• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • FOX 40
    • Meet Our Team
      • Our Journalists
      • Sales & Programming
    • Faces of Freedom
  • Contest
    • Visit Jackson City with Soul Giveaway
    • T&D Furniture’s Flip that Furniture Photo Contest
  • Keeping It Real
  • Programming
    • FOX 40 TV Guide
    • WHAT’S ON FOX
    • WATCH STREAMING NEWS NOW
    • CHURCH PROGRAMMING AND DIRECTORY
  • About WDBD
    • Contact Us
    • Job Listings
  • Advertise With Us
  • MS Help Wanted
FOX 40 TV Jackson, MS

WDBD FOX 40 Jackson MS Local News, Weather and Sports

WDBD Television for Jackson, MS

    lincoln-co.-woman-rescues-abandoned-and-malnourished-horses

    Lincoln Co. woman rescues abandoned and malnourished horses

    • Local News
    • National
    • Red Cross Relief
    • Sports
    • Weather
    • Lifestyle
    • City with Soul Giveaway
    • More…
      • Politics
      • Health
      • Science
      • Entertainment
        • Technology
        • What’s on TV?

    fox-news/travel/regions/south-america

    Top Honduran official says mass migration to US ‘possible’ when title 42 ends, stresses economic help

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    With the end of CDC public health policy of Title 42, an order that allows federal authorities to quickly deport migrants at US borders citing the health pandemic, the Foreign Minister of Honduras warns that it could lead to an increase of migration to the US.

    In an interview with Fox News, Honduran Foreign Minister Eduardo Enrique Reina discussed his recent meetings with officials in the Biden administration, plans on tacking internal corruption and issues of migration to the southern border. Fox News asked Foreign Minister Reina whether there was concern over a mass emigration to the United States when the Biden administration ends Title 42.

    DEM TITLE 42 COMPROMISE BEING ‘WORKED ON,’ HOYER AND SCHUMER SAY, AS MODERATES SEEK DISTANCE FROM WHITE HOUSE

    “It will be possible. I think this issue has been a part of the worries and we understand that many people internally and with the different policies that the US has to decide.” He said. 

    Immigrant men from many countries are taken into custody by U.S. Border Patrol agents at the U.S.-Mexico border on December 07, 2021 in Yuma, Arizona. Governors from 26 states have formed a strike force to address the crisis at the border. (John Moore/Getty Images)

    14% of migrants who have been expelled using Title 42 originated from Honduras. The policy was put in place in response to the Covid-19 Pandemic in March of 2020. Already over 100,000 migrants have been encountered from Honduras since the beginning of the Fiscal Year according to CBP data. The Biden administration posted that they would end Title 42 on May 23rd, but a Federal Judge in Louisiana blocked that order earlier this week.

    “A main issue that we will have to work together with the Biden administration in order to provide some alternative to develop this possibility of all economic growth in Honduras”. He said

    TEGUCIGALPA, HONDURAS – DECEMBER 30: Elected President of Honduras Xiomara Castro of the Freedom and Refoundation Party (Libre) speaks during a ceremony to present credentials from the National Electoral Council certifying her victory in the Presidential Elections on December 30, 2021 in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. (Photo by Inti Ocon/Getty Images)

    Honduras has been a key fixture for the Biden administration in solving the migrant crisis. It is part of the Northern triangle in Central America where over 680,000 migrants originated from in FY 2021.  In January, Vice President Kamala Harris attended the inauguration of President Xiomara Castro, head of the left-leaning Libre party, with a focus on combating corruption and irregular migration.

    Foreign Minister Reina traveled to Washington and New York with a series of White House and State Department officials, including senior director of the NSC department for the Western Hemisphere Juan Sebastian Gonzalez. They discussed the need for more direct aid to Honduras to prevent the flow of migration to the US. 

    IMMIGRATION NEARS TOP OF LIST OF URGENT ISSUES FOR AMERICANS, OVERTAKING UKRAINE: POLL

    “We will really need investment, we need the resources in order to develop our country. And so the people have better social and economic circumstances in their lives, so they will not be obliged to leave the country. And probably that is a main issue that we will have to work together with the Biden administration in order to provide some alternative.” 

    Issues of anticorruption policies and practices were also discussed. Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez was recently extradited to the US on drug trafficking and weapons charges that occurred during his time in office.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Mr. Reina also hoped that Vice President Harris and President Castro could have an additional summit in the United States by the end of the year, expressing confidence that President Castro’s ambitious agenda will have long lasting change despite being in power for less than 90 days.

    “The decision has been taken and the President has a power with the votes of an historic vote of Hondurans. So that what we have to do face and we have this challenge to fulfill all this expect that is that the Honduran people have.”

    Police ID Maryland man shot in incident at Peru envoy’s home

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    Gordon Casey, a 19-year-old from Germantown, Maryland, was identified by the Metropolitan Police Department on Saturday as the man who was shot and killed by U.S. Secret Service officers this past week at the residence of Peru’s ambassador to the United States.

    Police said the diplomat and his family were inside the home in the Forest Hills neighborhood of northwest Washington when they heard several windows being smashed Wednesday morning and called the Secret Service.

    FLORIDA SHERIFF PROMOTES GUN SAFETY COURSE FOR RESIDENTS TO SHOOT HOME INVADERS: ‘WE PREFER THAT YOU DO’

    Officers responding to the call for a burglary in progress encountered a man they said was armed with a metal stake in the rear yard.

    Washington Metropolitan Police blocks the street leading towards the Peruvian ambassador’s residence in northwest Washington, Wednesday, April 20, 2022. U.S. Secret Service officers shot “an intruder” Wednesday at the residence of the Peruvian ambassador to the United States in Washington, authorities said.  (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

    District of Columbia Police Chief Robert Contee said officers had used a Taser to try to detain the man, but “those weapons appear to not have any effect on the person.”

    CHICAGO CRIME CRISIS: FOUR BODIES PULLED FROM WATERWAYS IN ONE WEEK

    Police said the officers “gave multiple commands to the suspect to drop the weapon.” When he didn’t, two officers fired their guns, striking and killing Casey. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Investigators have not revealed any details about a potential motive. Earlier in the week, Contee said police were still trying to learn why the man was at the ambassador’s home and why he was smashing the windows.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Several windows and doors around the large property had been shattered, he said.

    New Guatemalan migrant caravan expected to arrive at southern border in May when Title 42 ends

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    A migrant caravan coming from Guatemala will likely be reaching the southern border by May 23, the day Title 42 is expected to expire, Fox News Digital has confirmed.

    National Border Patrol Council President Brandon Judd confirmed to Fox News Digital that a caravan is traveling to the southern border, adding that it likely will break up into smaller ones before it reaches the U.S.

    DESANTIS WARNS MIGRANTS BUSED FROM TEXAS TO DC: ‘DO NOT COME TO FLORIDA. LIFE WILL NOT BE EASY FOR YOU’

    “Yes, I have been informed a caravan is planning on leaving Guatemala with the intent to arrive at the US Border on May 23,” Judd wrote in an email. “The problem with caravans is that they often break up into smaller groups after crossing into Mexico.”

    Reps. John Katko, R-N.Y., and James Comer, R-Ky., were part of a congressional delegation visiting the southern border with Mexico. (House Oversight Committee Republicans)

    “Organized crime or the cartels have them break up prior to arriving at our border due to the optics,” he continued. “I can’t say whether this will happen with this particular caravan, but that has been the trend.”

    MIGRANTS SNAP SELFIES AT BORDER AFTER CROSSING INTO US

    Judd added that it is likely a “crapshoot” on whether the larger caravan will break into smaller ones.

    Migrants are pictured taking selfies at the border. (Houston Keene/Fox News Digital)

    Fox News Digital traveled to Yuma, Arizona, with several members of the House Oversight Committee on Monday and Tuesday to take a look at the ongoing crisis at the southern border.

    During a night tour of the Yuma border, two migrants were seen snapping a selfie as two Border Patrol agents looked after hundreds of migrants waiting for buses to arrive.

    Judd told Fox News Digital in the car while surveying the border that the selfies will help the cartels advertise their services.

    House Oversight Republicans traveled to the southern border with Mexico this week. (House Oversight Committee Republicans)

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “They use them to show everybody, ‘See? Look. Look how easy it was,’” Judd said. “‘These people are happy. Pay me $1,000, and you can be happy, as well.'”

    Judd also blasted the reports of the Biden administration giving illegal immigrants taxpayer-funded free smartphones as “one of the dumbest things I’ve ever heard.” The Biden administration has said the phones are used to keep track of migrants released into the U.S. 

    Giant tortoise thought to be extinct over a century ago found on Galapagos

    A giant tortoise thought to have gone extinct 112 years ago has been rediscovered on the Galapagos’ Fernandina Island.

    Scientists at Connecticut’s Yale University confirmed genetic similarity between a now-deceased large male found in 1906 and a lone female giant tortoise found during a 2019 joint expedition of the Galapagos National Park Directorate (GNPD) and Galapagos Conservancy.

    ENDANGERED WHALES HAVING A BABY BOOM OFF EAST COAST

    A blood sample sent to Yale geneticist Gisella Caccone confirmed that the female “Fernanda” or “Fern” is related to the Chelonoidis phantasticus tortoise species native to the island, the conservancy said earlier this week. 

    It’s a discovery even actor and environmental activist Leonardo DiCaprio tweeted about. 

    “Giant tortoises are critical to #rewilding the Galápagos. Fern pictured below is the only-known Fernandina Giant Tortoise – giving us hope for the rediscovery of the remaining lost species on @rewild’s list,” DiCaprio said, referring to the international conservation group Re:wild, of which he is a founding member. 

    Re:wild works directly with the GNPD and Island Conservation and this year DiCaprio announced a $43 million pledge to enact sweeping conservation operations across the region.

    Now, the hunt for a male tortoise is on, in a desperate attempt to save the species. And, in a landscape dominated by an active volcano, no less.

    “To avoid the same tragic fate as Lonesome George – the last Pinta Giant Tortoise who died in 2012 – an urgent expedition to Fernandina Island will be launched by GNPD and Galápagos Conservancy to find a mate and save the species,” the group wrote.

    If the search proves fruitful, a male tortoise would be united with Fernanda at the Galapagos National Park’s Giant Tortoise Breeding Center in Santa Cruz, California.

    After breeding under the eye of researchers, the tortoises would be returned to Fernandina. 

    Before 2019, only one of the Fernandina Giant Tortoise had been found during a year-long California Academy of Sciences expedition in 1905.

    The release said that previous populations of the Fernandina Giant Tortoise species were believed to be extinct due to volcanic eruptions and that the current population of giant tortoises throughout the Galapagos archipelago is now just 10%-15% of its historical numbers.

    Park rangers have reportedly found tracks and scat of at least two other tortoises during the expedition and plan to set out again in September.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    “One of the greatest mysteries in Galápagos has been the Fernandina Island Giant Tortoise. Rediscovering this lost species may have occurred just in the nick of time to save it. We now urgently need to complete the search of the island to find other tortoises,” said James Gibbs, vice president of science and conservation for the Galapagos Conservancy and tortoise expert at the State University of New York, said in the release.

    In order to do so, the conservancy has launched an urgent call for donations to undertake the effort.

    Joe Exotic, Assange, Snowden: Here’s who wanted a Trump pardon but didn’t get one

    Although former President Donald Trump issued more than 73 pardons and 70 commutations before his departure from the White House on Wednesday, some popular names were not included on the list. 

    Recipients included former White House adviser Steve Bannon, former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, and rappers Lil Wayne and Kodak Black.

    TRUMP PARDONS STEVE BANNON, LIL WAYNE, DOZENS OF OTHERS; ALSO COMMUTES SENTENCES

    Bannon is awaiting trial after allegedly defrauding Trump-supporting donors, Kilpatrick has served part of a 28-year sentence on corruption charges, and Lil Wayne and Kodak Black — whose real names are Dwayne Michael Carter Jr. and Bill Kapri, respectively — have been convicted on weapons-related charges.

    Although there were questions raised as to whether or not Trump would pardon himself or his family members on the way out the door, sources told Fox News that he was not expected to do so and did not before President Biden was sworn in on Wednesday afternoon.

    Joe Exotic 

    Joseph Maldonado-Passage, also known as “Joe Exotic” from Netflix’s “Tiger King” documentary series, did not receive a pardon, though his team had reported on Monday they were “confident” one would be forthcoming.

    “We will be standing by waiting for President Trump’s confirmation of the Tiger King Joe Exotic,” private investigator Eric Love, who is part of Exotic’s legal team, said Tuesday. “Much love to the fans. Thank you so much for all the support. God bless. We’ll see you as soon as we get the pardon.”

    Love had been waiting inside a limousine to pick Maldonado-Passage up from a Texas prison if he was pardoned, according to KFOR-TV. He said that they had brought supplies for “hair, makeup, wardrobes” in addition to a doctor and mental health expert in the event of his release.

    Maldonado-Passage, 57, was sentenced to 22 years in prison for his role in a murder-for-hire plot that targeted his rival, Carole Baskin. 

    This file photo provided by the Santa Rosa County Jail in Milton, Fla., shows Joseph Maldonado-Passage, also known as “Joe Exotic.” Maldonado-Passage was convicted in an unsuccessful murder-for-hire plot against Carole Baskin, the founder of Big Cat Rescue, who he has repeatedly accused of killing her husband Jack “Don” Lewis. Lewis’ unsolved 1997 disappearance and Maldonado-Passage’s accusations are the subject of new Netflix series “Tiger King.” (Santa Rosa County Jail via AP, File)

    Julian Assange

    WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, 49, was also not on the list, though both “Baywatch” star Pamela Anderson and whistleblower Edward Snowden appealed to Trump.

    The jailed publisher is being held in London following his eviction from the Ecuadorian Embassy, where he had been living in 2019.

    Earlier this month, U.K. District Judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled against a request to extradite Assange to the U.S. where he faces espionage charges after publishing classified intelligence more than a decade ago. 

    The charges carry a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison.

    The judge cited Assange’s mental health in the decision.

    “We are enormously gratified by the U.K. court’s decision denying extradition,” Barry Pollack — a Washington, D.C.-based lawyer for Assange, told Fox News in a statement. “The effort by the United States to prosecute Julian Assange and seek his extradition was ill-advised from the start.”

    The U.S. Government has since lodged an appeal against the decision to block his extradition.

    Assange’s mother, Christine Assange, said she was “not shocked, just disappointed” by Trump’s decision.

    “Courage is not always contagious,” she tweeted.

    Edward Snowden

    NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden also faces a sentence of up to 175 years in prison if convicted on charges of violating the Espionage Act, conspiring to hack government computers, and “unlawfully obtaining and disclosing classified documents related to the national defense.”

    The 37-year-old fled the U.S. after leaking agency files in 2013 and was later given asylum in Russia.

    In November, Snowden announced that he and his wife would apply for Russian citizenship for the sake of their family and ahead of the birth of their child.

    Although many were opposed to a pardon for Snowden, Trump said he was considering granting clemency in August.

    Following the White House’s release of the list of pardons, Snowden tweeted that he was “not at all disappointed to go unpardoned by a man who has never known a love he had not paid for.”

    “But what supporters of his remain must never forgive that this simpering creature failed to pardon truth-tellers in far more desperate circumstances,” he said.

    Ross Ulbricht

    Ross Ulbricht, the founder of darknet website Silk Road, was reportedly considered for a pardon last month but also absent from Trump’s list. 

    Silk Road reportedly enabled users to mask their identities while purchasing illegal goods. 

    Rep. Thomas Massie, R-W.Va., has been a vocal advocate for pardoning both Ulbricht and Snowden.

    Supporters of President Trump are confronted by U.S. Capitol Police officers outside the Senate Chamber inside the Capitol in Washington. An Arizona man seen in photos and video of the mob wearing a fur hat with horns was also charged Saturday in Wednesday’s chaos. Jacob Anthony Chansley, who also goes by the name Jake Angeli, was taken into custody Saturday, Jan. 9. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

    ‘QAnon Shaman’

    Jacob Anthony Chansley, who goes by Jake Angeli, was also not pardoned this week — though his attorney Albert Watkins said that it would be “appropriate and honorable” to do so.

    Chansley, 33, was nicknamed “QAnon Shaman” after he was pictured in viral photos storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 wearing face paint and a bearskin headdress with horns.

    Last week, Chansley was charged in a federal court with civil disorder, obstruction of an official proceeding, disorderly conduct in a restricted building, demonstrating in a Capitol building, entering a restricted building without lawful authority, and violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.

    In a previous statement, Watkins said that his client had not participated in violence and had “accepted President Trump’s invitation to walk down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Capitol.”

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    Chansley is currently being held in a federal facility in Phoenix.

    No one in connection with the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol received a pardon.

    “No one was holding their breath on the request and, as such, there is no need to exhale,” Watkins said, according to KMOV.

    Fox News’ Brie Stimson, Greg Norman and Sam Dorman contributed to this report.

    Amazon rock art discovery depicts prehistoric people and huge Ice Age beasts

    Newly discovered rock art in the Colombian Amazon depicts the rainforest’s early inhabitants living with giant Ice Age creatures.

    The drawings, which were made between 12,600 and 11,800 years ago, show human figures, hunting scenes, plants, trees, and animals. The discovery is featured in the series “Jungle Mystery: Lost Kingdoms of The Amazon,” which recently premiered on Channel 4 in the U.K.

    “The thousands of pictures are among the oldest depictions of people interacting with the huge creatures, including mastodons,” said the U.K.’s University of Exeter, which participated in the research, on its website.

    In addition to mastodons, other native animals are depicted such as camelids, three-toe ungulates with trunks, and what resembles a giant sloth.

    “These native animals all became extinct, probably because of a combination of climate change, the loss of their habitat and hunting by humans,” said the University of Exeter.

    MYSTERIOUS ROCK ART DISCOVERED IN MEGALITHIC TOMBS IN ISRAEL

    The drawings also include deer, tapirs, alligators, bats, monkeys, turtles, serpents, and porcupines.

    The rock art was discovered in the Colombian Amazon.
    (Channel 4/Jungle Mystery: Lost Kingdoms of the Amazon on Channel 4)

    “These really are incredible images, produced by the earliest people to live in western Amazonia. They moved into the region at a time of extreme climate change, which was leading to changes in vegetation and the make-up of the forest,” said University of Exeter Archaeology Professor Mark Robinson. “The Amazon was still transforming into the tropical forest we recognize today.”

    Researchers from the European Research Council-funded project LastJourney made the discovery and excavations were made in 2017 and 2018. The findings are also described in the journal Quaternary International.

    Ella Al-Shamahi, who presents the Channel 4 series, described the challenges of filming in the remote Amazonian location.

    The rock art depicts a host of creatures.
    (“Jungle Mystery: Lost Kingdoms of the Amazon” on Channel 4.  )

    MYSTERIOUS ROCK ART UNCOVERED IN CAVES ON UNINHABITED CARIBBEAN ISLAND

    “This discovery is not a drill — it is big news and will take many decades to unpack, it was also a bloody nightmare politically, security and rainforest-wise to get to,” tweeted Al-Shamahi.

    “This is such a significant discovery and seems to not have been known about by science or locals (often locals know),” Al-Shamahi said, in another tweet, noting that the rock is deep in rainforest controlled by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

    A 2016 peace treaty between FARC and the Colombian government meant that experts were able to visit the area where the rock art is located.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    The drawings were made between 12,600 and 11,800 years ago
    (“Jungle Mystery: Lost Kingdoms of the Amazon” on Channel 4)

    Earlier this year, in another project, archaeologists announced the discovery of mysterious rock art in megalithic tombs in Israel.

    Follow James Rogers on Twitter @jamesjrogers

    Out of vital medication, US woman among those stuck in Peru

    Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here.

    For Anna, a 33-year-old American woman stranded in a Peruvian hotel room and out of life-saving medication to treat her auto-immune disease, the clock is ticking.

    After Peru ordered its borders closed March 15 in an effort to hinder the spread of the new coronavirus, she and her husband tried to charter a plane to leave Cusco. They even planned to take with them other Americans trapped in the city nestled high in the Andes near the ancient ruins of Machu Picchu.

    But the Peruvian government refused to give the plane permission to land, according to the couple, the U.S. government and airline officials. And when they asked the U.S. State Department for help, they said they were told the agency was working on the situation.

    WHITE HOUSE, SENATE STRIKE DEAL ON HISTORIC $2T CORONAVIRUS RELIEF BILL, BUT HOUSE SUPPORT REMAINS UNCERTAIN

    Tourists from the United States wait outside the closed Jorge Chavez International Airport for a member of the U.S. Embassy to escort them to a flight that will fly them back to the U.S., in Callao Peru, Friday, March 20, 2020, on the fifth day of a state of emergency decreed by the government to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

    “There are other foreign governments that are able to take out their citizens, but it seems that with the U.S. there is some gridlock in the Peruvian government granting those airplanes permission to land,” Anna said. “But there are many citizens here that are just desperate to go home.”

    The couple’s plight is the latest in a series of problems facing thousands of U.S. citizens trapped all over the world because of the COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week that he has been working to repatriate Americans. But like others, Anna and her husband say they have gotten little help.

    Amid outcry from congressional leaders over the Peru situation, the State Department slammed Peru on Tuesday for turning back two repatriation flights for hundreds of U.S. tourists and said it was engaging the country’s government and “advocating vigorously for the return of our citizens.” The Embassy previously coordinated with Peru on repatriation flights that brought home 700 Americans.

    There was no immediate comment from Peru’s foreign ministry. President Martín Vizcarra, a soft-spoken U.S. ally, was among the first in Latin America to close borders over the coronavirus pandemic, deploy the military and require people to stay in their homes. Initially, he allowed waivers for chartered repatriation flights, but that ended Saturday.

    The pandemic has infected more than 400,000 people around the world and killed over 18,000. The COVID-19 illness causes mild or moderate symptoms in most people, but severe, life-threatening symptoms are possible especially for the elderly or those with existing health problems — like Anna. She and her husband requested that their last names not be made public for privacy reasons related to her medical condition and out of fear of possible retaliation from Peruvian authorities.

    Peru confirmed its first case of the virus on March 6, three days before Anna arrived to meet her husband who was there as part of a South American trip. When Peru’s president declared an emergency and closed the country’s borders days later, they were given just 24 hours to leave.

    Anna’s husband immediately turned to the U.S. Embassy for help, telling officials about her precarious health condition and dwindling supply of medication. He provided a note from her U.S. doctor attesting that it was “very urgent and important that she returns to USA” for treatment.

    CONGRESS NEEDS TO PROVIDE FUNDS OR POSTAL SERVICE MAY SHUT DOWN BECAUSE OF CORONAVIRUS: REPORT

    Lacking an answer about whether a U.S. plane would rescue them, he contacted political leaders in Texas including Sens. Ted Cruz and John Cornyn who he said tried to help. The couple believed an American plane would land in Cusco on Tuesday, but that didn’t happen.

    American Airlines spokesman Ross Feinstein said a charter flight from Miami reached Peruvian airspace that afternoon but was denied permission to land, and circled until fuel levels dictated a return to Miami. The State Department said Peru also did not provide clearances for a LATAM flight to pick up Americans in Cusco.

    U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted Tuesday that the problems in Peru were due to a “lack of urgency” by mid-level State Department employees, but that a “competent official has taken direct control.”

    Tourists from the United States wait outside the closed Jorge Chavez International Airport for a member of the U.S. Embassy to escort them to a flight that will fly them back to the U.S., in Callao Peru, Friday, March 20, 2020, on the fifth day of a state of emergency decreed by the government to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

    Anna’s husband had a backup plan: He had reached out to private companies to charter an air ambulance, but he said Peruvian authorities refused to let it land

    Various private air charter companies have been working feverishly to find a way to bring them home, according to communications that Anna showed to The Associated Press.

    Steve Panzella, president of Horizon Jets Charter Inc., said the couple contacted him about an air ambulance and said they were willing to pay to bring other Americans home on any flight they charter. He said Cusco’s airport presents some challenges because it is high in the mountains and not all airplanes are designed to take off from that elevation, but he said the holdup in this case has been securing permission from Peru.

    5 MEMBERS OF MISSOURI FAMILY TEST POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS: REPORTS

    “I have been getting calls 24 hours a day from people stuck all over Central and South America, but nothing like Peru,” Panzella said. “People are desperate.”

    In interviews, other Americans who traveled to Peru painted a bleak picture of armed troops patrolling the streets during the lockdown and making sure they stay in their hotels. Some told AP they didn’t know how or when they would get home. Others managed to leave by buying tickets through local travel companies. But they were given little advance notice about the flights and didn’t know until they boarded if there would be enough seats.

    Constance Bauer told AP via email that her son is stuck with other Americans in the Amazonian city of Iquitos.

    “And the situation is much worse for these folks than for those in Lima (the capital) — food, medical supplies, medical care, clean water are very scarce in Iquitos and they are under a strict, military-enforced quarantine,” she wrote.

    For Anna, all there is to do is wait.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    “I’m out of my medications,” she said, “and it is not a condition that can be treated here in Peru.”

    Americans stuck in Peru because of coronavirus speak out: ‘We are just crossing our fingers’

    Two Americans who became stuck in Peru after borders closed amid the threat of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic are speaking out about their experience.

    In an interview on “Fox & Friends Weekend” with host Pete Hegseth, Dan West and Jonathan Du said that the order made by the Peruvian government to close borders for two weeks took them by surprise.

    West said that originally things “seemed like they were fine” but quickly evolved as news broke from Italy and the United States.

    CLICK HERE FOR FULL CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

    “And then, all of a sudden the president announces that they are closing borders here in Peru and that just completely [caught] us off guard,” he admitted.

    What was originally a once-in-a-lifetime trip became a desperate attempt to return home.

    “Well, initially I mean there was just so much anxiety revolving around whether or not we could go home,” Du said. “We went to the airport around 3 a.m. on Monday morning and there were just hundreds of people at the airport all trying to get out. All people who didn’t have tickets.”

    “At first we didn’t get any help from the U.S. Embassy. We didn’t get any answers. The Department of Homeland Security didn’t know what was going on. None of the airlines knew what was going on,” he continued further.

    Du said that’s when the pair decided to reach out to other Americans in the same situation. In a matter of days, they had hit capacity on WhatsApp, moved over to Telegram, have a thousand people on their Facebook, and now over 1,600 on a spreadsheet they’ve been circulating.

    Although there is currently no official count, more than a thousand U.S. citizens are believed to be stuck in the South American country. On Thursday, President Trump said that the military is going to help bring them home.

    “They got caught, they were late with their flights, we gave them a period of time, they didn’t make it, but we’re looking to get them out probably through the military,” Trump told reporters.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    “And we are hearing now the president announced that they are going to be helping us out,” West remarked. “We are hearing flights have gotten to Morocco. We already saw that a United charter had landed in Lima yesterday and took some Americans back to Washington, D.C. And, the U.S. Embassy said that they are working to get everyone out.”

    “They are working on Lima first and then they are coming to Cuzco. So, we are just crossing our fingers and hoping that our time is soon,” he concluded.

    $300 million of ExxonMobil oil revenue hangs in the balance after contentious election in Guyana remains undecided

    Prosperity hovered on the horizon of Guyana, a small South American country, after ExxonMobil discovered eight billion barrels of oil off its coast late last year, but a contentious election has left the expected $300 million in revenue without a sworn-in president to control it more than a week after voters cast their ballots.

    Guyana Chief Justice Roxanne George began hearing the case Tuesday that will determine whether or not the country’s election commission will be mandated to recount the votes of more than half of the polling stations in an area known as Region Four. Opposition leaders have decried voter fraud and incorrect tabulations inflated to tilt support in favor of the sitting President David Granger, whose supporters predominantly consist of African descendants who were brought to Guyana as slaves when it was a British colony.

    DOZENS IN IRAN DIE FROM DRINKING BOOTLEG ALCOHOL TO PREVENT CORONAVIRUS INFECTION: REPORTS

    Racial tensions between Granger’s APNU+AFC coalition and the opposing People’s Progressive Party (PPP), supported mostly by Guyanese of East Indian descent who were brought to Guyana as indentured servants, have continued to stir, resulting in riots and violent protests, even as international entities, including the U.S. State Department, called for Granger not to assume the presidency for a consecutive term and instead wait for a voter recount.

    PPP presidential candidate Irfaan Ali, a 40-year-old former housing minister who has also come under scrutiny as questions about his academic qualifications swirled, has said he is confident of victory.

    “We call on President Granger to avoid a transition of government which we believe would be unconstitutional as it would be based on a vote tabulation process that lacked credibility and transparency,” the U.S. said in a joint statement with the heads of the British and Canadian High Commissions. “A fair and free process is vital for the maintenance and reinforcement of democracy in Guyana.”

    U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also met with the Canadian Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland on Monday to discuss the correct transition of power for Guyana.

    CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

    In late February, Guyana sent its first shipment of one million barrels of oil to markets in Asia and the U.S. as part of a production-sharing agreement.

    Officials say Guyana will earn $300 million as its share this year, but the figure will jump to $5 billion by 2025, when crude from a third oil field begins to flow. Foreign direct investment from oil-related activities is nearing $1 billion.

    Under terms of the deal with Exxon, the nation of fewer than one million people gets a 2 percent royalty and 50 percent of sales after the consortium recovers its investment from every shipment.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    10 different kinds of bear: Everything you need to know about the huge mammals

    What to do when a bear attacks

    If you encounter a bear making aggressive moves, this is what to do to save your life according to the National Park Service.

    Bears are mammals that belong to the family Ursidae.

    They can be as small as four feet long and about 60 pounds to as big as eight feet long and more than a thousand pounds. They’re found throughout North America, South America, Europe, and Asia.

    Bears are typically solitary, except for mothers with cubs. They have nonretractable claws, short tails, and an excellent sense of smell.

    While there are only eight species of bears, there are many more subspecies,

    On average, bears can live up to 25 years in the wild and up to 50 in captivity. Six species, including the polar bear and the giant panda, are included on the IUCN Red List as threatened or vulnerable.

    Here are ten different kinds of bears.

    1. Polar Bear

    A polar bear pulls yoga moves on a frozen lake in Svalbard, Norway. 28/11/19 – file photo. (Credit: SWNS)

    Polar bears are classified as marine mammals. They are also the largest carnivorous land mammals on Earth. They spend most of their lives on the sea ice of the Arctic Ocean. The skin under the polar bear’s fur is actually black; this black is evident only on the nose. They are about seven to eight feet long, measured from the nose to the tip of their very short tail. Male polar bears are much larger than the females. A large male can weigh more than 1,700 pounds, while a large female is about half that size (up to 1,000 pounds). They have a thick layer of body fat and a water-repellant coat that insulates them from the cold air and water. Polar bears spend over half of their time hunting for food. Considered talented swimmers, their diet mainly consists of ringed and bearded seals because they need large amounts of fat to survive. The polar bear evolved one to three million years ago from the brown bear. Because of the ongoing and potential loss of their sea ice habitat resulting from climate change, polar bears were listed as a threatened species in the US under the Endangered Species Act in May 2008.

    2. Grizzly Bear

    In this July 6, 2011, a grizzly bear roams near Beaver Lake in Yellowstone National Park, Wyo. 
    (AP Photo/Jim Urquhart, File)

    The grizzly bear is a North American subspecies of the brown bear. Grizzlies are typically brown, though their fur can appear to be white-tipped, or grizzled, lending them their name. Grizzly bears are protected by law in the continental United States—not in Alaska—though there have been some controversial attempts to remove those protections in recent years. They typically weigh up to 800 pounds and tend to be solitary animals—with the exception of females and their cubs. Grizzly bears are powerful, top-of-the-food-chain predators. However, much of their diet consists of nuts, berries, fruit, leaves, and roots. Bears also eat other animals, from rodents to moose. Despite their impressive size, grizzlies have been clocked running at 30 mph. These animals need a lot of space—their home range can encompass up to 600 square miles. Ever since they were listed as endangered in 1975, the population of grizzly bears has grown under the protection of the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

    3. Panda Bear

    The panda Xing Er in the new enclosure in Copenhagen Zoo, Wednesday, April 10, 2019 – file photo. (Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)

    Pandas — a worldwide treasure — are known for their distinctive black and white coat. The pandas live mainly in temperate forests high in the mountains of southwest China, where they subsist almost entirely on bamboo. They must eat around 26 to 84 pounds of it every day, depending on what part of the bamboo they are eating. They use their enlarged wrist bones that function as opposable thumbs. While a newborn panda is about the size of a stick of butter, the females can grow up to about 200 pounds. Males can grow up to about 300 pounds as adults. Despite their bulk, these bears are excellent tree climbers.

    4. Sun Bear

    A Malayan Sun Bear resting on the rock in a zoo – file photo (iStock)

    Also known as the honey bear for its love of honey, the Sun Bear is the smallest, least well-known and one of the rarest of all the bear species. Sun Bears are reclusive and live an insular life in the dense lowland forests of Southeast Asia. The sun bears take their name from the bib-shaped golden or white patch on their chest, which legend says represents the rising sun. Sun bears grow to only about half the size of an American black bear. And, ironically, they are nocturnal. These bears lumber through the forests by night, snacking on fruits, berries, roots, insects, small birds, lizards, and rodents. They have an excellent sense of smell and extremely long claws. Gathering data on sun bears is difficult. Their homelands are being lost rapidly to deforestation, poachers hunt them mercilessly for body parts and fur, and some farmers kill them on-sight because they often eat crops. Adult females are also frequently killed so their cubs can be taken and raised as pets.

    5. Andean Bear

    Andean bear (Tremarctos ornatus) standing near pond, also known as the spectacled bear – file photo (iStock)

    The spectacled Andean bear is South America’s only bear species. It faces an uncertain future due to loss of habitat. These bears are excellent climbers. Spectacled bears are generally, shy, peaceful and elusive, avoiding contact with humans. They are usually solitary, but may occasionally be found in relatively high concentrations when favorite food items are abundant. Recently estimated population sizes for most areas are small, with a total estimate for the Northern Andes comprised anywhere between 6,000 and 10,000 individuals. The main threats to spectacled bears throughout the region are hunting and habitat loss and degradation.

    6. North American Black Bear

    A black bear is shown in this undated handout photo provided by the State of Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, March 10, 2016 – file photo. 
    (REUTERS/State of Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries/Handout via Reuters)

    Black bears are North America’s most familiar and common bears. They typically live in forests and are excellent tree climbers, but are also found in mountains and swamps. Black bears will eat almost anything. Although solitary animals, black bears roam large territories. When winter arrives, black bears spend the season dormant in their dens, feeding on body fat they have built up by eating ravenously all summer and fall.

    7. Short-Faced Bear

    An unusual looking bear, the now extinct short faced bear, an animal of the last ice age, sits in the deep grass on the rocky shore of a prehistoric North American wetland. 3D Rendering. (iStock)

    The first thing to know about the Short-Faced bear is that it’s extinct. The short-faced bear was originally the largest and most powerful land carnivore in North America during the ice age. It may have weighed about over a few thousand pounds and towered at least 11 feet standing up. Known as the fastest running bear that ever lived, the short-faced bear roamed the earth about 500,000 to 2 million years ago and would have been the largest and most powerful meat-eater on land at the time, scientists say.

    8. Asiatic Black Bear

    Asiatic black bears are seen at the Vietnam Bear Rescue Centre in Tam Dao National Park, north of Hanoi May 14, 2009 – file photo. (REUTERS/Kham)

    Asiatic Black bears are medium-sized and black-colored in appearance with a light-ish muzzle and ears. Asiatic black bears live predominantly in forested areas — especially in hills and mountainous areas — in southern Asia. The bears den for winter sleep in the northern parts of their range. Asiatic black bears have been reported to feed on a wide range of foods, including fruits, bees’ nests, insects, invertebrates, small vertebrates, and carrion. They occasionally kill domestic livestock, but the degree to which they prey on wild hoofed mammals is unknown. The Asiatic black bear is listed as vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN).

    9. Brown Bear

    A brown bear is seen in a shelter for bears in the village of Berezivka near Zhytomyr, Ukraine August 15, 2017 – file photo. 
    (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich)

    The brown bear lives in the forests and mountains of northern North America, Europe, and Asia. These omnivorous giants are usually solitary animals, except for females and their cubs, but at times they do congregate. Dramatic gatherings can be seen at Alaskan fishing spots when the salmon swim upstream for summer spawning. In this season dozens of brown bears may gather to feast on the fish. In fall, a brown bear may eat as much as 90 pounds of food each day and may weigh twice as much before hibernation as it will in spring. Although brown bears are top-of-the-food-chain predators, much of their diet consists of nuts, berries, fruit, leaves, and roots. Like other subspecies, brown bears also eat other animals, from rodents to moose. Despite their enormous size, brown bears are extremely fast, having been clocked at speeds of 30 mph.

    10. Sloth Bear

    Sloth bear – file photo. (iStock)

    Sloth bears, much like sloths, have shaggy, dusty-black coats; pale, short-haired muzzles; and long, curved claws which they use to excavate termites and ants. Adult sloth bears are missing their top two front teeth. Due to their diet of insects and fruit, their premolars and molars are smaller than those of other bears, but they have large canines to use for defense. It is thought that their feet are turned inward to increase digging efficiency. These bears live in a variety of dry and moist forests and in some tall grasslands. Their range includes India, Sri Lanka, and southern Nepal. About 20,000 or fewer total sloth bears remain in the wild. However, no reliable large-scale population survey has been conducted. It is estimated that their population has declined by 30 to 49 percent in the last 30 years primarily due to habitat loss, but also because of poaching for parts.

    The World Wildlife Foundation, National Geographic, The National Wildlife Federation, The Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, Canadian Museum of Nature, International Association for Bear Research and Management, and Bears of the World contributed to this report.

    • Go to page 1
    • Go to page 2
    • Go to Next Page »

    Primary Sidebar


    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Twitter

    Follow Us On Facebook


    Trending Now

    prosecutors-set-to-call-former-fbi-officials-to-the-stand-as-week-two-of-sussmann-trial-begins

    Prosecutors set to call former FBI officials to the stand as week two of Sussmann trial begins

    california-substitute-teacher-arrested-for-allegedly-molesting-four-young-female-students

    California substitute teacher arrested for allegedly molesting four young female students

    biden’s-new-indo-pacific-economic-framework-for-prosperity-seeks-to-level-playing-field,-facilitate-peace

    Biden’s new Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity seeks to level playing field, facilitate peace

    new-york-city-violence:-teen-boy-killed,-teen-girl-shot-in-the-face-amid-city-wide-shooting-incidents

    New York City violence: Teen boy killed, teen girl shot in the face amid city-wide shooting incidents

    tennessee-inmate-recaptured-after-escaping-detention-center

    Tennessee inmate recaptured after escaping detention center


    LOCAL NEWS HEADLINES

    Family shares story after gunfire at Mississippi music festival

    Endangered/Missing Child Alert canceled for Ocean Springs teen

    Large crowd gathers for Huntington’s Disease walk in Brandon

    MS Black Panthers denounce shooting in Buffalo, New York

    ‘Prank gone wrong’: 15-year-old shot in chest, killed by friend in Jackson

    More Local News

    NATIONAL HEADLINES

    us-military-will-defend-taiwan-‘if-it-comes-to-that,’-biden-says

    US military will defend Taiwan ‘if it comes to that,’ Biden says

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! President Biden stated that the U.S. will send the military to defend Taiwan if the People's Republic of China were to invade the island nation."Very quickly, you didn't want to get involved in the Ukraine conflict … Read Full Report about US military will defend Taiwan ‘if it comes to that,’ Biden says

    blm-gave-$200,000-to-chicago-group-whose-leader-calls-cops-‘pigs’

    BLM gave $200,000 to Chicago group whose leader calls cops ‘pigs’

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! FIRST ON FOX: The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation donated $200,000 during its 2021 fiscal year to a Chicago-based nonprofit whose executive director has repeatedly called cops "pigs." Equity and … Read Full Report about BLM gave $200,000 to Chicago group whose leader calls cops ‘pigs’

    bears’-justin-fields-optimistic-for-2nd-season,-ready-to-revamp-culture-in-organization

    Bears’ Justin Fields optimistic for 2nd season, ready to revamp culture in organization

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Chicago Bears quarterback Justin Fields is entering his second year in the NFL with immense optimism as he is set to begin the 2022 season as a starter.Fields told Fox News Digital in a recent interview he is ready … Read Full Report about Bears’ Justin Fields optimistic for 2nd season, ready to revamp culture in organization

    kimberly-williams-paisley-reveals-the-‘greatest-job’-she’s-had-and-how-she-keeps-her-relationship-strong

    Kimberly Williams-Paisley reveals the ‘greatest job’ she’s had and how she keeps her relationship strong

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Being a mom is the "greatest job" Kimberly Williams-Paisley has.The "Father of the Bride" actress opened up about motherhood and keeping her relationship with Brad Paisley strong in a recent interview with Fox News … Read Full Report about Kimberly Williams-Paisley reveals the ‘greatest job’ she’s had and how she keeps her relationship strong

    transsexual-pioneer-criticizes-modern-trans-activists,-says-they’re-indoctrinating-kids:-‘this-isn’t-a-game’

    Transsexual pioneer criticizes modern trans activists, says they’re indoctrinating kids: ‘This isn’t a game’

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! A transsexual pioneer and human rights activist criticized modern trans activists and said children are facing "indoctrination."Buck Angel, a 59-year-old with gender dysphoria, told Fox News that when he began … Read Full Report about Transsexual pioneer criticizes modern trans activists, says they’re indoctrinating kids: ‘This isn’t a game’

    Footer

    Public File Info

    Individuals with disabilities who have questions about the content of our public file or website may contact RaMona Alexander by phone at
    601-948-3333 or by email at RaMona.Alexander@fox40tv.com

    »WDBD FCC Public File
    »EEO Report
    »Closed Captioning

     

    • Local News
    • National
    • Red Cross Relief
    • Sports
    • Weather
    • Lifestyle
    • City with Soul Giveaway
    • More…
      • Politics
      • Health
      • Science
      • Entertainment
        • Technology
        • What’s on TV?

    CATEGORIES

    • Local News
    • National
    • Red Cross Relief
    • Sports
    • Weather
    • Lifestyle
    • City with Soul Giveaway
    • More…
      • Politics
      • Health
      • Science
      • Entertainment
        • Technology
        • What’s on TV?
    GRIT TV Logo
    Antenna_TV_logo
    GRIT-TV Logo
    Antenna_TV_logo

    Copyright © 2022 · American Spirit Media LLC · WDBD TV · Jackson MS · Terms of Service · Privacy Policy