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A new mechanism to allow “legitimate trade” with Iran, which was set up by France, Germany, and the UK this week, doesn’t change anything for European companies, according to independent journalist Luc Rivet.

He told RT that European companies and others cannot feel confident that they could do business with Iran without being subject to US sanctions.

“I don’t know what companies will make use of that mechanism to sell to Iran,” he said, adding that it’s very dangerous for the companies if they are caught working in Iran.

Europe mentions that medical equipment could be sold through this way, says Rivet.

“Who produces this equipment? You think that Siemens will sell to Iran? Never, because they sell to America many other things as well… And Siemens is afraid of losing the American market.”

He explained that an “incredible number of companies” won’t have anything to do with Iran, including the banking sector, the oil and gas sector, and others.

Even small companies will hesitate to sell anything to Iran at risk of being caught, according to Rivet. They can do that through other channels, like via Turkey, he said.

The journalist added: “It’s much easier for Chinese and Russian companies to make deals with Iran. The Europeans are scared in an incredible way. The companies are afraid by ricochet of being in the eye of the storm with the Americans.”

“That’s very dangerous for European companies, he repeated, adding: “I don’t know anybody who will dare to go with this Instex system.”

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

TORONTO — A serial killer who preyed on men from Toronto’s gay village has pleaded guilty to eight counts of first-degree murder.

Bruce McArthur, who had been set to stand trial next year, entered the guilty plea during a hearing in a Toronto courtroom.

The 67-year-old self-employed landscaper was arrested in January 2018.

Police eventually charged him with first-degree murder in the deaths of Selim Esen, Andrew Kinsman, Majeed Kayhan, Dean Lisowick, Soroush Mahmudi, Skandaraj Navaratnam, Abdulbasir Faizi, and Kirushna Kanagaratnam.

The victims went missing from the gay village between 2010 and 2017.

The LGBTQ community had long said someone was targeting men who were vanishing from the city’s gay village.

Watch: ‘Mixed feelings’ after Bruce McArthur’s guilty plea. Story continues below.

In November 2012, police launched Project Houston to investigate the disappearances of 42-year-old Faizi, 40-year-old Navaratnam and 58-year-old Kayhan. They closed the probe in April 2014 after being unable to identify a suspect in their disappearances.

In the summer of 2017, police launched a separate investigation known as Project Prism into the disappearances of 49-year-old Kinsman and 44-year-old Esen. Within months, McArthur came on the police radar, according to court documents.

On Jan. 17, 2018, investigators uncovered evidence alleging McArthur was responsible for both Kinsman and Esen’s deaths, along with the deaths of other unidentified people.

The next day, police arrested McArthur at his apartment and charged him with the murders of Kinsman and Esen. They brought cadaver dogs the following day to a property nearby where McArthur, a self-employed landscaper, stored his equipment, court documents said.

Over the next three months, investigators made several grisly discoveries at the residential property in midtown Toronto, eventually finding the dismembered remains of seven men in large planters.

The remains of an eighth man were found in a large compost pile in a ravine behind the home, police said.

Partway through their investigation, police also made the rare decision to release a heavily edited photograph of a dead man in a bid to identify him. A month later they said the man in the photograph was Kanagaratnam.

Lead investigator Insp. Hank Idsinga said the McArthur probe was the largest forensic examination in the force’s history.

Forensic officers spent four months scouring McArthur’s apartment — they seized 1,800 exhibits and snapped more than 18,000 photographs of the scene. They also searched more than 100 properties where McArthur worked across the Toronto area.

The force’s cold case squad is currently investigating a series of homicides in the 1970s related to men with ties to the gay village, but Idsinga has said they’ve found nothing to link those to McArthur.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The musical chairs continued as North Georgia is the sixth consecutive new No. 1 in the 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll. The NightHawks (26-6) received 11 first-place votes and 393 points to return to the top spot, a ranking they held the final three weeks of the 2018 season.

UNG knocked off a pair of ranked teams – then-No. 21 Wingate, then-No. 2 West Florida – to start the week. They rolled into Peach Belt Conference play, sweeping UNC Pembroke and Francis Marion in a pair of league doubleheaders.

Central Oklahoma, which received the other five first-place votes, continued to rise, reaching No. 2 after a pair of Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association doubleheader sweeps of Lindenwood and Lincoln. The four triumphs extended the Bronchos (24-1) winning streak to 20 games, second longest in program history.

West Florida dipped one spot to No. 3 following a 5-2 week. The Argos (27-4) defeated then-No. 21 Wingate, Montevallo twice and then-No. 9 Valdosta State twice. No. 4 Chico State inched up one position with a 3-1 road record versus Cal State Dominguez Hills in California Collegiate Athletic Association play.

No. 5 Southern Arkansas, No. 6 West Texas A&M, No. 8 Grand Valley State and No. 10 University of Alabama in Huntsville all made positive jumps, while No. 7 Concordia Irvine and No. 9 Carson-Newman fell in the Top-10.

The Muleriders (22-6) bounced back with a four-game sweep at East Central in a Great American Conference series. The Lady Buffs (22-6) posted a 4-1 mark, winning two games at Metro State and two of three versus Lone Star Conference foe Texas A&M-Commerce. The Lakers (16-2) swept a doubleheader from then-No. 19 Cedarville, while the Chargers (22-7) went 3-1 in Gulf South Conference play. UAH finished off a sweep of Lee and then took two of three at West Georgia.

The seventh-ranked Eagles (19-3) fell from the No. 1 spot after a 4-2 week. CUI split four games against Hawai’i Pacific and posted two wins over Stanislaus State. The No. 9 Eagles (14-1) dropped their first game of the 2019 season, splitting at Queens (N.C.) in South Atlantic Conference play.

Joining the poll for the first time this season are No. 23 Lincoln Memorial and No. 24 Western Oregon. The Wolves (12-4) are joined at No.24 by Angelo State, making a return following one-week hiatus. The 23rd-ranked Lady Railsplitters have won 13 of their last 14 contest, which included a split with then-No. 20 Wingate over the weekend.

2019 NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – March 20 (Week 5)

Rank

School

Totals

2019 Record

Previous Week

1

North Georgia (11)

393

26-6

3

2

Central Oklahoma (5)

379

24-1

4

3

West Florida

367

27-4

2

4

Chico State

343

18-5

5

5

Southern Arkansas

324

22-6

6

6

West Texas A&M

315

22-6

8

7

Concordia Irvine

293

19-3

1

8

Grand Valley State

286

16-2

10

9

Carson-Newman

272

14-1

7

10

UAH

256

22-7

14

11

Texas A&M Kingsville

247

23-4

12

12

Florida Tech

220

23-7

11

13

Valdosta State

182

17-7

9

14

Texas A&M-Commerce

176

21-8

15

15

Wayne State University

174

17-4

16

16

UC San Diego

171

18-6

13

17

Augustana

159

16-4

18

18

Colorado Mesa

144

20-6

17

19

Southern New Hampshire

103

14-4

22

20

Indianapolis

84

19-7

24

21

Mississippi College

81

20-6

23

22

Winona State

48

13-3

25

23

Lincoln Memorial

43

23-5

NR

24

Angelo State

35

22-9

RV

24

Western Oregon

35

12-4

RV

 

New to Poll: No. 23 Lincoln Memorial, t-No. 24 Angelo State, t-No. 24 Western Oregon

Dropped Out:No. 19 Cedarville, t-No. 20 Wingate, t-No. 20 Cal State San Bernardino

Receiving Votes: Cedarville (33), Georgian Court (10), Tarleton State (10), Cal State San Bernardino (5), Ashland (3), Central Washington (1), Nova Southeastern (1).

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the NCAA’s eight regions. Records reflect games played through March 17.

The 2019 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 March 17, 2019.

One of the newest Russian airports, Platov International Airport in the city of Rostov-on-Don, has received the highest mark from the UK-based ranking organization Skytrax, becoming the first five-star Russian airport.

Getting five stars from Skytrax is considered the most prestigious international award for airports and airlines. After a recent audit of the terminal, the organization added Platov Airport to a list that includes only nine other airports from different countries.

Skytrax specialists visited the airport in January as regular passengers to see with their own eyes the work of the airport staff, how long the check-in queues are, and how the visitors are treated. They went through passport control and security checks, as well as visiting facilities inside the terminal.

© Facebook / Platov International Airport

“No airport in Russia has previously received a five-star Skytrax rating. Now the airport of Rostov-on-Don is on a par with the airports of Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore, Seoul and Munich,”said Evgeniy Chudnovskiy, director general of Airports of Regions Holding, which operates Platov. He also noted that such a high rating is a sort of a “challenge,” as all the transport hubs of the holding must fit the high service standards.

© Facebook / Platov International Airport

The airport opened its doors to passengers on December 7, 2017, as part of preparations for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, when the city was chosen to host some of the matches. The terminal, designed by the London-based bureau Twelve Architects, welcomed more than three million passengers last year.

Business lounge © Facebook / Platov International Airport

While Platov is the first to get the top Skytrax ranking, the agency previously certified three other Russian airports with a four-star rating – Koltsovo Airport in the Urals capital of Ekaterinburg, Kurumoch International Airport in Samara, as well as Kazan International Airport.

© Facebook / Platov International Airport

Meanwhile, Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport, which currently has just a three-star rating from Skytrax, also wants to climb higher on the list, with its Terminal B aspiring to get five stars. Last year, the deputy director of the airport told Vedomosti newspaper that the ranking organization was going to check Sheremetyevo, which had invested more than $7.6 million in order to meet Skytrax recommendations.

© Facebook / Platov International Airport

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

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Guiding Mount San Antonio College to a CCCAA State Championship, Rubilena Rojas and her staff have been named the 2018 NFCA Cal JC National Coaching Staff of the Year. Under the guidance of Rojas and assistant coaches- Jim Bollier, Jessica Vogel and Alex Mascarenas- the Mounties (41-7) earned their first state title with Rojas at the helm and fifth overall.

Mt. SAC won the South Coast-North regular season and posted a perfect 8-0 mark during its state playoff run. The Mounties swept Fullerton and Canyons in the Southern Region and Super Regional rounds to earn a spot in the state championship. The hosts and South No. 2 seed edged Ohlone, 2-1, in their opener and cruised past El Camino, 10-3 in their second contest.

A 5-1 triumph over Palomar put the Mt. SAC in the championship game where it would face the Comets again. Vicky Gutierrez’s three-run homer in the bottom of the sixth and two inning of shutout relief by Jessica Olvera lifted the Mounties over the Comets, 5-4, and to the 2018 title. The 41 victories marked the program’s third straight 40-win season and fourth overall under Rojas.

Regional winners this season were:

North – Sierra College

Head Coach: Darcie Brownell
Assistant Coaches: Cortney Magorian, Gabby Gonzalez, Craig Fuentes

Record: 38-9, 21-3 Big 8

Claimed the Big 8 Conference title and was ranked tied for third in the final regular season 3CFCA state rankings and second overall in the NorCal poll… Swept West Valley and College of the Sequoias in the Northern Regional and Super Regional rounds to reach the CCCAA State Championship… Finished 1-2 at the state tournament earning a first-round win over defending champion Cypress… Most wins since 43 in 2014.

South – Bakersfield College

Head Coach: Casey Goodman
Assistant Coach: Megan Rowe

Record: 33-11, 13-1 Western State-North

Ranked tied for third in the final regular season 3CFCA state rankings and second overall in the SoCal poll… Won the Western State-North regular season… Entered the Northern Regionals as the six seed and swept Riverside City to advance to Super Regionals… Fell to 2017 national champions Cypress College in the supers… Head coach Casey Goodman was named Southern California Coach of the Year… Kylee Fahy was the Western State Conference North Pitcher of the Year and was one of eight all-conference selections.

Canadian farmers will continue using glyphosate after Health Canada concluded that the active ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup weed killer poses no human risks.

The federal agency dismissed eight notices of objection and assertions made in the so-called Monsanto Papers in 2017.

“After a thorough scientific review, we have concluded that the concerns raised by the objectors could not be scientifically supported when considering the entire body of relevant data. The objections raised did not create doubt or concern regarding the scientific basis for the 2017 re-evaluation decision for glyphosate,” Health Canada said in a press release.

The 2017 re-evaluation determined that glyphosate is not genotoxic and is unlikely to pose a human cancer risk. It also determined that dietary exposure associated with the use of glyphosate is not expected to pose a risk of concern to human health. When used according to revised label directions, glyphosate products are not expected to pose risks of concern to the environment, according to the study.

Health Canada said it has selected a group of 20 of its own scientists who were not involved in the 2017 decision to evaluate the eight objections and the concerns raised publicly around glyphosate. The agency said its scientists “left no stone unturned in conducting” the review.

The agency noted that it “had access to numerous individual studies and raw scientific data during its assessment of glyphosate, including additional cancer and genotoxicity studies.” It added that it will “continue to monitor for new information related to glyphosate, including regulatory actions from other governments, and will take appropriate action if risks of concern to human health or the environment are identified.”

Glyphosate is the active ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup, which is the most popular weed killer in the US. German chemicals and pharmaceuticals giant Bayer, which bought Monsanto last year, disclosed earlier that lawsuits from 9,300 plaintiffs were pending at the end of October. The lawsuits alleged that the company’s recently acquired weed-killing product caused cancer.

The surge in lawsuits followed the $289-million California court verdict when Monsanto was ordered to pay damages to a man who alleged its glyphosate-based weed killers, including Roundup, caused his cancer.

Bayer rejected all the accusations, claiming there are hundreds of scientific studies and regulatory authorities that show glyphosate, the compound contained in the weed killers, is safe to use.

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

CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH, N.L. — Police say they pulled over a driver in Conception Bay South, N.L., and discovered he had $18,000 in unpaid fines.

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary says officers made a traffic safety stop at about 10:20 p.m. on Saturday.

They say the man was also driving with a suspended licence and no insurance.

Police say he was ticketed under the Highway Traffic Act and his vehicle was impounded.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Off to a 13-1 start, Angelo State rose to No. 1 in the first regular season rankings of the 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll. The Rambelles received half of the 16 first-place votes and 381 points. 

With the regular season underway, there were a few shakeups since the preseason poll was announced on Jan. 30. Six programs entered for the first time, while six others dropped out. The biggest jump was West Florida, which is off to a 13-1 start, and No. 10 this week. Joining the Argos as newcomers are No. 11 Carson Newman (9-0), No. 14 and NFCA DII Leadoff champions Florida Tech (10-2), No. 19 Central Oklahoma (13-1), No. 21 Cal State San Bernardino (7-0) and No. 23 Southern New Hampshire (5-1).

Angelo State has a neutral site win over then-No. 18 Palm Beach Atlantic and two at Florida Tech. The Rambelles have hit 22 home runs and are averaging 10.1 runs over their first 14 games.

Moving into No. 2 is 2018 national runner-up Saint Anselm. The Hawks (5-0), opened with five wins in Myrtle Beach, S.C., garnered four first-place votes and 374 points. North Georgia remained at No. 3 receiving three first-place nods and 356 points. The NightHawks (12-3) put forward a 4-1 showing at the Leadoff Classic with a win over then-No. 19 Lenoir-Rhyne. Southern Arkansas (9-3), which received the final first-place vote, slipped to No. 4 after dropping three contests, two of which did come at the hands of new-No. 7 Valdosta State and Palm Beach Atlantic.

In at No. 5 is another Lone Star Conference member, Texas A&M University-Commerce. The Lions (12-1) have three triumphs over then-No. 20 Arkansas Tech with their lone defeat coming at the hands of No. 25 Augustana.

Chico State is No. 6 after a 6-1 start. Following the Wildcats, is Valdosta State who catapulted from No. 22 to No. 7. The Blazers (10-2) opened the season with eight wins, half of which came against nationally-ranked foes –North Georgia, Palm Beach Atlantic, Lenoir-Rhyne and Southern Arkansas – all courtesy of a shutout.

Rounding out the top 10 is No. 8 Tarleton State, No. 9 Concordia-Irvine and West Florida. The Texans (11-2) sandwiched 11 consecutive wins between a pair of losses. The Eagles (4-1) have won four straight following a season-opening defeat. The Argos were the runners-up at the Leadoff Classic with their only defeat of the season to Florida Tech. UWF has wins over Saint Leo (2), Palm Beach Atlantic and then-No. 8 West Chester. 

Falling out of the poll are No. 1 Southern Indiana (3-5), No. 5 Saint Leo (7-7), No. 8 West Chester (0-5), No. 18 Palm Beach Atlantic (5-6), No. 19 Lenoir-Rhyne (6-5) and No. 20 Arkansas Tech (6-6).

The 2019 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 play through Feb. 17, 2019.

 

2019 USA Today / NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – Feb. 20 (Week 1)

Rank

School

Totals

2019 Record

Previous Week

1

Angelo State (8)

381

13-1

6

2

Saint Anselm (4)

374

5-0

4

3

North Georgia (3)

356

12-3

3

4

Southern Arkansas (1)

348

9-3

2

5

Texas A&M-Commerce

336

12-1

9

6

Chico State

321

6-1

7

7

Valdosta State

303

10-2

22

8

Tarleton State

283

11-2

14

9

Concordia Irvine

279

4-1

10

10

West Florida

244

13-1

NR

11

Carson-Newman

230

9-0

NR

12

Illinois Springfield

222

6-2

12

13

Dixie State

191

6-1

17

14

Florida Tech

183

10-2

NR

15

Winona State

176

0-0

15

16

Grand Valley State

160

0-0

16

17

UC San Diego

147

9-2

23

18

Young Harris

144

7-3

13

19

Central Oklahoma

128

13-1

NR

20

UAH

80

10-5

11

21

Cal State San Bernardino

72

7-0

NR

22

Colorado Mesa

56

7-3

21

23

Southern New Hampshire

50

5-1

RV

24

Gannon

32

0-0

24

25

Augustana

31

5-3

25

 

Receiving Votes: Newberry (27), Saint Leo (17), Arkansas Tech (16), Harding (6), Lenoir-Rhyne (6), Oklahoma Christian (1).

New to Poll: No. 10 West Florida, No. 11 Carson-Newman, No. 14 Florida Tech, No. 19 Central Oklahoma, No. 21 Cal State San Bernardino, No. 23 Southern New Hampshire.

Dropped Out: No. 1 Southern Indiana (3-5), No. 5 Saint Leo (7-7), No. 8 West Chester (0-5), No. 18 Palm Beach Atlantic (5-6), No. 19 Lenoir-Rhyne (6-5), No. 20 Arkansas Tech (6-6).

 

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the NCAA’s eight regions. 

The 2019 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 play through Feb. 17, 2019.

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his staff are controlling Progressive Conservative MPPs through a “culture of fear and intimidation,” one ousted member told reporters Tuesday.

Randy Hillier, who Ford kicked out of caucus on March 15, said that he thought the PCs’ election would give birth to a “dynamic, honest, resurgent Ontario.”

Instead, the MPP for Lanark-Frontenac-Kingston said, the opposite happened.

“My expectations slowly began to erode. And this erosion increased to become a crisis of confidence,” Hillier, who was a PC MPP for 12 years, said.

He said Ford and his top advisors are violating democracy by muzzling MPPs and interfering with their ability to represent constituents.

“As I stated to Doug Ford on many occasions, you can’t hog-tie me and gag me and then complain that I’m not a team player.”

MPPs aren’t scheduled to speak in debates when they’re “out of favour” with the PC leadership, Hillier said. He also said they can’t read petitions from their constituents in the legislature or even discuss an idea for a private members’ bill without permission from Ford’s office.

“You cannot have a representative democracy under such constrained restrictions.”

Government House leader Todd Smith confirmed that MPPs have to seek permission to read a petition or table a private members’ bill, but he said that is just to keep everybody on the same page.

“Of course that’s true,” Smith said. “There has to be some kind of a coherent plan here.”

Otherwise, Smith dismissed Hillier’s claims as a “bunch of baloney.”

Hillier also raised concerns about the amount of power Ford’s chief of staff, Dean French, has over the government. French plays a greater role in caucus meetings than the premier does, he said.

“He’s the most significant presence.”

PC MPPs have told reporters anonymously that French rules with “an iron fist.”

French was featured prominently in a recent report by Ontario’s integrity commissioner, an independent watchdog who oversees lobbying and investigates allegations of MPPs acting with a conflict of interest.

The commissioner looked into questions about how a close friend of the premier, Ron Taverner, got offered a job heading up the provincial police force.

Ford didn’t break the law, Commissioner J. David Wake found, but French acted in a way that would give anyone “serious doubts as to the fairness of the process to the other candidates.”

Smith said that French participates in caucus meetings and in meetings of the planning and priorities committee, a committee reserved for the most senior cabinet ministers.

“The chief of staff sometimes chimes in with his opinions on things too,” Smith said, “as do bureaucrats that are invited.”

Also On HuffPost:

The EU has slapped tech giant Google with a massive €1.5 billion ($1.7 billion) fine for blocking rivals’ ads.

Boom Bust talked to Adam Mesh, CEO at the Adam Mesh Trading Group, who said that since 2017 the Big Tech firm has been fined $9.3 billion.

The bigger concern, according to him, is that the company keeps getting fined and Europe is picking on tech.

“Now we’re seeing same kind of sentiment move toward the US…,” he says.

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