Category: Security

  • Largest US aircraft carrier deployed near Israel

    In a gesture of solidarity with Israel amid its war with Hamas terrorists, the United States is reinforcing its presence in the Eastern Mediterranean.

    Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin announced Sunday that the Pentagon is sending its largest aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, to the region. The move follows Israel’s official declaration of war on Hamas, which marks the country’s first war since 1973.

    The U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, which is the Navy’s newest and most advanced aircraft carrier, was already in the Mediterranean waters when the war declaration was made by Israel’s parliament on Sunday morning, according to The Daily Caller.

    U.S. Air Force fighter aircraft squadrons, specifically the F-35, F-15, F-16, and A-10, will accompany the carrier.

    “The U.S. maintains ready forces globally to further reinforce this deterrence posture if required,” Austin emphasized.

    According to Austin, the intention behind the strategic relocation of U.S. forces closer to Israel is to “strengthen Department of Defense posture in the region to bolster regional deterrence efforts.” The Pentagon’s decision was announced after multiple discussions with President Joe Biden.

    READ MORE: Pentagon warns it’s running low on money to replenish weapons sent to Ukraine

    Austin further stressed the commitment of the United States to its ally, stating, “Strengthening our joint force posture, in addition to the material support that we will rapidly provide to Israel, underscores the United States’ ironclad support for the Israel Defense Forces and the Israeli people.”

    Moreover, Secretary of State Antony Blinken confirmed the dedication of the U.S. by noting that the Pentagon is actively working to fulfill specific military aid requests from Israel, according to The New York Times.

    Early Saturday morning, Hamas fighters infiltrated southern Israel, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of civilians and the capture of Israeli civilians and soldiers. Within the initial hours of the assault, over 2,200 rockets were reportedly fired, according to The New York Times.

    In response to the aggression by Hamas, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has attempted to regain control of occupied territories and initiated retaliatory strikes on Hamas positions in Gaza.

    The current death toll stands at over 1,100 on both sides, with thousands injured – numbers that are expected to continue to climb.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has responded to the devastating Hamas attacks by committing to a “long and difficult war” against the terrorist organization and its affiliates, according to The Daily Caller.

    This news article was partially created with the assistance of artificial intelligence and edited and fact-checked by a human editor.



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  • ‘Django Unchained,’ ‘Hateful Eight’ actor Keith Jefferson dead at 53

    Keith Jefferson, an actor who appeared in the Quentin Tarantino films “Django Unchained,” “The Hateful Eight” and “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” has died at the age of 53.

    Jefferson died Thursday, his publicist Nicole St. John confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter. The news comes nearly two months after Jefferson announced he had been diagnosed with cancer.

    “Every now and then God will give you a challenge and leave it up to you to fix it,” he wrote on Instagram on Aug. 9, alongside a photo of himself in the hospital. “When I was first diagnosed with cancer I had to stop, pause, and didn’t want to share with anyone. Not my family nor extended family. Today I’m finally at a place to share because my faith is getting stronger. I have a loving family and the best friends in the entire world.”

    Jefferson was a longtime close friend of Jamie Foxx, who starred as the lead role in “Django.” The Oscar winner took to social media to mourn the loss of his friend.

    “Everything hurts right now,” he captioned a photo of the two posing in front of an airplane. “Having a hard time looking through these pictures, reliving the memories of us having a great time. Going to miss you man, gonna miss you.”

    Foxx, who has undergone his own recent health complications recently, continued: “Since we met back in college, you have been an incredible soul. God rest, NEVER THOUGHT I WOULD HAVE TO SEE THE WORDS ABOUT MY FRIEND.”

    According to Jefferson’s website, he was a personal acting coach who earned a BFA in musical theater from United States International University in San Diego, where he met Foxx, as well as an MFA in acting from the University of Arizona. He made his onscreen debut in 1995’s “Boys on the Side.” Other credits include “The Jamie Foxx Show,” “Buffalo Soldiers” and “The Fantastiks.”

    The veteran actor’s most recent work includes the Foxx-fronted legal drama “The Burial,” which will begin streaming on Amazon Prime Video on Oct. 13.

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    © 2023 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • AI-powered aircraft could give US military advantage

    While the use of aircraft powered by artificial intelligence could give the United States Air Force an advantage against foreign adversaries, the potential deployment of the advanced technology is leading to ethical concerns.

    According to Fox News, the U.S. Air Force is continuing to develop the XQ-58A Valkyrie aircraft, which is intended to be a stealth aircraft that can be operated by artificial intelligence, providing the military with a much cheaper aircraft that can be flown without risking the loss of human pilots in combat.

    “This technology is something we’ll need for the future of defense,” AI expert and founder of the Center for Advanced preparedness and Threat Response Simulation Phil Siegel told Fox News.

    The XQ-58A Valkyrie aircraft is currently being developed by Kratos Defense & Security Solutions. The aircraft’s first successful test flight occurred in 2019, which took place just a few years after the contract was originally awarded in 2016.

    According to The Drive, Kratos has estimated that the XQ-58A Valkyrie aircraft could cost as low as $4 million if the company produced 50 planes each year, marking a significant financial savings for the military compared to the MQ-9 Reaper drone which costs roughly $30 million and the F-35 which costs roughly $80 million.

    READ MORE: Artificial intelligence may influence whether you can get pain medication

    Steve Fendley, president of Kratos Unmanned, told Fox News, “The economy of scale is incredible, both from the cost in the first place of the unmanned system because you don’t have any of the expenses of life-sustaining systems and the reliability level that you need for a manned system versus and unmanned system.”

    In addition to the cost savings of the XQ-58A Valkyrie, Fendley said the risk is “very, very low compared to the equivalent risk for [a] single manned system.”

    Christopher Alexander, Pioneer Development Group’s chief analytics officer, told Fox News that the artificial intelligence powered aircraft will “add tremendous capabilities to military planners” since the aircraft will be able to be used “more aggressively” without as much concern for potential casualties and cost.

    Alexander described the AI-powered aircraft as, “amazing proof of concept for a revolutionary Pentagon strategy that relies on less expensive solutions in conflict.” However, the Pioneer Development Group analyst noted that the use of AI-powered aircraft also raises “important ethical concerns.”

    According to Army University Press, military experts have previously expressed ethical concerns surrounding civilian casualties that could be caused by AI technology, the potential for increased collateral damage, and the accountability required for AI-powered weaponry.

    Nevertheless, Alexander told Fox News that the Department of Defense has managed ethical concerns well so far. Additionally, Fendley has addressed concerns surrounding the company’s AI-powered aircraft.

    “There’s a lot of concern, and rightfully so, because I think in many cases our enemies are going to be much more free with what they allow the artificial intelligence agents to do, and I don’t think our country will do that,” Fendley said. “What’s very important to understand is having the capability doesn’t mean that you do it. It’s very easy to put in a system that could be capable of deploying weapons without asking anybody. It’s also very easy to have a constraint system in there.”



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  • Hundreds of migrants charge across the border

    New video footage shows a huge wave of migrants attempting to cross the Southern Border near El Paso, Texas, as the Biden administration continues to allow hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants to pour across the southern border.

    Collin Rugg, co-owner of Trending Politics, tweeted a video showing a large group of migrants charging the border Tuesday night.

    “Footage has been released of migrants wreaking havoc at the Southern Border last night near El Paso, first reported by@ElPasoYa,” Rugg wrote. “Rest assured: The border is completely secure according to the Biden White House.”

    According to Rugg, migrants can be heard shouting “Si se puede” in Spanish, which translates to “yes you can” or “yes, it can be done” in English.

    Customs and Border Protection recently told Fox News that the total number of migrant encounters for the month of September was over 260,000, marking the highest month of migrant encounters recorded in American history.

    In his tweet blasting the Biden administration’s handling of the southern border, Rugg stated, “The number of migrant encounters at the southern border has already surpassed last year’s total as the president continues to ignore the crisis.”

    READ MORE: Pics: Explosive, ammo-filled backpacks found at southern border

    Francisco Garduño, member of the Migration Delegate on the Mexican side of the southern border, told KFOX14 that the issue of migrants traveling to the southern border and seeking to cross into the United States will remain persistent if the United States continues to promote open border policies.

    “As long as the United States continues to open the doors of its border and exceptionally allow passage to some groups, families, minors, vulnerable people, it is a call for more migrants to come,” Garduño stated.

    While many lawmakers and American citizens have criticized the Biden administration for allowing illegal immigrants to continue streaming across the border into the United States, the Biden administration has continued to claim that the border is “secure.”

    In a statement to The Daily Mail, Border Patrol said, “Rumors circulating on social media that areas of the southwest border – specifically in the El Paso Sector — are open to illegal migration is patently false.”

    In their statement, Border Patrol acknowledged that there have been reports of “criminal organizations” that are putting the lives of migrants “at risk for their own financial gain” by “spreading falsehoods” about the southern border.

    “These rumors are absolutely false and yet another dangerous example of bad actors sharing bad information,” Border Patrol added. “The border is not open to illegal migration.”



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  • Scientists behind Pfizer and Moderna mRNA vaccines win Nobel

    Two scientists won the Nobel Prize in medicine for research that laid the groundwork for some of the best-selling medicines of all time: the messenger-RNA vaccines against COVID-19.

    Katalin Kariko and Drew Weissman’s work helped pioneer the technology that enabled Moderna Inc. and the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE partnership to swiftly develop shots. The vaccines have been given to hundreds of millions of people around the world, a key step toward easing the coronavirus pandemic.

    Kariko and Weissman will share the 11 million-krona ($1 million) award, the Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm said in a statement Monday.

    The scientists showed how to solve one of the major problems of mRNA by tweaking it to avoid causing inflammation. Their research, published in 2005, was one of the building blocks that allowed it to be introduced into the body.

    “Through their groundbreaking findings, which have fundamentally changed our understanding of how mRNA interacts with our immune system, the laureates contributed to the unprecedented rate of vaccine development during one of the greatest threats to human health in modern times,” the Nobel Assembly said.

    Their work became the basis for a new type of inoculation. Instead of introducing a weakened or dead virus into the body to teach the immune system to recognize an infection, mRNA is used to prompt cells to produce what’s needed for a vaccine themselves. The approach is much quicker, and enabled Moderna and the Pfizer-BioNTech team to develop shots against COVID in less than 11 months.

    Kariko, born in Hungary, and Weissman, an American, labored in relative obscurity for years with an approach that many other scientists had written off as too difficult to use.

    Xerox Machine

    The daughter of a butcher, Kariko was born in 1955 and grew up in a small town in the eastern part of the country. She earned her doctorate in biochemistry at the University of Szeged, working with RNA for the first time in 1978. In 1985, she moved to the U.S. for a job at Temple University in Philadephia, then later became a research assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania. For years, she struggled to get academic recognition for her work. After failing to get grant funding, she was demoted in 1995.

    Kariko, reached by the secretary of the Nobel Assembly, said she was “overwhelmed and also put it in context with her situation as a scientist.” Thomas Perlmann, the secretary, told reporters gathered in Stockholm that the prize marks “a dramatic change in her circumstances.”

    “It is absolutely right that the ground-breaking work on RNA led by Kariko and Weissman should be recognized by a Nobel Prize in view of the extraordinary advance that their scientific endeavors have made for vaccine development and for the impact of that work on human health in the pandemic,” said Andrew Pollard, who worked on a rival shot as the director of the Oxford vaccine group at the University of Oxford.

    Weissman earned his medical doctorate in immunology and microbiology at Boston University in 1987, joining UPenn in 1997 after a fellowship at Anthony Fauci’s lab at the National Institutes of Health.

    In a story that seems destined to become part of medical history, Kariko and Weissman met over a Xerox machine. Both were avid readers of medical journals, and as they copied hundreds of pages, they began to talk about their research. Weissman was interested in dendritic cells, which help the immune system adapt to fight intruders. Kariko thought mRNA could help.

    In 2005, the team published a breakthrough paper solving one of the major problems with using mRNA. Up to that point, introducing the molecule into a cell would cause inflammation, and sometimes the cell — or the lab mouse — would die. Kariko and Weissman made a slight modification in uridine, one of the building blocks that make up mRNA, mimicking a process that occurs naturally in the body. When they did, the inflammation no longer happened.

    Annual prizes for achievements in physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and peace were established in the will of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite, who died in 1896. A prize in economic sciences was added by Sweden’s central bank in 1968.

    The laureates are announced through Oct. 9 in Stockholm, with the exception of the peace prize, whose recipients are selected by the Norwegian Nobel Committee in Oslo.

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    © 2023 Bloomberg L.P

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Terrorists kill hundreds in Israel, incl. women, children

    After Hamas terrorists killed hundreds of Israeli citizens, including women and children, in a series of surprise attacks on Saturday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to turn Gaza into “rubble.”

    “Dear citizens of Israel, this morning, on Shabbat and a holiday, Hamas invaded Israeli territory and murdered innocent citizens including children and the elderly. Hamas has started a brutal and evil war,” Netanyahu said. “We will be victorious in this war despite an unbearable price. This is a very difficult day for all of us. Hamas wants to murder us all. This is an enemy that murders children and mothers in their homes, in their beds, an enemy that abducts the elderly, children, and young women, that slaughters and massacres our citizens, including children who simply went out to enjoy the holiday.”

    “What happened today is unprecedented in Israel and I will see to it that it does not happen again,” he continued. “The entire government is behind this decision. The IDF will immediately use all its strength to destroy Hamas’ capabilities. We will destroy them and we will forcefully avenge this dark day that they have forced on the State of Israel and its citizens.”

    Netanyahu warned the residents of Gaza to leave immediately because “all of the places which Hamas is deployed, hiding in, and operating from in that wicked city, we will turn them into rubble.”

    READ MORE: US will allow Israeli travelers into the country without visas

    CBS News reported that at least 250 people in Israel, including women and children, were killed and 1,500 were wounded in the Hamas terrorist attacks.

    The Israeli Defense Force (IDF) confirmed that the terrorist group also abducted Israeli civilians and soldiers. According to Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, an Israeli army spokesman, a “substantial” number of Israelis were taken hostage.



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  • Indo-Pacific commander: US military to seek access to more Philippine bases

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    The United States is seeking access to more bases in the Philippines on top of nine sites already included under an expanded pact, military chiefs said Thursday, amid heightened regional tensions with China. 

    During annual bilateral talks in Metro Manila, he and Philippine military chief Romeo Brawner Jr. recommended giving American forces greater access to bases here, but their governments would need to approve this, said Adm. John C. Aquilino, head of the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command. 

    “Gen. Brawner and I made recommendations to our senior leaders for the consideration of additional sites, but there is still work to do there before we get to that answer,” Aquilino told reporters at the Philippine military’s headquarters in Quezon City.

    Aquilino and Brawner did not give a number for how many more bases might be added under the Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (EDCA), but the addition of four bases this past February caused some controversy in the Philippines and it angered China.

    “We are in discussions, but everyone has a boss and we both have bosses, we’ll have those conversations – I think in private, and give our bosses some decision space on how they’d like to go forward,” Aquilino said. 

    Filipino and U.S. officials have denied that giving American forces rotational access to more Philippine bases is connected to tensions with China over a territorial dispute in the South China Sea and Taiwan. China reacted to the move earlier this year, saying it was provocative and aimed at helping the U.S. contain the People’s Republic and its military.

    Aquilino was in the Philippines this week to visit three of the EDCA sites and meet with Brawner to discuss ways to deepen defense ties between the longstanding allies. 

    The U.S. military chief for the region spoke to reporters after the annual meeting of the Mutual Defense and Security Engagement Boards, which are responsible for coordinating cooperation between the two militaries under the 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty. 

    In February, Manila added four sites that the U.S. could access under EDCA, increasing the total number of bases to nine.

    The decision by the Marcos administration to allow U.S. forces greater access to local bases has angered some Filipinos, who worry that their country, as a consequence, would be in the line of fire should war break out between the U.S. and China over Taiwan.

    In May, hundreds of people protested against the EDCA pact outside the U.S. Embassy in Manila, on the same day that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. was meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden at the White House in Washington. 

    Three of these new sites are in the northern Philippines facing Taiwan, while one is in the island of Palawan facing the South China Sea. Meanwhile in Taiwan on Thursday, the defense ministry reported that 68 Chinese warplanes and 10 navy ships had been “detected near the island,” starting on Wednesday morning, the Agence France-Presse news agency reported.

    The U.S. has added 63 projects for the EDCA sites on top of the previously approved 32, Aquilino said, adding that these projects include multipurpose storage facilities, road networks and fuel storage, among others. 

    “The United States has identified investments of almost $110 million [6.2 billion pesos] to those sites to build capability capacity for the AFP [Armed Forces of the Philippines] to use every day and for the United States to fall in when invited,” the admiral said. 

    For his part, Brawner said that the nine bases in total were meant for joint training as well as humanitarian and disaster-response operations, and were not related to regional security threats. 

    “All of these joint operations, even the selection of our EDCA sites, have nothing to do with the other countries in the Indo-Pacific region, meaning the threats that could come out from these countries,” Brawner said. 

    “We believe that doing certain things together would bring more value, for instance training together,” he said. 

    PHOTO2

    Meanwhile, China has ramped up its presence in the South China Sea. Beijing has deployed its China Coast Guard ships and maritime militia ships in the West Philippine Sea – the part of the South China Sea within Manila’s jurisdiction – to harass Philippine ships, Filipino officials said. 

    U.S. Navy reconnaissance planes were seen flying over the disputed waters during recent Philippine resupply missions to Ayungin (Second Thomas) Shoal, where the World War II-era BRP Sierra Madre serves as Manila’s military outpost in the disputed atoll. 

    Tour of three sites

    On Wednesday, Brawner, Aquilino, and MaryKay Carlson, the U.S. ambassador to the Philippines, inspected three EDCA sites – Lal-lo airport and Camilo Osias Naval Base, both in Cagayan in northern Philippines, and Basa Air Base in Pampanga, near Manila. 

    Manila has called on Washington to construct a pier and refurbish the airstrip at the naval base along with a fuel storage facility and command center in Lal-lo airport.

    “We are not just looking at how we can operate together more efficiently, but also we are looking at the future operations that we are going to conduct,” Brawner told reporters on Wednesday. “All of these factors should come in as we decide on which projects we’re really going to pursue.” 

    When the expanded EDCA was announced seven months ago, China immediately stated its opposition to the widened pact.

    “Such moves contradict the common aspiration of regional countries to seek peace, cooperation and development, and run counter to the common aspiration of the Filipino people to pursue sound economic recovery and a better life in cooperation with China,” said Huang Xilian, Chinese ambassador to Manila in a statement issued in February. 

    “It is hoped that the Philippine side stays vigilant and resists from being taken advantage of and dragged into troubled waters.” 



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  • Huawei’s role in Indonesia raises ‘digital colonization’ concerns

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    Lush green hills and a majestic lake surround a private university here that is training tomorrow’s elite Indonesian digital workers with help from a Chinese technological powerhouse reviled by the U.S. government.

    The Del Institute of Technology, or IT Del, founded by a key aide to Indonesia’s president, has been collaborating since 2013 with Huawei, China’s leading tech company. 

    Through the partnership, faculty members and students have access to cutting-edge training, certification and research opportunities in fields such as cloud computing, artificial intelligence and cyber security.

    “It’s a win-win situation for Huawei and us,” Humasak Simanjuntak, IT Del’s deputy president, told BenarNews, a news network affiliated with Radio Free Asia. “One of the ways they achieve success is by supporting education in Indonesia.”

    Indonesia has welcomed Chinese investment to develop its digital ecosystem. IT Del was founded by Luhut Pandjaitan, Indonesia’s coordinating minister for investment and maritime affairs, and its top official coordinating cooperation with China.

    Huawei’s interaction with Indonesia is part of China’s broader strategy of expanding its economic and political influence across Asia and beyond through its Belt and Road Initiative – a global infrastructure, technology and investment program launched by Chinese President Xi Jinping 10 years ago.

    That includes developing digital systems, which Jakarta views as key to future prosperity. Indonesia’s internet economy is projected to reach US$124 billion by 2025, according to a 2020 report by Google, Temasek, and Bain & Company.

    But Huawei’s dominance has raised alarm among some experts here amid warnings from the U.S. and other Western countries that the Chinese firm engages in espionage and sabotage activities, which it denies.

    Ardi Sutedja, chairman of the Indonesia Cybersecurity Forum and a former government consultant, said Huawei is deeply embedded in the national telecommunications infrastructure, from the core network to the end-user devices.

    “It’s going to be so difficult for us to transition to another company because from upstream to downstream, our 3G and 4G infrastructure is already being managed by Huawei,” he told RFA.

    ‘Technology can colonize them’

    Huawei has been providing its products and services to Indonesia since 2000. 

    It has established partnerships with more than 100 local companies and more than 30 universities, and created more than 20,000 jobs directly and indirectly, according to the company’s website. It also has an agreement on cybersecurity cooperation with Indonesia’s National Cyber and Crypto Agency, or BSSN.

    Ardi warned of the potential dangers of Indonesia relying on one foreign company, especially for cybersecurity. He noted that people “enjoy the wave of new technology without realizing that technology can also colonize them.”

    Alfons Tanujaya, another cybersecurity expert, said Indonesia needs to be careful about allowing outsiders’ controlling its networks — “not only China but also the United States.” 

    “When we talk about spying, without 5G we can already be spied on,” he said. “All our hardware is from China, we use modems, CCTV cameras, and everything from China.” 

    The United States has voiced increasing concern over Huawei. It has banned Huawei from its 5G networks and put pressure on its allies to do the same. 

    In 2020, Robert O’Brien, then the U.S. national security adviser, said the United States had evidence that Huawei could “access sensitive and personal information” in the systems it maintains around the world. He contended that Huawei is influenced by the Chinese government and must comply with directives of the Chinese Communist Party.

    Huawei has repeatedly denied these allegations, saying it is an independent company and that no government has ever asked it to compromise its products or customers’ data.

    Provider of choice

    Huawei devices and networks are ubiquitous in Southeast Asia.

    Last year, researchers at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a think tank in Washington, said that Huawei “has positioned itself as Indonesia’s cybersecurity provider of choice” through its vast cybersecurity and other training programs for groups ranging from senior government officials to rural students.

    Luhut, the minister who leads Jakarta’s cooperation with Beijing, summed up the approach in 2021 – under which China provides hardware and training, and Indonesians install, maintain and use the networks.

    “Why do I get along with China? China is very generous in sharing its technology with us,” he said then. “They have always been willing to give us whatever we ask for. This helps us to keep up with technological advancements.”

    Some Western tech companies, such as Ericsson, Nokia and Google, also cooperate with the Indonesian government and its educational institutions, but not as extensively as with Huawei, according to experts.

    They said Huawei had dominated Indonesia’s telecommunications infrastructure by offering low prices, credit from Chinese banks, and training for locals.

    Huawei equipment is mainly used in the Palapa Ring project, a 35,000-kilometer (22,000-mile) national fiber-optic network that covers more than 500 regions and cities in the Indonesian archipelago, the first phase of which was carried out by Huawei Marine.

    “We welcome Huawei’s support for developing digital talents in Indonesia and around the world,” said Wayan Toni Supriyanto, the director general of international cooperation at the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology.

    Hurdles for Huawei

    With an average rate of 4 U.S. cents per gigabyte, Indonesia has some of the lowest cellular data costs in the Asia-Pacific, according to the Indonesian Telematics Society, a forum for stakeholders in the Indonesian digital industry.

    The Indonesian Internet Service Providers Association says internet penetration in Indonesia has reached 78%, or 215.6 million users — although there is still a significant gap between urban and rural areas. The government said around 7,000 small and remote villages are still underserved by internet providers.

    Against this backdrop, Huawei still faces headwinds in building its business.

    It confronts legal challenges in several countries over its alleged theft of trade secrets, violations of U.S. sanctions against Iran, fraud, racketeering and patent infringement. Huawei has denied or contested these charges as well.

    It faces restrictions or bans on its equipment or services in the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and the United Kingdom. 

    These moves have hampered Huawei’s global expansion and market share, especially in the 5G sector.

    Huawei has also faced supply-chain disruptions due to the U.S. sanctions that prevent it from accessing key components and technologies from American suppliers. This has affected its ability to produce and sell its products, such as smartphones and network equipment.

    Huawei has sought to develop its own alternatives, such as its HarmonyOS operating system and its HiSilicon chips. It has also been seeking new markets and partners in other regions, such as in Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East.

    Huawei has also been lobbying and suing to defend its rights and reputation, as well as engaging in P.R. campaigns to win over public opinion and trust.

    Career boost

    Among tech-savvy Indonesians, the cachet of Huawei appears high.

    Muhammad Ihsan Fawzi, a lecturer at South Tangerang Institute of Technology near Jakarta, said he had received several job offers and speaking invitations after obtaining a Huawei certification for mobile development. He learned how to create applications for Huawei devices and platforms, and to include features such as location, analytics, push notifications, in-app purchases, and cloud functions.

    “After I received the certification and published it on my LinkedIn, several companies contacted me and offered me a job position as a mobile developer or a project manager,” he said.

    He didn’t take up those offers as he did not want to leave his present job. 

    Istas Manalu, a lecturer from IT Del who participated in a summer camp organized by Huawei in China in June, said the camp offered leadership sessions and further training in cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and IT governance.

    He said it was an opportunity for both lecturers and students “to familiarize ourselves with the development of 5G technology, cyber security, cloud computing, and AI, as they have a strong base in those areas.” 

    Onno W. Purbo, a computer engineering lecturer and a proponent of open-source tech, warned however that digital colonization by China was now a reality in Indonesia. 

    “We are really dependent on them because we don’t have the capacity,” said Purbo, a deputy rector at the South Tangerang Institute of Technology.

    But he likened it to Indonesia being “colonized” by Japan through the domination of Japanese car and motorcycle brands.

    Simanjuntak of IT Del, however, dismissed concerns about Huawei.

    He said that his institution’s partnership with the company was purely technical and practical. He noted that his institution also collaborates with Western companies, including Cisco and Google.

    “We are not discriminating against specific companies, but it’s free competition, let it be free. When we partner with someone, there should be mutual benefits,” he said.



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  • 17-year-old arrested for shooting friend in Florida, Sheriff’s Office says

    A 17-year-old was arrested Sunday after shooting a friend in the back late Friday in a Deltona park, the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office said.

    The 17-year-old boy was arrested on charges of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, carrying a concealed firearm, discharging a firearm in public and improper exhibition of a firearm after seriously injuring a friend who also was 17, the Sheriff’s Office said.

    The Orlando Sentinel does not publish names of minors who are arrested unless they are charged as adults.

    The 17-year-old, who was sitting in the right rear passenger seat, and three friends were in a car near Three Island Nature Park when he accidentally shot his friend in the back, the Sheriff’s Office said.

    The 17-year-old then ran away from the scene and tossed the gun, which has yet to be located, the Sheriff’s Office said.

    Deputies responded around 6:15 p.m. on Friday to a shooting and were flagged down by two men waiving and yelling for help at Howland Boulevard near Candler Drive, the Sheriff’s Office said.

    The victim was transported to a nearby hospital, where he is in stable but critical condition, the Sheriff’s Office said.

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    © 2023 Orlando Sentinel

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Groundbreaking choreographer Rudy Perez, a trailblazer of postmodern dance, dies at age 93

    Groundbreaking choreographer Rudy Perez, a pioneer of 1960s postmodern dance, died Friday, according to Sarah Swenson, a fellow choreographer, friend and member of Perez’s company.

    Perez died of complications from asthma. He was 93.

    Perez’s minimalist but wildly experimental work, marked by spare, precise movements, helped ignite a budding Los Angeles dance scene after he moved west from New York in the late 1970s. L.A.’s open spaces and natural landscapes inspired his innovative, site-specific works; and his interpretive abstract expressionism was so revelatory at the time, it opened up the dance landscape to new approaches.

    “He came to L.A. as a major artist, a choreographic genius known for making his own rules,” choreographer Lula Washington told the Los Angeles Times in 2015, adding that Perez was an influence on her. “There was nobody here doing that type of experimentation then. He allowed other people to see the possibilities.”

    Perez told The Times that his work sprang from the unconscious.

    “Nothing is planned,” he said in 2015. “When I put things together, unconsciously, it comes from my lifetime experience up to that moment. Then ultimately, it turns out to be about something for someone, certainly for me. But I don’t expect for it to be the same for the audience.”

    Perez was born Nov. 24, 1929, the son of a Peruvian immigrant and a Puerto Rican, and grew up in East Harlem and the Bronx with three younger brothers. He began improvising on the dance floor at an early age, with cha-cha and the samba, at family gatherings. His father was a merchant marine who traveled frequently; his mother died of tuberculosis when he was 7, at which point he contracted the disease and spent the next three years in the hospital, mostly bedridden.

    “I think a lot of the pain you see in some of my work that’s very sort of contained comes from that experience, from being in the hospital and hardly having any visitors,” he once said. “It’s all very suppressed, but it’s there in my work.”

    Perez studied with Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham in the 1950s, as well as Mary Anthony, but found his voice in New York’s ‘60s-era, avant-garde dance scene. He was part of the experimental collective Judson Dance Theater with Yvonne Rainer, Steve Paxton, Lucinda Childs and Trisha Brown.

    His first choreographed work, “Take Your Alligator With You” (1963), parodied magazine modeling poses. Three years later, he put together his first solo piece, “Countdown,” which featured Perez in a chair smoking a cigarette. He recalled that initially audiences weren’t sure what to make of his unique form of dance. But eventually, he broke through the largely white dance establishment of the time and won over audiences.

    Perez moved to L.A. in 1978 for a yearlong substitute teaching job at the University of California, Los Angeles and formed a dance company shortly thereafter.

    “In L.A., I felt freer; I was able to go beyond,” he told The Times. “I wanted to get away from the emphasis on dance, and work more with theater and natural movement.”

    In recent years, Perez’s vision had been severely impaired because of glaucoma and macular degeneration. He continued working every Sunday with his Rudy Perez Performance Ensemble at the Westside School of Ballet. During the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, several dancers in Perez’s ensemble kept the workshop going over Zoom. They have since moved it to MNR Dance Factory in Brentwood.

    “Rudy was so pleased that we continued the workshop,” said Anne Grimaldo, who danced in Perez’s ensemble for 35 years. “Even when his eyesight was going, (Perez) could still ‘see’ like a fine-toothed comb. He’d say, ‘point your toes.’ … He could see everything with extreme detail.”

    Shortly after she graduated with her master’s degree in dance from UCLA in 1988, Grimaldo met one of Perez’s dancers at an audition. He told her to come to his class. Grimaldo hesitated; she had heard Perez had a reputation for being tough. She eventually ended up going. “Right away he said he wanted me in the company,” Grimaldo said. “And I never left.”

    “Rudy changed all of our lives,” Grimaldo added. The workshop “wasn’t just dance: It was theater, it was choreography, it was improvisation. It was up to a performance level and professional. You didn’t sit down during a break and lean against the bar. When we first started out we’d always wear black. And the company was very tight. It was like a collaboration with all of us and Rudy and his direction.”

    “Rudy was a titan of minimalist movement,” Swenson said, “achieved by just being himself, unique in his approach and product. Fierce and demanding in the studio, he secretly had a tender heart, and I’ll miss that more than anything.”

    Perez insisted his dancers take Pilates, Grimaldo added. “Now I’m a Pilates instructor,,” she said. “I met my husband, Jeff, in the company and we have a daughter. … I mean, everything I do and what I have is because of Rudy and my connection with him.”

    Throughout his career, Perez created dozens of pieces, including work for the 1984 Olympic Arts Festival. He was also a teacher whose influence — at the University of Southern California School of Dramatic Arts and the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, among other places — lives on in generations of choreographers and dancers.

    Dance critic Lewis Segal told The Times that Perez’s vision sparked “a real firestorm in L.A.” in the late ‘70s. “Teaching it and choreographing (in his style), he made a difference,” Segal said. He added: “It encouraged people to really go with their instincts, to go for broke.”

    In November 2015, University of California, Irvine presented Perez with a lifetime achievement award during “The Art of Performance in Irvine: A Tribute to Rudy Perez.” Perez’s dance ensemble debuted work there that he’d choreographed for the event: the three-piece performance “Slate in Three Parts.” A month later, Colburn School restaged Perez’s 1983 piece “Cheap Imitation.”

    Among his many honors, Perez was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and L.A.’s the Music Center/Bilingual Foundation’s ¡Viva Los Artistas! Performing Arts Award. He held honorary doctorates from the Otis College of Art and Design in L.A. and the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, and his archives are part of the USC Libraries’ Special Collections.

    “I’ve been very fortunate,” Perez said in 2015 of his long-running career. “I’ve always been told, ‘Grow old gracefully’ — and I’m good at that. At this stage of my life, sure, it’s hard, but I’m striving for excellence. I wanna go out with a flash.”

    He is survived by his brother Richard Perez, his niece Linda Perez, and nephews Stephen and Anthony Perez, as well as numerous former Rudy Perez Ensemble Members, collaborators, and friends. A memorial for Perez is being planned.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

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