Meet the sixgill: A dominant shark that lurks in the deep, dark ocean

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On a balmy Caribbean evening in August, crew members aboard the the 184-foot exploration vessel the Alucia tied dead fish to the front of a small yellow submarine. 

They tightly wound the fish to a metal pole extending out from the undersea craft to tempt whatever might be lurking, three thousand feet below.

But Dean Grubbs, one of the researchers preparing the bait, didn’t intend to catch anything. Grubbs, a shark scientist at Florida State University, only hoped to attract a little-seen creature that largely dwells in the lightless ocean depths: the sixgill shark.

“They’re one of the oldest lineages of living sharks. That, by itself, makes them cool,” Grubbs, who with his long black hair and dark beard looks like he would fit right in at an Iron Maiden concert, said.

Unlike the charismatic sharks often spotted near the surface — hammerheads, great whites, and tiger sharks — the sixgill spends most of its life in the deep ocean, some 700 feet to 3,200 feet (200 to 1,000 meters) below the surface. It’s not easy to understand the sixgills, though Grubbs has glimpsed the sharks’ mysterious existence by tagging their dorsal fins with GPS devices.

OceanX lead scientist Vince Pieribone and sub pilot Lee Frey accompany Mashable's Mark Kaufman on an earlier dive.

OceanX lead scientist Vince Pieribone and sub pilot Lee Frey accompany Mashable’s Mark Kaufman on an earlier dive.

Image: Bubby Pavlo/OceanX Media

Far under the sea, the sixgill has carved out a niche as the biggest, dominant predator of the deep tropical and temperate latitudes — a huge swath of ocean.

It’s mostly lightless down there, at least to humans. But the sixgills, and their creepy, vivid green eyes, are adapted to this black world. 

“It’s pitch dark to us, but to them, it’s daylight,” said Grubbs.

This species of shark is also ancient. At some 200 million years old the sixgill — so named for its sixth gill when most sharks have five — predates most dinosaurs.

Beyond their mystique, Grubbs has good reason to seek out these sharks. 

For years he’s been tracking where these ancient creatures go, why they go there, and the role they play in the deeps. But this requires catching the massive beasts, hauling them to the surface on a fishing line, and attaching a GPS tracker to their dorsal fin before releasing them back into the water. 

It rattles them, said Grubbs. 

So he’s come aboard the exploration vessel Alucia, operated by the deep sea exploration organization OceanX, to try a new idea. He’ll meet the sixgills where they live, thousands of feet beneath the surface. As the sharks swoop by to investigate the dead fish attached to the submersible, Grubbs will attempt to tag them with a GPS dart. 

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Credit: Cape Eleuthera Island School/OceanX Media

On that evening at sea in August, Grubbs climbed through the hatch atop the Alucia and sat down inside the craft’s big bubble, which is sandwiched between two yellow slabs holding cameras and propellers. 

The bubble may initially appear vulnerable, but it’s built out of seven-inch thick plexiglass, designed to withstand the unrelenting weight of water pressing down on the craft, and the three occupants inside. 

Using a great hook dangling from the Alucia’s crane, submarine crew members raised the submersible into the air before gently plopping it into the Caribbean waters off of Eleuthera, a long, thin island in the eastern Bahamas. 

A wild-haired diver leapt off the Alucia’s nearby dinghy to unhitch the bobbing submersible from the crane, and then Grubbs, along with another scientist and submarine pilot, began to sink beneath the surface, and soon disappeared. 

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Credit: OceanX Media

The submersible dropped down to the ocean floor like a space capsule parachuting down to Earth in slow motion. 

All is still in this forever wilderness, save the robotic sounds of the submersible. At first, an omnipresent blue glow pervades everything, dying human skin an alien, indigo color. Then, the light dims to dusk as the craft continues its descent. Eventually, there’s little to no light. Here, the sixgills dwell.

Down in the dark, one realizes why the sixgills evolved eons ago, but remain unchanged. They had no need to evolve.

“They’ve been living in a pretty constant environment for a very, very long time,” Chip Cotton, a marine scientist who also researches sixgills, but took no part in this expedition, said in an interview. 

On the surface, volcanoes rumble, continents collide, ice ages pass, and warfare ensues. But the sixgill shark, who holds dominion over this distant black realm, doesn’t flinch. 

A bluntnose sixgill's serrated teeth and vivid green eye. There are three known species of sixgills.

A bluntnose sixgill’s serrated teeth and vivid green eye. There are three known species of sixgills.

The shark has spent millions years passing lethargically through the deep sea, said Cotton. And for good reason. 

“If you think about energy expenditures, food is kind of a luxury down there,” explained Cotton, saying that the creatures don’t needlessly waste energy by zipping around the sea floor.

The sixgills are masters of eating the dead. Their teeth, which have remained mostly unaltered for some 200 million years, are uniquely designed for twisting and tearing off big chunks of fallen whales, or large dead fishes.

“It’s a good way to make a living,” said Cotton.

Down in the dark, Grubbs waited patiently for the sixgills to arrive at the submersible. 

The night before, a curious sixgill swam right in front of him, just beyond the glass bubble. But he couldn’t get off a safe shot to tag the shark on its cartilaginous fins. The shark only exposed its underbelly, an area Grubbs didn’t want to risk harming.

Still, when Grubbs returned to the surface, he considered the mission a success. It almost worked. 

Now, down in the depths again for five hours, Grubbs hoped other sixgills would be tempted by the easy meal perched directly in front of the submersible, and within sight of the dart guns. 

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Credit: Cape Eleuthera Island School/OceanX Media

But on this night, no sixgills came to visit the bait. 

Grubbs mused they needed to bring a larger hunk of meat, perhaps a pig. 

Yet, the mission wasn’t a failure. It’s precisely the type of experiment that interests OceanX, which in 2012 captured the first and only footage of the legendary giant squid wrapping its tentacles around part of the very same submersible Grubbs sat in.

“We’re into trying unprecedented things out there,” Vincent Pieribone, a Yale neuroscientist who oversees OceanX’s science operations, said in an interview. “What’s interesting to us is the untested, high-risk, high-reward type stuff.”

Grubbs hopes to return to realm of the sixgills again, and give the mission another shot.

Protecting the sixgills

Sharks that live in deep waters are generally vulnerable to overfishing. They get caught in nets like other fish, and hauled to the surface.

But not the sixgill. These large sharks have been mostly safe in their dark realms. Here, they’re numerous, but hard to find.

“We don’t go to their house often looking for them, so they’re perceived as rare,” said Cotton. 

They’re generally too big to catch, and too strong for hooks and lines, said Grubbs.

But every once in a while, someone accidentally snags a sixgill, and they take the sharks’ valuable livers.

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Credit: Edie Widder and Dean Grubbs

“They throw the rest overboard,” said Grubbs. “The rationalization was the sharks were going to die anyways,” due to the trauma of being caught and taken from their usual waters.

But Grubbs wondered, is that true?

In 2005, he decided to do something that had never been done in order to figure out an answer to that question. He wanted to catch the elusive sixgill sharks, to see if they could survive the trauma after being forced out of the water.

Grubbs was told that it simply could not be done. Capturing a large deep sea shark is a daunting task. Doing it many times is beyond reason.

“We took that as a challenge,” said Grubbs.

Grubbs set out at sea, and has since caught 23 sixgills in an ongoing project that continues today. 

After releasing them into the water with GPS tags, he found 90 percent of them survived, and continued roaming the depths. 

It seemed sixgills needn’t be slaughtered just because they were hauled to the surface.

“Lo and behold, that assumption was totally wrong,” said Cotton. 

Dean Grubbs in Hawaiian waters with a sixgill shark.

Dean Grubbs in Hawaiian waters with a sixgill shark.

In their dark ocean homes, the sixgills might be king, but it’s not as if other predators aren’t lurking in these waters.

Tiger sharks, large dominant predators near the coast, sometimes venture into the sixgills’ realm. It’s likely they chew up smaller sixgills said Cotton. 

“I would be surprised if they didn’t,” he said, emphasizing that it might be the sixgills’ territory, but there are no walls keeping other predators out. 

“None of these things exist in a vacuum,” said Cotton. “Everything is interconnected in some way.” 

And in the a cold, lightless world where food is scarce and one eats what is available, both Grubbs and Cotton said the sixgills also hunt each other.

Even a monstrous 17-foot long sixgill Grubbs once hauled aboard a research vessel needs to look over its shoulder.

“There’s always a bigger predator,” he said. 

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Kerala floods: Five airlines offer to fly aid for victims

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Five airlines that fly to the flooded Indian province Kerala have said they will deliver relief goods for free to the affected areas.

Three of the airlines are from India; Air India, Jet Airways and Air Vistara, and two from the Middle East; Qatar Airways and Emirates SkyCargo.

Jet Airways, India’s full service, premier international airline, has waived off air freight charges on all domestic cargo shipments of relief material to Kerala,” Jet Airways said in a press release.

The airline will work with several NGOs to deliver relief goods to Kerala.

Vistara, another domestic airline, said it was also partnering with several NGOs to bring supplies, adding that it would fly doctors, nurses and other specialized people to the flooded areas too.

Qatar and Emirates

Qatar Airways said earlier this week it would deliver 50 tonnes of goods to Kerala after pleas from relatives living in Qatar.

“We have received earnest requests from the Indian community residing in Qatar seeking support to transport relief aid to Southern Kerala, where many of their families and relatives are affected by the worst flood in a century,” Qatar Airways Chief Officer Cargo, Guillaume Halleux, said according to The Peninsula.

“Given the devastating situation, we have rapidly activated a humanitarian operation to offer free transportation of relief goods from Doha to Trivandrum on our daily passenger flight,” he added. 

In an official statement, Emirates said it would bring over 175 tonnes of goods to Kerala.

“The goods, including lifesaving boats, blankets and dry food items, will be handed over to the local flood relief and aid organisations for distribution,” the statement said.

Flights to Kerala’s Kochi airport have been halted because of flood damage to the transport hub. Therefore, the relief goods will be delivered to Kerala’s capital, Trivandrum. 

The floods have also damaged hundreds of kilometres of roads and disrupted train services.

The province has been lashed by torrential monsoon rains since the end of May, triggering landslides and flash floods that have swept away entire villages.

Incessant downpours since August 8 have killed more than 190 people and left thousands more stranded. 

Medical officials and NGOs, meanwhile, warned of a heightened risk of waterborne disease outbreaks due to the flooding.

Local health officials said earlier this week they were prepared to deal with any such emergence of disease and had distributed preventive medicines in a bid to avert an outbreak.

The floods caused an estimated $3bn of damage, with about 10,000km of Kerala’s roads and more than 100,000 houses needing to be reconstructed.

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Premier League build-up – Wolves v Man City

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Wolverhampton Wanderers v Manchester City live in the Premier League – Live – BBC Sport


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Summary

  1. Listen to Wolves v Man City on 5 live & online
  2. Watch Football Focus on BBC One & online at 12:00 BST
  3. Wolves looking for first win since Premier League return
  4. Man City have two wins from two, scoring eight goals
  5. Four Premier League games at 15:00 BST


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Mollie Tibbetts’ funeral, Women’s Equality Day, Burning Man: 5 things to know this weekend

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Editors, USA TODAY
Published 3:39 a.m. ET Aug. 25, 2018 | Updated 5:09 a.m. ET Aug. 25, 2018

Funeral planned for University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts

A funeral for Mollie Tibbetts, the 20-year-old University of Iowa student whose body was found earlier this week after she was reported missing, will be held Sunday in her hometown of Brooklyn, Iowa. On Thursday, authorities confirmed Tibbetts died from “multiple sharp force injuries.” Tibbetts vanished after going for a run in her hometown on July 18, which captured national attention. Police arrested Cristhian Bahena Rivera, 24, and charged him with first-degree murder. He is currently being held in the Poweshiek County Jail on a $5 million bond. 

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Women’s Equality Day honors the right to vote

Sunday marks Women’s Equality Day, honoring the 98th anniversary of the 19th Amendment, , which gave women the right to vote.  According to data by the Center for American Women and Politics, 73.7 million women reported voting whereas just 63.8 million men reported the same. This year is particularly notable for women and politics, as a record number of women are running for office

Burning Man festival kicks off amid controversy

The annual countercultural festival known as Burning Man, which attracts nearly 80,000 people to Northern Nevada’s Black Rock Desert each year, kicks off Sunday. The festival —which runs through Sept. 3 — describes itself as “a vibrant participatory metropolis”  and will focus on the theme of Isaac Asimov’s “I, Robot.” The event is not without controversy though as organizers have threatened to file a lawsuit after reports that tribal and federal law enforcement are conducting frequent traffic stops on the only road to and from the event. The Feds say it’s not about Burning Man, it’s about drugs

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Pope Francis heads to Ireland amid global outrage over sex abuse

Pope Francis is expected to meet with victims of sexual abuse during an upcoming trip to Ireland this weekend, less than two weeks after a bombshell grand jury report found Catholic priests in Pennsylvania abused more than 1,000 children over six decades.Earlier this week, Francis apologized to the church community and condemned the “atrocities” of sexual abuse by priests and the hierarchy that covered up the crimes. The papal visit to Ireland, which has a devastating history of priests who raped and molested children and bishops who covered up for them, will be the first since 1979

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The attorney general’s report comes after years of state and local law enforcement uncovering cases of sexual abuse within the Catholic church.
Nate Chute, IndyStar

Coveted 1962 Ferrari GTO goes up for auction

Would you pay tens of millions for a used car? On Saturday night, a rare 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO could go for $45 to $60 million at a Sotheby’s auction being held during the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance car week. This legendary motor car is just one of 36 GTOs hand-built between 1962 and 1964. Few GTOs ever change hands publicly. When the last one came up for auction, in 2014, it went for $38 million. Start your engines.

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A 1962 Ferrari GTO, a winner on the track and with collectors, will be up for sale.
USA TODAY

Contributing: Associated Press

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Bruno, the quirky, very high-maintenance cat was adopted :’)

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This is One Good Thing, a weekly column where we tell you about one of the few nice things that happened this week.

Bruno, the beloved and very ~thicc~ polydactyl cat, has officially been adopted. We can all breathe a sigh of relief.

The extremely high-maintenance feline captured the hearts of internet users everywhere after Wright Way Rescue Animal Shelter in Morton Grove, Illinois, shared his adoption listing on Facebook on Aug. 15. 

A week later, a Chicago couple decided to adopt him.

For those of you who need a refresher, Bruno’s long list of quirky habits and super extra requests includes, but is not limited to:

  • Laying around

  • Sleeping at the end of his foster parents’ bed 

  • Getting neck/face scratches

  • Getting pet on ONLY the head and spine

  • Talking a lot. Like, A LOT…

  • Drinking water, but only in a room that doesn’t contain his food

  • Standing on hind legs

Amazing, right? There’s no denying Bruno, the seven-year-old, 25lb cat who’s been with the shelter since April, is hella extra. But he knows that and completely owns it. That’s why it’s no surprise his adoption listing quickly went viral.

On Wednesday, a week after Wright Way Rescue Animal Shelter’s call for adoption, Buzzfeed reported that Bruno had finally found a loving home.

A Chicago couple — Lauren Paris, 29, and her boyfriend, Jason Bartlett — officially adopted Bruno on Tuesday. They were one of 161 applications that came in.

“When I saw a photo of Bruno that had been shared on Facebook I just…freaked,” Paris told BuzzFeed News. “It was this wild combination of an excited laugh/cry. And I felt this insane drive — I knew I would do whatever it took to be his forever home.”

And because Bruno is such an extra cat, Paris made a truly extra plea to the shelter by performing a personalized song called, “Gimmie That Fat Cat.”

A match made in heaven.

According to BuzzFeed, the song wasn’t all Paris did to secure Bruno’s adoption. She reportedly sent a letter of intent to the shelter, too, and recorded a video tour of her house to show Bruno would have a nice home. Now that’s dedication.

To watch Bruno Bartlett’s homecoming and keep up with his wonderfully lazy life, be sure to follow him on Instagram. Gotta love a good real-world happy ending. :’)

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IMF urges Saudi Arabia to contain spending despite oil price rise

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned Saudi Arabia against increasing public spending as oil prices rise.

In a report issued on Friday, the IMF said that a rise in spending would leave the Saudi budget exposed, should there be an unexpected drop in oil prices. 

The report emphasised the importance of ensuring that spending remains “at a sustainable level in different oil price environments” and to avoid a fiscal policy that would create undue volatility.

Oil prices have rebounded strongly after major producers decided to cut output in late 2016. In June, they decided to raise production again.

Saudi revenues jumped 67 percent in the second quarter of 2018, mainly due to a sharp rise in oil income, while public spending surged 34 percent, according to government figures.  

Riyadh’s budget deficit is expected to continue to narrow from 9.3 percent of GDP last year to 4.6 percent in 2018 and to as low as 1.7 percent next year, the IMF said.

Around half of state spending goes on the public sector wage bill, according to the IMF which suggested “the workforce could be gradually reduced through natural attrition”.

Saudi authorities told the IMF that the civil service system is under revision with the help of the World Bank.

Unemployment among Saudi citizens is at 12.8 percent, and sits at 31 percent among women.

Is Saudi Arabia biting off more than it can chew? | Counting the Cost

High unemployment 

The country’s key challenge is to create around 500,000 jobs for its citizens over the next five years, the IMF said while stressing the need for more posts within the private sector.  

The Saudi economy contracted by 0.9 percent last year, for the first time since 2009, due to the collapse in oil prices.

Earlier this week, a planned initial public offering in the state’s oil company, Aramco, stalled when it became clear that Riyadh might not achieve the valuation it wanted.

However, government officials said the plans had not been cancelled.

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Lane downgraded to tropical storm, still poses threat to Hawaii

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As Hurricane Lane continued it slow slog along the edge of the Hawaiian Islands, tourists gathered on the rugged southeast coast of Oahu, away from the high-rise hotels of Waikiki, watching powerful waves crash against the cliffs below. (Aug. 24)
AP

HONOLULU — Roadways were virtually empty, stores closed, no buses are running and some buildings were boarded up as Honolulu prepared for the arrival of Lane, originally a hurricane but downgraded to a tropical storm Friday afternoon. 

The National Weather Service warned that even a tropical storm can bring maximum winds of 70 miles per hour and that the threat of flooding was still present through Saturday. 

“We’re not out of the woods yet,” Governor David Ige said at a press conference in Honolulu.

The island of Oahu, home to 69 percent of Hawaii’s population, has been preparing for days for the storm’s slow, 5 mph approach. The possible arrival of a Category 5 hurricane — Lane’s strength on Tuesday — was reason enough to batten down the hatches. 

The city ended bus service Thursday evening and was thinking of reopening limited service at least to the airport from downtown on Friday, but decided against it. 

“Any gusts of winds over 40 mph are dangerous for bus drivers and riders,” Mayor Kirk Caldwell said. Tropical storms can have winds as high as 74 mph.

Several homes in the city have lost roofs due to gusting winds, while downed trees have been a problem in some areas, leading to pocket power outages.

Close to 1,100 people are staying in the 20 shelters set up at Honolulu schools, Caldwell said. But there’s more room for those who feel their homes might not be safe during possible torrential rains and winds.

More: Has Hawaii dodged the bullet? Hurricane Lane weakens to a tropical storm

Related: Why are hurricanes so rare in Hawaii? It’s a lucky quirk

Also: Shelter shortage? Hawaiian officials face questions as Hurricane Lane approaches

For most people in the city, Friday was restful. Businesses were closed, giving many people an impromptu holiday.

“There isn’t much to do, you can’t go shopping, everything’s closed. So we’re all hanging out, watching the TV news, and going out for walks,” said Desiree Beveridge, who with her partner Eric Smythe was out walking their dog Bruce Wayne.

The difference of being on an island when danger approaches is that there’s nowhere to go, said Smythe, a Honolulu resident originally from Florida. 

“If this were Florida, this would all be under mandatory evacuation and we’d all have driven north. Here there’s nowhere to go, you’ve just go to ride it out,” he said. 

Silent streets, full beaches

Whereas much of the city was quiet, the sidewalks near Waikiki beach were full Friday afternoon. Thousands of tourists staying in the dozens of hotels in the area walked around looking at boarded-up and sandbagged stores, searching for anyplace open that had food.

“We bought a couple of pizzas and that’s what we had for lunch and what we’ll have for dinner,” said Bruce Webber of Auckland, New Zealand.

He and his wife had spent the last ten days in Hawaii and are due to fly home Monday. 

“We bought some potatoes and we figure that if worse comes to worse we can cook them in the microwave in our room and make potato salad,” his wife, Raewyn Webber, said. “Though if they don’t open the stores by Sunday we may well run out.”

Maui fires

In a cruel twist of fate, the island of Maui dealt with three wildfires, possibly caused by downed power lines and whipped by strong winds.

As many as 2,300 acres burned and at least seven homes were damaged or destroyed, officials said. Hundreds of homes were evacuated.

Big Island flooding

On the Big Island of Hawaii, the rains continued Friday even as Lane swept past, with some areas receiving as much as 35 inches of precipitation. Streams and rivers were rising above their banks, while roads were washed out or impassable due to flooding and homes have been destroyed. 

Guy Berryessa in San Francisco got a call from the tenants of a house his family owns in Papaikou, just north of Hilo on the island, and received a startling update.

“The entire backyard is gone,” Berryessa said about the home. 

The previous owner had put in a 30-foot rock retaining wall and extensive drainage to protect against flooding from nearby creeks, but the 26 inches of rain the town got in 48 hours overcame them. 

“I fear it’s a total loss,” Berryessa said. But he’d spent the day finding other housing for his tenants. “We’ll worry about the house later, they’re more important right now.”

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Venezuela migration nears ‘Mediterranean crisis point’: UN

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The Venezuela refugee situation is “building towards a crisis moment”, the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM) has warned, with the organisation’s spokesperson likening it to the refugee crisis in the Mediterranean.

Many Venezuelans are choosing to leave their country as a result of the recession which has gone on for almost five years now. According to the UN, 1.6 million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2015, 90 percent of whom went to countries within South America.

“This is building to a crisis moment that we’ve seen in other parts of the world, particularly the Mediterranean,” Joel Millman, IOM spokesperson, said on Friday.

“We have to start lining up priorities and funding and means to manage this as soon as we can.”

This week, Ecuador and Peru said those without valid passports would be denied entry, in a move affecting hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans who were previously allowed to cross the border with paper ID cards instead. 

Since the announcement of the new passport rules, Colombia’s migration authority said it recorded a decrease in traffic over official border crossings and an increase in the use of irregular crossings.

But only allowing those with a passport might lead to problems, Millman said.

“When we see things like passports only, we point out that there are a lot of migrants, particularly teenagers and unaccompanied children, that may not have access to these documents,” said Millman.

‘Solidarity is key’

Millman’s remarks echoed statements by other UN agencies warning that the new passport requirement will expose people to “further risk of exploitation, trafficking and violence”.

Andrej Mahecic, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, called on other countries to help those fleeing Venezuela.

“We are concerned about these recent events, and the demonstrations against refugees, asylum seekers and migrants in some of the Latin American countries,” said Mahehic.

“Those increase stigmatisation of those who are forced to flee, they put at risk the efforts of integration,” he added. “Solidarity is the key here.”

The currency has fallen 99.99 percent against the US dollar on the black market since President Nicolas Maduro came to power in April 2013.

Maduro blames the crisis on an economic war led by opposition leaders with the help of the US, which last year levied several rounds of sanctions against his administration.

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As prison strikes heat up, former inmates talk about horrible state of labor and incarceration

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Chandra Bozelko and Ryan Lo, Opinion contributors
Published 1:27 a.m. ET Aug. 25, 2018

Work in prison is vital. It gives inmates rare privacy, glimpses of humanity. That doesn’t mean they shouldn’t get paid what their labor is worth.

Conditions of modern prisons — tiny, overcrowded cells, lack of sanitation, infestation, lack of ventilation — make people inside so desperate for respite that they’re sometimes willing to accept even unconscionable deals, like working for little to no money. 

Paying someone 86 cents per hour to do backbreaking work is such an insult to human dignity that it’s not acceptable anywhere in this country except in prison, places intent on stripping people of their humanity. 

As former inmates, we know what it’s like to work for meager pay.

And we did it willingly, almost happily — for the chance to get out of our cells, use a private bathroom, walk freely. That’s the invidious part of prison labor. It makes you so grateful for tiny slices of humanity that you’re willing to do anything to get them.

Work in prison is rarely voluntary. And inmates who are currently striking against near-slave conditions won’t have it easy. Some may be placed solitary confinement. Their disciplinary records will get marred, and that could be used against them during hearings for discretionary release, like parole.

But they are willing to risk punishment and surrender the small moments of purpose that unjust work can bring for the larger goal of saving their humanity.

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The new American slavery 

Convict leasing — a legalized form of enslavement that lasted well after the institution was outlawed — once dominated prison labor in America, and today’s combination of low-to-no wages and lack of choice in working conditions smacks of the same treatment. 

Prisoners at Louisiana’s Angola facility — which is located on a former plantation — work for as little as four cents an hour. 

One of us knows what it’s like to participate in a prison strike.  

A 2013 hunger strike that started in California’s Pelican Bay solitary housing unit soon spread to 30,000 prisoners across the state who joined in solidarity. 

Like the inmates who are striking now, we were demanding an end to slave-like conditions — not involving pay, but instead indefinite and inhumane isolation.   

During our years in prison, we heard staff use every word but slavery to describe our treatment and prison labor practices. Some, laughably, called prison jobs unpaid “internships.” By law, an internship has to benefit the intern more than it does the employer. Inmate labor is the engine of prisons. The menial work that we did benefitted the state more than it did us. 

We recognize the argument against the nationwide call for higher wages: If you raise pay, the state might pull back on the work given to inmates in order to cut expenses. Inmates would lose out on the chance to get out of their cells, and all the perks that come with the privilege.

But states also charge inmates for the cost of their incarceration. Not only are prisoners working for next to nothing, they’re also paying for the opportunity to do so. Inmates have been charged for room and board, medical fees, booking, sentencing, DNA tests. Families are sometimes charged for visits.

The road to fair treatment and pay could start by dropping charges for basic care for those who work in the facility. It costs about $33,000 on average per year to imprison an inmate. A decade of full-time labor should offset this, but it doesn’t.

Just compensation takes many forms 

There are other ways to be fair about inmate compensation that also benefit the public.

Earlier this month, the Prison Policy Initiative released study showed that former inmates are about 10 times more likely to live on the street than the average American. A day of post-release housing, redeemable by voucher, for every day worked would not only make prison labor a legal business transaction, it could reduce homelessness and help many people who have nowhere to go when they leave custody. 

Prison labor is about as uneven an exchange as one could imagine.

It also sends a damaging message to inmates — that they deserve to be desperate. Devaluing your life is a loyal lesson. It follows you home when you leave custody. Unemployment among former inmates is 27%. Many former prisoners agree to work for free to prove themselves. These aren’t internships either. They’re unpaid auditions that other job applicants don’t endure.

The prison strike demands an end to these practices, which is reasonable. All they’re asking is for a fair deal.

Chandra Bozelko is the vice president of the National Society of Newspaper Columnists and writes the award-winning blog Prison Diaries. Ryan Lo is a 2016 Soros Senior Justice fellow and the founder of UnLabeled Digital Media. Both are fellows with JustLeadership USA, an organization dedicated to cutting the prison population in half by 2030.

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