The Chinese government has hailed Sky Net’s success. The Xinhua News Agency, a state-controlled news outlet, published on Saturday a piece saying that the operation was recovering people and stolen goods, even during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The legal net is vast, you can escape the country, but you can’t escape the law,” Xinhua said.

Li Gang decided to talk to the media to counter reports on Beijing-controlled outlets. “I used to be very fearful of the Chinese government’s retaliation, so I refused all media interviews before,” Li said told VOA Mandarin in 2020.

“But now I realize the more fearful I am, the more power they have on me,” he said. “So that’s why I decide to stand out and tell my story.”

top