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Debris found in new planes' fuel tanks

737 Max: Debris found in new planes' fuel tanks


A Boeing 737 MAX 8 airplane is pictured outside the company's factory.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Boeing's crisis-hit 737 Max jetliner faces a new potential safety issue as debris has been found in the fuel tanks of several new planes which were in storage, awaiting delivery to airlines.
The head of Boeing's 737 programme has told employees that the discovery was "absolutely unacceptable".
A Boeing spokesman said the company did not see the issue further delaying the jet's return to service.
It comes as the 737 Max remains grounded after two fatal crashes.
The US plane maker said it discovered so-called "Foreign Object Debris" left inside the wing fuel tanks of several undelivered 737 Maxs.
A company spokesman told the BBC: "While conducting maintenance we discovered Foreign Object Debris (FOD) in undelivered 737 Max airplanes currently in storage. That finding led to a robust internal investigation and immediate corrective actions in our production system."
Foreign Object Debris is a technical term that covers any substance, debris or article that isn't part of a plane which would potentially cause damage.
The revelation is the latest in a string of problems affecting what was once Boeing's best-selling plane.
The aircraft has been grounded by regulators around the world since March 2019.
It was banned from flying after two separate crashes killed 346 people.
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737 Max timeline

  • 29 October 2018: A 737 Max 8 operated by Lion Air crashes after leaving Indonesia, killing all 189 people on board
  • 31 January 2019: Boeing reports an order of 5,011 Max planes from 79 customers
  • 10 March 2019: A 737 Max 8 operated by Ethiopian Airlines crashes, killing all 157 people on board
  • 14 March 2019: Boeing grounds entire 737 Max aircraft fleet
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The US regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), told the BBC that it was monitoring the plane maker's response to the new issue: "The FAA is aware that Boeing is conducting a voluntary inspection of undelivered aircraft for Foreign Object Debris (FOD) as part of the company's ongoing efforts to ensure manufacturing quality.
"The agency increased its surveillance based on initial inspection reports and will take further action based on the findings," it added.
Boeing said it didn't expect the issue to cause any fresh delays to the 737 Max's return to service, which the company said could happen by the middle of this year.
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Deadly flare-up on eastern front line

Ukraine conflict: Deadly flare-up on eastern front line

Ukrainian troops fighting in the Luhansk region, Jan 2015
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionUkrainian troops fighting in the Luhansk region, Jan 2015
Ukraine says its troops on the eastern front line have come under heavy shelling during a rebel attack, with one soldier killed and four wounded.
It says four rebel soldiers were killed and six injured.
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No visas for low-skilled workers, government says

Immigration: No visas for low-skilled workers, government says


WaitressImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES

Low-skilled workers would not get visas under post-Brexit immigration plans unveiled by the government.
It is urging employers to "move away" from relying on "cheap labour" from Europe and invest in retaining staff and developing automation technology.
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Turkey 're-arrests' activist hours after acquittal

Osman Kavala: Turkey 're-arrests' activist hours after acquittal

A journalist stands in front of a poster featuring jailed businessman and philanthropist Osman Kavala in October 2018
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionMr Kavala spent more than two years in pre-trial detention
A prominent Turkish businessman and human rights activist has been re-arrested, just hours after he was acquitted of trying to overthrow the government, Turkish state media says.
A court ordered Osman Kavala's immediate release earlier on Tuesday, after dropping charges against him and eight others over protests in 2013.
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Meet the voters behind Bloomberg's surge

US Election 2020: Meet the voters behind Bloomberg's surge

Presidential candidate Mike BloombergImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
He's one of the richest men in the world, a polarising candidate in a crowded race and he's about to make his first appearance on the debate stage after rising to second place in the polls. So who are Mike Bloomberg's supporters, and why have they backed him?
Recent polling by NPR/PBS/Marist puts Mr Bloomberg in second place, behind Bernie Sanders, with 19% of the Democratic vote.
Mr Bloomberg will no doubt face questions on his political past - including recently revealed comments on women, farmers and minorities - on Wednesday, when he takes to the debate stage for the first time in Las Vegas, Nevada.
He won't appear on any ballots, however, until Super Tuesday - 3 March, when some of the biggest states, like California and Texas, hold their primary contests.
While liberals have attacked him over controversial policies during his tenure as mayor, his billionaire status and for having switched party affiliations in the past, Mr Bloomberg has also been a strong investor in many key causes for Democratic voters.
He spent some $100m (£77m) backing Democrats in the 2018 mid-term elections, which saw a record number of women voted to Congress. He founded the nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety group to lobby for gun control policies. He has given more than $1bn to public health causes and over $278m to climate change initiatives.
Think of a Bernie Sanders supporter and there's a good chance an image pops into your mind of someone young, progressive, possibly male.
But what does a Michael Bloomberg fan look like?
Looking at polling data and anecdotally at rallies, it appears most of Mr Bloomberg's grassroots supporters skew older. Pro-Bloomberg groups on social media are run by older-than-middle-aged Americans; there may be some racial diversity, but little when it comes to age.
A Quinnipiac poll last week found most of the former mayor's support came from voters aged 50 and up who make over $50,000 a year.
Here's how Mr Bloomberg's grassroots supporters responded to some of the biggest criticisms against him - and why they say they are all in for Mike 2020.
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What about the money?

For New Yorker Laura Wagner, Mr Bloomberg's money is far from a downside.
"You have to be a billionaire [to run] and then when you are, you're criticised for it!" she says, adding that most modern US presidents have been very wealthy.
Ms Wagner, a Sotheby's realty associate and contributing columnist to the Italian and English newspaper La Voce, agrees the money plays a big factor in Mr Bloomberg's candidacy. But that, she says, is not a bad thing.
"All the power to him because he's using it, in my opinion, so effectively. He's not going to be bartering with these big oil companies and organisations, the NRA [National Rifle Association], or trying to appease.
"Donald Trump would like to be what Michael Bloomberg is in terms of the power, the money."
All of the supporters who spoke to the BBC echoed that Mr Bloomberg's successful business record was a highlight, not a hindrance.
"And being the mayor of New York City for three terms is pretty close to being president of the United States," Ms Wagner adds.

What about 'stop and frisk'?

Perhaps the biggest issue from Mr Bloomberg's mayoral past is this policy, which allowed police to question and search individuals for weapons or illegal items based on extremely vague criteria. Most people stopped were innocent; most were black or Latino.
"Stop, question and frisk" began under Mayor Rudy Giuliani but peaked under Mr Bloomberg with over 680,000 stops. Analysis of the programme in the years since has suggested the random investigative stops did not have a meaningful impact on crime.
This month, audio emerged from 2015 where Mr Bloomberg claimed male minorities perpetrate "the real crime". He's since apologised for the policy and "the impact it had on black and Latino communities".
Sheikh Musa Drammeh, 58, is a religious leader and community activist who has lived in the Bronx and Harlem neighbourhoods of New York City for the last 30 years.
When asked about the controversial policy, Mr Drammeh emphasised: "No candidate will ever do as much for the blacks and Latinos as Bloomberg."
"I am black," Mr Drammeh continues. "Nobody can tell me about the ravages of crime in this city - I know it, I live it, I'm a victim of it.
"And Bloomberg did not create stop and frisk, [but] Bloomberg's administration saw that you must have a habitable environment otherwise investors, residents, high-earning individuals who will pay taxes to support social services, will leave the city."
Mike for Black America rallyImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Mr Drammeh says from what he has seen as an activist working to stop gang violence, people in his neighbourhoods have "benefitted from stop and frisk".
"It's not discriminatory, it's life saving. The lives that are being saved are black and brown, not white."

What makes him the best to take on Trump?

Carla Shead, a 49-year-old from Maryland, told the BBC: "It'll take another New Yorker to beat Trump."
Ms Shead adds that Mr Bloomberg has proven himself by being "a successful businessman and a successful mayor" and "has put his money where his mouth is".
"When I started listening to his ads and what he had to say about building the community and what his plan was to do for the United States - he is everything Trump isn't. And that to me, is the bottom line."
Media captionBloomberg: "We cannot afford four more years"
Ms Shead says that the divides in this country have been around for a long time. Her family is from Mississippi, she says, and many were active participants in the US civil rights movement.
"America is looking for a saviour right now," she says. "Trump from the beginning has split the nation and has dredged up old wounds.
"My family and other African-American families - are vested in this - in seeing the country coming together and I think Mike Bloomberg is doing the exact opposite of what Trump is doing."
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