Month: April 2019

Home / Month: April 2019

OTTAWA — Moments after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was praised for his support of Indigenous peoples’ self-governance on Tuesday, he urged a B.C. First Nation chief to “be careful about minimizing” reasons people may have in supporting the Trans Mountain pipeline.

Trudeau addressed hundreds of delegates at the Assembly of First Nations’ Special Chiefs Assembly, outlining progress his government has made in three years when the floor was open to chiefs to ask questions.

Chief Judy Wilson of the Neskonlith Indian Band in B.C. referred to a speech the prime minister delivered at the United Nations General Assembly last year, acknowledging the “humiliation” of Canada’s First Peoples. On that international stage, Trudeau reaffirmed his support for advancing Indigenous self-determination and self-governance.

She suggested, however, that the government’s purchase of a pipeline runs smack in the face of that support.

“When you’re talking about the United Nations and you’re going to go with the self-determination and the consent, why wasn’t that applied with the Trans Mountain pipeline that’s going through 513 kilometres of our territory?” Wilson asked.

“There was no consent.”

Trudeau responded that there are “lots of reasons” for people to take different sides of a debate. “And I think we should respect people’s choices to support or to not support different projects. And I don’t think we should be criticizing them just because they disagree with you, Judy.”

The prime minister defended the project, saying since a federal court quashed approvals related to the pipeline in August, the government has been “listening even more” during consultations.

Unanimity on the pipeline won’t ever be achieved, he said, using election results to explain his point.

“I am prime minister not because 100 per cent of people in the country voted for me — that’s what happens in North Korea,” he said, spurring laughter from the crowd.

“I am prime minister because we have a system that came through and asked me and offered me the job to serve as prime minister. That is how we move forward.”

Watch: Learn what’s driving Canada’s oil prices

The federal government announced in May its decision to buy the Trans Mountain pipeline and its core assets from energy giant Kinder Morgan Canada for $4.5 billion. Trudeau and federal ministers assured Canadians it was the only recourse to ensure construction of the contentious pipeline.

Conservatives have been hammering the government for being unable to get it built, so that Alberta’s oil can reach markets in Asia. Oversupply recently forced Alberta Premier Rachel Notley to slash raw crude and bitumen production by 8.7 per cent to mitigate a price crisis.

The oil-price crisis is partly fuelled by the lack of pipelines, Notley said Monday.

More from HuffPost Canada:

Northwest Territories Regional Chief Norman Yakeleya doesn’t think the government’s handling of the Trans Mountain pipeline will become an election issue — at least not in his region of the north.

Yakeleya is sympathetic to the prime minister for being, he said, in a “very difficult position” because he speaks strongly on the environment, land, water, and climate change, but is also balancing the interests of the oil and gas sector.

If there’s a government message that could have repercussions at the polls in the north, the Dene chief said, it won’t be about pipelines. It’ll be around the federal push to transition to greener economies.

“We’re used to driving Ford F-150s and F-250s, but they somehow want us to drive smaller vehicles,” Yakeleya told HuffPost Canada.

It doesn’t help that Indigenous communities won’t see the bulk of proceeds from fuel charges collected under the upcoming carbon pricing system, he added.

“Efficient energy projects cost millions, and we don’t have that. And you know who pays for it? It’s the community who pays for it.”

Pipelines and the oil price crisis have been added to next week’s First Ministers’ meeting after Notley and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe urged Trudeau to include the issues in the agenda.

The prime minister’s talks with Indigenous leaders will continue with representatives from the AFN, Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, and the Métis National Council who will also be attending the First Ministers’ meeting.

Tokyo has announced plans to halt government purchases of Huawei and ZTE network equipment, citing security issues. The claims come amid a brewing diplomatic row over the Huawei CEO detained by Canada at Washington’s request.

Japanese central government ministries and the Self-Defense Forces have reportedly received procurement guidelines that effectively ban the offices from buying telecommunications equipment, servers and personal computers from Chinese telecom giants. The new rules will come into effect in 2019, after a training period.

Dow plunges 700 points after Huawei exec’s arrest, fears grow over US-China trade relations

The decision was reportedly made after communication with the US on a wide range of issues, including cybersecurity, according to Japan’s chief government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga.

Later, Japanese media agency Kyodo News reported that the country’s big three telecom operators are planning to stop using network equipment from China’s Huawei and ZTE.

The ban came after Huawei’s expulsion from the US market followed by Washington’s allies, including Australia, New Zealand and Britain, making moves to restrict the Chinese telecom giants’ businesses. The restrictive measures were taken due to the company’s alleged ties to the Chinese government and concerns over spying.

Earlier this month, Canadian authorities arrested Meng Wanzhou, the global chief financial officer at Huawei Technologies, at the request of US authorities. The top executive faces possible extradition to the US for allegedly breaking a trade embargo with Iran.

China has never heard of any country having a security problem with Huawei, according to the Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang who called for equal conditions for Chinese companies abroad.

“Chinese enterprises operating in Japan under any circumstances cannot become a target for discrimination,” the spokesman said. “We demand that Japan provide Chinese corporations with transparent, equal and nondiscriminatory conditions.”

Huawei stock has plunged over 13 percent since Washington started using the Chinese corporation as a tool in a trade war against Beijing.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The NFCA has announced that its Division I membership has submitted a response to the NCAA on current early recruiting proposals in the legislative cycle. DI college softball coaches have asked for all recruiting contact to begin September 1 of a prospective student-athlete’s (“PSA”) junior year.

An Energetic Debate at Convention

Input from coaches associations was sought by the NCAA. The topic of early recruiting was vigorously discussed at the NFCA Convention in Las Vegas in December. An overwhelming consensus emerged from the Division I membership: early recruiting is not good for softball; we need to do something now. As University of Michigan head coach Carol Hutchins acknowledged, “we are spiraling in a poor direction.”

The NFCA DI coaches discussed multiple early recruiting proposals, which were introduced by the Student Athlete Experience Committee (“SAEC”), as well as the relatively recent “lacrosse proposal” which was passed by the NCAA in April 2017.

The Details of the SAEC Proposals

First, the initial point of focus at the DI softball caucus was the series of proposals brought forward by the SAEC. The SAEC is part of the relatively new NCAA governance structure, charged with overseeing NCAA bylaws that affect the student athlete intercollegiate experience. This group was also involved in the NCAA student time demands legislation that went into effect this year.

One SAEC proposal set a date for when unofficial visits could begin. These are visits to college campuses taken by a PSA and her family at their own cost. The SAEC identified that the first day of classes of a PSA’s sophomore year be used. Currently, no start date exists for unofficial visits. The SAEC also proposed that recruiting conversations at camps and clinics not take place until the opening day of classes of a PSA’s sophomore year.

The SAEC also suggested a change in date for official visits. These trips to campus are arranged for and paid for by an institution; PSAs are allowed to take a maximum of five official visits. The SAEC proposed official visits be moved from senior year to the opening day of classes of a PSA’s junior year. In theory, this could help shift the financial burden of recruiting visits from PSAs and their families to the institutions, by allowing official visits to take place earlier. Some question if this will actually be helpful for families if recruiting contact is allowed to begin in the sophomore year.

While the effort here is to attempt to slow down this process by pushing back moments of recruiting contact into the sophomore year; loopholes in the SAEC recommendation still exist. The SAEC did not address incoming telephone calls. This means that recruiting communication initiated by telephone from a PSA to a collegiate coach remains permissible at any point in time.

A Look at the Lacrosse Legislation

The approach taken by lacrosse differed from the SAEC proposal in that lacrosse legislation sets September 1 of junior year as the start date for all recruiting contact: unofficial visits, correspondence, telephone calls, and recruiting conversations at camps and clinics. The clean, streamlined legislation was well-received. Many in the lacrosse community cite the “bright line” for all recruiting contact at a later more appropriate age for PSAs as exactly what was needed to address the problem of early recruiting.

The Votes: Consensus for Change

The merits of all the proposals were debated, as well as what was in the best interest of softball. A straw poll (one vote per institution) was taken in the NFCA DI caucus and the results were overwhelming: 200-3 in favor of the lacrosse proposal, over the SAEC proposal, making September 1 of junior year the desired start date for all recruiting contact.

A follow-up survey was sent to all DI softball coaches in mid-December to capture the vote in writing. The rate of participation was an astounding 95%. The results were compelling: 80% support moving forward with September 1 of junior year as the beginning of recruiting contact for softball, with 84% of coaches favoring the structure of the lacrosse proposal over the SAEC proposal.

Coaches recognize that this change would be a major shift in softball recruiting, away from current trends with middle-schoolers verbally committing to colleges.

NCAA Action is Necessary

Everyone agrees that the only way any change will happen with early recruiting is with NCAA legislation. Outreach efforts from the NFCA to the NCAA SAEC and DI Council members began immediately after the Convention concluded.

NFCA President and University of Tennessee co-head coach Karen Weekly underscored the need for action, “The biggest problem facing college softball today is early recruiting, but it is not going to change unless the coaches and the NCAA work together to make it change.”

The DI softball coaches have built consensus around a solution to the problem of early recruiting and they have asked the NCAA to amend these SAEC proposals to include that all softball recruiting contact begin on September 1 of junior year.

What You Can Do

To express your support, please consider signing our NFCA petition to stop early recruiting. More information can be found HERE.

Thousands of people brave the freezing Russian winter and take a dip into the ice-cold water on Epiphany to cleanse their souls and, in some cases, snap really cool photos for Instagram.

Orthodox Christians celebrate the baptism of Jesus Christ on January 19 by diving into ice holes, which represent the Jordan River – a ritual which has been gaining popularity in Russia recently.

© Sputnik / Vladimir Astapkovich

It has become a whole industry in the country. Numerous consecrated ice holes, often shaped as a cross, are cut at rivers and ponds for the occasion. They’re equipped with special railing, warm changing rooms, and have rescuers working on site to make sure everything goes without complications for the faithful.

© Sputnik / Maxim Bogovid

Many Russians believe cold water treatment is good for the health, so people of all ages, including children, engage in the chilling ritual. Mid-January is not usually the time to wear a bikini in Russia, but Epiphany provides a unique exception for fashionistas.

© Sputnik / Vitaly Ankov

© Sputnik / Aleksandr Galperin
© Sputnik / Aleksandr Kryazhev

State officials, lawmakers, and celebrities have also joined in, with former ballet star Anastasia Volochkova, boxing champ-turned MP Nikolai Valuev, and others sharing videos of their ice-water dips on social media.

Think your friends would be interested?

In Williams Lake, B.C., you’re either a logger, mill worker, miner or rancher.

For Chris Wiggins, the choice was easy. Logging is just in his blood, he says.

“Logging has raised my family. It was logging that helped my grandpa bring up his family, and it’s been logging that’s helped my uncles raise their families, my dad’s family,” he says. “I never really looked down on it, so just got into it.”

He walks into the Tim Hortons in downtown Prince George in a slightly oversized army green hoodie and matching camouflage ball cap. Wiggins is a little intimidating from a distance. With weathered skin from 20 years working outside, his earrings and goatee make him look rough.

He says hello in a mellow voice, and though he’s six-foot-one, his warm demeanour makes him seem less imposing.

Wiggins, 39, is a fourth-generation forestry worker. His great-grandfather, both grandfathers, his dad and uncles have all worked as loggers or in the lumber mills in Williams Lake, located in B.C.’s Central Interior region.

He remembers spending weekends with his maternal grandfather working on the machines. Climbing the giant feller buncher like a jungle gym when he was five years old, he would pull branches from the giant harvester machine’s teeth and ride in the cab on his grandfather’s lap.

And though working in forestry is common in that part of the province, his experience and the changes he’s seen in the last 20 years are uncommon for someone his age.

He’s gone from horse logger to skidder driver. The former uses horses to pull or “skid” felled trees from where they are cut down to the area where they are collected. It’s a technique used in British Columbia logging operations that goes back to the 19th century.

Now Wiggins drives the machine that does the work a two-person, two-horse logging team used to do.

Automation has changed what it means to be a logger.

“I have kind of gone through the ages of logging in my career. Just going from old-school horse logging … then advancing into line skidders,” he says. “Now I’m on a grapple skidder doing full-blown clearcuts, moving way more wood than I would have ever imagined when I was doing horse logging.”

Most of the jobs Wiggins finds now are for clear-cutting operations. With giant machines and the latest technology, there’s less need for workers. Much less need for horses.

Many of the smaller family-owned horse logging businesses have closed down. They couldn’t compete with the commercial logging operations.

In the future, Wiggins knows even that job could change.

Replaced By A Robot, a website that analyzes how likely a job will be replaced by automation, predicts skidder drivers will eventually be displaced by machines.

Some operations are already phasing out his job. Instead of dragging all the felled logs to the landing, “forwarder” machines now cut and process wood on the spot, removing the middle step of skidding from where they’re felled, to the landing where they’re picked up and loaded onto logging trucks.

But Wiggins isn’t too worried about being replaced. When skidders are phased out, he can learn to operate another machine. But there will be a learning curve.

“I’ve always been up for getting more experience on other things,” he says. “I have just run skidder for 23 years and power saw. So now, for me to get on another machine, it’s pretty hard, just because I don’t have experience on them.”

The writing on the wall

Gary Amundsen, 62, is a third-generation forestry worker, and his son — in his late 30s — is carrying on the tradition as a logger. Amundsen started in the ’70s in Powell River after he dropped out of high school to support his family.

Like Williams Lake, Powell River is a forestry town: nearly everyone is a logger or works in a mill. Many others are fisherman.

Forestry still makes up the fibre of the town. And though loggers and mill workers are part of the same industry, there hasn’t always been much tenderness between the two groups.

When Amundsen was a child, and even into the late ’80s, the town was divided: logger versus mill worker. Loggers lived on the outskirts of town — the sticks — and mill workers lived in the core.

“That was always a bone of contention with bar fights … if you’re a logger and you’re talking about a mill worker, we call them ‘cake eaters,’ because their job is so easy they sit down and eat cake all day. As opposed to what loggers do, is bust your hump all day,” he says, laughing.

The divisions were even felt within his family when Amundsen married a town girl: “I kid you not: my mother detested my wife for many, many years because of that. My brothers wouldn’t speak to her because she was a town girl.”

But that all started to change when the economy of the B.C. Interior slowed down and the mills started to downsize in the late ’80s and early ’90s.

“The town started to be more integrated,” he says. “And low and behold — it was like the Hatfields and McCoys — they actually started to get along, the loggers and mill workers.”

Even Amundsen had to cross that line, though It wasn’t his first choice. He became a paramedic in the late ’80s in the off-season.

He saw “the writing on the wall” and he needed to diversify his skills as the industry started to automate and labourers were losing their jobs.

In many cases, what used to take three or four hand-fallers to do — chopping down trees with chainsaws — can now be done with one machine, the feller buncher, which is used in many logging companies. It cuts trees, lifts them and piles the cut logs. They were invented in the late ’60s, but because they were so expensive, it took years before many operations started using them.

The grapple yarder was a game changer, too. Once logs are cut, the grapple yarder pulls felled trees to a collection point on the road or a landing.

The introduction of these and other machines meant fewer workers were needed on the ground, and only handful were needed to operate from the cab of the machine.

In the ’70s, Amundsen worked with crews of eight people which might include: a yarding engineer, a chaser, a second loader, a rigging slinger, two chokermen, one hook tender, and one loaderman. Now, sometimes it’s a three-man crew.

Losing people to machines means losing some of the “art” of logging, he says. In the past, hook tenders had specialized knowledge — they would know six or seven different splices — something missing when trees are cut with such large machines today.

Amundsen says he thinks automation will continue to change the industry, but maybe not as drastically as what’s happened up until now.

“I think the big culture shift has already happened. That started to happen in the 1980s with grapple yarders coming in to replace things,” he says. “With the changes in technology and the machines, and the changing of equipment, absolutely it was the manpower that took the hit.”

Workers might have a chance if they broaden their skillset, he says. That’s why he became a “handyman,” someone who could do multiple jobs, or have multiple roles in one logging operation.

“In today’s market … you can’t just say ‘I’m a logger,’… you have to be diversified,” he says. “You have to be able to do many things in today’s world.”

A skeleton crew

Harvesting equipment, like the skidder Wiggins drives, is constantly changing and being made more efficient. More trees are cut down faster than ever, and companies are making more money — but fewer people are working on the ground.

Though major changes to the forestry industry have already happened, the industry is on the edge of “serious automation,” says John Innes, dean of the forestry faculty at the University of British Columbia.

“We already see driverless trucks used in mines and mining operations,” he said. “A lot of people are saying if they can work there, why can’t they work in the forest itself?”

Automation is coming to every area of forestry: from harvesting, to mills, to planning, surveying and forest management.

As technology progresses, the need for workers is reduced, but not eliminated. Fully-automated harvesting could happen soon — as much as is possible — says Innes, even within the next 10 years. Workers like Wiggins could be driving their machines remotely from home or from the office, and logging truck drivers could be replaced with driverless trucks. Foresters doing ground surveys could be replaced with drones. Tree planters could be replaced by airplanes dropping seedlings from the sky.

Mill jobs have been reduced to a skeleton crew, and they’ve nearly already become as automated as possible.

Steep slope logging, an area that has been safe from automation for years, has started seeing the creep of automation. More and more, harvesters are able to cut down trees on steeper slopes previously inaccessible by machine. That means fewer hand fallers are needed to access trees along the coast of B.C., work that is expensive and dangerous.

There will always be places inaccessible to machines, where workers are needed to fell trees by hand. But in some of the Interior regions — like the Cariboo, Chilcotin and Prince George areas — the terrain isn’t very rough at all. That’s where the majority of automation is most likely to happen.

The skills to pay the bills

The future of forestry won’t always mean fewer workers, but might mean jobs with different skill sets, like for in-demand professional foresters and forest technologists who work in planning and managing forest conservation and harvesting.

“It’s more likely to be changes in the expectations of what an individual will have to be able to do, and will be a lot more technical aspects, like (for professional foresters), using lasers, using drones, being able to interpret GIS maps, and so on — rather than the older skills of identifying trees and plants, and knowing how to cut a tree down and things like that,” says Innes.

For UBC’s professional forestry program, that means students are learning how to use more technology in the field. The industry is looking for graduates with an understanding of robotics, who know how to fix computers and understand programming.

UBC forestry professor Dominik Roeser says the demand for different skills is attracting new and younger people to the industry.

“These new machines, they’re high-tech, they have computers involved, they have very advanced decision support systems. Whereas before, you would just be walking up and down a slope, now you’re sitting in an air-conditioned cabin,” he says. “There are still some areas where you absolutely need fallers and hand fallers. It’s very complementary.”

“Those machines are not taking away jobs: the jobs are changing, and it makes the jobs safer in the future.”

Even though jobs have been lost in some areas: one in every four manufacturing jobs in B.C. is still in forestry.

Diversifying the industry

Few people see sawmills booming again, but Innes wouldn’t be surprised at new types of industries springing up.

“Companies that basically take wood that is coming out of the sawmill and do something with it, rather than sending it straight abroad to America or to the markets there,” Innes says. “I think a lot of people are talking about how particularly pulp mills may become bio-refineries producing a range of things other than just pulp.”

Aviation fuels, textiles, cellulose for pills, or wood-based materials replacing metal and plastic, biofuel: the forestry industry is looking at new ways to process and use wood, and so more jobs might still be created in these other areas.

There’s no doubt fewer forestry workers will have long careers like Gary Amundsen and Chris Wiggins as more jobs are phased out. But it’s unlikely they’ll all disappear overnight, or at least that’s what people like Wiggins are hoping for.

“There will always be logging, it’s just what it is. Doesn’t matter what people say or what we do, there’s always going to be a need for wood supplies or wood products of one sort or another,” he says.


This story is a part of HuffPost Canada’s The Nature of Work series, which looks at the impact of automation on Canada’s natural resources sector and what it may mean for the Canadian identity.

Related on HuffPost:

Click:gshock mods

A massive explosion that ripped across two lanes on a Russian highway was caused when a stray wheel forced the driver of a family car to swerve into the path of an oncoming truck.

Shocking dashcam footage of the crash near the Russian city of Voronezh, about 500 kilometers south of Moscow, depicts the cabin of a truck erupting into a ball of flames as it collides with a Ford Focus car.

The video of the harrowing incident, obtained from a passing motorist, reveals how a heavy goods vehicle appears to lose a wheel on M4 Don Highway. As the stray wheel careers across the road and rolls into the path of a Ford Focus, the car’s driver is forced to take action – with disastrous results.

READ MORE: Torn to shreds: Moment of horrifying car crash in central Moscow caught on camera (VIDEO)

The vehicle inadvertently swerves in the road and into the way of a truck coming in the opposite direction. As the car smashes into the left-hand side of the oncoming vehicle, the large cargo truck skids into the central reservation of the highway before bursting into a fireball.

Thursday’s incident follows another serious accident in the region last September, when four people died and 37 were injured as two buses collided.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – National Pro Fastpitch announced that Rosemont, Illinois, will be the host of the 2018 Championship Series. The Ballpark at Rosemont, home of the league’s longest running affiliate team, Chicago Bandits, will be the site of the Championship held Aug. 16-20.

The announcement marks the first time the Championship event will return to a team’s home venue since Rosemont hosted in 2013.

In addition to the venue, the NPF also announced a change in Championship Series format and qualification. In 2018, for the first time in League history, the Championship Series will feature only the top two finishers from regular season play. The two teams will face off in a best-of-five Championship Series to determine who will raise the Cowles Cup. This is a variance from year’s past where the postseason typically featured the top four finishers from regular season play.

“Our Championship Series is our hallmark event and we continue to try and create the best competitive and fan experience environment possible,” NPF commissioner Cheri Kempf said.  “This season we are trying something we haven’t done before in featuring the top two finishers in a best of five format. In addition to that, we are placing the event in an NPF team home venue that has proven to draw consistent crowds. We are looking forward to this event being the best ever in 2018.”

“The Village of Rosemont is so very excited to have the Championship Series return to the Stadium at the Ballpark at Rosemont in 2018,” Rosemont mayor Brad Stephens said. “We are already planning for the event and promise the teams and NPF fans it will be an experience to remember.”

Two of the five league teams participating in the 2018 season have captured the coveted Championship Series Cowles Cup – the Chicago Bandits with four titles (2008, 2011, 2015, 2016) and the USSSA Pride with three (2010, 2013, 2014).  Those seven combined titles represent over half the 13 awarded Cowles Cups.

As a result of the 2018 Winter Meetings held in January, league management committee representatives overturned a policy that forbade the Championship from being held in affiliate team venues, a policy voted into effect following the award of the Championship to Rosemont for 2012 and 2013. This recent policy change paved the way for the 2018 site award.

The Ballpark at Rosemont opened in 2011 and was built specifically as a home venue for a professional softball team.  Adjoining the Stadium is 140,000 square foot facility known as the Dome at the Ballpark. The combined facilities represent a state of the art venue that in addition to being the home location for the NPF’s Chicago Bandits, is host to tournaments, leagues and individual games for softball and baseball, volleyball, soccer, all sport practices and training.

Although Tuscaloosa, Alabama, holds the NPF Championship attendance record of 7,408, set in 2016, Rosemont owns the single day attendance of Day 3 and Day 4, 1,809 and 1,949 respectively, set in 2013.

The NPF Season will lead off on May 19, when the Aussie Spirit hosts the Beijing Shougang Eagles. The League will celebrate its 15th season in 2018.

— Courtesy of NPF

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia’s royal families will meet on Jan. 24 to pick a new king after Sultan Muhammad V abdicated unexpectedly after just two years on the throne, an official said Monday.

The 49-year-old ruler resigned Sunday as Malaysia’s 15th king, marking the first abdication in the nation’s history and cutting short his five-year term. No reason was given, but the move came after he reportedly married a 25-year-old former Russian beauty queen in November while on medical leave.

Keeper of the Ruler’s Seal, Syed Danial Syed Ahmad, said the Council of Rulers held a meeting Monday and set Jan. 24 to elect a new king. He said in a statement that the new king would be sworn in on Jan. 31.

Watch: Malaysia’s king abdicates. Story continues below.

The council comprises nine hereditary state rulers who take turns as Malaysia’s king for five-year terms. Malaysia is the only country in the world to have a rotational monarchy under a unique system maintained since the country’s independence from Britain in 1957.

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said earlier Monday that it was up to the Council of Rulers to pick the new king, but added that he hoped it would be done quickly.

During his first stint as prime minister for 22 years until his retirement in 2003, Mahathir pushed through constitutional amendments that stripped the sultans’ power to veto state and federal legislation, and curbed their legal immunity.

One of Malaysia’s youngest constitutional monarchs

The monarch’s role is largely ceremonial, since administrative power is vested in the prime minister and parliament. But the monarch is highly regarded, particularly among the ethnic Malay Muslim majority, as the supreme upholder of Islam and Malay tradition.

Still, some sultans have in recent years become more active in business and politics. Sultan Muhammad V delayed Mahathir’s swearing-in as prime minister after a historic election victory in May last year, and also delayed giving his consent to the appointment of a non-Muslim attorney general.

Sultan Muhammad V was installed as king in December 2016. He was one of Malaysia’s youngest constitutional monarchs and has a love for extreme sports.

Reports in Russian and British media and on social media featured photos of his wedding with a former Miss Moscow that reportedly took place in Moscow. Neither the sultan, the palace nor the government had officially confirmed the wedding.

Speculation that Sultan Muhammad V would step down emerged last week, shortly after he returned from a two-month leave, but Mahathir had said Friday that he was unaware of any abdication plans.

National police chief Mohamad Fuzi Harun warned the public Monday not to speculate on Sultan Muhammad V’s abdication. He was quoted as saying by local media that police had received several reports of provocative statements being made on social media and were investigating.

Next in line for the top job is Sultan Azlan Shah of central Pahang state, who was king from 1979 to 1984, but the 88-year-old is now unwell and didn’t attend Monday’s council meeting. Some observers said he can abdicate in favour of his son, who can become king.

After Pahang is the billionaire Sultan Ibrahim Ismail of southern Johor state, who is involved in business, owns a fleet of jets and loves Harley-Davidson motorcycles.

Russia’s state nuclear corporation Rosatom has no intention of abandoning its adventurous tours to the North Pole, especially since cruise tickets for the entire 2019 season have been snapped up.

“Initially, cruises became a good a way to support the Atomflot state enterprise, and help it to deploy its idle fleet of icebreakers,” said Maksim Kulinko, deputy head of the Northern Sea Route Administration and the head of Rosatom’s Department for Development of NSR and Coastal Territories.

“At the moment, the situation is radically changing, and it [cruise service] is currently not a top-priority goal. But we don’t want to abandon it,” Kulinko added.

Atomflot is a subsidiary of the Russia’s state-run Rosatom group. The Murmansk-based enterprise maintains the world’s only fleet of nuclear-powered icebreakers. The government started using the icebreakers for transporting tourists to the top-of-the-world in 1991.

The official stressed that Arctic cruises provided by the company are increasingly popular among foreigners. The voyages allow travelers to cross the Arctic Ocean on the world’s most powerful icebreaker, exploring the historic sites on Franz Josef Land.

According to Kulinko, the Russian Arctic fleet will get new icebreakers in the near future. This means some of the older icebreakers will be used for Arctic cruises. Over recent years, Arctic tourists have been carried to the North Pole by the world’s biggest nuclear-powered icebreaker ‘50 years of Victory’.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – North Georgia became the first NCAA program to reach the 50-win plateau and enters conference tournament play as the No. 1 program in this week’s NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll.

The NightHawks (53-2) swept a pair of Peach Belt twinbills, the first against then-No. 20 Georgia College, which clinched their fifth straight Peach Belt Conference regular season title. UNG earned 15 of a possible 16 first-place votes and 399 points.

Chico State and Colorado Mesa, who both clinched their league’s regular season titles, swept their final conference series to hold firm at No. 2 and No. 3, respectively. The Wildcats (47-3) swept San Francisco State to extend their winning streak to 22 games and finish with a 37-3 mark in the California Collegiate Athletic Association. The Mavericks (43-3) took all four games from CSU-Pueblo and will host the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference tournament this weekend.

North Alabama moved up one spot to No. 4, while Winona State entered the top five for the first time in 2018. The Lions (42-5) took two of three from Gulf South Conference (GSC) foe and then-No. 18 UAH and will be the top seed and host of the GSC Softball Championship. The Warriors (41-5) capped off their regular season with 11 straight wins, six last week, to earn their first Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference regular season title since 2007 and fourth overall.

Angelo State stood pat at No. 6, while Southern Arkansas dipped to No. 7. The Rambelles (45-7) clinched the Lone Star Conference (LSC) regular season and will host the LSC Tournament.  The Lady Muleriders (49-7) put forth a 2-2 showing at Southeastern Oklahoma State and dropped three of their last five contests. SAU ran away with the Great American Conference (GAC) regular season and will be the No. 1 seed at the GAC Tournament.

Palm Beach Atlantic (33-6) stood still at No. 8, while Grand Valley State inched up to No. 9 and West Texas A&M moved up to No. 10. The Sailfish (33-6) already clinched their NCAA bid with a Sunshine State Conference regular season title. The Lakers (35-7) and Lady Buffs (38-10) are the No. 1 and 2 seeds in the GLIAC and LSC tournaments, respectively.

Several NCAA postseason berths are on the line this weekend with conference tournament champions being crowned all over the country. The NCAA tournament field will be announced on Monday, May 7 at 10:00 a.m. ET on NCAA.com.

The 2018 NFCA Division II Top 25 Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regions. Records reflect games played through April 29, 2018.

 

2018 NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – May 2 (Week 11)

Rank

Team

Points

Record

Previous

1

North Georgia (15)

399

53-2

1

2

Chico State (1)

384

47-3

2

3

Colorado Mesa

369

43-3

3

4

North Alabama

336

42-5

5

5

Winona State

332

41-5

7

6

Angelo State

330

45-7

6

7

Southern Arkansas

304

49-7

4

8

Palm Beach Atlantic

289

33-6

8

9

Grand Valley State

262

35-7

10

10

West Texas A&M

240

38-10

12

11

Lenoir-Rhyne

238

42-8

9

12

Concordia Irvine

214

44-12

16

13

Texas A&M Commerce

200

38-8

13

14

Augustana

168

37-11

13

15

California Baptist

167

31-10

11

15

Tarleton State

167

46-8

15

17

UAH

138

34-14

18

18

Illinois Springfield

128

35-14

17

19

Dixie State

120

36-8

19

20

UC San Diego

95

34-15

21

21

Georgia College

85

35-13

20

22

Embry-Riddle

66

33-13

23

23

West Virginia Wesleyan

64

37-10

22

24

Saint Anselm

45

36-9-1

24

25

McKendree

20

37-14

25

New to Poll: None

Dropped Out: None

Receiving Votes: Valdosta State (19), Saint Leo (9), Minnesota Duluth (4), West Chester (4), Indianapolis (2), Coker (1), Colorado Christian (1).

The 2018 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regionals. Records reflect games played through April 29, 2018.