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Health ministry: BA.4, B.A5 triggering surge in Covid-19 cases in Iran

COVID in Iran

Dr. Mehrdad Hagh Azali, a member of the coronavirus taskforce committee, said the new subvariants of Omicron variant, BA.4, B.A5, are the leading cause of the new outbreak.

The new surge comes after Iran managed to rein in the cases and reduce fatalities to near zero for several weeks thanks to widespread vaccination and coronavirus-related restrictions.

BA.4 and BA.5 are more infectious than previous Covid variants and subvariants and evade immunity from vaccines and previous infections.

Dr. Hagh Azali warned the new surge can lead to a rise in fatalities, saying the elderly patients are more at risk of death from the new subvariants.

He called on people to stick to unrelenting health protocols and get the booster doses of coronavirus vaccine.

In an interview with Iran’s Channel 1 TV on Monday, Iranian Deputy Health Minister Dr. Kamal Heidari said the subvariants spread from the United States and Europe to other parts of the world.

He warned of the fast pace of outbreak in BA.4, B.A5, saying every patient who carries either of the subvaraints can infect up to 18 people, while Omicron-struck patients could infect 10 people.

Over 140 thousand people in Iran have died of the virus.

More than 150 million doses of coronavirus vaccine have been administered across the country of about 85 million people. Over 64 million Iranians have received the first dose and nearly 58 million people have received the second dose of the vaccine.

Nearly 28 million people have got the third shot as the booster jab.

Live Update: Russia’s “Special Operation” in Ukraine; Day 138

Russia Ukraine War

6 dead and 31 injured in Kharkiv bombardment: Ukraine’s prosecutor general

At least six people have died due to rocket attacks against Kharkiv, according to the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office.

“As a result of mass shelling by the occupiers of Kharkiv, 6 people died and 31 were injured,” the office said on its Telegram channel.

A shopping center was damaged, as well as houses and vehicles, stated Serhii Bolvinov, head of the Investigation Department of the National Police in Kharkiv.

Fragments of a rocket from a Uragan multi-launch rocket system have been found at the scene of the damage, he added.

Two of the dead were a father and his 17-year-old son whose car took a direct hit, he continued. They were on their way to pick up a certificate for the teenager’s university entrance.


Kyiv condemns Russian plans to fast-track citizenship for Ukrainians

Ukraine’s foreign ministry has condemned a decree from President Vladimir Putin that simplified the Russian citizenship procedure for all Ukrainians.

“The mentioned decree is another encroachment on the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, incompatible with the norms and principles of international law,” the ministry said in a statement.

Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba stated “Ukrainians do not need Putin’s citizenship and attempts to impose it by force are doomed to failure”.

Kuleba called Monday’s decree “worthless” and proof of “Putin’s aggressive appetites”.


Death toll from Russian rocket attack on housing block rises to 30: Ukrainian official

The death toll from a Russian rocket attack that hit an apartment block in eastern Ukraine over the weekend has risen while rescuers search for survivors in the ruins, an official from President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office has said.

Kyrylo Tymoshenko, the deputy head of Zelensky’s office, also stated rescuers had now cleared 65 percent of the rubble that remained of a collapsed five-storey block struck late on Saturday in the town of Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region.

Russia has repeatedly denied targeting civilians as part of its offensive. The country’s defence ministry said on Monday that “high-precision ground-based weapons … have destroyed the temporary deployment point” of a Ukrainian territorial defence unit in Chasiv Yar.


Russia and Turkey plan summit talks soon: Kremlin

President Vladimir Putin and Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan plan to meet in the near future after a phone conversation in which they discussed efforts to facilitate grain exports from Ukraine, Moscow has announced.

“An exchange of views on the situation around Ukraine continued, including in the context of coordinating efforts to ensure the safety of navigation in the Black Sea and grain exports to global markets,” the Kremlin said in a statement.

Turkey’s state-owned Anadolu news agency meanwhile reported that Erdogan had told Putin on Monday that it was time to act on a United Nations plan to set up a sea corridor for Ukrainian grain exports through the Black Sea.

Turkey has been mediating between Moscow and Kyiv since Russia began its offensive in late February. The last talks between representatives of Russia and Ukraine were held in Istanbul at the end of March.


Erdogan, Zelenskyy discuss grain exports, Ukrainian ports

Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky has revealed he held talks with Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the need to unblock Ukraine’s ports and resume its grain exports.

“We appreciate (Turkish) support. Discussed the importance of unblocking (Ukrainian) ports and resuming grain exports. We must also prevent Russia from taking our grain from (occupied territories),” he tweeted.


Impose sanctions on Russia for new citizenship decree: Kyiv tells allies

Ukraine has called on its allies to impose new sanctions on Moscow and step up new supplies of heavy weapons to Kyiv to punish President Vladimir Putin’s government for simplifying their naturalisation procedure for Ukrainian citizens.


Ukrainians to be offered fast track Russian citizenship

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday issued a decree to fast track citizenship for all Ukrainians.

The decree ordered that “all citizens of Ukraine” be given “the right to apply for admission to the citizenship of the Russian Federation in a simplified manner”.

It comes more than four months into Moscow’s military offensive in Ukraine.


29 people killed in Chasiv Yar residential building strike, 9 people found alive

Ukraine’s Emergency Services say 24 bodies have now been recovered from the wreckage in Chasiv Yar after Russian rockets hit a residential building over the weekend.

Five other bodies have been found but not yet retrieved, taking the total number of dead in the attack to 29.

The Emergency Services said on Telegram that nine survivors had been rescued from the rubble and that work to try and find more people was ongoing.

Chasiv Yar is one of several towns in Donetsk that have seen an uptick in rocket and missile attacks in recent days as Russian forces try to grind down Ukrainian resistance in the region.


Putin and Lukashenko discuss joint response to Lithuania’s ban on goods shipments to Kaliningrad

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko have discussed possible joint measures in response to Lithuania’s ban on goods shipments to Kaliningrad, according to a Kremlin readout published Monday.

“Emphasis was placed on the situation in connection with the illegal restrictions imposed by Lithuania on the transit of goods to the Kaliningrad region,” the readout said.

“In this context, some possible joint steps were discussed,” it added.

In June, Lithuanian officials banned the passage of goods subject to EU sanctions across its territory into Kaliningrad, Russia’s exclave in Europe.

Moscow denounced the decision and warned that retaliatory steps might follow.


Russia trying to export wheat from occupied region: Ukraine

Moscow is trying to export grain from occupied areas of Zaporizhzhia region, according to the Ukrainian Intelligence Services.

Russia is continuing to “steal Ukrainian grain,” said the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine on Telegram on Monday.

A company called “GUK” has been created to facilitate the process, it added, headed up by former Ukrainian opposition politician Yevhen Balytskyi, who is now head of the Regional Occupation Administration of Zaporizhzhia.

According to Ukrainian intelligence, “GUK” is setting the following grain prices: coarse wheat is 6,000RUB/ton ($98), food wheat is 9,000RUB/ton ($147) and barley is 7,000/ton ($114).

However farmers are unsatisfied with the price and are storing grain in warehouses, converted buildings and even out in the open, according to the Telegram post.

On Sunday a ship arrived to export grain, noted Ukrainian intelligence, with another expected to arrive on July 17.

One of the ships in question is the “Zhibek Zhloy,” which has already been used to export wheat from the port of Berdiansk.

Zaporizhzia region remains partly under Russian control and partly under Ukrainian control.


Russian shelling kills three, wounds dozens in Kharkiv: Official

Russian shelling in Ukraine’s northeastern city of Kharkiv has killed three people and wounded 28 others, according to the region’s governor.

Synehubov stated in a Telegram post that Russian forces had launched three missile strikes on the city, hitting only civilian targets.

“All [three were launched] exclusively on civilian objects, this is absolute terrorism!” he added.

One of the missiles destroyed a school, another a residential building while the third landed near warehouse facilities, Synehubov continued.

Russia has repeatedly denied targeting civilians during its invasion.


Ukraine: Chasiv Yar death toll has risen to 19

The State Emergency Service of Ukraine says the death toll from Russian missile strikes in the eastern Ukrainian town of Chasiv Yar has now risen to 19 people.

The department said in a Telegram post that eight people had so far been removed from the rubble of a five-storey building destroyed in Saturday’s attack, with rescue efforts continuing.


Russia says its forces struck ammunition depots in Dnipro region

Russia’s defence ministry says that its forces have struck ammunition depots in Ukraine’s central Dnipro region used to supply rocket launchers and artillery weapons.

The ministry also claimed that Moscow’s troops had hit deployment points for Ukrainian forces and foreign fighters in the Kharkiv region.

Kyiv made no immediate comment on the report.


Russia suspends operation of major gas pipeline to Europe

The flow of Russian gas to Germany through the Nord Stream Baltic Sea pipeline has been suspended.

Operator Nord Stream AG said that routine maintenance work would shut down the pipeline for 10 days, starting Monday. During that time, all gas flows via the pipeline will stop.

The operator highlighted that the stoppage had previously been agreed with all partners.

Last month, the Russian energy giant slashed the volumes of gas delivered to Germany via the pipe by 60% due to operational challenges, caused by the failure to return a serviced turbine on time from Canada. However, German Economy Minister Robert Habeck argued that it was “a political decision.”

In recent years, the maintenance-related shortfall in supplies via Nord Stream was compensated by increased flows through Ukraine or Poland.

However, various officials and industry representatives told the FT that they feared Russia may not do that this time, leaving the continent to face gas shortages.

“Based on the pattern we’ve seen, it would not be very surprising now if some small, technical detail is found and then they could say ‘Now we can’t turn it on any more,’” Habeck stated in late June.

Nord Stream AG, which is majority-owned by Gazprom, insists that maintenance information was appropriately disclosed in compliance with the EU Regulation on Wholesale Energy Market Integrity and Transparency.

“The schedule for the maintenance activities has been closely coordinated with Nord Stream’s upstream and downstream partners,” it added.


Russian forces control “almost all” of Luhansk region, 300k displaced: Ukrainian official

“Almost all of the territory” of the Luhansk region in eastern Ukraine is now occupied by Russian forces and 300,000 people from the region have been internally displaced, according to the Ukrainian head of the regional military administration.

Serhiy Hayday said in a telegram post that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has vowed to provide housing for everyone forced to leave their homes.

Hayday added work is underway “on the formation of housing funds intended for temporary residence, registration and provision of such housing” to internally displaced people.


Top diplomat: EU not winning in global battle of narratives on Ukraine

EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell stated the G20 Foreign Ministers Meeting in Bali showed to him the different perspectives around the world on the situation in Ukraine and its consequences.

“In the March vote at the UN General Assembly, 140 states condemned the Russian aggression and no member of the G20, apart from the aggressor, opposed this resolution. But on how to move forward and on the consequences of the war, views differ sharply,” Borrell said in a statement published on the EU’s website.

“The G7 and like-minded countries are united in condemning and sanctioning Russia and in trying to hold the regime accountable. But other countries, and we can speak here of the majority of the `Global South’, often take a different perspective,” he concluded.

“The global battle of narratives is in full swing and, for now, we are not winning,” Borrell emphasized.

The G20 foreign ministerial sessions held in Bali on July 7-8 were attended by Russia’s top diplomat Sergey Lavrov. The Russian foreign minister held a number of bilateral meetings on the sidelines of the G20 Foreign Ministers Meeting.


No ‘pause’ in Russian attacks: Zelensky

President Volodymyr Zelensky has said there was not let-up in Russian air attacks on his country, after officials said at least 15 people were killed, and two dozen more were feared trapped after Russian Uragan rockets hit a five-storey apartment block in Ukraine’s Donetsk region.

Speaking during his nightly video address, Zelensky stated the death toll from the attack in the Donetsk town of Chasiv Yar was likely to rise.

“Two residential high-rise buildings were destroyed. Dozens of people are under the rubble. Six were saved. There are 15 names in the list of the dead and, unfortunately, this is not the final number,” he added, refuting claims that Russian air raids had been “paused”.

“34 airstrikes by Russian aviation in the past 24 hours, in one past day, is an answer to all those who invented this ‘pause’,” he said, adding: “The Ukrainian army is holding on, holding firm … But, of course, a lot still needs to be done so that Russian losses become such that there will really be a pause.”


Western rocket systems making difference on battlefield: Ukraine DM

Ukraine’s defence minister has said that Western-donated high mobility artillery rocket systems (HIMARS) were making a “huge” difference on the battlefield after a senior United States official announced the Joe Biden administration would be sending four more HIMARS as part of a $400m weapons package.

“HIMARS have already made a HUUUGE difference on the battlefield,” Oleksii Reznikov wrote on Twitter.

“More of them as well as ammo & equipment will increase our strength and help to demilitarise the terrorist state. I highly appreciate the efforts of the POTUS & SecDef to support Ukraine’s struggle for freedom!” he added.

The US official told reporters on Friday that the new arms package would include four additional HIMARS and more ammunition, bringing the total number of these systems sent to Ukraine to 12.


Ukraine plans to use Western weapons to retake southern territory: Report

Ukraine is massing a million-strong fighting force equipped with Western weapons to recover its southern territory from Russia, the nation’s defence minister told The Times newspaper.

In his first interview with a UK daily since the invasion began, Oleksii Reznikov said President Volodymyr Zelensky had ordered Ukraine’s military to retake occupied coastal areas which are vital to the country’s economy.

“We understand that, politically, it’s very necessary for our country. So the president has given the order to the supreme military chief to draw up plans. After that the general staff are doing their homework and say to achieve this goal we need XYZ,” he stated.

“This is my job. I’m writing letters to counterparts in partner countries, the generals talk about why we need this kind of weaponry and then we get the political decisions,” he added.

Reznikov told The Times the intensity of the war was rapidly depleting Soviet-era stockpiles.

“It was a long process, a month and a half, but we got a result. Ukraine had a Soviet-era armed forces with thirty-year-old weapons. We changed this in three months,” he continued.


Chasiv Yar attack a ‘terrorist’ act: Zelensky adviser

President Volodymyr Zelensky’s chief of staff has called the attack on the town of Chasiv Yar a terrorist act, and has again called for Russia to be officially considered a state sponsor of terrorism.

“The Russians hit a high-rise apartment building with civilians again. Another terrorist attack by a terrorist country,” Andriy Yermak wrote on Twitter.

“The Russian Federation should be on the list of state sponsors of terrorism,” he added.


Ukraine urges civilians in Kherson to evacuate

Ukraine’s deputy prime minister on Sunday urged civilians in the Russian-occupied southern region of Kherson to urgently evacuate as Ukraine’s armed forces were preparing a counterattack there.

Ukraine lost control of most of the Black Sea region of Kherson, including its eponymous capital, in the first weeks after Russia’s February 24 invasion.

“It’s clear there will be fighting, there will be artillery shelling … and we therefore urge [people] to evacuate urgently,” Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said on national television.

She added she could not say when exactly the counteroffensive would happen.

Soldier, sergeant killed by kidnapper in southwestern Iran

Crime Scene

The soldier and the sergeant died after the man opened fire on them while they were trying to stop his vehicle.

The commander of the law enforcement of Chahar Mahal and Bakhtiari Province said the armed abductor was killed by security forces in the town of Farsan. A civilian was also wounded in the crossfire.

No motive is known for the kidnapping.

Hospital on fire in western Tehran

Firefighters in Iran

A spokesperson for Iran’s Emergency Organization has said unfortunately all the patients on upper floor inhaled smoke from the fire.

According to the official, 10 ambulances have been dispatched to site of the incident and all medical centers in the vicinity of the hospital are on high alert.

No news on possible casualties is available yet.

Anar Bij; A Tasty Dish of Northern Iran

Anar Bij - Persian Pomegranate Stew recipe

In general, for the preparation of the Anar Bij or the northern Fesenjan stew, walnuts, vegetables, sour grape juice, pomegranate paste, ground meat, onions, salt and pepper, along with turmeric are needed.

If you do not have access to herbs, you can make the food with the rest of the vegetables that are mentioned below which are easier to find. But surely this meal will have an original flavour with local vegetables.

Ingredients for Anar Bij

Ingredients for Anar Bij

  • Half a kilo of ground meat
  • Half a kilo of vegetables (Chives, Coriander, Parsley, Fenugreek, Spinach)
  • 5 tbsp of pomegranate paste
  • Salt & pepper as much as needed

Anar Bij - Persian Pomegranate Stew recipe

How to cook Anar Bij

Mix the ground meat with grated onions as well as salt and pepper and prepare them in the form of small meatballs.

Place the walnut on the heat until it gets hot (make sure the colour does not change). Then, pour 3 glasses of cold water on the walnuts and heat.

Chop the vegetables and sauté them in a little water. When the mixture of water and walnuts boiled, add the fried vegetables to the stew. Add the pomegranate paste at this stage.

The amount of pomegranate paste depends on your taste and, of course, the paste’s sourness. You can also use some bitter orange juice or plum paste along with pomegranate sauce.

Sauté the meatballs in the same oil and add it to the stew and place the stew on medium heat for an hour so that the stew becomes ready. At this stage, if the stew needs water, you can add some.

This delicious meal becomes green after getting ready and has a fairly sour taste. You could also add pomegranate seeds and reduce the amount of pomegranate paste. The stew can also be made with chopped meat or duck meat.

Anar Bij Stew

Additional tips for making Anar Bij

1-You can use blue eryngo (locally called Chuchagh that is a kind of vegetable growing in northern Iran) as filling for the meatballs which is a matter of taste.

2-Do no forget that the amount of mint and local northern vegetables should be less than other vegetables.

3- If local vegetables are not available, use pennyroyal or no local vegetables at all.

4- People from Gilan (Brittanica) use black and sour pomegranate paste to make Anar Bij, but if black pomegranate paste is not available, use sweet-and-sour pomegranate paste.

5- You can add some cold water or ice cubes to the stew from time to time to let walnut oil come out.

Anar Bij Recipe

More questions about Anar Bij Recipe

1- Is it possible to prepare this stew without local vegetables?

Yes, but in that case it will not have the special taste. You can use any vegetable that is in the recipe and finally omit the pennyroyal.

2- Can sliced meat be used instead of minced chicken or meat?

You can use it, but this stew is based on minced meat. One of the reasons why this dish is prepared quickly is the use of minced meat.

Iran distributes meat from 30k livestock among needy people

Morteza Bakhtiari said 9,000 charities have participated in the program.

He said Iran’s leader Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei ordered the launching of a campaign to help those who need.

Bakhtiari said the meat from the livestock is distributed among people in line with health standards.

The livestock were slaughtered on the occasion of Eid al-Adha, which is one of three very important feasts celebrated by Muslims worldwide.

On Eid al-Adha, many people, including Hajj pilgrims, slaughter sheep as part of a tradition which has continued since the Prophet Abraham was ordered by God to do so instead of sacrificing his son, Ishmael as a sign of surrender to the Almighty’s will.

Biden defends Saudi Arabia trip amid criticism ovor Riyadh rights record

President Joe Biden

In an op-ed published in the Washington Post, Biden directly responded to the critics of the trip, saying that while human rights issues are always on the agenda, his job is to keep the US “strong and secure” and a “more secure and integrated Middle East benefits Americans in many ways.”

“We have to counter Russia’s aggression, put ourselves in the best possible position to outcompete China, and work for greater stability in a consequential region of the world. To do these things, we have to engage directly with countries that can impact those outcomes,” Biden wrote, adding that Saudi Arabia is one of those nations.

The president listed some practical benefits of “reorienting” relations “with a country that’s been a strategic partner for 80 years.”

“Its waterways are essential to global trade and the supply chains we rely on. Its energy resources are vital for mitigating the impact on global supplies of Russia’s war in Ukraine,” the American leader stated, revealing that oil-rich Saudi Arabia is now working with US experts “to help stabilize oil markets with other OPEC producers.”

Biden also stressed that “violent extremism” is less likely to rise in a region “that’s coming together through diplomacy and cooperation.”

Admitting that his visit is seen by many as controversial, Biden said his administration had reversed “the blank-check policy” towards Riyadh by releasing the intelligence report on the murder of a Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018 in Turkey (which deemed Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman responsible for ordering the killing) and imposing new sanctions on the state. Riyadh claimed its security agents “went rogue” in Istanbul.

“My administration has made clear that the United States will not tolerate extraterritorial threats and harassment against dissidents and activists by any government,” Biden added, at the same time hailing some of Riyadh’s achievements in international politics.

Biden used his op-ed to contrast his own administration’s policies in the Middle East with those of Donald Trump, whom he referred to only as “my predecessor” without ever mentioning his name.

Biden is scheduled to travel to the Middle East from July 13 to July 16. He will make stops in Israel, the West Bank and Saudi Arabia. In his op-ed, the president emphasized the symbolic meaning of his direct flight from Israel to Saudi Arabia.

“That travel will also be a small symbol of the budding relations and steps toward normalization between Israel and the Arab world, which my administration is working to deepen and expand,” he explained.

The announcement of the president’s visit to Saudi Arabia and especially his upcoming meeting with the Crown Prince has drawn harsh criticism as Biden had previously pledged to make Saudi Arabia a “pariah” over Khashoggi’s murder. His administration is struggling to rein in a surge in gas prices in the US and hopes to boost production in the Persian Gulf kingdom.

Iran comfortably wins Serbia to reach quarterfinals of VNL

Iran men's national volleyball team

Thus, Iran secured a spot at the quarterfinals round the Volleyball Nations League after the decisive straight sets win over Serbia.

The 1st set was lengthy but it was the Iranian team that won 35-33.

The Iranians carried the momentum into the 2nd set in which they defeated the Serbians 25-21 to double their lead.

They acquitted themselves well both on the offense and defense in the 3rd set as well to finish a brilliant game by crushing Serbia 25-12.

Earlier, Iran defeated Poland, Slovenia and was defeated by Italy. Thus, it made its way to the rank of top eight teams after seven victories and five losses in three weeks of games.

The final round of the competitions will kick off on Wednesday, July 20, with the top eight teams facing off in new games. Seven teams have already reached the finals.

They include Italy, Japan, America, Poland, France, Brazil and Iran. The Netherlands needs to win to join the top eight group of teams.

Daily Covid death toll in Iran becomes double-digit

COVID in Iran

The Sunday daily caseload was 2,375. They included 296 hospitalizations.

The latest deaths push to 141,439 the number of people who have died of Covid since the pandemic hit Iran some two years ago.

Currently, there are 4 red cities in Iran in terms of risk from the Coronavirus. The number of orange cities is increasing as well.

Authorities have urged all Iranians to get their booster shots of Covid vaccine quickly to prevent a full resurgence of the disease.

Latest figures show that the number of people willing to get their boosters is low.

This has made officials worried. They have warned that the current trend will lead to a new wave of the pandemic in Iran.

Red Cross: Mothers and babies facing ‘unimaginable horror’ in Yemen

Yemen War

With the armed conflict in Yemen in its eighth year, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) released a report this week stating that around 66% of Yemen’s 30.5 million people lack access to basic healthcare, and those in need of medical attention often risk death to visit the 51% of healthcare facilities still operating in the country.

The crisis has been most acutely felt by women and infants. Less than 50% of births in Yemen are attended by healthcare professionals, and one mother and six newborn babies die every two hours, the report read. Of the estimated 4.2 million people displaced in Yemen since the outbreak of war in 2014, 73% are women and children.

“It’s just unimaginable horror,” Omar told RT.

“We are doing our best to draw the attention of the international community to the plight of the Yemeni people. We’re saying that the world should not turn a blind eye to what is happening,” Omar added.

“The Yemeni people should not be left alone facing their fate,” Omar, who authored the ICRC’s report, continued.

Saudi Arabia launched a war on Yemen in March 2015 in collaboration with its Arab allies and with arms and logistics support from the US, the UK and other Western states.

The war has stopped well short of all of its goals, despite killing hundreds of thousands of Yemenis and turning the entire country into the scene of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

The conflict has been described by the UN as the “world’s worst humanitarian crisis,” and has resulted in the deaths of 377,000 people, more than two-thirds under the age of five, per UN figures at the end of 2021.

The Yemeni conflict is currently in a fragile truce, which was declared in April and extended last month until August.