Exiled Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's party barred from electionNew Foto - Exiled Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's party barred from election

Bangladesh's Election Commission has cancelled the registration of the former ruling party of ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, preventing it from participating in the next national election, which is expected to be held by June next year. The decision on Monday came hours after the country's interim government headed byNobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunusissued an official notification banning the Awami League party and its affiliated bodies from conducting activities online and elsewhere. Monday's formal notification from the Ministry of Home Affairs was issued two days after the interim Cabinet decided to ban all activities of the party under the country's Anti-Terrorism Act until a special tribunal concludes a trial for the party and its leaders. In the notification, the government said it outlawed all activities "including any kind of publication, media, online and social media" as well as "any kind of campaign, procession, meeting, gathering (or) conference until the trial of the leaders and activists … is completed." It said the decision was effective immediately. Separately, the Election Commission said Monday it would not allow the Hasina-led party to contest the next election. Political parties must be registered with the Election Commission to take part in elections. A government adviser said Monday that anyone who posts comments online in support of the Awami League party would face arrest. On Sunday, the Awami League accused the interim government of "stoking division" and trampling on "democratic norms" by banning its activities. It said in a statement that the ban "stoked division within society, strangled democratic norms, fueled ongoing pogrom against dissenters and strangled inclusivity, all undemocratic steps." The Awami League is one of two major parties in Bangladesh, which has a fractious parliamentary democracy with a violent history of coups and political assassination. Hasina, the daughter of Bangladesh's independence leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, fled the country on Aug. 5 last year and has beenin exile in Indiasince then along with many senior party colleagues and former Cabinet minsters and lawmakers. They have been accused of killing protesters during an uprising against Hasina's 15-year rule in July-August last year. The United Nations human rights office said in a report in February that up to 1,400 people may have been killed during three weeks of anti-Hasina protests. But the Office of the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights recommended in a report to "refrain from political party bans that would undermine a return to a genuine multi-party democracy and effectively disenfranchise a large part of the Bangladeshi electorate." The Awami League, which led a nine-month war against Pakistan for independence in 1971, has been under severe pressure since Hasina's ouster. Protesters have attacked and torched many of its offices including its headquarters in Dhaka. It accuses the interim government of sponsoring mobs to attack the homes and businesses of their activists and leaders. It said thousands of its supporters have been arrested across the country and that many have been killed. Yunus has said the next election will likely be held either in December or in June next year. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Exiled Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s party barred from election

Exiled Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's party barred from election Bangladesh's Election Commission has cancelled the regis...
Chief Justice Roberts addresses divisions between justices after several recent SCOTUS skirmishesNew Foto - Chief Justice Roberts addresses divisions between justices after several recent SCOTUS skirmishes

Chief Justice John Roberts on Monday urged Georgetown Law's newest graduates to collaborate across ideological lines, commenting that on the Supreme Court, it's necessary for those who disagree strongly to work past their differences. Speaking to the dean of Georgetown Law, William Treanor, at a fireside chat Monday, Roberts lamented current political divisions, and though he was careful not to be specific, his comments came as PresidentDonald Trumphas sharply criticized judicial decisions that have set back his second-term policy agenda. It's "really too bad," Roberts said of the environment facing aspiring lawyers. "We're developing a situation where a whole group of young people is growing up having no real sense about how our system of justice works." He also noted that some of the harshest criticisms ofSupreme Court rulings, past and present, often come from fellow justices on the bench. But he also urged the importance of keeping these relationships above the fray and maintaining a sense of decorum. Chief Justice Roberts Doubles Down On Defense Of Courts As Scotus Gears Up To Hear Key Trump Cases ThoughSupreme Courtjustices may "disagree a lot," such differences have not strained their relationships. "We have to work together on these things that are difficult," Roberts said. "You find a way to get along." Read On The Fox News App "It's a long job. If you're sort of really at each other's throats with bad feelings and stuff like that, it's just not a good way to function," Roberts said, adding that the justices work to avoid the "toxic" relationships seen in earlier generations of the court. At times, the issues that frustrate the life-time appointed justices aren't quite as high-minded, Roberts acknowledged. "There's also the matter of the little things," he said. "I mean, if you're sitting next to somebody, and you just can't stand the way he or she kind of taps the chair, you're thinking, 'OK, we'll be here together for 20 years.' "And you know, you've got to decide, am I going to tell her to stop doing that, or am I going to just get over it, or what? And on a small level, that's kind of the way we across the board have to make those decisions and move on," he said. 100 Days Of Injunctions, Trials And 'Teflon Don': Trump Second Term Meets Its Biggest Tests In Court His remarks come as the Supreme Court is slated to hear a number of high-profile cases and emergency appeals filed by the Trump administration in the next few months. Alongside its regular docket – which already includes important cases on education, religious liberty and election redistricting – the Supreme Court has been asked to weigh in on several Trump-era executive actions. These include the ban ontransgender military service, efforts to reinstate fired federal employees and the use of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to expedite deportations. On Thursday, the court will hear arguments over Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship, including whether lower courts overstepped by issuing nationwide injunctions blocking the order, as the administration claims in its appeal. Original article source:Chief Justice Roberts addresses divisions between justices after several recent SCOTUS skirmishes

Chief Justice Roberts addresses divisions between justices after several recent SCOTUS skirmishes

Chief Justice Roberts addresses divisions between justices after several recent SCOTUS skirmishes Chief Justice John Roberts on Monday urged...
Judge orders restoration of jobs in health program for West Virginia coal minersNew Foto - Judge orders restoration of jobs in health program for West Virginia coal miners

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A judge on Tuesday ordered the restoration of a health monitoring program for coal miners in West Virginia and rescinded layoffs the federal government implemented in a unit of a small U.S. health agency. U.S. District Judge Irene Berger issued a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit filed against Health SecretaryRobert F. Kennedy Jr.and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services by a coal miner who was diagnosed with a respiratory ailment commonly known as black lung disease. Nearly 200 workers at aNational Institute for Occupational Safety and Healthfacility in Morgantown were told last month that their jobs were being terminated as part of restructuring within Health and Human Services. Berger ordered that jobs be restored within NIOSH's respiratory health division in Morgantown, although her ruling didn't specify a number. The division is responsible for screening and reviewing medical exams to determine whether there is evidence that miners have developed black lung. Federal law mandates that regular health screenings be made available to coal miners. Those diagnosed with black lung also are given the option to transfer to other positions in a mine to protect them from continued dust exposure without a pay reduction. Berger said the defendants "lack the authority to unilaterally cancel" the Coal Workers Health Surveillance Program within NIOSH. She ordered both the surveillance and job transfer programs to be restored, saying that "there be no pause, stoppage or gap in the protections and services" mandated by the federal Mine Safety and Health Act. Poisonous silica dust has contributed to the premature deaths of thousands of mine workers from black lung disease. Plaintiff Harry Wiley, a West Virginia mine electrician who has worked in coal mines for 38 years, was diagnosed with early-stage black lung last November. Canceling the health surveillance program would "cost lives," Berger wrote. "Remaining in a dusty job may reduce the years in which Mr. Wiley can walk and breathe unassisted, in addition to hastening his death. It is difficult to imagine a clearer case of irreparable harm." The judge gave Kennedy 20 days to show the federal government is complying with her order. An email seeking comment from Health and Human Services wasn't immediately returned Tuesday night. Wiley's attorney, Sam Brown Petsonk, said the preliminary injunction "had to happen, and the public, I think, understands the absolute necessity of this program. It cannot be hindered. It cannot be whittled away. It's essential because it saves the lives of some of he hardest-working people in this entire world." NIOSH was created under a 1970 law signed by President Richard Nixon. It started operations the following year and grew to have offices and labs in eight cities, including Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Morgantown, and Spokane, Washington.

Judge orders restoration of jobs in health program for West Virginia coal miners

Judge orders restoration of jobs in health program for West Virginia coal miners CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — A judge on Tuesday ordered the res...
Why Bob Odenkirk Has Wanted to Do 'Glengarry Glen Ross' for DecadesNew Foto - Why Bob Odenkirk Has Wanted to Do 'Glengarry Glen Ross' for Decades

Bob Odenkirk ("Better Call Saul") earned a Tony nomination for his Broadway debut in the hit revival of "Glengarry Glen Ross." But almost 30 years ago, if he'd gotten his way, he would have starred in a very different production of David Mamet's celebrated play. Listen to this week's "Stagecraft" podcast below: More from Variety 'Nobody 2' Trailer: Bob Odenkirk Kills Thugs With Whack-A-Mole Mallet, Boat Anchor and More in 'John Wick'-Style Action Sequel 'Glengarry Glen Ross,' Starring Kieran Culkin, Bob Odenkirk and Bill Burr, Recoups $7.5 Million Investment on Broadway Where to Buy Tickets For Broadway's Biggest Tony Nominees: 'Oh, Mary,' 'Stranger Things,' 'English' and More "Back around '97-'98, I wrote to David Mamet and asked him if I could do an all-comedy cast of 'Glengarry Glen Ross' with Fred Willard as Shelley Levine," Odenkirk recalled on the new episode of "Stagecraft," Variety's theater podcast. "I would be Ricky Roma, and David Cross and other people would be in it too. And I said: 'Is it okay if we change it so that instead of selling land, the characters are selling pots and pans?' He never wrote back." Odenkirk has wanted to do the show ever since. When asked why, he replied, "I can't help but think about my roots. My dad, who was not a friend of mine, he would take me and my brother to his office occasionally, until I was about seven or eight years old. And we would go to lunch with him and his friends and they'd get drunk. They were all drunks. They all destroyed their businesses, ended up divorced. Most of them had car accidents. My dad would take us to lunch, and those guys were the guys in 'Glengarry.'" He continued, "So I don't know, something about the play. You say, 'Well, I thought you didn't like your father. You want to get close to him or whatever?' I don't know, I guess I want to play those guys. I hung out with them occasionally, and I want to be one of those fuckers for a little while and live in their world. Live in their shoes. They're very short-sighted people, and immature. But you know, so are most of us." Odenkirk got his start in sketch comedy, which is considerably looser and more improvisatory than the word-perfect clockwork of performing in a Mamet play. His approach to "Glengarry" ended up being an extension of how he worked on "Breaking Bad" and "Better Call Saul." "For 'Breaking Bad,' when I first got the script, I almost started marking up that first script, like: 'Well, what if you said it this way? What if you shorten this?' Like I'd been doing my whole life in comedy. And then I immediately thought, 'You know what? I don't think a real actor does that.' I think a real actor goes: These are the words. What character do they describe, as scripted? Who is this guy if he talks like this, if he uses these phrases, if he repeats himself, if he backtracks? Who does that tell me he is?" Also in the new episode of "Stagecraft," Odenkirk expounded on the honor of being a Tony nominee — "to be invited in and embraced and given a nod here by this Broadway community, a community that you can see really knows each other, is pretty special" — and revealed why he was intimidated to tackle his first Broadway project. "The truth is, this was very intimidating and I told myself it wasn't," he said. "I told myself this is no big deal. It's just a stage. I've been on a million stages. But it was another level by a lot, and I didn't prepare for it, anxiety-wise." But, he added, he's grown to love it. "The audiences at a Broadway show come with the best fucking energy, and you get to work from that. It's the best. So now I'm looking at other plays." To hear the entire conversation, listen at the link above or download and subscribe to "Stagecraft" on podcast platforms, includingApple Podcasts,Spotifyand theBroadway Podcast Network.New episodes of "Stagecraft" are released every other week. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Why Bob Odenkirk Has Wanted to Do ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ for Decades

Why Bob Odenkirk Has Wanted to Do 'Glengarry Glen Ross' for Decades Bob Odenkirk ("Better Call Saul") earned a Tony nomina...
Marlo Thomas Makes First Public Appearance 8 Months After Death of Husband Phil DonahueNew Foto - Marlo Thomas Makes First Public Appearance 8 Months After Death of Husband Phil Donahue

Adela Loconte/Variety via Getty Marlo Thomas made her first public appearance since Phil Donahue's death at Family Equality's annual Night at the Pier gala Demi Moore, Debbie Harry and Nicole Scherzinger were among the stars supporting LGBTQ+ families at the event, held at Pier 60 on Chelsea Piers in New York City $1.5 million was raised to advance legal and lived equality for LGBTQ+ families nationwide Marlo Thomasappeared to be in good spirits on Monday, May 12, as she stepped out in New York City for Night at the Pier, Family Equality's signature fundraising gala. It was the first public appearance the Emmy-winning actress, producer, author and activist has made since the death of her husband,Phil Donahue. The beloved talk show hostdied in August 2024 at the age of 88after a long illness. Thomas and Donahue were married for 44 years.The longtime couplefirst met when she appeared as a guestonThe Phil Donahue Showin 1977, and they wed in 1980. Thomas credited their long bond to the "three L's" they followed throughout their romance: "Love, listening and lust." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images In the wake of his passing, Thomas has remained out of the spotlight. She evenmissed her annual Thanksgiving Day appearance on theTodayshowto promote the work done by St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, the renowned pediatric treatment center founded by her late father, Danny Thomas. But the May 12 Night at the Pier event was special. There, Thomas joinedDemi MooreandDebbie Harryto present entertainment industry powerhouses Jason Weinberg and Merritt Johnson with the Luigi Caiola Luminary Award for their continued advocacy and leadership to help ensure LGBTQ+ families have the legal protections, visibility and support they deserve. "The power to create a family doesn't come from gender or tradition, it comes from love," Moore said in her speech. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Others honored at the event included Peggy Gillespie, co-founder/director of Family Diversity Projects, a national nonprofit organization devoted to eliminating discrimination. Jim Obergefell, the lead plaintiff inObergefell v. Hodges(the 2015 U.S. Supreme Court case that ushered in marriage equality), was recognized, too, to mark 10 years of marriage equality. Among the 1,200 guests in the room were a slew of famous faces includingTallulah Willis,Kelly Ripa,Mark Consuelos,Jessica Lange,Georgina Chapman,Billy Eichner,Lucy Liu,Katie Couric,Ali Wentworth,Molly Ringwald,Zachary Quinto,Jessica Capshaw,Brandon Flynn, Wilson Cruz, Orfeh and Celia Keenan-Bolger, Cole Escola, Louis McCartney, Joy Woods, Fina Strazza and Natalie Venetia Belcon, plusNate Berkusand Jeremiah Brent, and Michael Arden and Andy Mientus. Nicole Scherzinger,Megan HiltyandDarren Crissall took the stage to perform. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! A whopping $1.5 million was raised to support Family Equality's work to advance legal and lived equality for LGBTQ+ families nationwide "This event is more than a moment. It's a movement," CEO of Family Equality Darra Gordon said in a statement before the event. "We are not simply acknowledging the resilience of LGBTQ+ families. We are actively investing in their future. Each story, each song, each dollar is a critical catalyst in a world where our families are not just respected, but where they are guaranteed the full spectrum of legal and social protection, for generations to come." Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Read the original article onPeople

Marlo Thomas Makes First Public Appearance 8 Months After Death of Husband Phil Donahue

Marlo Thomas Makes First Public Appearance 8 Months After Death of Husband Phil Donahue Adela Loconte/Variety via Getty Marlo Thomas made he...

 

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