Saturday, April 19, 2025
29 C
Brunei Town
More

    As spending bill stalls, Biden climate goals remain elusive

    WASHINGTON (AP) – United States (US) President Joe Biden faces a steep path to achieve his ambitious goal of slashing planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030, amid legislative gridlock that has stalled a USD2 trillion package of social and environmental initiatives.

    Biden’s Build Back Better plan, which contains USD550 billion in spending and tax credits aimed at promoting clean energy, was sidetracked by Democratic Sen Joe Manchin of West Virginia, who said just before Christmas that he could not support the legislation as written.

    Democrats insist they are moving forward on the sweeping package, which also would bolster family services, health care and other programmes. Manchin signalled in recent days that climate-related provisions were unlikely to be a deal-breaker, but the bill has taken a back seat to voting rights legislation and other Democratic priorities.

    Even without the legislation, Biden can pursue his climate agenda through rules and regulations. But those can be undone by subsequent presidents, as demonstrated by Biden reversing Trump administration rules that rolled back protections put into place under Barack Obama.

    Experts cite Biden’s executive authority to regulate tailpipe emissions from cars and trucks, as well as restrict emissions from power plants and other industrial sources, and the federal government’s vast power to approve renewable energy projects on federal lands and waters.

    Indeed, the Environmental Protection Agency announced new tailpipe rules for cars and trucks the day after Manchin’s bombshell announcement on December 19. The next day, the Interior Department announced approval of two large-scale solar projects in California and moved to open up public lands in other Western states to solar development as part of the administration’s efforts to counter climate change by shifting from fossil fuels.

    US President Joe Biden speaks in Louisville, Colorado. PHOTO: AFP

    The administration also has access to tens of billions of dollars under the bipartisan infrastructure law approved in November, including USD7.5 billion to create a national network of electric vehicle chargers; USD5 billion to deliver thousands of electric school buses nationwide; and USD65 billion to upgrade the power grid to reduce outages and facilitate expansion of renewable energy such as wind and solar power.

    “I think the US has a lot of tools and a lot of options to make gains on climate in the next decade,’’ said John Larsen, an energy systems expert and partner at the Rhodium Group, an independent research firm.

    “Build Back Better is helpful” to meet Biden’s goals, “but if you don’t have Build Back Better, that doesn’t mean nothing happens,’’ Larsen said. “It just makes the task ahead a bit more challenging.’’

    Larsen is co-author of a Rhodium Group study last fall that found that passage of the Build Back Better package, along with the bipartisan infrastructure law and regulations by key federal agencies and states, could cut US greenhouse gas emissions by 45 per cent to 51 per cent below 2005 levels in 2030.

    The Biden bill offers incentives for electric car purchases, development of technology to capture and store carbon emissions, and construction of wind and solar farms, among other provisions.

    Global leaders made progress at a November climate summit in Scotland, “but there needs to be much more” action taken, said Penn State climate scientist Michael Mann. “And for the US to be able to do its part, we need the climate provisions of Build Back Better to pass Congress as soon as possible.?

    Energy Systems Engineer at Princeton University Jesse Jenkins who has led an effort to model the Build Back Better bill’s effect on US emissions, said there is “a yawning gap” between where US emissions are today “and where we need to be to hit President Biden’s climate targets.”

    Such a gap “is unlikely to be bridged by executive action or state policy alone,’’ Jenkins said in an email. The Princeton model estimates that the US will fall 1.3 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent short of Biden’s 2030 climate commitment without the Build Back Better law.

    Carbon dioxide equivalent is a standard measurement for the range of so-called greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, that are generated from the burning of coal and petroleum and from other industrial uses and agriculture, and trap heat in the atmosphere.

    Still, Jenkins remains optimistic about US climate action.

    “I do not accept the premise that the Build Back Better package is dead,’’ he wrote, adding that he thinks “there is still a very good chance that Congress passes the climate provisions and some combination of social policies’’ being pushed by Democrats.

    “The consequences of failure are untenable, and the climate clock only moves in one direction,’’ Jenkins said.

    Sen Tina Smith said she’s confident Biden and his administration will make good use of their current regulatory authority, as well as billions of dollars in new spending in the bipartisan infrastructure law. But on their own, those tools are not enough to meet Biden’s climate goals, she said.

    Eight violations recorded on Saturday night

    Izah Azahari

    Enforcement personnel detected eight violations during the movement restriction operation from 10pm to 4pm on Saturday night, to curb the spread of COVID-19 in the Sultanate.

    Five of the violations were breaches of the stay-at-home directive, according to the Royal Brunei Police Force (RBPF).

    The offenders were Md Asri bin Abdullah, Musmuliady bin Haji Osman, Aminah binti Muhammad, Haji Ashari bin Haji Md Jali and Shajahan Riyashkhan.

    Seven violations were recorded in the Brunei-Muara District and one in Temburong.

    ABOVE & BELOW: Md Asri bin Abdullah, Musmuliady bin Haji Osman and Aminah binti Muhammad. PHOTOS: RBPF

    ABOVE & BELOW: Haji Ashari bin Haji Md Jali and Shajahan Riyashkhan

    Police personnel during the operation

     

    Local detained for alleged drug possession

    James Kon

    A 46-year-old local man was detained by marine police personnel for allegedly possessing drug paraphernalia after his boat was stopped for inspection at Sungai Kupang area on
    Saturday morning.

    According to the Royal Brunei Police Force (RBPF), they discovered the boat during a patrol in the Brunei river.

    The personnel stopped the boat and found drug paraphernalia inside a duffle bag owned by the suspect.

    The suspect was brought to the Marine Police headquarters along with the boat and the seized items.

    The case was handed over to the Narcotics Control Bureau.

    The RBPF through the Marine Police will continue to increase patrols and checks in the areas under its jurisdiction to combat criminal activities.

    The public is urged to report criminal activities to police hotline 993 or the nearest police station.

    A drug paraphernalia found during the investigation
    A duffel bag containing the contraband
    The boat was brought back to the Marine Police headquarters along with the seized items. PHOTOS: RBPF

    Sidney Poitier changed movies, and lives

    Hillel Italie

    NEW YORK (AP) – We go to movies not just to escape, but to discover. We might identify with the cowboy or the runaway bride or the kid who befriends a creature from another planet.

    To see yourself on screen has long been another way of knowing you exist.

    Sidney Poitier, who died on Thursday at 94, was the rare performer who really did change lives, who embodied possibilities once absent from the movies. His impact was as profound as Method acting or digital technology, his story inseparable from the story of the country he emigrated to as a teenager.

    “What emerges on the screen reminds people of something in themselves, because I’m so many different things,” he wrote in his memoir The Measure of a Man, published in 2000. “I’m a network of primal feelings, instinctive emotions that have been wrestled with so long they’re automatic.”

    Poitier made Hollywood history, by breaking from the stereotypes of bug-eyed entertainers, and American history, by appearing in films during the 1950s and 1960s that paralleled the growth of the civil rights movement. As segregation laws were challenged and fell, Poitier was the performer to whom a cautious Hollywood turned for stories of progress, a bridge to the growing candor and variety of Black filmmaking today.

    He was the escaped Black convict who befriends a racist white prisoner (Tony Curtis) in The Defiant Ones. He was the courtly office worker who falls in love with a blind white girl in A Patch of Blue. He was the handyman in Lilies of the Field who builds a place for a group of nuns. In one of the great roles of stage or screen, he was the ambitious young man whose dreams clashed with those of other family members in Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun.

    Actor Sidney Poitier poses with his Oscar for Best Actor for ‘Lillies of the Field’ at the 36th Annual Academy Awards in Santa Monica, California on April 13, 1964. PHOTO: AP

    Poitier not only upended the kinds of movies Hollywood made, but how they were filmed. For decades, Black and white actors had been shot with similar lighting, leading to an unnatural glare in the faces of Black performers. On the 1967 production In the Heat of the Night, cinematographer Haskell Wexler adjusted the lighting for Poitier so the actor’s features were as clear as those of white cast members.

    The long-running debate over Hollywood diversity often turns to Poitier. With his handsome, flawless face, intense stare and disciplined style, Poitier was for years not just the most popular Black movie star, but the only one; his unique appeal brought him burdens familiar to Jackie Robinson and others who broke colour lines.

    He faced bigotry from whites and accusations of compromise from the Black community. Poitier was held, and held himself, to standards well above his white peers. He refused to play cowards or cads and took on characters, especially in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, of almost divine goodness. He developed an even, but resolved and occasionally humourous persona crystallised in his most famous line – “They call me Mr Tibbs!” – from In the Heat of the Night.

    “All those who see unworthiness when they look at me and are given thereby to denying me value – to you I say, ‘I’m not talking about being as good as you. I hereby declare myself better than you’,” he wrote in The Measure of a Man.

    In 1964, he became the first Black performer to win the best actor Oscar, for Lilies of the Field. He peaked in 1967 with three of the year’s most notable movies: To Sir, With Love, in which he starred as a school teacher who wins over his unruly students at a London secondary school; In the Heat of the Night, as the determined police detective Virgil Tibbs; and in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner, as the prominent doctor who wishes to marry a young white woman he only recently met, her parents played by Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn in their final film together.

    In 2009 President Barack Obama, whose own steady bearing was sometimes compared to Poitier’s, awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, saying that the actor “not only entertained but enlightened… revealing the power of the silver screen to bring us closer together”.

    Poitier was not as engaged politically as his friend and contemporary Harry Belafonte, leading to occasional conflicts between them. But he was active in the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and other civil rights events and even helped deliver tens of thousands of dollars to civil rights volunteers in Mississippi in 1964, around the same time that three workers had been murdered. He also risked his career. He refused to sign loyalty oaths during the 1950s, when Hollywood was blacklisting suspected Communists, and turned down roles he found offensive.

    “Almost all the job opportunities were reflective of the stereotypical perception of Blacks that had infected the whole consciousness of the country,” he later told The Associated Press (AP). “I came with an inability to do those things. It just wasn’t in me. I had chosen to use my work as a reflection of my values.”

    Poitier’s films were usually about personal triumphs rather than broad political themes, but the classic Poitier role, from Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner to In the Heat of the Night, seemed to mirror the drama the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr played out in real life: An eloquent and accomplished Black man – Poitier became synonymous with the word “dignified”- who confronts the whites opposed to him.

    But even in his prime, his films were chastised as sentimental and out of touch. He was called an Uncle Tom and a “million-dollar shoeshine boy”. In 1967, The New York Times published Black playwright Clifford Mason’s essay Why Does White America Love Sidney Poitier So? Mason dismissed Poitier’s films as “a schizophrenic flight from historical fact” and the actor as a pawn for the “white man’s sense of what’s wrong with the world”. James Baldwin, in his classic essay on movies The Devil Finds Work, helped define the affinity and disillusion that Poitier inspired. He remembered watching The Defiant Ones at a Harlem theatre and how the audience responded to the train ride at the end, when Poitier’s character decided to imperil his own freedom out of loyalty to Curtis’ character.

    “The Harlem audience was outraged, and yelled, ‘Get back on the train, you fool!” Baldwin wrote. “And yet, even at that, recognised in Sidney’s face, at the very end, as he sings Sewing Machine, something noble, true, and terrible, something out of which we come.”
    In his memoir, Poitier wrote that he didn’t have a responsibility to be “angry and defiant”, even if he often felt those emotions. He noted that such historical figures as King and Nelson Mandela could never have been so forgiving had they not first “gone through much, much anger and much, much resentment and much, much anguish”.

    “When these come along, their anger, their rage, their resentment, their frustration – these feelings ultimately mature by will of their own discipline into a positive energy that can be used to fuel their positive, healthy excursions in life,” he wrote.

    His screen career faded in the late 1960s as political movements, Black and white, became more radical and movies more explicit. He would tell Oprah Winfrey in 2000 that his response was to go the Bahamas, fish and think. He acted less often, gave fewer interviews and began directing, his credits including the Richard Pryor-Gene Wilder farce Stir Crazy, Buck and the Preacher (co-starring Poitier and Belafonte) and the comedies Uptown Saturday Night and Let’s Do It Again, both featuring Bill Cosby.

    He continued to work in the 1980s and ’90s. He appeared in the feature films Sneakers and The Jackal and several television movies, receiving an Emmy and Golden Globe nomination as future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall in Separate But Equal and an Emmy nomination for his portrayal of Mandela in Mandela and De Klerk. Theatregoers were reminded of the actor through an acclaimed play that featured him in name only: John Guare’s Six Degrees of Separation, about a con artist claiming to be Poitier’s son. A Broadway adaptation of The Measure of a Man is in the works.

    In recent years, a new generation learned of him through Winfrey, who chose The Measure of a Man for her book club, and through the praise of such Black stars as Denzel Washington, Will Smith and Danny Glover. Poitier’s eminence was never more movingly dramatised than at the Academy Awards ceremony in 2002 when he received an honorary Oscar, preceding Washington’s best actor win for Training Day, the first time a Black person had won in that category since Poitier nearly 40 years earlier.

    “I’ll always be chasing you, Sidney,” Washington said as he accepted his award.

    “I’ll always be following in your footsteps.”

    Poitier’s life ended in adulation, but began in hardship, and nearly ended days after his birth.

    He was born prematurely in Miami, where his parents had gone to deliver tomatoes from their farm on tiny Cat Island in the Bahamas.

    He spent his early years on the remote island, which had no paved roads or electricity, but was so free from racial hierarchy that only when he left did he think about the colour of his skin.

    “Walking on the beach, or sitting on rocks, my eyes on the horizon, aroused curiosity, stirring joy,” he wrote in his 2008 book Life Beyond Measure: Letters to My Great-Granddaughter about his time on Cat Island.

    By his late teens, he had moved to Harlem, but was so overwhelmed by his first winter there that he enlisted in the Army, cheating on his age and swearing he was 18 when he had yet to turn 17. Assigned to a mental hospital on Long Island, Poitier was appalled at how cruelly the doctors and nurses treated the soldier patients and acknowledged that he got out of the Army by pretending he was insane.

    Back in Harlem in the mid-1940s, he was looking in the Amsterdam News for a dishwasher job when he noticed an ad seeking actors at the American Negro Theater. He went there and was handed a script and told to go on the stage and read from it. Poitier had never seen a play and stumbled through his lines in a thick Caribbean accent. The director sent him off.

    “As I walked to the bus, what humiliated me was the suggestion that all he could see in me was a dishwasher. If I submitted to him, I would be aiding him in making that perception a prophetic one,” Poitier later told the AP.

    “I was so angry, I said, ‘I’m going to become an actor – whatever that is. I don’t want to be an actor, but I’ve got to become one to go back there and show him that I could be more than a dishwasher’. That became my goal.”

    Poitier’s now-famous cadence and diction came in part through reading and studying the voices he heard on the radio. He found an early job in a student production of Days Of Our Youth, as the understudy to another determined young performer: Belafonte. When Belafonte didn’t show up one night, Poitier stepped in and caught the attention of a Broadway director who happened to be in attendance. He was soon in a cross-country touring group – often staying in segregated hotels – and by 1950 had his first notable film role: He played a doctor in an all-white hospital in Joseph Mackiewicz drama No Way Out.

    Other early films included Cry, the Beloved Country and Blackboard Jungle, featuring Poitier as a tough high school student, the kind of character he might have had to face down when he starred in To Sir, With Love. By the late 1950s, he was one of the industry’s leading performers – of any race. In The Defiant Ones, co-star Tony Curtis helped Poitier make history by insisting that his name appear above the title of the movie, as a star, rare status for a Black performer at the time.

    By the time he received his Oscar for Lilies of the Field, his career and the country were well aligned. Congress was months away from passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, banning discrimination on the basis of race, and a victory for Poitier was so desired in Hollywood that even one of his Oscar competitors, Paul Newman, was rooting for him.

    When presenter Anne Bancroft announced his victory, the audience cheered for so long that Poitier was able to re-remember the speech he briefly forgot. “It has been a long journey to this moment,” he declared.

    Poitier never pretended that his Oscar was “a magic wand” for Black performers, as he observed after his victory, and he shared his critics’ frustration with some of the roles he took on. But he also believed himself fortunate and encouraged those who followed him.

    Accepting a life achievement award from the American Film Institute in 1992, he spoke to a new generation. “To the young African American filmmakers who have arrived on the playing field, I am filled with pride you are here. I am sure, like me, you have discovered it was never impossible, it was just harder.

    “Welcome, young Blacks. Those of us who go before you glance back with satisfaction and leave you with a simple trust: Be true to yourselves and be useful to the journey.”

    Kosovo seizes hundreds of cryptocurrency mining devices

    PRISTINA (AFP) – Kosovo police seized hundreds of cryptocurrency mining machines and arrested one person in the tense ethnic-Serb majority north as the country suffered an energy crisis.

    Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are created through solving complex equations – an endeavour that consumes enormous amounts of energy.

    Tensions between the Serb-majority area and the ethnic Albanian majority government are running high and Kosovo’s government on Tuesday brought in a temporary ban on cryptocurrency mining in an effort to bring down electricity consumption.

    During the operation police “confiscated 272 different anti-miner devices used for the production of Bitcoin”, a police statement said.

    One person was arrested, it added.

    Cryptocurrency mining facilities in Pristina, Kosovo. PHOTO: AFP

    “The whole action took place and ended without incidents,” Interior Minister Xhelal Svecla said on Facebook.

    The confiscated equipment uses as much electricity as 500 homes a month or between EUR60,000 and EUR120,000, said Finance Minister Hekuran Murati on Facebook.

    “We cannot allow the illegal enrichment of some, at the expense of taxpayers.”

    Ethnic Serbs in Kosovo’s four northern municipalities have not paid for their electricity since the end of the 1998-1999 war between independence-seeking ethnic Albanian guerrilla and Serbian armed forces.

    Barty sends Australian Open warning with Rybakina demolition

    ADELAIDE (AFP) – World number one Ashleigh Barty showed why she is the Australian Open favourite when she demolished Kazakhstan’s Elena Rybakina in the final of the Adelaide International yesterday.

    Barty took just 64 minutes to see off the seventh seeded Rybakina 6-3, 6-2 and claim the 14th singles title of her career.

    The 25-year-old Australian has been in superb form this week and has had to beat a host of top players in a stacked top half of the draw.

    She received a first round bye, but then faced Coco Gauff (world number 22), Sofia Kenin (12) and Iga Swiatek (9) on her way to the decider.

    “We’ve obviously had a brilliant week, been able to work progressively through each match,” Barty said.

    “I got better and better.”

    Against the big-serving Rybakina, the world number 14, Barty dominated every aspect of play and took control of the match midway through the first set.

    Both players started well, dropping only two points each on serve in their first three games, so it came as a surprise when at 3-3, Barty stumbled slightly and found herself at 15-40.

    But Rybakina was unable to convert either break point and Barty made her pay.

    Ash Barty of Australia celebrates her victory. PHOTO: AP

    Sudan talks will aim to salvage political transition: UN

    AP – The United Nations (UN) said on Saturday it would hold talks in Sudan to try to get the country’s democratic transition back on track after it was derailed by an October military coup.

    The UN offer came a week after embattled Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok resigned, citing the failure to reach a compromise between the military and the pro-democracy movement.

    The resignation plunged the country further into turmoil amid political deadlock and relentless street protests that have claimed the lives of at least 60 people since the coup.

    UN envoy for Sudan Volker Perthes said in a statement that the talks would seek a “sustainable path forward towards democracy and peace” in the country.

    It wasn’t clear when discussions might begin.

    “It is time to end the violence and enter into a constructive process. This process will be inclusive,” he said.

    Perthes said key players in Sudan, including the military, rebel groups, political parties and protest movements will be invited to take part in the process, as well as civil society and women’s groups.

    There was no immediate comment from the military on the UN effort.

    This extra-creamy vegetable quiche stars squash or mushrooms – your choice

    Joe Yonan

    THE WASHINGTON POST – I can’t tell you the last time I made quiche. It’s not that I don’t like it – a good one, eggy and creamy and light, with a flaky crust – is a thing of beauty. But when I’m in the mood for savoury baked egg dishes, I’m more of a frittata cook, loving how adaptable and no-fuss that dish can be.

    But my pie-baking itch flares up every holiday season, and a quiche is really nothing more than a savoury pie (or tart), so when I saw Jamie Oliver’s recipe for what he simply called vegetable quiche in his new book Together, I took a closer look. Oliver offers two options in this recipe – one for butternut squash and one for mushrooms – and rather than incorporating either in chunks in the filling, he has you puree the cooked veg with the requisite eggs, cream and cheese before baking.

    CREAMY BUTTERNUT SQUASH OR MUSHROOM QUICHE
    12 servings

    INGREDIENTS
    1 2/3 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
    Nine tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
    Half teaspoon fine salt, divided, plus more to taste
    Half cup cold water, divided, plus more as needed
    1 3/4 pounds butternut squash or mixed mushrooms
    One tablespoon plus one teaspoon extra-virgin olive oil, divided, plus more for greasing
    One small yellow onion, thinly sliced
    Four garlic cloves, thinly sliced
    Six large eggs
    Seven tablespoons heavy cream
    Four ounces cheddar cheese, coarsely grated
    Two ounces crumbly goat cheese
    Two fresh thyme sprigs

    DIRECTIONS
    Lightly flour your work surface.

    In a food processor, combine the flour, butter and quarter teaspoon of salt, and pulse until the mixture resembles coarse breadcrumbs. Add quarter cup of the cold water and pulse for a few more seconds until the dough just starts to come together, adding more water, one tablespoon at a time, if needed. Transfer the dough to the work surface and push and pat (without kneading) into a round.

    Wrap it in plastic or beeswax wrap and refrigerate for 30 minutes.

    Creamy Butternut Squash Quiche. PHOTO: THE WASHINGTON POST

    Prep your chosen vegetable: Peel, carefully halve and seed the squash, then cut into three qarter-inch chunks. Or clean, trim and slice the mushrooms (removing and composting the stems if you use shiitakes).

    In a large frying pan over medium heat, heat one tablespoon of the oil until it shimmers. Add the onion, garlic and remaining quarter teaspoon of salt and cook, stirring frequently, until the vegetables start to soften, about three minutes. If using squash, add it along with the remaining quarter cup of water, reduce the heat to medium, cover and cook, stirring occasionally, until the squash is very soft, 20 minutes.

    Uncover, increase the heat to medium-high, and cook, stirring, until the extra water has evaporated, two to three minutes.

    If using mushrooms, cook uncovered over medium-high heat, using tongs to toss frequently, until they wilt, then reduce the heat to medium and cook, stirring and scraping the bottom of the skillet occasionally, until they are soft and starting to brown, 20 minutes. Taste, and season with more salt as needed. Turn off the heat and let cool.

    Position a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 425 degrees. Lightly oil a 10-inch quiche pan with a removable bottom.

    Roll out the pastry on the flour-dusted surface until it’s about 14 inches in diameter and just under quarter-inch thick. Gently roll it up around the rolling pin, then unroll it over the oiled pan and ease it into the sides, curling the excess pastry tightly over the edges. Prick the base all over with a fork, top with a sheet of parchment paper and fill with coins, beans or other pie weights.

    Transfer to a large, rimmed baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes, or until the pastry is set, then remove the paper and weights and continue baking for about 10 minutes, or until lightly browned and firm. Cool, then use a sharp paring knife to trim off the excess pastry.

    Transfer the squash or mushroom mixture to a blender. Add the eggs, cream and cheddar and puree until smooth.

    Pour or scrape the filling into the baked and cooled pastry shell, being careful not to overfill.

    Crumble over the goat cheese. Rub the thyme sprigs with the remaining one teaspoon oil, then pick the tips and leaves over the quiche.

    Bake for about 40 minutes, or until the quiche is set in the centre (it should feel firm to the touch, with little to no wobbling). Transfer to a cooling rack and let cool in the tart pan for at least 30 minutes, then unmold and serve warm, or let cool completely, refrigerate, and
    serve cold.

    Monfils claims 11th singles title with win over Khachanov

    ADELAIDE (AFP) – Flamboyant Frenchman Gael Monfils claimed the 11th title of his career and his first in almost two years when he beat Russia’s Karen Khachanov at the Adelaide International yesterday.

    Monfils broke Khachanov once in each set to take the title 6-4, 6-4.

    The 35-year-old Monfils has admitted he has struggled for motivation during the pandemic because he does not enjoy playing in empty stadiums.

    As a result his ranking has dropped from inside the top 10 to its current position of 21.
    But playing in front of a large crowd who had poured in to see local favourite Ashleigh Barty win the women’s title, Monfils lifted and had the edge on his Russian opponent.

    Both men had no trouble holding serve throughout the match.

    But at 4-5 in both sets, Khachanov seemed to let his nerves get the better of him and he dropped serve each time to hand the match to Monfils.

    The two men will remain in Adelaide for next week’s second ATP tournament, where Monfils is top seed once again.

    Understanding a dog’s body language

    Nusrath Jahan

    THE DAILY STAR – Dogs are among the most adorable, loving creatures whose company can cheer us in an instant. They know when we need a cuddle, when we are not feeling our best, or when exactly to become extra cute and distract us from work! But how well do we understand our canine friends?

    Communication with pets can be tricky. Unlike us, they rely almost entirely on non-verbal signs to convey their feelings. So here are some important points to help you understand your dog better.

    TAIL WAGGING
    Dogs use their tails to project a wide variety of emotions, both positive and negative. The direction of wagging itself will tell you a lot.

    A relaxed dog will hold their tail at a neutral position or move it slowly from side to side in a sweeping manner. When they are feeling happy, they usually do the helicopter where their tails move in quick circular motions. Dog owners often receive greetings this way.

    The tail also lets you know when your dog is feeling distressed. A raised tail above the spine indicates that something has caught the dog’s attention and it is now alert. A stiff tail with bared teeth and growling could definitely mean trouble.

    Dogs try to make themselves appear small by tucking their tails between their legs when they are feeling scared. You may also see their tails pointed low towards the ground in a submissive manner when they are stressed.

    YAWNING
    Much like humans, dogs yawn when they are tired or sleepy. However, excessive yawning hints at something else; your dog is feeling threatened.

    When dogs feel anxious by a person or other animals, they will yawn and look away. Also known as the calming signal, it is a dogs’ way of saying that they feel threatened but are not going to attack.

    EYE CONTACT
    We’ve all heard of ‘puppy dog eyes’, right? Well it’s more than a metaphor for dogs.

    Dogs will look at you with soft, affectionate eyes to tell you that they need some love.

    According to experts, practicing eye contact with pups helps strengthen your bond with them considerably. Remember to do it right though.

    Have you ever seen two dogs locked in a stare-down? Dogs are not a fan of long eye contacts. They are found staring hard when they are trying to establish dominance over something.

    On the contrary, they will avoid eye contact and pointedly look away when they are feeling stressed.

    SMILING
    Just when you thought pups could not get any cuter, they smile. And this one actually has a lot to do with you!

    Smiling is an adaptive facial expression that dogs often pick up from their owners. Spending time with them, communicating regularly, and making the dog included in your life will bring out the best smile from them.

    Go ahead! Look at your dog, smile at him, some belly rubs maybe, and watch their tail do the helicopter!

    Trending News