Sri Lanka closes offices and schools as death toll from landslides and floods rises to 56

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lanka closed government offices and schools Friday as the death toll from floods and landslides across the country rose to 56 while more than 600 houses were damaged, officials said.

Sri Lanka begangrappling with severe weatherlast week and the conditions worsened Thursday with heavy downpours that flooded homes, fields and roads, and triggered landslides across the country.

More than 25 people were killed Thursday in landslides in the central mountainous tea-growing regions of Badulla and Nuwara Eliya, which is about 300 kilometers (186 miles) east of the capital, Colombo. Another 21 people were missing and 14 were injured in the Badulla and Nuwara Eliya areas, according to the government's disaster management center.

Others died in landslides in different parts of the country.

As the weather conditions grew worse, the government announced the closing of all government offices and schools on Friday.

Due to heavy rains, most reservoirs and rivers have overflowed, blocking roads. Authorities stopped passenger trains and closed roads in many parts of the country after rocks, mud and trees fell on roads and railway tracks, which were also flooded in some areas.

Local television showed an air force helicopter rescuing three people stranded on the roof of a house surrounded by floods Thursday, while the navy and police used boats to transport residents.

Footage on Thursday also showed a car being swept away by floodwaters near the eastern town of Ampara, leaving three passengers dead.

Sri Lanka closes offices and schools as death toll from landslides and floods rises to 56

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lanka closed government offices and schools Friday as the death toll from floods and landsl...
A visit to Somalia's crumbling hospitals shows the toll of aid cuts and war

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — To save the life of his badly malnourished 3-year-old son, farmer Yusuf Bulle had to travel from a remote area of southernSomaliato the capital, Mogadishu, where a rare health unit presented the only hope.

After 15 days at Banadir Hospital, the child was deemed out of danger.

"Where I come from, there is no hospital," Bulle said. "That's why I am here."

One of the world's poorest countries faces a crisis of health care exacerbated by the Trump administration's dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development this year. The loss of USAID funding has disheartened many Somalis who believe they can't depend on their own government, which focuses mostly on defeating the al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab.

Somalia's deputy health minister, Mohamed Hassan Bulaale, told The Associated Press that the U.S. cuts led to over 6,000 health workers losing their jobs while up to 2,000 health facilities were affected — a massive hit in a country that the Center for Global Development this year said was among the world's most likely to suffer as donors draw back.

Bomb and gun attacks by the militants — including against health centers — have reduced in frequency and intensity in recent months, leading some to see success in President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's "total war" against al-Shabab.

But hospital administrators, civic leaders and others say the latest push to defeat al-Shabab has come at the expense of health care and other public services.

Relying on outside money

Somalia's Ministry of Health was allocated $91 million of a national budget exceeding $1 billion this year, with those funds tied mostly to projects backed by outside groups. That's a significant improvement from last year's $52 million, but almost all of that increase came from donors, said Mahad Wasuge, who runs the Somali Public Agenda think tank.

And as the United States has shown, donor money comes and goes.

Even with major setbacks in overall foreign support this year, including from other key benefactors such as Britain, "security remains the first priority" for Somali authorities, Wasuge told the AP.

Many areas outside Mogadishu don't have functioning public hospitals, he said, with people forced to trek through often insecure areas to receive care at the ones still functional.

Such facilities in the capital include Banadir Hospital, built with Chinese support in 1977, and De Martino Hospital, established in 1922 by Italian colonialists.

During an AP visit, officials at those hospitals said much of their work would stop without assistance from the United Nations and international groups.

Even at Banadir, Mogadishu's main public referral hospital, expectations of the Somali government aren't high. The unit looking after malnourished children depends entirely on donor funds channeled through the humanitarian group Concern Worldwide, said supervisor Dr. Mohamed Haashi.

After 37 people employed in the unit lost their jobs with this year's U.S. aid cuts, Concern Worldwide still pays the salaries of 13 others in addition to milk and food for mothers and babies, Haashi said.

'Donors are fatigued'

At De Martino Hospital, director Dr. Abdirahim Omar Amin said he worries what will happen when contracts with two other humanitarian groups expire at the end of 2025.

The hospital was looking after dozens of children suffering from diphtheria, an infectious disease of the throat preventable by vaccination but now spreading in rural areas. Parents are not taking their kids for routine vaccinations because they are afraid of militant attacks, Amin said.

In the medical lab, Amin pointed to the equipment and said everything was acquired with donor funds.

"Now it looks like donors are fatigued," he said.

Most services at the hospital are provided free of charge, thanks largely to funding from the International Rescue Committee and Population Services International. Patients with conditions not deemed urgent are asked to cover some costs.

"The Ministry of Health is supposed to give support to this hospital because this hospital belongs to the Ministry of Health," Amin said. "I hope, even if (the humanitarian groups) left, the Ministry of Health will replace their position."

Bulaale, the deputy health minister, said the government is working with some partners in "developing a contingency plan" after the loss of USAID funding. He didn't elaborate.

In some ways, De Martino Hospital's history mirrors Somalia's scars. It once sheltered displaced people after the fall in 1991 of Siad Barre, a dictator whose removal triggered fighting by warlords from different clans. Many public facilities across Somalia were destroyed in years of civil war.

Somalia's federal government, now based in a heavily fortified area near the airport in Mogadishu, struggles to assert itself despite support from African Union peacekeepers, U.S. airstrikes targeting al-Shabab and security consultants from nations jockeying for influence in a country with strategic access to the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden.

The countries include Turkey, which bankrolls a hospital with intensive care capabilities in Mogadishu.

"Even the limited number of public hospitals that started functioning properly lately are heavily dependent on donor money," said Wasuge, the civic leader. "They don't get direct government budget that allows them to provide better health care services."

'No national health care plan'

The Banadir and De Martino hospitals are where the most needy people are referred for care. De Martino, Mogadishu's main referral hospital for COVID-19 patients during the pandemic, receives the "most vulnerable" wherever they come from, director Amin said.

Amina Abdulkadir Mohamed, a jobless woman who was at De Martino recently to give birth, said she went there because she knew she would not be asked for money.

"I was told there is free medication," she added.

Mohamed Adam Dini, who represents Somalia's Puntland state in the national assembly, described the federal government's priorities as "deficient" because of its overwhelming focus on ending "anarchy."

"A lot of diseases have been spreading" unchecked, Dini said, adding: "There is no national health care plan, as we don't have a national political plan."

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A visit to Somalia's crumbling hospitals shows the toll of aid cuts and war

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — To save the life of his badly malnourished 3-year-old son, farmer Yusuf Bulle had to travel fro...
<strong>Bruna Ferreira</strong>

Bruna Ferreira came to the US from Brazil as a child, and by all accounts, lived a life like any American: playing on the high school tennis team, getting married and divorced, building a small business and helping raise her son.

When she was taken into custody by ICE agents earlier this month as she left her home in a Boston suburb to pick up her son from school, it didn't make headlines: she was another immigrant caught up in President Donald Trump's deportation crackdown, despite having developed strong American roots.

But during her arrest, Ferreira repeatedly told authorities that her son's aunt was the White House press secretary, her sister, Graziela Dos Santos Rodrigues, told theBoston Globe. Her former fiancé – the father of her 11-year-old son – is the brother of Karoline Leavitt.

"I'm sure she tried to just use whatever she could come up with in the moment," Dos Santos Rodrigues told the Globe. "However, it didn't really help very much."

Now, Ferreira's familial connection to Leavitt – one of the most prominent voices supporting Trump's deportation push – has transformed her into a symbol of how far the immigration crackdown is reaching. It's also provoked debate over her background: the administration has described her as a "criminal illegal alien" who had been arrested for battery, but her lawyers say she has no criminal record and previously had protection from deportation as part of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program.

Ferreira, 33, is now detained in an ICE detention center in Louisiana, facing deportation proceedings. She broke up with her son's father, Leavitt's brother Michael Leavitt, 35, about a decade ago, her sister told the Globe. A source familiar with the situation told CNN that Ferreira and the White House press secretary have not spoken in many years.

Ferreira's attorney, Todd Pomerleau, told CNN's Jim Sciutto on Wednesday, "She's part of the Leavitt family's lives," adding the White House press secretary is Ferreira's son's godmother.

Ferreira came to the US at age six with her parents from Brazil, Dos Santos Rodrigues told the Globe, calling her "more American than she is anything else." Ferreira arrived in the US on a tourist visa that required her to leave the country in 1999, according to a DHS spokesperson.

But Pomerleau argued Wednesday, "A 6-year-old isn't responsible for breaking the law."

"A 6-year-old such as her would only be responsible for being in a visa violation status six months after 18th birthday. By then, she already had DACA, which is a lawful process," Pomerleau said on "OutFront," referring to the Obama-era immigration program that grants temporary protection from deportation for those brought to the US as children.

Pomerleau added that Ferreira is "in the middle of applying for her green card, which she's been waiting for for 27 years."

Ferreira grew up in suburban Boston and attended Melrose High School, where she played on the tennis team and graduated in 2011, according to school yearbooks. In her senior yearbook, she chose the quote "La vita e bella," and wrote that "In the year 2021," she would be "older, wiser and successful."

Ferreira married a high school classmate a few months after graduation, but they separated the following year and divorced in 2014, according to court records.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt during the daily press briefing at the White House on November 4, in Washington, DC. - Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

By that time, Ferreira was engaged to Michael Leavitt, Karoline Leavitt's older brother, who ran his family's auto dealership in New Hampshire, according to a 2014articlein the Salem News newspaper about him winning $1 million in a fantasy football competition. The article featured a photo of Michael Leavitt, Ferreira, and their then eight-month-old son, beaming while posing with a huge novelty check.

Ferreira told the newspaper that the family didn't have any big needs to spend the prize money on.

"I need the lights fixed on the back of my car," she said. "And we need a lamp for my son's room. Other than that, we don't really need much. We have our health. We have a nice condo. We really are blessed."

Court records at the time show Ferreira listed her address as a home Michael Leavitt owned in Atkinson, New Hampshire, just over the border from Massachusetts.

Facebook photos posted by Ferreira show her spending time with her young son, going trick-or-treating and taking him to his first Red Sox game. But the couple never married, and their son lived with his father in New Hampshire after his mother moved back to Massachusetts, a source familiar with the situation told CNN.

Michael Leavitt toldCNN affiliate WMURon Tuesday night that Ferreira has maintained a relationship with their son, but the boy has not spoken to her since her detention. He described the situation as difficult and said he just wants the best for his son.

Back in Massachusetts, Ferreira ran a home-cleaning business, according to social media postings and friends. Lisa Batista, who worked with Ferreira for about two years at a Boston-area nightclub in 2016 and 2017, remembered her as being "very friendly, very hardworking." She said she was shocked when another former coworker told her Wednesday morning that Ferreira had been detained by ICE.

Ferreira remained present in her son's life, frequently driving to and from New Hampshire to visit him, cooking him Brazilian cuisine and taking him to Dave & Buster's, Dos Santos Rodrigues told the Globe.

Dos Santos Rodrigues said the family has not heard from Karoline Leavitt. Michael Leavitt urged her to tell her sister to "self-deport" to Brazil, Dos Santos Rodrigues said – but she said the US is Ferreira's home.

Ferreira's son "needs his mom home," Dos Santos Rodrigues said. "He's always asking, 'When's my mom coming home? Will she be home for Thanksgiving? Will she be home for Christmas?'"

Pomerleau told CNN that when he spoke to Ferreira, she was "crying."

"She wants her son," he added.

This story has been updated with additional details.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

A mother was taken into custody by ICE. Then the public learned of her family tie to the White House

Bruna Ferreira " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Bruna ...
Lea Michele/Instagram; FOX Image Collection via Getty Lea Michele and her family (left); Lea Michele as Rachel Berry on Glee

Lea Michele/Instagram; FOX Image Collection via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Lea Michele confirms the last song she listened to from Glee in an interview with PEOPLE

  • The mom of two introduced her 5-year-old son Ever Leo to Glee through a cover of a song he knows

  • Michele also tells PEOPLE that her BFF and Glee costar Jonathan Groff plays a role in one of her son's favorite movies — but Ever doesn't know it yet

Once aGleek, always aGleek — andLea Micheleis starting her kids early!

The 39-year-old actress, who is currently starring inChesson Broadway,took a trip downGleememory lane while chatting with PEOPLE earlier this month. Though theRyan Murphyseries wrapped its six-season run in 2015, Michele's performance as Rachel Berry remains one of her most talked-about roles — and one even she keeps revisiting.

The actress, who shares sonEver Leo, 5, and daughterEmery Sol, 15 months, with husbandZandy Reich, tells PEOPLE that the last time she watched the series was when she showed son Everher rendition of "Let It Go"from the first episode of season 6.

Lea Michele/Instagram Lea Michele with her husband Zandy Reich and two young children, Ever Leo and Emery Sol

Lea Michele/Instagram

The cover of the hit track — which was, coincidentally, first performed by Michele's onscreenGleemom,Idina Menzel— was the perfect entry point for herFrozen-obsessed son, according to the actress.

When she showed him the clip, Michele says, the 5-year-old was already "really into" the 2013 Disney animated film.

"He has started to know that mommy is a singer," she says, "and I wanted to play him me singing a song."

Ever, who attended Michele'sFunny Girlrun on Broadway, knows what his mom does for a living, she says, but "doesn't understand that it was a television show."

Michele's son comprehends the concept of acting, she says. He knows, for example, thatCynthia ErivoandAriana Grandeplay the roles of Elphaba and Glinda in the film adaptations ofWicked, the mom of two explains.

FOX Image Collection via Getty Lea Michele sings as Rachel Berry in 'Glee'

FOX Image Collection via Getty

Despite his love forFrozen, Ever has not, however, discovered that Michele's longtime BFF (and formerGleecostar)Jonathan Groffvoices one of the main characters in the film, she reveals.

"We have not told him that Uncle Jonathan is Kristoff," Michele tells PEOPLE, adding, "I want to keep that for as long as I can."

Gleeis still a part of Michele's work life, as well.

During her solo tours, the actress says, she stops at a point in each show to poll the audience on their favorite covers from the show. Most recently, herStraight from Carnegie Hall spring tourbrought together plenty of Rachel Berry aficionados.

"It's just such a special moment for me because it brings back so many memories of songs that I had done on the show or things that might've resonated with the fans that I may not remember, but that they connected to so much," Michele says. "For me, that is always such an amazing moment of connection with my fans and takes me down an amazing walk down memory lane, if you will."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.

Lea Michele/Instagram Actor Jonathan Groff, known as

Lea Michele/Instagram

Earlier this year, Michele shared a bit more about her kids' love of music — andtheir love for Groff, 40.

"Ever and Emery love him so much," Michele told PEOPLE, adding that Groff "has a very special relationship with both of my children."

"A really special moment recently was when I took my son to go see him in his Broadway show [Just in Time]. Jonathan came up to Ever during the show and sang to him," the proud mom continued. "Ever was smiling from ear to ear."

TheGleealum added that some songs from theBobby Darinbiographical musical have even joined the family's musical rotation. "We have been singing 'Somewhere Beyond the Sea,' and 'Splish Splash' every night at home now," said Michele.

Read the original article onPeople

Lea Michele Reveals the Last Time She Watched “Glee” (Exclusive)

Lea Michele/Instagram; FOX Image Collection via Getty NEED TO KNOW Lea Michele confirms the last song she listened to from Glee in an in...

 

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