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Upcoming US WeChat ‘Ban’ Won’t Target Its Users

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Celebrating the Grape Harvest

If you live in the Italian countryside, you’d better not be in a hurry to return home when you leave your house on any September morning. At some point in the day, you’ll likely find yourself stuck behind a tractor bursting with ripe grapes, carrying its buzzing load to the closest winery. So arm yourself with patience and let yourself be mesmerized by the dull sound of the tractor engine and the twitching bunches of grapes, impatient to become wine …  Vineyards in Tuscany, Italy. (Susan Schmitz/Shutterstock)The time has come: It is harvest season. There are so many traditions and legends related to this moment of the year. It touches every region of Italy, from North to South, each with special recipes that call for grapes as a key ingredient. For…

Upcoming US WeChat ‘Ban’ Won’t Target Its Users

NEW YORK—A looming U.S. ban on the Chinese app WeChat won’t target people who use the app to communicate, according to a government court filing Wednesday.

President Donald Trump issued orders on Aug. 6 that targeted WeChat and TikTok as national-security threats and imposed a Sept. 20 deadline for the Commerce Department to draft specific measures for blocking “transactions” with the Chinese owners of the apps.

The nonprofit U.S. WeChat Users Alliance and several people who say they rely on the app for work, worship, and staying in touch with relatives in China sued to stop the ban in federal court in California. The suit says the ban violates its U.S. users’ freedom of speech, free exercise of religion, and other constitutional rights.

The WeChat users, who say they are not affiliated with WeChat or its parent company, Tencent, are seeking an injunction against the order, and a hearing is scheduled for Thursday.

WeChat users in the United States depend on the app to talk to friends, family, and colleagues in China, where the messaging, payments, and social media app is widely used. It has several million users in the United States.

The Justice Department said in the Wednesday filing that the Commerce Department “does not intend to take actions that would target persons or groups whose only connection with WeChat is their use or downloading of the app to convey personal or business information between users.” It added that such users would not be exposed to “criminal or civil liability.”

The government filing said that using and downloading the app to communicate won’t be a banned transaction, although messaging on the app could be “directly or indirectly impaired” by the ban.

The Justice Department’s filing said that these “assurances largely address” concerns raised by the plaintiffs who called for an injunction.

The lead lawyer for the WeChat users, Michael Bien, said in an interview that the plaintiffs will be filing a response later Wednesday.

By Tali Arbel

Focus News: Upcoming US WeChat ‘Ban’ Won’t Target Its Users

Young Child Found Dead After Driver Reports Seeing a Doll on Interstate

The body of a child was found along an interstate in Arkansas after a driver reported seeing a doll, officials said. Arkansas State Police responded to a welfare check request at around 9 a.m. on Tuesday on Interstate 30 in Benton, authorities told TVH-11. The driver reportedly said they saw what might have been a baby doll. Officials discovered the young child’s body, saying the child is around 2 years old. The identity of the child was not disclosed. The Arkansas State Police said they are now investigating the matter. No arrests or other details were released about the incident. Missing Children There were 424,066 missing children reported in the FBI’s National Crime Information Center in 2018, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). Under federal law,…