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Measles Outbreak, Foreign Aid Cuts, Bolsonaro Charges

2025/2/19
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Leila Faudel和Steve Inskeep:报道了德克萨斯州的麻疹疫情,并指出疫情可能进一步蔓延。他们还讨论了美国政府削减对民主倡导团体的资金援助以及巴西前总统博索纳罗面临的政变指控。 Samantha Larned, Zach Holbrooks, Catherine Wells和Ron Cook:讨论了西德克萨斯州麻疹疫情的细节,包括病例数量、疫苗接种率以及疫情在农村地区传播的挑战。他们强调了疫苗接种的重要性以及疫苗的安全性。 Emily Fang和Francisco Ben-Kosme:分析了特朗普政府削减对民主推广项目的资金援助的影响,认为此举是对中国的让步,并可能损害美国的国际影响力。他们还讨论了中国试图利用这一情况来影响相关组织。 Carrie Kahn:报道了巴西前总统博索纳罗被控参与政变企图的事件,详细介绍了指控内容,包括策划政变、煽动暴力和批准暗杀计划。她还讨论了博索纳罗及其支持者的回应以及此案的后续发展。

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A measles outbreak in West Texas, particularly around Lubbock, has health officials concerned. The number of cases has more than doubled in a week, with a majority among unvaccinated school-age children. While the vaccine is highly effective, the outbreak highlights vaccine hesitancy in some communities and challenges in tracking the disease in rural areas.
  • Measles outbreak in West Texas, primarily affecting unvaccinated children.
  • Cases have more than doubled in a week.
  • Vaccine hesitancy and challenges in tracking the disease in rural areas.
  • Vaccine is 97% effective.

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People around Lubbock, Texas are watching the spread of measles. Could it grow? Absolutely it could. Other places have seen it too. So what's behind the return of a disease health officials once thought they had eradicated? I'm Leila Faudel, that's Steve Inskeep, and this is Up First from NPR News.

It's common for countries like China to criticize U.S. efforts to spread democracy. Now, democracy advocates say the Trump administration speaks the same way. The geopolitical information warfare is no longer something that's happening halfway across the world, but is happening within our own governments.

Who's gaining from that information war? Also, Brazilian authorities filed charges against a former president for a coup attempt. Do they put a former president on trial? Stay with us. We've got the news you need to start your day. This message comes from NPR sponsor Shopify. Start selling with Shopify today. Whether you're a garage entrepreneur or IPO ready, Shopify is the only tool you need to start, run, and grow your business without the struggle. Go to Shopify.com slash NPR.

Measles is spreading across parts of West Texas. Health officials thought they had eradicated this disease 25 years ago, but it's occasionally returned most recently to five counties around Lubbock, Texas. Which is where we find Samantha Larned of our member station KTTZ. Samantha, good morning. Good morning. What's it like there?

There is a lot of anxiety around this. In the past week, measles cases have more than doubled. We now have 58 confirmed cases. Here in Lubbock, it's just one, but it's the first one the city has seen in more than 20 years.

Zach Holbrooks is the executive director of South Plains Public Health District, which serves Gaines County and Terry County outside of Lubbock, where most of these cases are being reported. He expects cases to continue rising. Could it grow? Absolutely it could. We're trying to educate and get as much information out as possible so that people realize that

What the stakes are? A majority of the cases are among school-age children, and the state health department says most of the measles patients are either unvaccinated or have an unknown vaccine status. Measles can be dangerous, even deadly, especially for babies and children. Okay, you mentioned vaccines there. Do health authorities feel they understand how this particular outbreak got going?

Public health officials have described communities in Gaines County as vaccine hesitant. The vaccination rate there is just under 82 percent as compared to the state of Texas, which has a vaccination rate of 90 percent.

Catherine Wells is the director of public health here in Lubbock, where there is that one case. And she says the process of confirming measles cases is a lot quicker in a city than in those remote rural areas like Seminole, which is an hour and a half away from here, where a majority of those cases have occurred. The quickest way to get that measles test done is in the state public health lab in Austin.

which is fine when you're in Lubbock because we have overnight delivery to Austin. Okay, I guess she's saying that it's a little bit harder to catch up to this disease and track and isolate it when you're in some of the rural areas. I'd like to know, though, is this outbreak in West Texas representative of things going on around the country?

Well, like Texas in the past month, there's been cases in Georgia, Rhode Island, New York City and Alaska. And this is all coming as Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is getting started leading the Health and Human Services Department. Kennedy was critical of the measles vaccine for years before he was nominated.

Health officials say the vaccine is 97 percent effective at preventing measles even after exposure. Some of the people who are at risk are those with compromised immune systems, like pregnant people and babies under one year old who can't receive the vaccine. Dr. Ron Cook is the health authority for the city of Lubbock, and he says the vaccine is safe. I tell my pediatric moms and dads, you

If they get a rash after the MMR, it's okay. It's not measles. It's just your body's reaction to the vaccine. There haven't been any deaths so far with this outbreak, but providers are concerned about continued spread from those who might not know that they have measles. And MMR vaccines are available across the state. Samantha, thanks so much. Thank you. Samantha Larned is a reporter with member station KTTZ in Lubbock, Texas. ♪

President Trump's drive to cut back the federal government includes cuts to a traditional tool against China. Yeah, the United States has promoted democracy and human rights abroad, and it's been seen as a way to counter the influence of authoritarian countries, especially China.

Now the U.S. is blocking those efforts as part of an effort led by Elon Musk, the presidential aide who is the world's richest man. NPR's Emily Fang has covered China for many years and is on the line. Emily, good morning. Hey, Steve. Good morning. OK, so why would the administration back off democracy promotion now?

Well, part of the reason given by Musk and other people close to Trump is that the agencies that fund these groups you're talking about are wasteful. Musk has accused specifically the aid agency USAID of being behind a, quote, hoax about Russian influence in the Trump administration without giving evidence. The U.S. has also paused human rights and civil society related grants at the State Department. And the latest funding phrase I've been tracking is that the National Endowment for Democracy or NED is

Interesting, some Republicans like Marco Rubio, who is now U.S. Secretary of State, had previously seen groups they funded as essential to U.S. national security because they build soft power by promoting U.S. democratic ideals abroad. But since Rubio's joined the Trump administration, he's defended these massive cuts. OK, so this is worldwide, the effects of these changes. But a good portion of the funding was supporting Chinese dissidents, some diversity of opinion within China. So what does China think of that?

They have not said much publicly, but this is a huge windfall for China because these are all organizations Beijing found a nuisance. And I found signs that China is trying to co-opt some of these groups now. At least two human rights organizations that are China-focused but based here in the U.S. tell me they've actually been approached by people within the Chinese government, offering to introduce them to new China-based funders. And this has specifically happened in just the last few days since they've faced losing funding from the U.S.,

I also talked directly with a Chinese state representative who answers to the government there, who requested anonymity because they're not authorized to speak publicly. They reached out to at least one China-focused civil society group that is at risk of losing their funding and proposed to them.

Instead of criticizing people and organizations in China publicly, perhaps they could facilitate private conversations with China to achieve social change. And one of the groups he was in contact with said, you know, this feels like a tactic to buy their silence, though the Chinese state representative argued to me it would be a more effective way for organizations to work. Wow. Thanks for all that reporting. So what are some of these groups that risk getting their funding cut?

They're the exact kind of groups that China and other authoritarian governments criticize. These are women's rights groups, human rights research groups, legal aid non-profits. One of them is New York-based China Labor Watch. It was started by a researcher named Li Qiang, and his group investigates labor rights abuses. Why am I in the U.S.? If I stay silent, or...

He says here he's chosen to go on the record with me because he left China when he felt he could not speak freely there. So he says now if he stays silent on the funding cuts, what was the point of coming to the U.S.? Well, how does this affect Americans?

Well, for better or worse, the U.S. is competing with China on social influence and soft power. And some human rights workers say they're worried about this convergence between how Trump administration officials talk about democracy and how governments like China describe it. Francisco Ben-Kosme is USAID's former China policy lead.

The geopolitical information warfare is no longer something that's happening halfway across the world, but is happening within our own governments. For example, Musk called NED a scam and then cited a story on X, a takedown of the U.S. Foundation from the Foreign Ministry of China. Emily, thanks so much. Thank you, Steve. That's NPR's Emily Fang.

Okay, Brazil's former president could be facing a long prison sentence for his participation in what authorities say was an attempt to overturn the country's election in 2022. Yeah, Brazil's attorney general indicted the far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro, accusing him of plotting a coup to stay in power as well as inciting violence and even approving a plan to poison the current president. NPR South America correspondent Carrie Khan has been following all of this. Carrie, good morning.

Good morning. Wow. Coup attempt, inciting violence, poisoning. What more can you say about these accusations? They're stunning charges. The standout points, prosecutors say that Bolsonaro and 33 others, they said it was this vast criminal organization to keep him in power after he narrowly lost to the current president, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva.

On top of that, there was also this outline to poison Lula, kill his vice president and a Supreme Court justice who Bolsonaro has feuded with. The idea was to create this constitutional crisis and then the military would have to take over to calm any unrest and Bolsonaro would be reinstated. Investigators say they even found a speech that Bolsonaro was to give once he was back in power. In the indictment, the prosecutor said that,

quote, the plan was conceived and taken with the knowledge of the president and he agreed to it. Well, the draft of the speech, I guess, would be pretty strong evidence. But what has Bolsonaro said about the allegations? He's always, always denied them. His defense did release a statement saying that the former president never, ever supported any movement to deconstruct the democratic rule of law in any way and called the charges inept. In a statement to the New York Times,

Bolsonaro went further, saying the accusations are, quote, a weaponization of the justice system and jailing him is a desperate attempt to criminalize his political movement and silence millions of Brazilians. And if you're thinking the comparisons between Bolsonaro's case is similar to President Trump's false claims of the 2020 election being stolen from him.

Bolsonaro did that himself. He said the legal fight against him is just like the same strategy used against President Trump, which he pointed out failed. The two men were close allies when Bolsonaro was in power and supporters of Bolsonaro have been emboldened by Trump's return to power. They've been saying that the U.S. president is even going to help them bring Bolsonaro back.

He's been barred from running for office for at least eight years. His supporters in Congress are trying to get a bill through to grant pardons to Bolsonaro supporters who rioted the Capitol on January 8th of 2023. And they say they will get Trump's support. They're hoping the bill will also apply to Bolsonaro. The Supreme Court here, however, has been one of the key institutions of

aggressively ruling against Bolsonaro and his right-wing movement. They've been overseeing investigations, even ordering the removal of social media posts that they say are anti-democratic. Well, these events took place almost two years ago. Had people been waiting for these charges a long time?

Yes, they were. This has been a very lengthy investigation. Late last year, we got a glimpse of the evidence against Bolsonaro when police turned over their investigation to the Attorney General Prosecutor's Office. That report was nearly 900 pages long. It's based on testimonies, phone records, and also plea deals with close allies of Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro's running mate, also charged in the case, has been in custody as well as other close confidants of his.

And there are also hundreds of cases against the rioters who were charged and tried for ransacking the Capitol on January 8th. Okay, so long investigation, plea deals, 900-page report. Now we have the criminal charges. Where do we go next?

It's now up to the Supreme Court. They will decide whether they will arrest Bolsonaro and put him on trial. You know, such a trial like that could start this year, and it would definitely be an explosive political event in this deeply divided country. And if convicted of the charges, which are quite serious, Bolsonaro's sentence could be anywhere from 12 years to as much as four decades to even prison. And Pierce, Gary Kahn, thanks so much. You're welcome. And that's a first for this Wednesday. And that's a first for the...

We should have kept that in. I should have just kept going. Just a little hacking this morning. Exactly. Exactly. Got to wake up. That's all there is to it.

And that's Up First for this Wednesday, February 19th. I'm Steve Inskeep. And I'm Leila Faldin. Make your next listen, consider this. The team behind NPR's All Things Considered goes deep into a single news story in just 15 minutes. Listen now on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. Today's Up First was edited by Alfredo Carvajal, Padmananda Rama, Tara Neal, Reena Advani, and Jenea Williams. It was produced by Ziad Butch, Nia Dumas, and

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