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Added on the 25/01/2021 13:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Quito, Jan 25 (EFE), (Camera: Juan Francisco Chávez).- Less than two weeks before elections in Ecuador, the country's president, Lenín Moreno, continues to keep his distance from the electoral process and assures he will transfer the government with its "accounts in order" and not as an "ambush" like the one he claims he inherited from his predecessor in 2017.SOUNDBITES OF ECUADOR'S PRESIDENT LENIN MORENO:"We found a country that was said to be prepared and it was not true, it was not real.""The president insisted, he told me we had to keep the revolution project he had already started and, to be honest, I trusted his words. I even believed the situation in which he said he left the country was real. But it was not.""From the beginning of my term and even before I said I would respect (democratic) institutionality, that I would not interfere in the judiciary power as the previous government had done and that I would respect the autonomy and independence of powers. ""If they want to investigate me, they are more than welcome. What I truly recommend is not to break (democratic) institutionality, not to interfere in the judiciary so we can keep believing in it because there is nothing more frustrating for a human being that not trusting (democratic) institutionality."
San Salvador, Jul 8 (EFE) (CAMERA: Vladimir Chicas) - The editor of the Salvadoran newspaper El Faro, the Mexican journalist Daniel Lizárraga, left El Salvador Thursday within the period ordered by the Government after denying him a work permit and temporary residence.
Xinjiang Jin worked as Zoom’s chief liaison with Chinese law enforcement and intelligence services. Now he's facing federal charges for sharing user information and disrupting video calls at the request of the Chinese government. Xingjiang Jin allegedly schemed to leak user data and squash video meetings discussing the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre earlier this year. With co-conspirators, he fabricated incriminating evidence against US-based hosts of these memorials. He would log into their meetings under fake accounts with profile images related to terrorism or child porn, which he'd use to justify suspending their accounts. He’s charged with conspiracy to commit interstate harassment and unlawful conspiracy to transfer a means of identification. According to Gizmodo, the Justice Department’s case races a fresh wave of concern about Zoom’s security. The company spent the summer months muzzling Zoombombings and dragging its feet on end-to-end encryption.
Business Insider personal finance contributor Alexis Rhiannon opened her Roth IRA in her 20s and has managed to max it out every year. That is, she's maxed it out every year ever since she began using a strategy she calls 'squirreling.' To meet any annual savings goal, like an IRA contribution--or anything else--just divide the full amount by 52 weeks or 365 days. Then, set up an automatic transfer from your checking account for that amount to go into your IRA, or any other account you can't access easily. After all, the annual ROTH-IRA contribution max for 2020 is $6K if you're under 50, or $7K if you're over fifty. That means you need to save $116 or $135 a week, or $16.44 or $19.18 a day. If that's too ambitious, you can always lower the amount, but you can still make great headway.
On Tuesday, former Rep. Katie Hill of California was granted a restraining order against her ex-husband by a Los Angeles judge. Business Insider reports that Hill accused her ex, Kenny Heslep, of leaking nude photos of her. Heslep is also accused physically and mentally abusing her over the course of 15 years. "I considered filing a restraining order many times over the years, I was always afraid doing so would simply make matters worse."