I am reading the paper "On the birational automorphisms of varieties of general type", and I have a question about the property of potentially birational divisor.
Definition (potentially birational divisor, c.f. Def. 2.3.3). Let $X$ be a normal projective variety, and $D$ D be a big $\mathbb{Q}$-Cartier $\mathbb{Q}$-divisor on $X$. If $x$ and $y$ are two very general points of $X$ then, possibly switching $x$ and $y$, we may find $0 \leq \Delta \sim_{\mathbb Q} (1 − \epsilon)D$, for some $0 < \epsilon < 1$, where $(X,\Delta)$ is not kawamata log terminal at $y$, $(X, \Delta)$ is log canonical at $x$ and $\{x\}$ is a non-kawamata log terminal centre, then we say that $D$ is potentially birational.
After this definition, the following important property of potentially birational divisor is proven:
Lemma (c.f. Lemma 2.3.4(1)) Let $X$ be a normal projective variety and $D$ be a big $\mathbb Q$-Cartier divisor on $X$. If $D$ is potentially birational, then $\phi_{K_X+\lceil{D}\rceil}$ (i.e. the rational map defined by the linear system $|\lfloor K_X+\lceil{D}\rceil \rfloor|$) is birational.
In order to proving this, the authors reduce to consider the case where $X$ is smooth, $D \sim_\mathbb{Q} A + B$ with $A$ is ample and $B \geq 0$. Moreover, one can assume $\Delta\sim_{\mathbb Q} (1 − \epsilon)D$ in the definition of potentially birational divisor satisfying the property that $(X, \Delta)$ is klt in a punctured neighborhood of $x$. Then, by Nadel vanishing, one obtains $$H^1(X, \mathcal{O}_X(K_X + \lceil D \rceil) \otimes \mathcal{J}(\Delta + \epsilon B + \lceil D \rceil -D)) = 0,$$ where $\mathcal{J}(\Delta + \epsilon B + \lceil D \rceil -D)$ is the multiplier ideal sheaf.
Then the authors claim that one can find "a section $\sigma \in H^0(X, \mathcal{O}_X(K_X + \lceil D \rceil))$ vanishing at $y$ but not at $x$". It is this part that I was not able to follow. Granted this fact, one can find sections to separated very general points and hence define a birational map.
My question: why there exists section $\sigma$ satisfying claimed property as the above paragraph? Or, how does potentially birationality used above?