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Rugby World Cup: the Blues try to digest their elimination and plan ahead The elimination of the Blues in the quarter-finals abruptly ended their dream. They must now swallow their narrow defeat against the Springboks after a match marked by highly contested refereeing decisions. They will then begin a new cycle with coach Fabien Galthié, confirmed in his role until the next World Cup. If football France likes to say that it has 67 million selectors, rugby France seems to be teeming with referees. Since the elimination of the Blues by South Africa by a small point (28-29) in the quarter-finals of the World Cup, there is no shortage of more or less informed opinions on social networks regarding the performance from New Zealander Ben O'Keeffe who led the match at the Stade de France. A referee criticized as the victim of harassment from certain Internet users, who do not hesitate to insult him. During the match, captain Antoine Dupont repeatedly expressed his incomprehension regarding his whistles. And he expressed just after the end of the match against South Africa his doubts about the quality of Ben O'Keeffe's refereeing, which was not, according to him, "up to the level of the challenge", while taking care to point out that this took nothing away from the performance of the South Africans, authors of a “great match” against France. His frustration is shared by many French supporters and former international players. Everyone plays the video clips of around ten contentious actions over and over again and does not budge from the fact that the referee disadvantaged the Blues and weighed heavily on the outcome of this very close match. They denounce contentious ball scratching, South African players who deliberately slowed down French ball exits or dangerous contacts. And they criticize Springbok winger Cheslin Kolbe for not having respected the rule to successfully counter a transformation from Frenchman Thomas Ramos. https://www.france24.com/fr/sports/20231018-coupe-du-monde-de-rugby-les-bleus-essaient-de-digérer-leur-élimination-et-de-se-projeter
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I grew up thousands of miles away, hearing stories of the family bungalow in Kampala and of Idi Amin, the dictator who had driven us out of it. What kind of welcome would I find there? As my dusty Toyota Hilux bumped down the sloping street past concrete walls flanked by palm trees, my stomach flipped with anticipation. Everything was familiar, although I’d never been to this street in Kampala, Uganda’s capital, before. Google Street View had offered me a window into another life, continents away. I slowed as I passed a house, but wasn’t ready to stop yet. My preoccupation with this particular street had begun in my childhood, when my parents told me tales from their years before me, in countries far from mine. My mother’s stories of road trips to the Nile and colourful pet chameleons captivated me. This side of my family is Indian, but she was born in Uganda. As a five-year-old, I used to mix the countries up. It would be much longer before I understood the global forces behind the family migration. In August 1972, Ugandan dictator Idi Amin ordered the country’s entire South Asian po[CENSORED]tion to be expelled, accusing them of sabotaging the economy. Facing threats of violence, 50,000 people were given just 90 days to leave their homes, friends, pets and lives for ever. My grandparents, Rachel and Philip, had arrived two decades earlier, having been recruited in India by the British to work as teachers in the then-British Protectorate of Uganda. They were two of the 28,000-plus who would come to Britain during the expulsion – as a legacy of the empire, many South Asians held British passports. My family later moved to Australia. Growing up in Sydney and later Cambridge, explaining my origins wasn’t easy. The multi-continental migration was a mouthful, no one my age knew anything about the turmoil of expulsion and I often felt I didn’t belong enough to any of the four countries of my roots to claim them. I was conflicted as to where I could truly say I was from. Uganda was one of the first countries I travelled to independently, drawn to this piece of my past, although I didn’t seek out a true reckoning with my family history. Deep down, I feared I would not be welcome and any pilgrimage would be a devastating disappointment. It would be another 15 years before I plucked up the courage to find my grandparents’ former home while researching my book on Ugandan Asian history. Lucy Fulford in Dumbo, Brooklyn, in 2023. Photograph: Laura Jane Dale I drove past the unassuming driveway a few more times before stopping. In the 50 years since my family were forced out, lawns had been tarmacked over and new structures erected and rented out to businesses, but the bones of the original bungalow lived on. I spoke to tenants in the hopes of reaching the owner, but my efforts were complicated by a misunderstanding that I, like many Ugandan Asians before me, was trying to reclaim property seized in 1972, which inevitably involved evicting those residing in it. But after a tricky start, on one sunny afternoon, I found myself living the moment I had imagined so many times. As I sat with the present owner, she leafed through my collection of faded family photos, confirming our shared heritage in this place. I learned how the house was bought from the government 10 years after my grandparents packed up, and it had been in the same family ever since. I was delighted to see that some of the trees planted by my grandfather all those years ago were still standing. Looking up at the grey bungalow, history took over the landscape. I saw the slope my mother did handstands on, imagined the echoes of the BBC World Service coming from within the house, and thought of the beloved dogs standing guard at the front door, who had to be left behind when Amin brutally undid lives. During my previous travels in Uganda, I had begun to get to know the spirit of the land my family had loved. Eating rolex (a fusion food turning Indian chapatis into a street snack), looking out over the Nile in Jinja and, on the shores of Lake Bunyoni close to the Rwandan border, holding up a stick with a tiny chameleon clutching on to it. But being in the actual space my family inhabited, and having a beautiful human connection here, moved me on a level I hadn’t expected. I had started to wonder if I could ever claim to belong to this country as I was so clearly an outsider. But our conversation spun a thread between my grandparents, no longer here, through the generations to me, and the family who had called this place home ever since. It cemented that this existence long ago was real, and didn’t end in 1972, but carried on a new life – one I could now be a tiny part of. All my life I have been asked where I’m from, and it hasn’t been easy to give an answer. Revisiting such an important part of my family’s past breathed confidence into my knowledge that I come from many places, and all of them are a piece of home. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2023/oct/18/a-moment-that-changed-me-5o-years-after-my-grandparents-were-expelled-from-uganda-i-visited-their-old-home
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WASHINGTON — For a second time in two days, Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, fell short of the 217 votes needed to be elected speaker, another serious blow to the Donald Trump-backed candidate's chances of seizing the prized gavel. Jordan, the GOP's latest nominee for speaker, received 199 votes; that was one net vote fewer than he received on Tuesday and a sign that Jordan is bleeding support rather than winning over his detractors. Compared to the first ballot, he lost four votes, flipped two in his favor and added one who was initially absent. The backward movement indicates that Jordan's hopes of securing the job are in peril, prolonging an unprecedented stretch of chaos for the Republican-controlled House, which has no clear path to electing a new leader. Many lawmakers are eager to get to work on government funding legislation ahead of a Nov. 17 deadline to avert a shutdown, but the chamber cannot conduct business until it elects a new leader. Rep. Mike Garcia, R-Calif., a Jordan backer who represents a swing district, said the dynamics needed to change and proposed fractured Republicans hold a retreat outside of the Beltway, far from lobbyists and the glare of the media. "It sounds silly but let's go to Gettysburg or something. Let's go to somewhere that is meaningful to our nation's history so that the Republican party can once again remember why we do what we do," Garcia said after the vote. Somewhere "to remind us of why we fight these fights and why we are actually in this job. And that's to make sure that the country endured and that we get stronger and not weaker." Even as Jordan vowed to stay in the fight with further ballots until he's elected speaker, the vote tally raised new questions about whether the powerful Judiciary Committee chairman might bow out of the race and other speaker hopefuls might jump in. The four members who voted for Jordan initially but flipped on the second ballot Wednesday were Reps. Vern Buchanan of Florida, Drew Ferguson of Georgia, Mariannette Miller-Meeks of Iowa, and Pete Stauber of Minnesota. The two who flipped in Jordan's favor were Reps. Doug LaMalfa of California and Victoria Spartz of Indiana. He added one vote, Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., who was absent Tuesday. Wednesday is the 15th day the House has been without a speaker. Lawmakers are growing increasingly worried about not being able to supply Ukraine and Israel with fresh aid packages amid their wars, and a new government shutdown threat is now less than a month away. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/jordan-house-speaker-fail-rcna121021
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Palestinian health officials now say that at least 471 people were killed by an explosion at a hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday night. They blame an Israeli air strike, but Israel's military says the blast was caused by a failed rocket launch by the militant group Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The BBC's Rushdi Abu Alouf visited the scene and found that body parts are still being collected. Blood-soaked mattresses are strewn across the courtyard of the Al-Ahli Arab hospital, along with clothing and personal possessions left behind in the chaos that followed the blast and the huge fire it caused. In a nearby car park lie the smouldering wrecks of more than a dozen cars. The surrounding buildings are also damaged, apparently pockmarked by shrapnel. But no large impact crater is visible. There is an atmosphere of panic, with people struggling to understand what happened at a place that was supposed to be protected under international humanitarian law. "We left our home to come here," a woman who survived the explosion told the BBC. "We thought it would be safe, but then it got bombed." More on Israel-Gaza war Follow live: Latest updates Explained: What's going on in Gaza and Israel, and why now? History behind the story: The Israel-Palestinian conflict Hamas attack: Family seeks answers after live-stream horror From Gaza: BBC reporter flees Israel bomb warning Doctors said that most of the victims were among the several thousand civilians who had been sheltering at the hospital since Friday. They fled there after the Israeli military told civilians to evacuate the north of the Gaza Strip, as it stepped up its air strikes on militant group Hamas. Many staying inside the courtyard were elderly or infirm, unable to leave for the south because they did not have access to transport. One witness told me that they had been sitting on the ground when it was rocked by a huge blast. People from all around the Gaza Strip soon arrived at the scene to try to help, he said. They collected bodies and began evacuating injured people. Those in a serious condition were taken away on motorbikes, while those less hurt had to make their way on foot to Shifa hospital, 3km (two miles) away. IMAGE SOURCE,EPA Image caption, Many of the victims were displaced people who had been sheltering in the grounds, thinking the hospital was safe A second man said he heard something just before the blast but did not know what it was. He explained that he returned to the hospital afterwards because there was no other option. "Where else can we go? Are we leaving like in 1948?" he asked, referring to the first Arab-Israeli war, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced or fled from their homes. Despite their protected status, 20 hospitals in the north, including Al-Ahli Arab, have received orders to evacuate their patients and staff, according to the World Health Organization. The UN agency has said the orders are impossible to carry out, given the current insecurity, critical condition of many patients, lack of ambulances, and shortage of beds elsewhere, and warned that it will "further worsen the current humanitarian and public health catastrophe". https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67147059
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Age: 23 GFX Designer or GFX School?: GFX Designer Experience in Adobe Photoshop (Months or years):months Obligatory attach your Gallery link (If you have one): Any other editing program you use?: Do you have time for this function?: yes
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Trump tells judge he will appeal gag order in federal election interference case The former president said the order barring him from going after witnesses, prosecutors and court staff was "unconstitutional." Former President Donald Trump sits in a Manhattan courthouse at New York State Supreme Court in New York City, on Tuesday. Attorneys for former President Donald Trump on Tuesday filed a formal notice of appeal after a federal judge prohibited him from publicly disparaging witnesses, prosecutors and court staff involved in the criminal case alleging he illegally tried to reverse the 2020 election results. The filing with the U.S. Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia came within hours of U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan formalizing her order from Monday in a written decision. "All interested parties in this matter, including the parties and their counsel, are prohibited from making any public statements, or directing others to make any public statements, that target (1) the Special Counsel prosecuting this case or his staff; (2) defense counsel or their staff; (3) any of this court’s staff or other supporting personnel; or (4) any reasonably foreseeable witness or the substance of their testimony," the ruling said. Chutkan added that the order "shall not be construed to prohibit Defendant from making statements criticizing the government generally, including the current administration or the Department of Justice; statements asserting that Defendant is innocent of the charges against him, or that his prosecution is politically motivated; or statements criticizing the campaign platforms or policies of Defendant’s current political rivals, such as former Vice President Pence." https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-files-notice-appeal-judge-issues-partial-gag-order-rcna120924
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Rugby: “A World Cup in France, we won’t live through it anymore” Several players from the French XV confided their immense disappointment after their narrow defeat on Sunday evening against South Africa in the quarter-final of the World Cup. They are eliminated from a competition that they dreamed of winning after four great years of preparation. And if this talented generation can still offer France, in four years, its first Webb Ellis trophy, it has lost the opportunity to do so at home. The short defeat (29-28) of the French XV, Sunday October 15, against South Africa in the quarter-final of "its" World Cup generates an immense disappointment living up to the hopes placed for four years in this team and its golden generation. After an equally cruel outing against Wales at the same stage of the competition (20-19) during the 2019 World Cup in Japan, this setback still amounted to nothing: a small point, a transformation undoubtedly countered by illicit manner, a perhaps deliberate South African forward, an unsanctioned Springbok scrum at the end of the match, a few dropped balls... But this time, it was at home, in a World Cup where the Blues were among the big favorites. being intentional, an unsanctioned Springbok scrum at the end of the match, a few dropped balls... But this time, it was at home, in a World Cup in which the Blues were among the big favorites. Read also Rugby World Cup: the semi-final program Like the refereeing of the South African Jaco Peyper in Japan, that of the New Zealander Ben O'Keeffe at the Stade de France was not to the taste of the French, captain Antoine Dupont considering that he had "not been at the level of the issue. Ben O'Keeffe "is not alone", reacted for his part the coach Fabien Galthié, whose mandate runs until 2028 and who was confirmed in his position on Monday by the president of the French Rugby Federation, Florian Grill. “The TMO (the video referee, Editor’s note) and the surrounding referees have the time to review the images like us and have the right to take part in the arbitration,” he added. However, he was careful not to fuel the controversy, ensuring that he "overlooked" the arbitration choices. The rare teammates of Dupont to appear before the press after the defeat also spoke of "mistakes", without however this bitterness outweighing the immense disappointment. Because this is undoubtedly not the main explanation for the defeat. The big mistakes of the Blues "It's always easy to talk about refereeing. There were some pretty blatant situations on the pitch which didn't seem to be obvious to the refereeing body," center Jonathan Danty also noted, before adding : “To err is human unfortunately (but) it was not the refereeing which caused the match to be lost.” “We are sad, with this result and this cruel scenario (...). We had the ingredients but we conceded points too easily,” summarized third row François Cros. The XV of France, which seemed to be leading the match from the right end until half-time (22-19) after a first period of rare intensity, breathtaking and magnificent (six tries scored, a first in history of a World Cup quarter-final), did not last long and paid in cash for his mistakes. Thus, we saw gross defensive errors, particularly on lost balls; a bankruptcy on high balloons; an unexpected drop in physical fitness in the second half not compensated by the bench. Gaps that we did not see in 2022 at the height of the Blues and which allowed the Springboks to stay in contact at the end of a first period during which they had been dominated. “They stayed in their plans, signing three tries on the counter-attack in the first half, with a lot of pressure play, and they fed off our errors, the referee's whistle to be able to score 'at the right time and successfully,' analyzed fly-half Matthieu Jalibert. A better South African strategy Another sector which has sinned: aerial play. “We clearly saw that they had used a lot of high-footed play, which allowed them to create highlights,” admitted Galthié. https://www.france24.com/fr/sports/20231016-rugby-une-coupe-du-monde-en-france-on-n-en-vivra-plus
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The elephant I was riding threw me, then rolled over me like a steamroller. All my bones broke at once Gemma Jones’s dream holiday left her with a crushed pelvis, ribs and collarbone – and changed her life for the better. Twenty years on, she remembers the attack that began with an ominous growl It was as Gemma Jones was climbing on to the elephant, over its head and on to its back, that she began to have misgivings. The trek through the hillside jungle in north Thailand, near Chiang Mai, was highly rated by other travellers. Jones had been expecting a ladder, perhaps even a saddle. Instead she found a wooden plank, lashed precariously with rope across the animal’s back. “I remember climbing on and thinking: ‘I don’t know about this,’” she says. Jones, 45, is a clinical psychologist and yoga therapist based in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire. Back then, in October 2002, she was 24 years old and days into what was meant to be a 15-month trip through south-east Asia, Australia and New Zealand with two friends. She was a relatively experienced traveller, but this trek, with leeches, outdoor ablutions and spiders “the size of my head”, had taken her to the edge of her comfort zone. By the third and final day, she was ready for the city, but not before the activity she’d looked forward to most: an elephant ride. For their group of nine, five elephants were brought to their bamboo huts: four adult animals and a smaller adolescent, each led by a mahout (guide). Jones and her friend Yvette (a pseudonym, at her request) were to ride together on one of the fully grown animals while Berni, the third in their trio, sat by herself on the younger elephant behind. What first struck Jones as she climbed up the elephant was, inevitably, its size. It was huge – “just nothing like” what she had imagined from watching nature documentaries. These were Asian elephants, slightly smaller than the African variety, and up to 12ft high and weighing up to 12,000lb (5,400kg). The creature was so tall and so broad that Jones – perched next to Yvette on the plank across its back – could not see the ground on either side, or the mahout walking by its head. Gemma Jones on a subsequent trip to Thailand, five years after the attack. The next surprise was a low rumble from deep within the elephant. She could feel it travelling up her legs. “I didn’t know that elephants could growl,” she says. In 2002, elephant rides were seen as innocent fun, and a key draw for tourists in Thailand. “You don’t realise, in your 20s, that just because you’re allowed to do something doesn’t necessarily mean it’s all going to be fine,” she says. They set out in uneasy formation, the elephants lumbering along the uneven ground. The two women struggled to hold on against the rolling motion. “As soon as we started, I was like: ‘I don’t like it,’” says Jones. After 10 minutes, the elephant stopped so abruptly that Jones was nearly launched over its head. As the three elephants in front continued along the path, theirs moved to follow. But then it came to a halt again. The third time the elephant stopped, it turned to look at the mahout, now in Jones’s line of sight. “The mahout’s face suddenly turned white,” she says. “The look of fear – I remember thinking: ‘That’s not good.’” The mahout turned and ran. The elephant gave chase. “I don’t know how long we held on for – it could have been seconds, or minutes,” says Jones. Eventually the animal stumbled, or it may have deliberately thrown them. Jones and Yvette were both tossed to the ground, one to each side of the charging elephant. They landed hard, in a bramble bush. Jones’s glasses bumped up against her eyes, temporarily taking away the sight in her left. Her clothes were shredded, along with much of the skin on her left side, from armpit to hip. But her split-second reaction was of relief. “I was thinking I was safe, that it was gone,” she says. “Then I realised that the elephant hadn’t kept going – the elephant was still over us.” What happened next Jones registered in flashes, like a silent film. In such a high-stakes situation, “your brain is constantly catching up. Everything is changing second by second,” she says. There was no pain. “This is one of the things I learned: your brain just takes over and starts to sedate you,” says Jones. “That’s part of the trauma: you dissociate. You have to – you can’t cope with what’s going on.” Yvette was able to scramble out of the way; Jones was caught by her long sleeves and trouser legs. Yvette later confessed to Jones that she felt guilty for abandoning her friend, but Jones told her she’d had no choice. “There was no ‘fight’ option, it was literally: run. You just didn’t stand a chance. It was massive – and it was everywhere.” The elephant towered over Jones, who was on all fours beneath its belly and in the thick of “this chaotic scramble of feet and legs”, she says. Its limbs were like tree trunks being uprooted and crashing down around her. “It was at that point I started thinking about my family – the impact that this was going to have on them, and what would happen if I died.” Then the elephant grabbed Jones with its trunk. “It wrapped itself around me, picked me up and threw me,” she says. It did this more than once. Jones remembers a distinct thought penetrating her limited consciousness: that, at age 24, “Everything that has happened to me could be everything that is going to happen to me – this is where it stops.” Jones at her home today. Photograph: Andrew Fox/The Guardian Then the elephant brought its great bulk down on the ground, level with Jones. It rolled over her from right to left, like a steamroller. “All my bones broke at once: my collarbone, my ribs, my pelvis,” she says. “I didn’t feel it, but I heard it. I thought: ‘Oh, shit. That’s my spine.’” She believes that what saved her was that the ground was soft. Plus she had some experience of gymnastics and yoga, which might have helped her move with the impact. But there was nothing she could have done that would have improved her chance of survival. “It’s just luck and circumstances.” She remembers feeling the elephant’s short, bristly hair against her skin; the way it blocked out the sun as it went to roll over her again. She braced herself for the end, for her skull to be crushed. Instead the shadow passed. “The next thing I remember was light,” she says. “There was sun on my face – and the elephant wasn’t there.” The mahout reappeared by her side. He dragged Jones to her feet and then over a fence to some nearby huts. The numbness finally gave way to all-encompassing and overwhelming pain. “Everything just started screaming at me,” Jones says. As she was laid out on her back on an outside table, Berni and others from the group pulled up in a pickup truck. Berni – Bernadette Johnen, now based in Kingston-upon-Thames – remembers the sight vividly. Her first reaction was relief: Jones was covered in dirt and dishevelled, with a bloodshot eye, but had no visible wounds. She was even talking. “But as soon as you touched her, or went anywhere near, she started screaming,” says Berni. Chiang Mai was more than an hour’s drive down the mountain. Every bump in the dirt road was agonising. At the hospital in Chiang Mai, Jones was given painkillers and X-rays revealed that her pelvis had been cracked from top to bottom. She also had a broken collarbone, three fractured ribs and internal bleeding – but didn’t need surgery. Jones’s call to her parents from the hospital was her first call home since setting out on her big trip, less than a week earlier. Sedated with morphine, she told her dad in Warwickshire “an elephant broke my glasses” before handing the phone over to Berni. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2023/oct/17/the-elephant-i-was-riding-threw-me-then-rolled-over-me-like-a-steamroller-all-my-bones-broke-at-once
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Belgian police have shot dead a man who killed two Swedish nationals in the capital, Brussels, on Monday evening. The 45-year-old man, named in Belgian media as Abdesalem, was shot in a café in the Schaerbeek neighbourhood. A third Swedish citizen was seriously injured in the attack, which took place 5km (3 miles) from the stadium where Belgium was playing Sweden to qualify for the Euro 2024 football tournament. The victims are all men in their 60s and 70s, Swedish officials said. The attack began at 19:00 (17:00 GMT) on Monday, when a man opened fire with an automatic rifle on the Boulevard d'Ypres - north of the city centre. Videos shared online showed a man on a scooter, dressed in an orange fluorescent jacket, pull up and start shooting passers-by. He then chases people into the hallway of an apartment building to gun them down. Four gunshots can be heard. Shortly after the attack, he filmed himself admitting to the killings. In the video, the Arabic-speaking gunman refers to fighting for God and says he has killed Swedish people. The suspect was tracked down on Tuesday morning following an overnight manhunt, during which France also stepped up security measures at the Belgian border. He was found after a witness informed the police that he had seen the suspect in a café near his accommodation in Schaerbeek, north of Brussels, and that he was carrying a military weapon and a bag of clothes. The suspect was shot in the chest and sent to hospital, where he received intensive care treatment but died from his wounds. He is believed to be a Tunisian man who was in Belgium illegally, after his asylum application was rejected in 2020. Sweden's prosecutor's office said it believes he was inspired to commit the killings by the Islamic State (IS) group. Belgian Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden said the automatic weapon found on him was the same as the one used in the attack. IMAGE SOURCE,POLICE HANDOUT Image caption, A police handout of the suspect, named in Belgian media as Abdesalem The country's threat risk was raised to four, its highest level, following the killings. This was lowered to three on Tuesday after the authorities assessed that the imminent threat had disappeared following the suspect's killing. Belgian prosecutors initially said there did not appear to be any links between the attack and the Israel-Gaza war, but later said they could not exclude that possibility. Prime Minister Alexander De Croo called the shooting "a harrowing act of terrorism" in a press conference and prosecutors said the victims were probably targeted because they were Swedish. The Swedish authorities have urged their citizens in Belgium and abroad to be vigilant. "Everything suggests this is a terror attack targeted at Sweden and Swedish citizens," said the country's Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson. He later wrote on X, formerly Twitter, that he would travel to Brussels on Wednesday to attend a ceremony commemorating the victims alongside Mr De Croo. "Sweden and Belgium mourn the victims of yesterday's attack together," posted the Belgian leader. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-67131128
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Nick movie: FAST CARS Time: 27 juil. 2023 Netflix / Amazon / HBO: N/A Duration of the movie: 1 h 30 min Trailer:
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Music: Life Is Good Signer:Future Release date: 10 janv. 2020 Official YouTube link:
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Nasty, 1 post in 24 hours is for “Off-Topic” topic oficial.
Each forum has a specific rule, pay attention, you are a Moderator.
It is not necessary for anyone to warn you about the rules, you should already know.
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Music: Hot N*gga Signer:Bobby Shmurda Release date: 1 août 2014 Official YouTube link: