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Dielli | The Sun

Albanian American Newspaper Devoted to the Intellectual and Cultural Advancement of the Albanians in America | Since 1909

Trump Appointee at Agency for Global Media Paid Millions To Investigate His Own Staff

March 11, 2021 by dgreca

U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO Michael Pack dismissed the heads of all its broadcasters when he took office in June.

Former U.S. Agency for Global Media CEO that oversees Voice of America, Michael Pack, contracted with a private law firm to investigate his own staff, a task usually done by government specialists. Mr. Pack, an appointee of former President Donald Trump was irate because he could not simply fire top executives who had warned him that some of his plans might be illegal. In August, Mr. Pack suspended those top executives. He immediately ordered up an investigation to determine what wrongdoing the executives might have committed.

Instead of turning to inspectors general or civil servants to investigate, Mr. Pack personally signed a no-bid contract to hire a high-profile law firm with strong Republican ties. The bill — paid by taxpayers — exceeded $1 million in just the first few months of the contract.

Government Accountability Project, a nonprofit that represents federal whistleblowers accusing Pack and some of his inner circle of breaking U.S. laws and regulations, shared an analysis of documents related to the contract between Mr. Pack and the law firm.

“The engagement constitutes gross mismanagement, gross waste of taxpayer dollars and abuse of authority,” David Seide of the Government Accountability Project, wrote in a letter to congressional committees with oversight of the USAGM. “The investigations produced nothing that could justify the kind of discipline Mr. Pack sought to impose on current USAGM employees he did not like — he wanted them fired (they have since been reinstated). Investigations of former employees also yielded nothing.”

Defined by scandal at Voice of America, CEO has resigned at Biden’s request. The new acting CEO Kelu Chao, a former senior Voice of America official, was appointed by President Biden on the day of his inauguration. She has brought back many of the executives that Pack suspended and investigated. 

USAGM is the parent agency of Voice of America, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and other networks that cover news for people living in nations overseas. They reach an estimated combined audience of more than 360 million people each week, providing news for countries where a free press is either not financially viable or under assault from repressive regimes. 

NPR Edited version

Filed Under: Analiza Tagged With: Michael Pack, Rafaela Prifti

WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH

March 2, 2021 by dgreca

by Rafaela Prifti/


The start of Women’s History Month serves as a reminder of an ongoing campaign to elevate the voices of women. “T
o honor women across the globe, we must ensure that they are not only celebrated, but also supported,” says Nathalia Fernández, who is running for the office of the Bronx Borough President.

Fifty years ago, women’s history was not part of the K-12 curriculum or in the general public consciousness, according to records of the National Women’s History Alliance. To address this situation, the Education Task Force of the Sonoma County, California, Commission on the Status of Women initiated a “Women’s History Week” celebration in 1978.

The intention was to observe the week of March 8th – International Women’s Day. Dozens of schools planned special programs for Women’s History Week and numerous community women participated in special presentations in classrooms throughout the country. At the end of the week a celebratory parade was held in downtown Santa Rosa, California.


The success of the Sonoma County’s Women’s History Week initiated similar celebrations in organizations, communities, and school districts. They all joined in agreement to support an effort to secure a “National Women’s History Week.”

The historical records reveal that in February 1980 President Carter issued the first Presidential Proclamation declaring the Week of March 8th as National Women’s History Week.


The Presidential support prompted lobbying efforts on a national scale. “State Departments of Education encouraged celebrations of National Women’s History Week as an effective means to achieving equity goals within classrooms,” notes the website of National Women’s History Alliance. States like New York, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Oregon, and others developed and distributed curriculum materials for all of their public schools. Encouraged by resolutions from governors, city councils, school boards, and the U.S. Congress, thousands of schools and communities were celebrating the event. Through the years, the growing efforts of hundreds of educational and women’s organizations was spearheaded by the National Women’s History Alliance. Thanks to increased lobbying, in 1987, Congress declared March as National Women’s History Month in perpetuity. A special Presidential Proclamation is issued every year which honors the extraordinary achievements of American women.

Filed Under: Komunitet Tagged With: Rafaela Prifti, WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH

GRIM MILESTONE

February 22, 2021 by dgreca

President Biden is asking Americans to mark the 500,000 deaths with a moment of silence at sunset Monday. He’s also ordered flags on all federal buildings lowered to half-staff for five days. The disease has killed at least 100,000 people in the past five weeks and was the leading cause of death in the country in January, ahead of heart disease, cancer and other ailments, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Since last February the disease began to ravage nursing homes and the five boroughs of New York, frequently striking the most vulnerable on account of age, poor health, job requirements or crowded living conditions. Now, around 2,000 people die from the disease every day on average, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, down from a high of over 3,000 a day on average in mid-January. The pandemic’s deadliest day in the U.S. so far has been January 12 when 4,400 people died.

The NPR report lays out that death count in the US far exceeds that of other countries — a fact that health experts attribute to the scattered, patchwork pandemic response from the Trump administration. The specialists cite the shortages of personal protective equipment, testing supplies and contact tracing capacity as some of the missing pieces that could have saved lives. Putting in place the public health measures was not the focus of the previous administration. Neither was ensuring that workplaces for those who had to go to work were safe, nor securing adequate personal protective equipment for workers. The politicization of public health messaging, on topics such as masking and the severity of the disease in comparison with flu, also confused and endangered the public, say health experts.

Perhaps the most heartbreaking fact about reaching half a million U.S. deaths, is that the toll is still rising. Though new infections and hospitalizations are slowing after a midwinter peak, the country has a long way to go to end the pandemic. The present situation is described as a race between the vaccine and new more transmissible variants Americans will need to stick to safe behavior to keep the virus from surging badly again.

IHME is now forecasting the U.S. may surpass 600,000 deaths by June.

According to health experts, although we are several months into vaccinating this is not the time to drop the guard and start gathering, because that’s going to erase all the progress that we’ve recently made. Still many speak with measured optimism about the future. People who work in hospitals and in funeral homes are witnesses to the loss than many Americans can avoid. 

PROCESSING GRIEF

The toll of witnessing these deaths has largely fallen on front line health care workers. 

Signs of hope ahead do not soften the tragedy of each life lost to the illness. The losses include children, and adults of all ages and ethnicities. More than 3,400 health care workers in the U.S. have died from COVID-19, according to numbers from The Guardian and KHN It’s hard to fathom hundreds of thousands of lives in the U.S., and some 2 million more around the world, cut short by the pandemic.

For health workers who help the families say the final goodbyes, it has been extremely hard. It appears that we as a nation have not coped with this. It’s almost as if these are individual losses to individual families, but that they are not seen as a loss to the whole society.

The COVID-19 memorial tribute last month, on the eve of President Biden’s inauguration, in which lights were placed around the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool, was the first formal acknowledgment of the pandemic’s death toll in the U.S. by the executive branch of the federal government. For most of the past year the burden of processing the grief has fallen on health care and funeral home workers.

Edited NPR Reporting

Filed Under: Analiza Tagged With: GRIM MILESTONE, Rafaela Prifti

A MOVING TRIBUTE

February 20, 2021 by dgreca

MTA Citywide Memorial in Honor of Workers Lost to COVID-19/

by Rafaela Prifti/

The death toll of COVID-19 pandemic is nearing half a million in the US. The grieving for the loved ones is made harder under ongoing restrictive measures. The outdoor memorials and candlelight vigils help to alleviate the sorrow. In New York, the MTA, the underground transportation system that keeps New Yonkers such as this one moving, opened its own memorial to honor the essential workers who were hard hit by COVID-19. 

Throughout the subway system, portraits of MTA workers lost to the pandemic were on view through the first week of February. Director of the MTA Arts & Design department and a visual artist, Sandra Bloodworth initiated the project in collaboration with Cheryl Hageman and Victoria Statsenko. The data released by the MTA New York City transit confirms that 140 members of their workforce have passed away from COVID-19. The train operators and conductors have been affected at the highest rate. The in-memoriam slideshow consists of portraits of the deceased employees on displays at 107 subway stations in all five boroughs on screens where we are used to see maps and service changes, integrated with a newly commissioned poem, “Travels Far,” by the Poet Laureate Tracy K. Smith and a nine-minute video, with audio by composer Christopher Thompson, at three times a day. The MTA officials said that it is important for the 55,000 employees to see the memorial as well — and know that they and their families are appreciated. One of the first employees who died last March, Peter Petrassi was a subway conductor and operations associate. In response to the first lives lost to the pandemic, the MTA launched a new unit to help liaise with their families. The team invited families from all MTA departments to submit portraits of the deceased employees. They are set against backdrops of MTA colors. Mostly New York City Transit workers who make up the majority of the portraits, some Long Island Rail Road and Metro North employees. 

The agency head said that while coworkers and colleagues are still unable to gather in a physical space, they did not want to wait any more to pay respects in a special memorial. In the future, MTA will have a permanent memorial and in-person service. 

The creative way to honor and celebrate the lives lost to COVID-19 serves as a touching reminder of the sacrifices of the essential workers whose work cannot be done from home. The memorial allows us to grieve with a deeper appreciation for the MTA employees who continue to keep the city moving. 

The artwork stays up for a few weeks. Yet the riders carry the memorial in their ever-lasting motion on buses and trains.

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Memorial in Honor, MTA Citywide, of Workers Lost to COVID-19, Rafaela Prifti

Vetevendosje Projected to Win Kosova’s Election

February 14, 2021 by dgreca

by Rafaela Prifti/

Despite freezing temperatures and the Covid pandemic, Kosova’s parliamentary election saw citizens go to the polls on Sunday. A series of exit polls predicted Vetevendosje (Self Determination) party to take first place, PDK is projected to finish second and LDK to come in third. NISMA looks set to miss out with polls predicting less than 3 percent of the vote going to the party. Three exit polls released as voting closed in Sunday’s parliamentary election put Vetevendosje in first place with between 42 and 53 percent of the vote. 

Leader of the party Albin Kurti has campaigned on bringing social and legal justice and key issues of reciprocity with Serbia. In terms of foreign policy, he has pledged to dismiss “aspects of the agreements signed by the Hoti government in Washington DC under the auspices of the Trump administration. Vetevendosja’s position is to not commit to all agreements given that Serbia has been violating the terms constantly, as the Serbian officials continually oppose the recognition for Kosovo, despite pledging to halt its de-recognition campaign. “We cannot be overly polite to Serbia, whose aim is to deny the existence of Kosovo statehood,” said Mr. Kurti to the reporters. 

The election was held early pursuant to the Constitutional Court ruling that the last government was formed through an illegitimate vote in parliament. 

An estimate of 1.8 million people were eligible to vote in the election, with an additional 100,000 diaspora Kosovars eligible to vote by mail. Overseas mail ballots are not included in the polls, and the verification process is not expected to start until Monday evening. 

The parliamentary election will determine 120 lawmakers from among more than 1,000 candidates from 28 political groupings. Kosovo’s Serbian minority has 10 seats, and 10 more representatives come from other national minorities.

There have been some reports of irregularities at polling places. The adverse weather conditions made access to the polls difficult for some citizens.

Partial results are expected late Sunday evening.

Filed Under: Politike Tagged With: Albin Kurti, Rafaela Prifti, vetevendosja

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