Here’s what you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On with Your Day.
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1. Coronavirus
Coronavirus outbreaks are fouling things up everywhere. Major US airlines canceled or delayed thousands of flights over the busy holiday travel weekend due to staffing issues caused by the Omicron surge, including 1,200 flights that were canceled yesterday. At sea, at least four cruise ships were turned away from US ports of call or were prohibited from letting passengers disembark because of coronavirus cases on board. Covid-19 has also thinned out the highly anticipated college football bowl season. The Military Bowl in Annapolis, Maryland, will not be played today, and neither will Wednesday’s inaugural Fenway Bowl in Boston. In total, five bowl games have been canceled or impacted by Covid-19.
2. Trials
The juries in two very different, high-profile trials are expected to resume deliberations this week after a holiday break. Ghislaine Maxwell faces six charges in her federal trial related to what prosecutors say were her efforts to groom and traffic underage girls to be sexually abused by her close companion Jeffrey Epstein. Four women testified during the proceedings, saying Maxwell facilitated, and sometimes participated in their abuse. Elizabeth Holmes, the former CEO and founder of blood-testing startup Theranos, faces federal criminal fraud charges over allegations that she misled investors, doctors and patients about the company’s testing abilities.
3. China
China is planning to tighten restrictions for Chinese companies that want to go public in international markets. Under a new system proposed by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, a company would have to register with the agency first, and then meet a set of government requirements. China has actively tried to discourage companies from trading in overseas markets out of concern for national security, but the government has stopped short of banning the practice altogether. Meanwhile, Evergrande, the Chinese real estate company known as the world’s most indebted property developer, says it has made progress in resuming construction on homes in an effort to dig its way out of more than $300 billion in liabilities.
4. Myanmar
At least 30 people, including women and children, were killed in eastern Myanmar during a Christmas Eve attack, according to the Karenni Human Rights Group. Two members of international humanitarian group Save the Children were also reported missing after the attack. Myanmar’s National Unity Government blamed the country’s military junta and called for an end to their violent rule. The Myanmar military, which seized power in a February coup, says it shot and killed a number of “terrorists with weapons” in the area. The Karenni National Defense Force, one of the largest of several civilian militias, said the dead were civilians seeking refuge from the conflict.
5. Los Angeles shooting
Police body camera video is set to be released today in connection with the death of a teenage girl who was shot and killed as police responded to an incident in a Los Angeles-area store last Thursday. The 14-year-old was in a dressing room with her mother when police fired at a man suspected of attacking another woman in the store. A bullet penetrated a wall and struck the girl. The LAPD said it is planning to release body cam footage, 911 calls, radio transmissions and other evidence related to the shooting. The California Department of Justice is also investigating the incident.
“He was larger than life, and for so many in South Africa and around the world his life has been a blessing. His contributions to struggles against injustice, locally and globally, are matched only by the depth of his thinking about the making of liberatory futures for human societies.”
A statement from the Nelson Mandela Foundation on the passing of Archbishop Desmond Tutu. The Nobel Peace Prize-winning Anglican cleric, known for his leadership during the struggle to end apartheid in his native South Africa, died Sunday at 90.