WM FINAL DEADLINE: ROSEN, GLOBAL INVESTOR COUNSEL, Encourages Waste Management, Inc. Investors With Losses Over $100K to Secure Counsel Before Important August 8 Deadline in Securities Class Action – WM

NEW YORK, July 21, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — WHY: Rosen Law Firm, a global investor rights law firm, reminds purchasers of Waste Management, Inc. (NYSE: WM) redeemable senior notes (the “Notes”) between February 13, 2020 and June 23, 2020, inclusive (the “Class Period”), including the following senior redeemable notes issued by WM in May 2019: (i) 2.95% Senior Notes due 2024; (ii) 3.20% Senior Notes due 2026; (iii) 3.45% Senior Notes due 2029; and (iv) 4.00% Senior Notes due 2039, of the important August 8, 2022 lead plaintiff deadline.

SO WHAT: If you purchased Waste Management Notes during the Class Period you may be entitled to compensation without payment of any out of pocket fees or costs through a contingency fee arrangement.

WHAT TO DO NEXT: To join the Waste Management class action, go to https://rosenlegal.com/submit-form/?case_id=6891 or call Phillip Kim, Esq. toll-free at 866-767-3653 or email pkim@rosenlegal.com or cases@rosenlegal.com for information on the class action. A class action lawsuit has already been filed. If you wish to serve as lead plaintiff, you must move the Court no later than August 8, 2022. A lead plaintiff is a representative party acting on behalf of other class members in directing the litigation.

WHY ROSEN LAW: We encourage investors to select qualified counsel with a track record of success in leadership roles. Often, firms issuing notices do not have comparable experience, resources or any meaningful peer recognition. Many of these firms do not actually handle securities class actions, but are merely middlemen that refer clients or partner with law firms that actually litigate the cases. Be wise in selecting counsel. The Rosen Law Firm represents investors throughout the globe, concentrating its practice in securities class actions and shareholder derivative litigation. Rosen Law Firm has achieved the largest ever securities class action settlement against a Chinese Company. Rosen Law Firm was Ranked No. 1 by ISS Securities Class Action Services for number of securities class action settlements in 2017. The firm has been ranked in the top 4 each year since 2013 and has recovered hundreds of millions of dollars for investors. In 2019 alone the firm secured over $438 million for investors. In 2020, founding partner Laurence Rosen was named by law360 as a Titan of Plaintiffs’ Bar. Many of the firm’s attorneys have been recognized by Lawdragon and Super Lawyers.

DETAILS OF THE CASE: The complaint filed in this class action alleges that throughout the Class Period, defendants made materially false and/or misleading statements, as well as failed to disclose material adverse facts about the Company’s business, operations, and prospects. Specifically, defendants failed to disclose to investors that: (1) the U.S. Department of Justice had indicated to Waste Management that it would require Waste Management to divest significantly more assets than the $200 million Antitrust Revenue Threshold; (2) as a result, the merger would not be completed by the End Date; and (3) the Notes would be subject to mandatory redemption at 101% of par. When the true details entered the market, the lawsuit claims that investors suffered damages.

To join the Waste Management class action, go to https://rosenlegal.com/submit-form/?case_id=6891 or call Phillip Kim, Esq. toll-free at 866-767-3653 or email pkim@rosenlegal.com or cases@rosenlegal.com for information on the class action.

No Class Has Been Certified. Until a class is certified, you are not represented by counsel unless you retain one. You may select counsel of your choice. You may also remain an absent class member and do nothing at this point. An investor’s ability to share in any potential future recovery is not dependent upon serving as lead plaintiff.

Follow us for updates on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-rosen-law-firm, on Twitter: https://twitter.com/rosen_firm or on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rosenlawfirm/.

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Contact Information:

Laurence Rosen, Esq.
Phillip Kim, Esq.
The Rosen Law Firm, P.A.
275 Madison Avenue, 40th Floor
New York, NY 10016
Tel: (212) 686-1060
Toll Free: (866) 767-3653
Fax: (212) 202-3827
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www.rosenlegal.com

‫هواوي تطلق حل الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية 2.0 للاستفادة من منصة Temenos

سنغفورة، 22 يوليوز/تموز 2022 / PRNewswire / — خلال مؤتمر هواوي Huawei للتمويل الذكي 2022 – أطلقت هواوي Huawei حل الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية 2.0 الذي يستفيد من منصة Temenos المفتوحة، وناقشت مع العملاء وكبار الشركاء في الصناعة المالية كيفية بناء بنية سحابية أصلية لتحقيق سرعة الأعمال والابتكار الصناعي.

المصرفية الرقمية هي اتجاه عالمي

في مواجهة المنافسة الشرسة مع عمالقة الإنترنت، تتحول البنوك من مقدمي الخدمات المالية التقليدية إلى مقدمي الخدمات المالية الرقمية الجديدة القائمة على النظام الإيكولوجي للصناعة. تعمل التقنيات الجديدة – مثل السحابة الأصلية وواجهة برمجة التطبيقات المفتوحة والبيانات الضخمة – بالإضافة إلى البيئة الاقتصادية الجديدة على دفع الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية إلى أن تكون مفتوحة وذكية مع قدرة تكامل سلسة.

يتعين على البنوك التحول إلى التكنولوجيا الرقمية لتلبية المتطلبات الجديدة المتنوعة في السيناريوهات الجديدة، وتعتبر الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية خيارًا لا مفر منه. في الواقع، شهدت البنوك الرقمية العالمية نموًا هائلاً في السنوات الأخيرة. وفقًا لإحصائيات قاعدة بيانات بنك Simon-Kucher الجديدة، ظهر 153 بنكًا رقميًا في عامي 2020 و 2021، وسيستمر هذا الرقم في الارتفاع في المستقبل.

أطلقت هواوي Huawei حل الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية 2.0 الذي يستفيد من منصة Temenos المفتوحة التي تدعم التحول الهندسي للبنوك وابتكار الأعمال

Jason Cao, CEO of Huawei Global Digital Finance & Jimmy Ng, CIO and Head of Group Technology & Operations, DBS

خلال المؤتمر، أصدرت هواوي Huawei حل الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية 2.0 الذي يستفيد من منصة Temenos المفتوحة. يعد حل الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية الجديد هذا حلاً مطورًا ويستخدم منصة Temenos المفتوحة للخدمات المصرفية القابلة للتكوين لتوفير وظائف الخدمات المصرفية الأساسية وقدرات البيانات السحابية الأصلية. يدعم هذا الحل الإطلاق السريع للبنوك الرقمية ويساعد البنوك الكبيرة على تسريع عملية التحديث في السحابة. هذا يحسن بشكل كبير من كفاءة الطرح ورضا العملاء.

يتيح حل الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية 2.0 إمكانية تكامل الخدمة بسرعة ونشرها استنادًا إلى بنية السحابة الأصلية، مما يوفر وظائف مصرفية أساسية للبنوك. يتضمن الحل القدرات الأساسية التالية:

  1. المدمج مسبقا: يقدم الحل المعتمد مع Temenos والشركاء الآخرين في الصناعة مجموعة وظائف كاملة وشاملة من الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية للعملاء في سيناريوهات الأعمال المختلفة، مثل التجزئة المصرفية والشركات والخدمات المصرفية الإسلامية، إلخ.
  2. ذكي: يوفر الحل خدمات مصرفية قابلة للدمج تتيح تطوير خدمات جديدة وتكرارها من خلال التجميع البسيط. في الوقت نفسه، فإن النظام السحابي الأصلي قابل للتطوير بدرجة كبيرة وفعال من حيث التكلفة، ويتطلب استثمارات أولية أقل.
  3. مفتوح: يوفر النظام الأساسي واجهات برمجة تطبيقات مفتوحة لاستدعاء الطرف الثالث والتكامل. يثري النظام البيئي ويدعم المزيد من سيناريوهات الأعمال. كل هذا يؤدي إلى تحسين كفاءة تشغيل النظام ورضا المستخدم.

قدم نيو غونغ، كبير مديري حلول التمويل الرقمي في مجموعة أعمال هواوي Huawei ، “يمكن تقديم الخدمات المصرفية الرقمية 2.0 في البرمجيات كخدمة SaaS أو نموذج الأساس السحابي. يساعد هذا الحل العملاء على تحسين كفاءتهم في العمليات التجارية وإدارة التكاليف، بحيث يمكنهم التركيز بشكل أكبر على ابتكار الخدمة وتطوير النظام البيئي. استنادًا إلى التعاون مع Temenos ، وهي منصة مفتوحة رائدة للخدمات المصرفية القابلة للتكوين، يوفر هذا الحل وظائف مصرفية أساسية غنية للبنوك “.

من خلال بناء أساس سحابي ذكي ومرن وآمن وموثوق، والتكامل مع الشركاء لبناء حلول مالية قائمة على السيناريوهات، تلتزم هواوي Huawei بمواصلة تعزيز تطوير وابتكار الخدمات المالية، وتشكيل تمويل أكثر ذكاءً وصديقًا للبيئة معًا.

حول مؤتمر هواوي Huawei للتمويل الذكي 2022

يعد مؤتمر هواوي Huawei للتمويل الذكي حدثًا سنويًا رائدًا تنظمه هواوي Huawei في الصناعة المالية العالمية. يبدأ مؤتمر هواوي Huawei للتمويل الذكي 2022 من 20 إلى 22 يوليوز/تموز في سنغافورة. تحت عنوان “تشكيل تمويل أكثر ذكاءً وصديقا للبيئة”، يجمع  مؤتمر هواوي Huawei للتمويل الذكي بين الشخصيات البارزة وقادة الرأي الرئيسيين والخبراء الأكاديميين والممارسين المبتكرين في الصناعة المالية العالمية لمناقشة كيفية تشكيل التمويل الأخضر والرقمي في ضوء اتجاه التنمية المستقبلية من الصناعة المالية. لمزيد من المعلومات، يُرجى زيارة:  https://e.huawei.com/en/special_topic/Industry/finance/2022-finance-summit

رابط الصورة – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1863833/image.jpg  

Libya Official: Renewed Militia Clashes in Tripoli Kill 13

Clashes between competing militias in Libya’s capital killed at least 13 people, a spokesman for Tripoli’s emergency services said on Friday, despite calls for calm after violence first broke out the previous night.

It was the latest escalation to threaten the relative peace after nearly a decade of civil war in Libya, where two rival sets of authorities are locked in a political stalemate. The divisions have sparked several incidents of violence in Tripoli in recent months, but most have been over in a matter of hours.

According to Osama Ali, the emergency services spokesman, among those killed since the fighting started late Thursday were three civilians from the area and a 12-year-old child. He also said 30 people had been wounded.

Earlier in the day, one of Libya’s rival governments had called on militias to stop the fighting, which forced hundreds of people to flee the area.

The Libyan Presidential Council, based in Tripoli, said all forces involved in the clashes should go back to their bases immediately. Malek Merset, another emergency spokesman, said 200 people had already fled the area, some of them who were attending a wedding. He called for the firing to stop so more could leave.

The clashes spread to other areas of the city. The Mitiga airport, Tripoli’s only working airport, announced that it was closing out of concern for passenger safety. The U.N. mission to the country also called on all parties involved to exercise restraint.

Libya has for years been split between rival administrations in the east and the west, each supported by various well-armed militias and foreign governments. The Mediterranean nation has been in a state of upheaval since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising toppled and later killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

The cause of the fighting was unclear. However, there were indications it was part of the ongoing power struggle between militias backing the country’s rival administrations. Videos shared on social media showed local militia forces deploying and heavy fire being exchanged across the night sky.

The country’s plan to transition to an elected government fell through after an interim administration based in Tripoli, headed by Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, failed to hold elections last year. Dbeibah was meant to share executive power with The Presidential Council in Tripoli until an elected government could take over. The postponement drove aground yearslong U.N.-led attempts to usher in a more democratic future and bring the country’s war to an end.

Dbeibah has refused to step down since then, raising questions over his mandate.

In response, the country’s east-based lawmakers have elected a rival prime minister, Fathy Bashagha, a powerful former interior minister who is now operating a separate administration out of the city of Sirte. An attempt in May by Basghagha to install his government in Tripoli also ended in clashes that killed one, after which he withdrew.

Source: Voice of America

Monkeypox Virus Could Become Entrenched as New STD in US

The spread of monkeypox in the U.S. could represent the dawn of a new sexually transmitted disease, though some health officials say the virus that causes pimple-like bumps might yet be contained before it gets firmly established.

Experts don’t agree on the likely path of the disease, with some fearing that it is becoming so widespread that it is on the verge of becoming an entrenched STD — like gonorrhea, herpes and HIV.

But no one’s really sure, and some say testing and vaccines can still stop the outbreak from taking root.

So far, more than 2,400 U.S. cases have been reported as part of an international outbreak that emerged two months ago.

Health officials are not sure how fast the virus has spread. They have only limited information about people who have been diagnosed, and they don’t know how many infected people might be spreading it unknowingly.

They also don’t know how well vaccines and treatments are working. One impediment: Federal health officials do not have the authority to collect and connect data on who has been infected and who has been vaccinated.

With such huge question marks, predictions about how big the U.S. outbreak will get this summer vary widely, from 13,000 to perhaps more than 10 times that number.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the government’s response is growing stronger every day and vaccine supplies will soon surge.

“I think we still have an opportunity to contain this,” Walensky told The Associated Press.

Monkeypox is endemic in parts of Africa, where people have been infected through bites from rodents or small animals. It does not usually spread easily among people.

But this year more than 15,000 cases have been reported in countries that historically don’t see the disease. In the U.S. and Europe, the vast majority of infections have happened in men who have sex with men, though health officials have stressed that anyone can catch the virus.

It spreads mainly through skin-to-skin contact, but it can also be transmitted through linens used by someone with monkeypox. Although it’s been moving through the population like a sexually transmitted disease, officials have been watching for other types of spread that could expand the outbreak.

Symptoms include fever, body aches, chills, fatigue and bumps on parts of the body. The illness has been relatively mild in many men, and no one has died in the U.S. But people can be contagious for weeks, and the lesions can be extremely painful.

When monkeypox emerged, there was reason to believe that public health officials could control it.

The tell-tale bumps should have made infections easy to identify. And because the virus spreads through close personal contact, officials thought they could reliably trace its spread by interviewing infected people and asking who they had been intimate with.

It didn’t turn out to be that easy.

With monkeypox so rare in the U.S., many infected men — and their doctors — may have attributed their rashes to some other cause.

Contact tracing was often stymied by infected men who said they did not know the names of all the people they had sex with. Some reported having multiple sexual interactions with strangers.

It didn’t help that local health departments, already burdened with COVID-19 and scores of other diseases, now had to find the resources to do intensive contact-tracing work on monkeypox, too.

Indeed, some local health officials have given up expecting much from contact tracing.

There was another reason to be optimistic: The U.S. government already had a vaccine. The two-dose regimen called Jynneos was licensed in the U.S. in 2019 and recommended last year as a tool against monkeypox.

When the outbreak was first identified in May, U.S. officials had only about 2,000 doses available. The government distributed them but limited the shots to people who were identified through public health investigations as being recently exposed to the virus.

Late last month, as more doses became available, the CDC began recommending that shots be offered to those who realize on their own that they could have been infected.

Demand has exceeded supply, with clinics in some cities rapidly running out of vaccine doses and health officials across the country saying said they don’t have enough.

That’s changing, Walensky said. As of this week, the government has distributed more than 191,000 doses, and it has 160,000 more ready to send. As many as 780,000 doses will become available as early as next week.

Once current demand is satisfied, the government will look at expanding vaccination efforts.

The CDC believes that 1.5 million U.S. men are considered at high risk for the infection.

Testing has also expanded. More than 70,000 people can be tested each week, far more than current demand, Walensky said. The government has also embarked on a campaign to educate doctors and gay and bisexual men about the disease, she added.

Donal Bisanzio, a researcher at RTI International, believes U.S. health officials will be able to contain the outbreak before it becomes endemic.

But he also said that won’t be the end of it. New bursts of cases will probably emerge as Americans become infected by people in other countries where monkeypox keeps circulating.

Walensky agrees that such a scenario is likely. “If it’s not contained all over the world, we are always at risk of having flare-ups” from travelers, she said.

Shawn Kiernan, of the Fairfax County Health Department in Virginia, said there is reason to be tentatively optimistic because so far the outbreak is concentrated in one group of people — men who have sex with men.

Spread of the virus into heterosexual people would be a “tipping point” that may occur before it’s widely recognized, said Kiernan, chief of the department’s communicable disease section.

Spillover into heterosexuals is just a matter of time, said Dr. Edward Hook III, emeritus professor of infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

If monkeypox becomes an endemic sexually transmitted disease, it will be yet another challenge for health departments and doctors already struggling to keep up with existing STDs.

Such work has long been underfunded and understaffed, and a lot of it was simply put on hold during the pandemic. Kiernan said HIV and syphilis were prioritized, but work on common infections like chlamydia and gonorrhea amounted to “counting cases and that’s about it.”

For years, gonorrhea, chlamydia and syphilis cases have been rising.

“By and large,” Hook said, doctors “do a crummy job of taking sexual histories, of inquiring about and acknowledging their patients are sexual beings.”

Source: Voice of America

Kenyan Court Convicts 3 Police Officers, Informant of Murder

Kenya’s high court on Friday convicted three police officers in the 2016 slayings of a human rights lawyer, his client and a driver.

Fredrick Leliman, Stephen Cheburet and Sylvia Wanjiku, and police informant Peter Ngugi, were found guilty on three counts of first-degree murder.

The officers were charged with killing human rights lawyer Willie Kimani, his client, Josephat Mwenda, and the driver, Joseph Muiruri.

Abducted after court filing

The three were abducted in June 2016 as they left a court, where Kimani had filed a complaint alleging that his client was shot and wounded by police. Their bodies were later found in a river, wrapped in burlap sacks.

In her judgment, Justice Jessie Lesiit said she had analyzed exhibits and evidence given by 46 prosecution witnesses and 34 defense witnesses and had concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants were guilty.

The justice found that Kimani had been harassed before his murder. The 32-year-old lawyer had been working with the International Justice Mission, a global legal rights group.

Lesiit found that the officers contemplated for three hours whether to kill the victims, which indicated malicious motive.

“I have carefully considered the evidence produced in this case by both sides and I have considered the submission by counsel of the authorities established against the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 5th, the accused persons, justifying the drawing of an imprint of guilt,” the judge said.

A fourth person accused in the case, Leonard Mwangi, was acquitted because of a lack of sufficient evidence against him.

Rights groups in Kenya frequently accuse police of brutality and extrajudicial killings, but officers are rarely charged, and even more rarely convicted.

The three police officers face the possibility of life in prison.

Source: Voice of America

Cheetahs to Return to India After 70 Years in Deal With Namibia

India and Namibia have signed an agreement to bring cheetahs to the forests of the South Asian country, where the large cat became extinct 70 years ago.

According to the agreement signed Wednesday, eight African cheetahs will be transferred from Namibia to India in August for captive breeding at the Kuno National Park (KNP) wildlife sanctuary, in the central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.

Indian officials said that as part of the “ambitious” project, 12 more African cheetahs from South Africa are expected to be brought to the park, though a formal agreement between the two countries has not yet been signed.

The KNP wildlife sanctuary is the new Indian home for African cheetahs, complying with International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) guidelines, including a specific focus on site quality, abundant prey base and vast swaths of grasslands.

“The main goal of cheetah reintroduction project is to establish viable cheetah metapopulation in India that allows the cheetah to perform its functional role as a top predator,” a statement from the Indian Environment Ministry said.

The arrival of the cheetahs is expected to coincide with India’s 75th Independence Day celebrations on August 15, 2022.

After signing the agreement in New Delhi with Namibia’s Deputy Prime Minister Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, India’s Environment Minister Bhupender Yadav tweeted: “Completing 75 glorious years of Independence with restoring the fastest terrestrial flagship species, the cheetah, in India, will rekindle the ecological dynamics of the landscape.”

In another tweet, he said, “Cheetah reintroduction in India has a larger goal of re-establishing ecological function in Indian grasslands that was lost due to extinction of Asiatic cheetah. This is in conformity with IUCN guidelines on conservation translocations.”

A statement from the Environment Ministry said the KNP can currently host up to 21 cheetahs, but after the restoration of a wider landscape, its capacity will be increased to about 36.

The cheetah, the fastest land animal, has been rapidly heading toward extinction and is classified as a vulnerable species under the IUCN’s red list of threatened species. An estimated 7,000 cheetahs remain in the wild and almost all of them are in Africa.

The plummeting number of cheetahs across the world is blamed mostly on the depletion of habitats and poaching. Hunting, loss of habitat and food scarcity led to the animal’s extinction in India.

It is believed that more than 10,000 Asiatic cheetahs roamed the wilds of India during the 16th century.

The cheetah population in India dwindled during the 19th century, largely because of bounty hunting by local Indian kings and ruling British officials.

The last three Asiatic cheetahs were hunted down in 1948 by an Indian king in central India. In 1952, the cheetah was declared officially extinct in the country.

Just a dozen or so Asiatic cheetahs are left in the wild right now — all in Iran.

In 2010, India initiated an effort to revive the cheetah population at the KNP wildlife sanctuary by bringing in African cheetahs. But in 2012, an Indian court stalled the project, noting it would come in conflict with a then-ongoing plan to introduce lions in the sanctuary.

In 2020, India’s Supreme Court announced African cheetahs could be introduced in a “carefully chosen location” in India on an experimental basis. Since then, India has been making an effort to ship in the African cheetahs.

Indian officials are hopeful that this time, the plan to introduce African cheetahs in India is going to succeed, and the country will be able to revive its cheetah population.

Source: Voice of America