Time - USA (2022-01-31)

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A seismic shock
A photograph taken by the NOAA GOES-West satellite on Jan. 15 and obtained via NASA shows
a huge eruption from the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha‘apai volcano in the South Pacific Ocean, just
40 miles from the island nation of Tonga. In a Jan. 18 statement, Tonga’s government called
the eruption, which unleashed clouds of ash and tsunami waves reportedly as high as 15 m,
an “unprecedented disaster.” —Madeleine Carlisle

THE BULLETIN

Prince Andrew’s royal mess forces the Palace’s hand


Queen elizabeth’s second son was
barely mentioned during the December
trial of Ghislaine Maxwell on charges of
sex trafficking minors, which ended with a
guilty verdict Dec. 29. But Prince Andrew,
a former friend of late sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein, faces a reckoning of his own in a
civil case brought against him by Virginia
Giuffre, Epstein’s most outspoken accuser.
Giuffre alleges Epstein and his then girl-
friend Maxwell groomed, abused and
forced her to have sex with powerful men.
Andrew, she alleges, was one of them.

CIVIL CASE Giuffre, 38, is suing Andrew
under a New York State law that allows
victims of childhood sexual abuse to seek
justice outside the standard statute of limi-
tations. Andrew has repeatedly denied Gi-
uffre’s allegations, and claimed in a 2019
interview with the BBC that he had “no rec-
ollection” of meeting her. His lawyers made
several attempts to have the case thrown
out before a Manhattan judge ruled on
Jan. 12 that it could proceed to trial.

IN DISGRACE Following the judge’s deci-
sion, Buckingham Palace released a state-
ment on Jan. 13 saying the Queen had
stripped her son of his military titles and
his honorary patronages—Andrew will no
longer be referred to as His Royal Highness.
Implying a more permanent separation, the
Palace added that Andrew (who stepped
back from public-facing duties in 2019,
when the scandal first hit) would be “de-
fending this case as a private citizen.”

NEXT STEPS Andrew could seek to settle
out of court with Giuffre. This would not
necessarily make him liable, but might
cost him a hefty sum. If the case does go to
court, he could face further embarrassment,
as Giuffre and other victims of Epstein
might be called to testify. The case now
moves to discovery, which usually involves
sworn interviews. However it proceeds,
it has already thrown a shadow over the
Queen’s platinum jubilee—her 70-year
anniversary on the British throne.
—eloise baRRY

NEWS TICKER

Parole hearing
for Norwfor Norway ay
mmass shooterass shooter

Anders Breivik, who Anders Breivik, who
in 2011 murdered 77 in 2011 murdered 77
people in a bombing people in a bombing
in Oslo and a mass in Oslo and a mass
shooting at a summer shooting at a summer
camp on the island camp on the island
of Utoya, of Utoya, asked to be
released at a Jan. 
hearing. Experts say
Breivik’s parole is Breivik’s parole is
unlikely; during the unlikely; during the
hearing, he claimed hearing, he claimed
to have renounced to have renounced
violence, but gave violence, but gave
a Nazi salute upon a Nazi salute upon
arriving in court.arriving in court.

NYC mNYC museumuseum
loses Roosevelt loses Roosevelt
statuestatue

On Jan. 19, the Ameri-On Jan. 19, the Ameri-
can Museum of Natu-can Museum of Natu-
ral History in New York ral History in New York
City began City began remov-
ing its statue of U.S.
President Teddy Roo-
sevelt, which depicted
him on horseback him on horseback
flanked by African flanked by African
and Native American and Native American
men. The removal was men. The removal was
greenlighted last year greenlighted last year
amid protests label-amid protests label-
ing the tableau rac-ing the tableau rac-
ist and colonialist. ist and colonialist.

Births fall to
precipitous precipitous
lowlow in China in China

Chinese authorities Chinese authorities
on Jan. 17 announced on Jan. 17 announced
that birth rates in the that birth rates in the
country country declined for the
fifth straight year in


  1. Although China
    has taken steps to has taken steps to
    boost births, including boost births, including
    relaxing its one-child relaxing its one-child
    policy, experts warn of policy, experts warn of
    a demographic crisis a demographic crisis
    that could threaten that could threaten
    economic growth and economic growth and
    political stability.political stability.


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