Olympics director fired over Holocaust joke

The World
A woman is shown walking and pulling a rollaboard in an airport terminal with the Tokyo Olympics 2020 sign in the background.

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Olympics
The director of the opening ceremony for the Tokyo Olympics was fired on Thursday over accusations of a Holocaust joke he made many years ago. The organizing committee for the games dismissed Kentaro Kobayashi, just one day before the pandemic-delayed opening ceremonies are set to take place. Kobayashi allegedly used the Holocaust in a joke he made during a comedy show in 1998. The scandal is just the latest for the controversy-plagued games that has included allegations of bribes paid to International Olympic Committee members and multiple forced resignations.

Iran
Iran has begun bypassing the Strait of Hormuz after opening its first oil terminal in the Gulf of Oman. The $2 billion project is part of an effort to lessen Iran’s dependency on its main oil export terminal in the Persian Gulf and allow Iranian tankers to avoid the vulnerable and narrow Strait of Hormuz, where tensions with the United States and others often flare up. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani called the project “strategic” and suggested the new facility could eventually export as much as 1 million barrels of oil per day.

Norway
Church bells rang out on Thursday as thousands of people gathered at events across Norway marking 10 years since neo-Nazi, right-wing extremist Anders Breivik set off a bomb in Oslo, killing eight people, before traveling northwest where he shot dead another 69 people — mostly teens — on Utoya island. Jens Stoltenberg, Norway’s prime minister in 2011, at the time of the attacks, said at Oslo Cathedral that, “10 years ago we met hatred with love, but the hatred is still there.” Breivik was sentenced to 21 years in prison.

From The World

After the revolution, a secular Sudan?

A large crowd od people are shown outside of the tan-colored Grand Mosque with a man selling beaded jewelry in the nearground.
A vendor sells his wares outside of the Grand Mosque in Khartoum, Sudan.Mohamed Noureldin Abdallah/The World

The Nuba rebels of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North are negotiating with the transitional government, and reviving an age-old issue in Sudan: secularism, or the separation between religion and the state.

Farmworkers who face extreme heat fear retaliation or deportation if they complain, says nurse

Farm workers wearing hats break up earth
Pedro Lucas, left, nephew of farm worker Sebastian Francisco Perez who died while working in an extreme heat wave, breaks up earth near St. Paul, Oregon, July 1, 2021.Nathan Howard/AP/File photo

Farmworkers are 35 times more likely to die from a heat-related death than other occupations. Roxana Chicas, a nurse and assistant professor at Emory University School of Nursing in Georgia, told The World’s host Marco Werman that more needs to be done to protect farmworkers’ rights.

“[F]armworkers are 35 times more likely to die from a heat-related death, compared to other occupations, and we have documented that they sometimes work with a fever … many of them are chronically dehydrated,” Chicas said. “They suffer from heat-related illness symptoms. Some of them are even suffering from acute kidney injury.”

Global hit

Dakota Camacho wanted to understand the complexities of the Chamorro people’s history, and in the process, developed a unique hip-hop style. You can take a listen for yourself! ( ?)

Dakota Camacho, dancer and musician, seen in a body of a water unclothed with long hair.
Dakota Camacho is a Seattle-based dancer and musician with roots in Guam. Their quest to understand their ancestral history led to the development of a unique hip-hop style. Courtesy of Dakota Camacho

In case you missed it

Listen: Indonesia becomes the world’s latest COVID hot spot

Workers in protective suits carry a coffin containing the body of a COVID-19 victim to a grave for a burial at Cipenjo cemetery in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, Wednesday, July 14, 2021. 
Workers in protective suits carry a coffin containing the body of a COVID-19 victim to a grave for a burial at Cipenjo cemetery in Bogor, West Java, Indonesia, Wednesday, July 14, 2021. Achmad Ibrahim/AP

COVID-19 is tearing through Indonesia, where the total case count is nearing 3 million and the infection rates have skyrocketed since mid-May. And today, UNESCO announced it is revoking Liverpool’s World Heritage status, over concerns about the city’s waterfront redevelopment plans. Also, a rocket attack in Kabul, near the presidential palace, is yet another reminder of the worsening security situation in Afghanistan, with most US troops having already left. And, Seattle-based artist Dakota has roots in Guam. By researching the island’s history, Dakota developed a unique hip-hop style.

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