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Hopes for Normalcy in Life and Death Slowly Return to St. John’s, Newfoundland After Blizzard Emergency

EU Nations Can Restrict Vendors Under New 5G Guidelines, Huawei at Risk

BRUSSELS—EU countries can restrict or exclude high-risk 5G providers from core parts of their telecoms networks, new EU guidelines show, dealing a potential blow to China’s Huawei Technologies. The non-binding recommendations, set out in an EU document seen by Reuters, are part of a set of measures aimed at addressing cybersecurity risks at national and EU-wide level, in particular concerns related to China’s Huawei, though they do not identify any particular country or company. The document, which lays out guidelines agreed by EU member states, warned of the risks of interference by a third country in the 5G supply chain, as well the risk of depending on a single supplier, to justify a tough line. EU countries should assess the risk profile of suppliers on a national or EU level…

Hopes for Normalcy in Life and Death Slowly Return to St. John’s, Newfoundland After Blizzard Emergency

ST. JOHN’S, N.L.—There’s hope in St. John’s, N.L., that the daily concerns of life—and death—will slowly begin returning to normal over the weekend.

Jan. 23 marked the provincial capital’s seventh day under a state of emergency that was declared on Jan. 17 as a record−setting blizzard dropped more than 76 centimetres of snow in some areas.

However, the city has said after days of military and civilian efforts to clear snow from streets and parking lots, it is expecting the emergency status to be lifted by Jan. 25.

That was welcome news for Robert Barrett, the director of Barrett’s Funeral Home, who said he’s heard from families awaiting word on when they could hold wakes and funerals for relatives who’ve died in recent days.

Bodies have been kept at hospital morgues, and Barrett said municipal rules only permitted him to begin transporting them to his facility on Jan. 23.

“We have people who passed away a week ago and families haven’t been able to start their grieving or visitations,” he said in an interview. “It will be a relief for our families that they can move forward and go through the grieving and healing process.”

Rev. Cecil Critch, a Roman Catholic priest at the Basilica of St. John the Baptist, said with churches closed there have been no funerals nor other religious sacraments at the cathedral since Jan. 17. He estimated on a normal weekend, about 1,000 people attend masses.

“It’s very difficult for the families who are grieving,” Critch said during a telephone interview. “A funeral is part of the grieving process. You’re trying to go through it, and then a week goes by and you don’t have the funeral yet.”

Critch said he’s looking forward to hundreds of parishioners returning to mass on Sunday, Jan. 26, and planning a homily around texts that deal with the healing of rifts within a Christian community.

Rev. Roger Whalen, the archdeacon and rector of the nearby Anglican cathedral of St. John the Baptist, said parishioners want to come together again, and he’s received emails hoping the state of emergency is lifted by the weekend.

“Some people are able to enjoy each other’s company in the snow, but many people can’t do that. So being able to gather in community is very important to them,” he said.

As of the evening of Jan. 22, about 400 Armed Forces personnel were on the ground in the region and had completed an estimated 380 tasks of an assigned 450.

The city has been updating residents on a daily basis about businesses permitted to open as snow−clearing continues.

Mayor Danny Breen did not give a dollar figure about what the cleanup has cost so far, but said he would work with the provincial and federal government to potentially recover the costs.

Breen said during a media scrum on Jan. 22 that “The state of emergency will remain in effect, we expect, until Saturday morning at 6 a.m.”

However, all medical, dental and health practitioners, as well as veterinarians, were allowed to open at 8 a.m. on Jan. 23.

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Some Kenyans Say Chinese-Built Railway Leaves Them in the Dust

KIU, Kenya—The soporific buzz of bees fills the abandoned train station at Kiu, a two-hour drive from Kenya’s capital Nairobi. Rusting rail sleepers lay on the grass outside; a slender snake slithers away after footsteps disturb its sunbaked snooze. A new Chinese-built rail track lies about 500 meters away from the old colonial-era railway station, which closed down in 2012. But the new high-speed trains thunder through without stopping; Kiu is just a dusty blur glimpsed through the window. Residents of this eastern Kenya town serving 6,000 people, feel bereft without their station and the old railway line, which they depended on to get to work, or the nearest hospitals. Traveling by road is a slow and costly alternative. Opened in 2017, the new $3.3 billion railway is part of…