Isabelle Axelsson is one of the youngest delegates at Davos,where the 19-year-old, dressed in Doc Martin boots and dungarees, and her fellow climate activists are calling on the world leaders to do more to tackle climate change. Axelsson is part of the Stockholm branch of “Fridays for Future” which includes founding member Greta Thunberg. “People are taking us more seriously than they were before,” Axelsson told Reuters this week in the flat she is sharing with fellow campaigners from Switzerland and Germany, adding: “I think it’s a lot of talk and not enough action.”
↑Swedish climate change activist Isabelle Axelsson attends a session at the WEF, January 21, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
“We’re sleeping out in Davos because we believe that there are decision-makers here that need to, instead of think differently, they need to act differently to end homelessness,” he told Reuters.
↑Andrew Funk poses in Davos, Switzerland January 22, 2020. REUTERS/Fejda Grulovic
↑House Manager Rep. Adam Schiff speaks next to Rep. Jerry Nadler near the Senate Subway in Washington, U.S., January 22, 2020. REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert
The lawmaker walking U.S. senators methodically through the casefor removing President Trump from office is also becoming Exhibit A in efforts by the president’s allies to defend him. Over the first three days of Trump’s impeachment trial, the head of the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, Adam Schiff, has led a team of Democratic lawmakers serving as prosecutors as they lay out their evidence that Trump abused his power by pressuring Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden, a leading 2020 Democratic presidential contender.
How long can the U.S. Senate sit still?The 100 U.S. senators who will determine whether to remove President Trump from office at the end of his impeachment trial managed to stay seated and listen to the Democratic case against him for about 20 minutes. Despite a warning about the power of Senate security, members of both parties disregarded rules that call for them to remain seated and silent through the impeachment trial before voting as jurors on Trump’s fate.
China ramped up measures to contain a virus that has killed 26 people and infected more than 800, suspending public transport in 10 cities, shutting temples over the Lunar New Year and even closing the Forbidden City and part of the Great Wall.
Thousands of Iraqis rallied at two central Baghdad intersections on Friday after a prominent cleric called for a “million strong” protest against the American military presence, following the U.S. killing of an Iranian general and an Iraqi militia chief.
Britain scolded the United States for refusing to extradite a U.S. diplomat’s wife who was involved in a car crash that killed a British teenager. British prosecutors had requested the extradition of Anne Sacoolas over the crash last August in which 19-year-old Briton Harry Dunn was killed while riding his motorbike.