A5 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2019 WORLD IN BRIEF attorney entered a not guilty plea on behalf of his client today as the singer faces multiple charges of sexual abuse in Chicago. Kelly, one of the best-selling music artists of all time, entered the courtroom wearing an orange jail jumpsuit after spending the week- end in Chicago’s 7,000-inmate jail. He was arrested Friday on 10 counts of aggravated sexual abuse involving four females, three of whom were minors. Kelly remains jailed after a judge on Sat- urday set bond at $1 million. The Grammy Award-winning singer is required to pay 10 percent, and his attorney said Kelly’s confi - dants are trying to pay $100,000 to get him released as he awaits trial. Among the conditions of release is that Kelly have no contact with females younger than 18. Kelly appeared at the arraignment hearing today with defense attorney Steve Greenberg, and the case was assigned to Cook County Associate Judge Lawrence Flood. Kelly’s next court date is March 22. Associated Press Stocks surge on US decision to postpone China tariff hike BEIJING — China’s stock market surged today after President Donald Trump’s deci- sion to postpone a tariff hike on Chinese imports. State media expressed hopes the fi ght with Washington over Beijing’s technol- ogy ambitions can be resolved. Other fi nancial markets in Europe and Asia recorded more modest gains following Trump’s announcement that the Washington talks made “substantial progress” toward end- ing the tariff fi ght. Washington accuses Beijing of stealing or pressuring foreign companies to hand over technology. The Trump administration wants China to roll back plans for government-led creation of global leaders in robotics and other technology that its trading partners say violate Beijing’s free-trade obligations and some American offi cials worry they might erode U.S. industrial leadership. The weekend talks made progress on technology transfer, protection of intellec- tual property rights and non-tariff barriers to market access, according to the offi cial Xin- hua News Agency. It cautioned there are “still some differences that need more time to be ironed out.” Trump said he would postpone a March 1 deadline for increasing 10 percent punitive duties on $200 billion of Chinese imports to 25 percent but he set no new date. Trump looks for win in N. Korea summit this week WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump will head into his second meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un having reframed what would make a successful summit, low- ering expectations for Pyongyang’s denucle- arization while eager to declare a fl ashy vic- tory to offset the political turmoil he faces at home. Trump was the driving force behind this week’s Vietnam summit, aiming to recreate the global spectacle of his fi rst meeting with Kim, although that initial summit yielded few concrete results and the months that followed have produced little optimism about what will be achieved in the sequel. He once warned that North Korea’s arsenal posed such a threat to humanity that he may have no choice but to rain “fi re and fury” on the rogue nation, yet on Sunday declared that he was in no hurry for Pyongyang to prove it was abandoning its weapons. “I’m not in a rush. I don’t want to rush anybody, I just don’t want testing. As long as there’s no testing, we’re happy,” Trump AP Photo/Gregory Bull The border wall on the beach in Tijuana, Mexico. Former US security offi cials to oppose emergency declaration WASHINGTON — A group of former U.S. national security offi cials is set to release a statement arguing there is no justifi cation for President Donald Trump to use a national emergency declaration to fund a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. The statement has 58 signatures from prominent former offi cials, including for- mer Secretaries of State Madeline Albright and John Kerry, former Defense Secre- taries Chuck Hagel and Leon Panetta, and former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. The statement is set to be released today, a day before the Democratic-controlled House is expected to vote to block Trump from using the declaration. The measure is sure to pass, and the GOP-run Senate may adopt it as well, though Trump has already promised a veto. “There is no factual basis for the declaration of a national emergency,” says the state- ment, which argues that border crossings are near a 40-year low and that there is no ter- rorist emergency at the border. Trump declared an emergency to obtain wall funding beyond the $1.4 billion Con- gress approved for border security. The move allows the president to bypass Congress to use money from the Pentagon and other budgets. told a gathering of governors at the White House. Hours earlier, he ended a tweet about the summit by posing the key question that looms over their meeting in Vietnam: “Denuclearization?” Trump will arrive in Hanoi on Tuesday on Air Force One while his counterpart, lacking a modern aircraft fl eet, travels via armored train. Though details of the summit remain closely held, the two leaders are expected to meet at some point one-on-one, joined only by translators. Lawyer enters not guilty plea for Kelly in sex abuse case CHICAGO — R&B singer R. Kelly’s Pence in Colombia announces new sanctions on Maduro BOGOTA, Colombia — The Trump administration announced new sanctions today on allies of Venezuela’s Nicolas Mad- uro and fi nancial assistance to his opponent Juan Guaido as an effort to deliver humanitar- ian aid to the economically devastated nation faltered amid strong resistance from security forces who remain loyal to the socialist leader. Vice President Mike Pence arrived in the Colombian capital for an emergency summit of regional leaders to discuss Venezuela’s cri- sis and immediately met with Guaido. In a speech to the group, Pence urged regional partners to freeze oil assets con- trolled by Maduro, transfer the proceeds to Guaido and restrict visas for Maduro’s inner circle. He said the U.S. was imposing more sanctions on four governors aligned with Maduro, including the Venezuelan politician who negotiated the release of a Utah man held in jail more than two years on what were seen as trumped-up weapons charges. He also repeated President Donald Trump’s threat that “all options are on the table” — fi ery language that Guaido himself has adopted in what many see as a dangerous escalation of rhetoric hinting at the use of mil- itary force. Pence’s appearance before the Lima Group — a 14-nation coalition of mostly con- servative Latin American nations and Can- ada that has joined together to pressure Mad- uro — comes two days after a U.S.-backed effort to deliver humanitarian across the bor- der from Colombia ended in violence over the weekend. 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