Organisers barred journalists on Sunday from a publicly advertised event in Shanghai that offered Chinese investors the chance to get U.S. immigrant visas if they put money in a real estate project linked to the family of President Donald Trump's son-in-law. The two-tower luxury apartment complex in New Jersey, One Journal Square, is being developed by KABR Group and the Kushner Companies, which until recently was headed by senior White House advisor Jared Kushner, the husband of Trump's daughter Ivanka. "Sorry, this is a private event," said a man stopping journalists from entering a function room on Sunday afternoon at the Four Seasons Hotel in Shanghai.
A starving, struggling otter in Arizona was nursed back to health after utility workers plucked it from a canal on the outskirts of Phoenix. The 4-week-old animal was dehydrated and covered with fleas when three heroes from Salt River Project noticed the otter struggling to escape the drying canal. "He was calling for his momma, we assumed," Craig Boggs, one of the utility workers, told the local Arizona news channel KPNX-TV. SEE ALSO: These animals are getting the Lego treatment because conservation is cool "It would go back under water and fight and come back up," he told the station. "He was about to give up. He was pretty exhausted." Awww! SRP crews rescued this baby otter recently and @azgfd staff nursed it back to health! Story: https://t.co/py4ER6CzPK #wildlife #rescue pic.twitter.com/sPCgy6dxIQ — Salt River Project (@SRPconnect) May 2, 2017 Otters were once found throughout the region in the Salt, Verde, Little Colorado, and Gila river systems, until early settlers all but killed them off. Wildlife officials reintroduced the web-footed swimmers into the Verde River in the early 1980s, and now otters are common throughout the entire watershed. An otter family is said to live near the artificial pool of water at Granite Reef Diversion Dam, which is where the baby otter possibly began its harrowing journey, according to the Arizona Game and Fish Department. Remember the #otter pup our crews rescued from #Arizona Canal? She's doing well as seen in @OutofAfricaPark , weighing in at 2 lbs 9 oz.! pic.twitter.com/GykNuTENdn — Salt River Project (@SRPconnect) May 6, 2017 "While we don't know for sure, it's likely that as the canal started to draw down, mom abandoned the canal and the baby was too young to follow," Nathan Gonzalez, a spokesman for the wildlife department, said in a press release. After rescuing the struggling baby on April 20, the utility workers contacted the Game and Fish department, which transported the critter to their wildlife center in Phoenix. Workers fed the otter a trout mash mixed with kitten milk formula — and it was apparently just what the doctored ordered. Happy Friday night @innofsedona @SedonaSunflower @AZRogerNaylor @BigBlendMag @arizonakey pic.twitter.com/3PEl6mmsfJ — Out of Africa Park (@OutofAfricaPark) May 6, 2017 The otter's condition improved, and six days later wildlife officials turned it over to Out of Africa Wildlife Park in Camp Verde, where it will live. An otter-ly happy ending, you might say. WATCH: Watching this mother whale and her calf in the wild will bring you the peace you need
German police on Sunday evacuated some 50,000 people from the northern city of Hanover in one of the largest post-war operations to defuse World War II era bombs. Residents in a densely populated part of the city were ordered to leave their homes for the operation, planned since mid-April, to extract five recently discovered unexploded bombs. Seven retirement and nursing homes were affected and some rail traffic through the city was disrupted for the operation, which was expected to last all day.
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