Russia-Ukraine live updates: Mariupol airstrikes continue, deepening humanitarian crisis

Russia-Ukraine live updates: Mariupol airstrikes continue, deepening humanitarian crisis
Russia-Ukraine live updates: Mariupol airstrikes continue, deepening humanitarian crisis
Narciso Contreras/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “special military operation” into Ukraine began on Feb. 24, with troops crossing the border from Belarus and Russia. Moscow’s forces have since been met with “stiff resistance” from Ukrainians, according to U.S. officials.

Russian forces retreated last week from the Kyiv suburbs, leaving behind a trail of destruction. After graphic images emerged of civilians lying dead in the streets of Bucha, U.S. and European officials accused Russian troops of committing war crimes.

Here’s how the news is developing. All times Eastern:

Apr 06, 5:49 am
EU proposes new sanctions, readies Russian coal ban

European Union leaders said on Wednesday they were preparing a new round of economic sanctions against Russia, as outrage grew over civilian deaths in Bucha.

“We have all seen the haunting images of Bucha. This is what is happening when Putin’s soldiers occupy Ukrainian territory,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Wednesday. “They call this liberation. I call this war crimes. The Russian authorities will have to answer for them.”

The sanctions to be proposed may include a ban on importing Russian coal, bans on transactions with four Russian banks, and a ban on Russian ships at EU ports, among other measures.

The fifth round of sanctions “will not be our last,” von der Leyen said. U.S. officials are also expected to announce new sanctions on Wednesday, sources told ABC News.

Apr 06, 4:47 am
Mariupol airstrikes continue, deepening humanitarian crisis

Russian forces are continuing their airstrikes in Mariupol, the besieged Ukrainian port city, the U.K. Ministry of Defense said on Wednesday.

“The humanitarian situation in the city is worsening,” the ministry said. “Most of the 160,000 remaining residents have no light, communication, medicine, heat or water.”

Russian troops have prevented humanitarian access to the southern city, a move the ministry said was a part of a strategy to pressure Ukraine to surrender.

Apr 06, 12:11 am
US concedes Russia won’t be expelled from Security Council

Speaking with MSNBC Tuesday night, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations said the U.S. could not remove Russia from the United Nation’s most powerful body, the Security Council.

“They are a member of the Security Council. That’s a fact. We can’t change that fact, but we certainly can isolate them in the Security Council,” Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.

That’s separate from the push to remove Russia from the U.N. Human Rights Council, which Thomas-Greenfield said earlier they hope to bring to the U.N. General Assembly for a vote.

“I know we’re going to get” the necessary two-thirds majority, she told CNN.

Thomas-Greenfield also described what it was like in the room Tuesday as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s graphic video finally played for the Security Council. She told MSNBC it was the first time she saw the uncensored video of the war’s victims.

“We were all speechless. We had all seen various videos showing atrocities. But they all covered up the real, you know, the real people that were there – they were all blurred,” Thomas-Greenfield said. “This was the first time I’ve seen that video without the bodies being blurred. And it was horrific. And there was silence in the room. I can tell you that people were horrified.”

Apr 05, 9:26 pm
US sending $100M in new anti-tank missiles

The U.S. will be sending an additional $100 million in Javelin anti-tank missiles to Ukraine, a White House official confirmed to ABC News. The weapons will be coming from existing military stockpiles.

The White House later released a memorandum from President Joe Biden saying he would be using drawdown powers to release “an aggregate value of $100 million in defense articles and services of the Department of Defense, and military education and training, to provide assistance to Ukraine.”

Pentagon officials have said anti-tank weapons provided by the U.S. and other partner countries have been very successful in staving off Russian troops and bogging down vehicle movement.

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Scoreboard roundup — 4/5/22

Scoreboard roundup — 4/5/22
Scoreboard roundup — 4/5/22
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Tuesday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Orlando 120, Cleveland 115
Philadelphia 131, Indiana 122
Toronto 118, Atlanta 108
Brooklyn 118, Houston 105
Miami 144, Charlotte 115
Oklahoma City 98, Portland 94
Washington 132, Minnesota 114
Milwaukee 127, Chicago 106
San Antonio 116, Denver 97
Utah 121, Memphis 115 (OT)
Final New Orleans 123, Sacramento 109
Phoenix 121, LA Lakers 110

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
NY Rangers 3, New Jersey 1
Buffalo 4, Carolina 2
Columbus 4, Philadelphia 2
Ottawa 6, Montreal 3
Colorado 6, Pittsburgh 4
Florida 7 Toronto 6 (OT)
Detroit 5, Boston 3
Nashville 6, Minnesota 2
Final Dallas 3, NY Islanders 2
Edmonton 2, San Jose 1 (OT)

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President Joe Biden to create interagency task force focused on long COVID

President Joe Biden to create interagency task force focused on long COVID
President Joe Biden to create interagency task force focused on long COVID
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — The White House is attempting to speed up the nation’s response to long COVID by establishing a new task force to coordinate research efforts across the government.

President Joe Biden appointed Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra as the interagency task force leader in a memorandum issued Tuesday.

The task force will deliver two reports over the next four months, a senior administration official told ABC News.

The first report will lay out existing government services for people struggling with long COVID. The second report will plan for further research needs.

“The interagency will take 120 days to put forward a comprehensive action plan that will lay out all of the work that’s ongoing, the lessons that have been learned and the plan moving forward to make sure we continue to accelerate and move as fast as we can,” the senior administration official said.

Biden’s directive also called on the National Institute of Health to accelerate its ongoing $1.15 billion research project, moving quicker to fulfill its slow-moving pledge to enroll 40,000 Americans in long COVID studies.

Other White House efforts would require about $45 million in funding, all of which depends on congressional approval, which is expected to be an uphill battle for Biden. About $25 million would go toward long COVID research, and about $20 million would be allocated to fund centers that are making headway in long COVID treatment.

But experts who advocate for the government to do more on long COVID say money is not the chief concern. The government has already made a huge investment in long COVID research with the over $1 billion NIH project called the Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) Initiative.

And Biden’s memorandum on Tuesday didn’t add many new policies to the federal response.

The top priority, experts say, is moving quickly on research that is already underway to get a clear picture of how widespread long COVID is and how urgently the country needs to respond.

“I think the frustration is they’re taking their time,” said former White House Health Policy Advisor Dr. Zeke Emanuel, reacting to Biden’s announcement.

Emanuel, who co-wrote a recent report on the path out of the pandemic, called for NIH to enroll people quicker in its studies and “turbocharge” the process. Recent reporting found the NIH had so far enrolled 1,366 people, or just 3% of its goal.

“This is not rocket science. These are desperate people and it should be easy to enroll hundreds of thousands of them,” Emanuel said.

He criticized the four-month timeline, though commended the White House for announcing Becerra as “the point person” and “realizing they have to do more.”

The White House, for its part, said on Tuesday that results would come out “every day” of the four-month period.

“We’re not going to wait 120 days to share our results. We’re coming out with our results every single day, as soon as we have them,” a senior administration official said.

“We feel the urgency of this moment. We want to make sure that we’re sharing lessons and learnings as we have them and that is our commitment,” the official added.

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Feds halt monoclonal treatment out of omicron subvariant BA.2 concerns

Feds halt monoclonal treatment out of omicron subvariant BA.2 concerns
Feds halt monoclonal treatment out of omicron subvariant BA.2 concerns
Gerard Bottino/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Nationwide distribution of one of the last remaining monoclonal antibody treatments is being paused “effective immediately” since it has shown to be ineffective against the COVID-19 BA.2 subvariant now dominating every region of the country, an internal letter sent Tuesday afternoon from the federal government to states and obtained by ABC News said.

States and stakeholders should not expect any further shipments of sotrovimab, from GSK and Vir Biotechnology, from which the Food and Drug Administration has pulled authorization nationwide.

Sotrovimab was one of two monoclonal therapies in the U.S. arsenal that worked against previous variants. Now, the omicron subvariant has shown to chip away at its efficacy.

The government and FDA had already been incrementally limiting sotrovimab distribution in pockets of the country where BA.2 had been creeping up as the prevailing COVID strain. Tuesday, the FDA announced it would pull back authorization completely.

The agency said it will continue to monitor BA.2’s spread across the country, and that doctors and patients should use one of the other treatments that have held up against BA.2 — the one other monoclonal that still works, bebtelovimab from Eli Lilly; Paxlovid, or the antiviral pills from Pfizer; or molnupiravir from Merck.

Monoclonals have become a mainstay in our COVID medicine cabinet. Their ability to curb hospitalization rates, particularly among unvaccinated high-risk patients, has made them a key component in Biden’s COVID plan.

But new evolving strains of the virus have forced health care officials to recalibrate existing treatments — and this is not the first time the U.S. has seen COVID treatments get shut down when a new variant of concern stymies its efficacy.

GSK tells ABC it is prepping further data on whether a higher dose would hold up better against the omicron subvariant, which it’s sharing with relevant health and regulatory bodies.

The internal letter urges health care providers to make sure they are up to date with which variants impact what treatments, since it’s constantly shifting — and for providers to be aware of the variant makeup in their region in order to “guide treatment decisions” in an optimal way for their patients.

Meanwhile, the national COVID-19 medicine cabinet is once again getting whittled down by new variants and by limited supplies.

Weekly allocations of many COVID therapies had already been scaled down while further COVID relief funding stalled in Congress, and the government cut back on the amount of treatments shipped to states.

Though Senate negotiators had struck a deal for $10 billion in additional funding, its passage is far from guaranteed. It is unclear if this slimmed-down version of what the White House wanted will cover the country’s needs should another infection surge emerge. Without sufficient funding, the White House previously said the U.S. supply of the antiviral pills like Paxlovid could run out by September.

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COVID-19 has had ‘devastating and disproportionate’ impact on poorest Americans, report finds

COVID-19 has had ‘devastating and disproportionate’ impact on poorest Americans, report finds
COVID-19 has had ‘devastating and disproportionate’ impact on poorest Americans, report finds
Carol Yepes/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — As the nation approaches the grim milestone of 1 million lives confirmed lost to COVID-19, a new report reveals the “devastating and disproportionate” impact of the virus on low-income communities in the U.S., offering an initial analysis of the deadly consequences of poverty, economic insecurity and systemic racism.

“Poverty was not tangential to the pandemic, but deeply embedded in its geography,” researchers wrote. “Poverty and widespread inequality increases vulnerability to crises. While vaccines will prevent the worst impacts of COVID-19, they will not inoculate against poverty.”

The report, produced by the The Poor People’s Campaign in collaboration with the U.N. Sustainable Development Solutions Network, found that death rates in the lowest income group were double the death rates of those in the highest income group.

In addition, counties with disproportionately more Black residents had a significantly higher COVID-19 death rate than counties that did not.

The pandemic exacerbated preexisting social and economic disparities that existed prior to the emergence of COVID-19, the report found.

“Crises do not unfold independently of the conditions from which they arise,” researchers said. “The pandemic exacerbated preexisting social and economic disparities that have long festered in the US, including a deeply divided society, widespread poverty, a weak social safety net, inadequate living conditions, and a lack of trust in science that predated COVID-19.”

Prior to the onset of the pandemic, there were 140 million low-income people living in the U.S., accounting for approximately 40% of the population — including more than half of children in the country.

“Widespread and unequal distribution of wealth, income and resources prior to the pandemic created the conditions for many of the negative outcomes associated with the virus,” researchers wrote.

Death rates have varied throughout the pandemic, in each of the various surges. Researchers found that the two deadliest waves were the winter surge of 2020-2021, accounting for nearly 40% of all deaths to date, and the recent omicron surge, accounting for nearly 20% of deaths so far, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

With the exception of the first COVID-19 surge, U.S. counties with the “lowest median income had death rates at least two times higher than that of the counties with the highest income.”

Preexisting disparities in health care access, wealth distribution and housing insecurity created “disastrous effects” for some Americans, as the virus exacerbated gaps in access that “caused increased harm to populations based on their class, race, gender, geography, and ability.”

Findings also suggested that pandemic job losses were concentrated among low-income workers, and that Americans living in poverty were the most likely to miss work due to COVID-19. Furthermore, Black and Hispanic women were most likely to lose full-time jobs.

Researchers stressed that adequate living wages, shared economic prosperity and inclusive welfare programs can address some of the concerns discussed in the report. In addition, ensuring universal and affordable health care, housing, water, access to utilities, quality public education and guaranteeing a robust democracy “will establish a more equitable foundation upon which we can build back better from the pandemic.”

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Domestic airfare up 40% from start of the year: Hopper

Domestic airfare up 40% from start of the year: Hopper
Domestic airfare up 40% from start of the year: Hopper
Erlon Silva – TRI Digital via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Domestic airfare is up 40% from the start of the year and is expected to climb another 10% next month, according to online booking platform Hopper.

Last month, average airfare in the U.S. went up 5.2%, the third largest one-month jump since 1999, according to Scott Keyes, founder of Scott’s Cheap Flights.

Hopper said the cost of a domestic round trip is averaging $330 — 7% above 2019 prices. For international trips, the average round trip cost is $810, up 25% from the start of the year.

Pent-up demand and rising prices of jet fuel are driving the change.

“A tremendous amount of demand [is] from travelers who have not been able to travel the last two spring and summer seasons,” Haley Berg, economist at Hopper, said in an interview with ABC News. “And the second factor is jet fuel. Jet fuel prices are also up 40% since the beginning of the year and up 75% since this time last year. Demand and higher jet fuel prices together are really driving overall domestic airfare up.”

But it’s not all bad news. Keyes said average airfare doesn’t tell the whole story.

“A lot of folks see that headlines about airfares going up, and they’re worried that they’re not going to get any cheap flights anymore. And I actually think that’s the that’s the wrong way to look at things,” Keyes said in an interview with ABC News.

In the past two weeks, Keyes has found deals like $215 round trip to Hawaii, $395 round trip to Milan and $579 round trip to Australia.

“While it’s creeping back up, it’s important to remember we are still living in the golden age of cheap flights. Tickets are significantly cheaper than they used to be even a decade or two ago,” Keyes said.

To get those cheap fares, Keyes said it’s important to book one to three months in advance for domestic trips and two to eight months ahead for international trips.

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Mammoth WVH cancels Young Guns tour dates due to positive COVID tests

Mammoth WVH cancels Young Guns tour dates due to positive COVID tests
Mammoth WVH cancels Young Guns tour dates due to positive COVID tests
Scott Legato/Getty Images

Mammoth WVH‘s stint on the Young Guns tour has ended earlier than expected: Wolfgang Van Halen and company are canceling the final six shows on the tour, which also features Dirty Honey. The reason for the cancellation?  COVID, of course.

Van Halen says in a statement, “After an incredible weekend in Las Vegas with my family for the Grammys, I flew back yesterday to meet up with my band and crew in North Carolina to continue the Young Guns tour. This morning, as everyone took COVID tests to re-establish the bubble that has served us on the tour, we came to find that members of our band and crew who didn’t travel with me were positive.”  Van Halen himself is negative.

“With only 6 shows left in the tour, it breaks my heart that we unfortunately won’t be able to continue,” he adds. “Mammoth WVH will do our very best to make up the dates that we missed to the fans in those markets in the future.” 

Dirty Honey will still perform on the affected dates, which include tonight’s show in Raleigh, NC, as well as April 6 in Charlotte, April 8 in Nashville, April 9 in Dothan, AL, and April 10 and 12 in Orlando, FL.  Refunds are available at point of purchase.

Mammoth WVH will return to the road April 29 for a series of headlining shows.

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Powfu announces debut North American headlining tour

Powfu announces debut North American headlining tour
Powfu announces debut North American headlining tour
Columbia Records/Robots and Humans

Powfu will soon need a lot of coffee for his head when he embarks on his first-ever North American headlining tour.

The outing kicks off in the Canadian artist’s home country with a show in Calgary on May 28, and will make its way into the U.S. before wrapping up June 24 in Dallas.

“Been waiting 3 years for this tour,” Powfu says. ‘Bout time we go crazy.”

Tickets go on sale this Friday, April 8, at 10 a.m. local time. For the full list of dates and all ticket info, visit PowfuOfficial.com.

Powfu broke through in 2020 with his hit single “death bed (coffee for your head),” which features beabadoobee. He’s since released a number of EPs and singles, the most recent of which being last month’s “sleeping on the floor.”

Another new track, titled “draw you inside my book,” arrives this Friday. The song is inspired by the 2007 film Bridge to Terabithia, which was based on the beloved 1977 children’s novel of the same name.

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Doobie Brothers, Metallica, Mike Campbell and many more playing 2022 Bourbon & Beyond festival

Doobie Brothers, Metallica, Mike Campbell and many more playing 2022 Bourbon & Beyond festival
Doobie Brothers, Metallica, Mike Campbell and many more playing 2022 Bourbon & Beyond festival
Danny Wimmer Presents

The Doobie Brothers, Metallica and longtime Tom Petty guitarist Mike Campbell and his solo group The Dirty Knobs are among the many artists set to play the 2022 Bourbon & Beyond festival, taking place September 15-18 in Louisville, Kentucky.

The Doobies — featuring the band’s 50th anniversary tour lineup, including Michael McDonald, Tom Johnston, Pat Simmons and John McFee — will headline the festival’s final day, along with Grammy-winning country star Chris Stapleton. Campbell and The Dirty Knobs also will perform on September 18. Pearl Jam will headline the fest’s third day September 17, alongside contemporary rockers Greta Van Fleet.

This year’s other headliners are Jack White, Alanis Morissette, Kings of Leon, Greta Van Fleet and Brandi Carlile. Other performers include Jimmie Vaughan, Crowded House, Elle King, Robert Randolph Band, Marcus King, St. Vincent, Cold War Kids and more.

Billed as “The World’s Largest Bourbon & Music Festival,” the four-day event will showcase more than two dozen craft bourbons, and also will feature special culinary experiences and much more.

Tickets are on sale now. For the full lineup and all ticket info, visit BourbonandBeyond.com.

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Watch Vera Farmiga conjure heavy metal spirit with cover of Iron Maiden’s “The Trooper”

Watch Vera Farmiga conjure heavy metal spirit with cover of Iron Maiden’s “The Trooper”
Watch Vera Farmiga conjure heavy metal spirit with cover of Iron Maiden’s “The Trooper”
Amy Sussman/WireImage

Vera Farmiga proved that she’s equally adept at channeling the power of heavy metal as she is demons and other supernatural spirits with a rocking cover of Iron Maiden‘s “The Trooper.”

The actor, known for her role The Conjuring series and films including The Departed and Up in the Air, put her spin on Maiden’s 1983 classic during a recent performance at the Rock Academy music school in Woodstock, New York.

Farmiga recently shared an Instagram video of the rendition, which included Anthrax‘s Scott Ian on guitar. In the caption, she paid tribute to her parents’ home country of Ukraine — which continues to fight against Russia’s invasion — with hashtags including #GlorytoUkraine and #IStandWithUkraine.

We’d guess that “The Trooper” wasn’t a random choice, as its lyrics make reference to another Russia-involved military conflict, the Crimean War of the 1850s. 

Last month, Iron Maiden canceled their upcoming shows in Russia and Ukraine due to the war. 

“Our priority is, and will always be, the safety of our fans,” the metal legends said.

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