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-Ace Ϟ ™

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  1. @SamiBNZ i forgive u before this is ur second warning becarfull because this lead u to suspend remember this ur second warning T/C
  2. Spin back 12 months to the COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow and you couldn't move without tripping over a world leader, a FTSE boss, even the Archbishop of Canterbury. The conference was an enormous affair where hours and hours of negotiations took place about how countries large and small, north and south, could work together to try to slow down climate change and manage its impact. There was another vital ingredient last year though: political energy. There was no doubt that the then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson took the issue seriously. There was a visible desire in the government to act to manage climate change and for the UK to take, and be seen to take, a prominent role. There were some grumbles in the Conservative Party but the political push from the top to grasp the issue last year was strong and clear. The UK had to be at the forefront of tackling climate change, and couldn't afford not to. The dynamics of COP are truly international, and as our climate editor Justin Rowlatt notes here, this week's summit in the Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm El-Sheikh is likely to see the world's poorer countries pitted against the rich nations who they feel have backtracked on the financial commitments made in Glasgow. A really simple guide to climate change What you can do to reduce carbon emissions The big issues facing Egypt's COP27 climate summit But as leaders touch down this weekend for COP27, is the UK's commitment still as strong? First off, the simple optics of the last few weeks suggest not. There was a straightforward argument against Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's attendance at COP. He's only just moved into No 10 and the economy is in bad shape. Summits are, putting it politely, not always a good use of important people's time. There was also a good case for him to go - to show personal commitment and interest in the subject, and of course to take the opportunity to rub shoulders with other world leaders. LINK
  3. Man is often a source of threat to the natural balance in the universe, to the extent of causing the extinction of some of its components, but nature offers its inhabitants opportunities to circumvent this opponent and support its structures of plants and animals, opportunities that need support from human beings to fix what they have corrupted. Endangered animals In the Bocas del Toro region of the Central American islands of Panama, floating aquatic plants join forces on the surface of wet reserves to hide their friends, the manatees swimming inside, which contributed to the survival of these animals away from the eyes of the looters of the treasures of these rich water communities. In a study conducted by a research team at the University of Technology in the Republic of Panama led by researcher Fernando Merchin - who specializes in acoustic processors for marine animals - with another team at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and published in the Journal of the American Acoustic Society, the importance of these plants was highlighted in the preservation of po[CENSORED]tions. Sheep inside the reserves. The researchers were also able to identify different vocal patterns using spectral analysis of the individual melodies of the manatees. Through this melody, the animals can exchange their information and then create the language of communication between the members of their group. For a decade, manatee communities dwindled due to the effects of climate change and water pollution on the one hand, and exposure to extermination when colliding with boats and due to overfishing on the other hand. Aquatic plants floating on the surface of wet reserves join hands Aquatic plants floating on the surface of wet reserves join hands Seeing through the dark These causes have increased the likelihood of losing more than 20% of sheep in future generations, according to projections by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. As an inevitable consequence, this diminishment could threaten the entire ecosystem - the interaction between living organisms and their environment - as a whole. The application of these techniques used in this research provides more data on the estimated number of manatees in the Panama Islands. “By using sonar to examine the acoustic patterns, we will be able to estimate the number of sheep in the aquarium, so now we can see through the darkness,” says co-author Hector Guzman, marine biologist and ecologist from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. floating water. Also, these techniques will provide some information about the mating seasons within groups and the ways they communicate with each other to make the transmission of offspring successful. potential survival To avoid inflicting any additional damage, conservationists have recommended limiting the initial number of manatees, and on that basis laws can be put in place to not harm them, in order to avoid an exaggerated decrease in the number of survivors. “Sorting and processing 375,000 and eight hundred audio recordings took a lot of effort in a two-year project, and thanks to the cooperation of the interdisciplinary research team, they were able to distinguish the different tunes of individuals in the vicinity of the wet reserves in the Bocas del Toro region,” said lead researcher Fernando Merchin, specialist in the study. in the acoustic treatments of these animals at the Technological University of Panama. Such research may contribute to revealing the weaknesses of such species, and can recommend the preparation of optimal living conditions to protect them from the dangers of extinction and annihilation. Then estimating the po[CENSORED]tion of manatees inhabiting the regions of Colombia and Mexico as a sample, in addition to revealing their lifestyle, observing the most subtle changes between groups of different regions, in addition to identifying migration patterns. Ultimately, the team hopes to create a taxonomic map in which the species or age of the animal can be known just by listening to its own tunes LINK
  4. Istanbul - The "Fong Istanbul" group plays delicious melodies with unique instruments, which they made themselves from waste, as their love for nature led them to establish this project, to direct people's attention to the environment and the importance of protecting it. The band began its career in 2014, where it started with two musicians: Harman Artuch and Ronnie Aran, a natural science researcher, and caring for the environment has been a main goal for them from the beginning - even if they use professional musical instruments - they called their first album "phenology", a science that studies the relationship Climate in the life cycle of animals and plants, in order to draw attention to issues related to the environment. One of the activities of Fung Istanbul Ensemble in a concert in the lap of nature One of the activities of the Istanbul Fung Ensemble in a concert in the lap of nature (Al Jazeera) The beginning of the idea The band's interest has shifted to focusing on recycling and protecting the environment from accumulated waste since 2019, when the musician Serhat Ibi joined the band, as they stopped using the usual musical instruments and started manufacturing their instruments through recycling. The idea of the band's project is based on the use of music, which they consider to be more influential than words. "With the increased risk of environmental pollution recently, we began to think more about this project. We never use words, but rather rely on spreading environmental awareness through musical pieces." and machines that we make ourselves. With the increase in the band's activities, participations and concerts, the number of those interested in the topic increases, as the band's interest in environmental issues has become a matter of curiosity among people. The band members and the fashion designer display their products in an exhibition Members of the Istanbul Fung Troupe and a fashion designer display their products at an exhibition (Al-Jazeera) Recycling to make musical instruments To achieve their goal of creating music that is compatible with the environment, the members of the band manufacture many musical instruments using different materials, which they get from street or home waste, or even from waste dumped in the forests such as hunting bullets and plastic bags. They use empty glass cans, plastic containers, metal pots, can tops, precision instruments from broken electrical appliances, old clothes and other types of waste. Speaking about the selection of materials to be used in recycling, Aibi says, "We pay attention to choosing materials that will not degrade in nature. We want to use the least number of pieces of wood as possible, and this is one of our most important considerations." The band in one of the training workshops Members of the Istanbul Fung Troupe in one of the training workshops aimed at educating society about the importance of preserving the environment (Al-Jazeera) Manufacture of many musical instruments The musicians create instruments that suit their professional expertise. They are originally professional players, while Harman Artuch plays percussion instruments, Serhat Ibe plays guitar and violin, and Ronnie Aran plays stringed instruments. The band members gave new names to the instruments they made, based on some of the materials used to make them. In a statement to Al-Jazeera Net, Ibi said, "My specialty was originally playing the bass guitar (a stringed instrument) and the cello, but here I play the tarbasin (a musical instrument similar to the qanun) and the bass trumpet, I continue my artistic life, but with a different design." The bass pot, for example, is a musical instrument that they made from a large pot, a clothesline, and a mop wand. It is an instrument made entirely from household waste. Tarbassin made of a plastic bathtub, a piece of an old cabinet, paintbrushes, pieces of children's toys, a clothesline, and old guitar strings - Lamia Ahmed - Istanbul A bolt-action machine made from a plastic bathtub and a piece of an old cabinet (the island) Difficulties and obstacles on the road to recycling The device made of rotating may seem simple, but in fact, the process of making it is a complex process. While the process of collecting materials takes a great deal of time and effort, musicians face great difficulty when choosing materials. Choosing the right material is a condition for obtaining the desired sound. As for extracting musical melodies, it is another thing. The pidon saz - which is similar to the lute - has two chords, each chord must emit a different tone. The musicians admit that the instruments they make are not like professional instruments, and they need constant maintenance, but in the end they feel happy when they get a satisfactory result, and they see that sometimes the outlier melodies are not confusing to them, but rather it acquires meaning by merging all the tones to obtain an integrated melody commensurate with their idea . The band's costumes are also made by recycling The band's costumes are also made entirely through recycling (the island) Band costumes and accessories also "rotate" As for the outfits that the band members wear during their concerts, they were designed in cooperation with the designer Rokan Eddie Bailey, who uses rotation in her designs. All of the tools collected from the waste. Recycling hats the band wears in their concerts - Lamia Ahmed - Istanbul Different design hats - from recycling - worn by the band in its concerts (Al-Jazeera) environment related activities On the other hand, the band participates in activities related to the environment and nature by holding its own concerts, or participating in public music festivals. LINK
  5. Kyiv residents should be prepared to leave the city if there is a total loss of power, its mayor has said. In recent weeks millions of Ukrainians have intermittently been left without electricity and water, as Russian air strikes target vital infrastructure. Rolling power cuts are also in place to avoid overloads and to allow for repairs. Some 40% of Ukraine's energy system has been damaged or destroyed by Russian attacks on power plants and lines. Another city official has warned that, in the case of a total blackout, water supply and sewage would also stop working. The Geneva Conventions, which outline humanitarian standards for treatment in war, state that attacks should not be carried out against "civilian objects". Speaking on Ukrainian television, Mayor Vitaly Klitschko branded Russia's targeting of infrastructure as "terrorism" and "genocide". Russian President Vladimir Putin "doesn't need us Ukrainians. He needs territory, he needs Ukraine without us", the former heavyweight boxer said. "That's why everything that is happening now [strikes on infrastructure] is genocide. His task is for us to die, to freeze, or to make us flee our land so that he can have it. In winter in Kyiv, the average temperature is below freezing and drops even further at night. Mr Klitschko said that while authorities are doing "everything" to keep the lights on and water flowing, he was ensuring preparations were in place for different scenarios. Kyiv's three million residents should make arrangements to stay with friends or relatives who live in the suburbs who still have water and power, so that they have a plan in the "worst case" scenario if the supply to Kyiv is lost, the 51 year old said. He added that the authorities were stocking up on fuel, food and water, and residents should do the same. At least 1,000 heating shelters are being set up across the city where people will be able to get warm in an emergency. Kyiv's Director of Security, Roman Tkachuk, echoed the mayor's comments in a post on messaging app Telegram. He stressed that city officials were making plans but that "there are no reasons to talk about the evacuation at the moment". Residents in Kyiv have said that they know that power could be lost and supplies could become scarce. Dmytro, a 30-year-old father-of-two told the BBC he had already made plans to leave Kyiv in case things got worse. He has stocked up on fuel, bought generators and will move his family to his grandparents' home on the outskirts of Kyiv. He said he began making the plans after "authorities announced that they were going to open heating points" two weeks ago. "I understood from that there will eventually be no electricity," he added. Another resident, Anastasia, 36, said she would remain in the city even if power was lost. "Our defenders sleep on the ground, so we will manage to stay in our apartment even without heating," she said. Russian-installed authorities have reported power and water loss in occupied Kherson, blaming a Ukrainian strike on nearby power lines and a key dam. They urged residents to "remain calm" and said they would "quickly" resolve the situation. However, the head of the Ukrainian regional administration blamed Russia for the power outage. Some of the power outage was caused by damage to the nearby hydroelectric Kakhovka dam after it was hit by a missile, according to Russian media, However, Ukraine has not commented on the reports, which cannot be independently verified. In recent weeks Ukraine has warned that Russian forces intend to blow up the dam, causing devastating flooding for hundreds of thousands of people in the surrounding area. Kherson - which lies downriver of the dam - fell to Russia within the first days of the war but as Ukrainian forces advance they have their sights set on retaking it. Russia is suffering "heavy losses" as it carries out "fierce" attacks in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, President Zelensky has said in his nightly television address. The Insider, a Russia-focused, independent media outlet, reported that in four days, 300 members of a brigade of Russian marines were killed, wounded or missing in the Pavlivka area. Posts on pro-Russian Telegram channels have been drawing attention to the brigade's reportedly dire situation. Mr Zelensky also warned that Ukraine believes Russia is "concentrating forces and means for a possible repetition of mass attacks on our infrastructure, energy in the first instance". LINK
  6. Live Performance Title: Childish Gambino - This Is America (Official Video) Signer Name: Childish Gambino Live Performance Location: - Official YouTube Link: Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video): 9/10
  7. Music Title: Travis Scott - SICKO MODE ft. Drake Signer: Travis Scott ft. Drake Release Date: 19/10/2018 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer: - Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video): 9/10
  8. V1:0 V2:6 V3:0 V4:2 Winner IS @Edward- Congrats!
  9. • Name: @-Ace Ϟ ™ • Time & Date: 07/11/2022 - 06:03 • Screenshot: HERE
  10. Hello all members of THUNDER i want to tell you we need to reconfigure the server we need to review all admins activity and make a weekly check to make sure they are active starting from me and be serious with all the members and the staf to make the server much batter i hope u agree that suggestion. and make more prizes weekly or monthly that make it much bater and working hard to get something good.
  11. The world around us is vibrating with sounds we cannot hear. Bats chitter and babble in ultrasound; elephants rumble infrasonic secrets to each other; coral reefs are aquatic clubs, hopping with the cracks and hisses and clicks of marine life. For centuries, we didn’t even know those sounds existed. But as technology has advanced, so has our capacity to listen. Today, tools like drones, digital recorders, and artificial intelligence are helping us listen to the sounds of nature in unprecedented ways, transforming the world of scientific research and raising a tantalizing prospect: Someday soon, computers might allow us to talk to animals. In some ways, that has already begun. “Digital technologies, so often associated with our alienation from nature, are offering us an opportunity to listen to nonhumans in powerful ways, reviving our connection to the natural world,” writes Karen Bakker in her new book, The Sounds of Life: How Digital Technology Is Bringing Us Closer to the Worlds of Animals and Plants. Automated listening posts have been set up in ecosystems around the planet, from rainforests to the depths of the ocean, and miniaturization has allowed scientists to stick microphones onto animals as small as honeybees. “Combined, these digital devices function like a planetary-scale hearing aid: enabling humans to observe and study nature’s sounds beyond the limits of our sensory capabilities,” Bakker writes. All those devices create a ton of data, which would be impossible to go through manually. So researchers in the fields of bioacoustics (which studies sounds made by living organisms) and ecoacoustics (which studies the sounds made by entire ecosystems) are turning to artificial intelligence to sift through the piles of recordings, finding patterns that might help us understand what animals are saying to each other. There are now databases of whale songs and honeybee dances, among others, that Bakker writes could one day turn into “a zoological version of Google Translate.” But it’s important to remember that we aren’t necessarily discovering these sounds for the first time. As Bakker points out in her book, Indigenous communities around the world have long been aware that animals have their own forms of communication, while the Western scientific establishment has historically dismissed the idea of animal communication outright. Many of the researchers Bakker highlights in her book faced intense pushback from the scientific community when they suggested whales, elephants, turtles, bats, and even plants made sounds and even might have languages of their own. They spent nearly as much time pushing back against the pushback as they did conducting research. While that seems to be changing with our increased understanding of animals, Bakker cautions that the ability to communicate with animals stands to be either a blessing or a curse, and we must think carefully about how we will use our technological advancements to interact with the natural world. We can use our understanding of our world’s sonic richness to gain a sense of kinship with nature and even potentially heal some of the damage we have wrought, but we also run the risk of using our newfound powers to assert our domination over animals and plants. We are on the edge of a revolution in how we interact with the world around us, Bakker told Recode. Now, we must decide which path we will follow in the years ahead. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Let’s start with the big idea that you lay out in your introduction: We’re using technologies like AI to talk to animals. What does that look like? We can use artificial intelligence-enabled robots to speak animal languages and essentially breach the barrier of interspecies communication. Researchers are doing this in a very rudimentary way with honeybees and dolphins and to some extent with elephants. Now, this raises a very serious ethical question, because the ability to speak to other species sounds intriguing and fascinating, but it could be used either to create a deeper sense of kinship, or a sense of dominion and mani[CENSORED]tive ability to domesticate wild species that we’ve never as humans been able to previously control. We can use artificial intelligence-enabled robots to speak animal languages How would that work? I’ll give you one example. A research team in Germany encoded honeybee signals into a robot that they sent into a hive. That robot is able to use the honeybees’ waggle dance communication to tell the honeybees to stop moving, and it’s able to tell those honeybees where to fly to for a specific nectar source. The next stage in this research is to implant these robots into honeybee hives so the hives accept these robots as members of their community from birth. And then we would have an unprecedented degree of control over the hive; we’ll have essentially domesticated that hive in a way we’ve never done so before. This creates the possibility of exploitive use of animals. And there’s a long history of the military use of animals, so that’s one path that I think raises a lot of alarm bells. So these are the sorts of ethical questions that researchers are now starting to engage in. But the hope is that with these ethics in place, in the future, we — you and I, ordinary people — will have a lot more ability to tune into the sounds of nature, and to understand what we’re hearing. And I think what that does is create a real sense of awe and wonder and also a feeling of profound kinship. That’s where I hoped we would take these technologies. How did we first realize that animals and even the Earth were making all of these sounds outside of our hearing range? It’s funny, humans as a species tend to believe that what we cannot observe does not exist. So a lot of these sounds were literally right in front of our ears. But because of a tendency, especially in Western science, to privilege sight over sound, we simply hadn’t listened for them. The game changer, and the reason I wrote this book, is that digital technology now enables us to listen very easily and very cheaply to species all over the planet. And what we’re discovering is that a huge range of species that we never even suspected could make sound or respond to sound are indeed sort of participating in nature’s symphony. And that’s a discovery that is as significant as the microscope was a few hundred years ago: It opens up an entirely new sonic world, and is now ushering in many discoveries about complex communication in animals, language, and behavior that are really overturning many of our assumptions about animals and even plants. LINK
  12. Today, Sunday, the Iraqi parliament decided to postpone the first reading of the draft law on military service (compulsory military service) to the next session. And the science service stopped working in Iraq about 20 years ago. It is not clear whether the bill will win the support of a majority of MPs. In an interview with the Iraqi News Agency, Representative Sakfan Sindi, a member of the Parliamentary Defense Committee, said that "legislation of the (compulsory service) law is necessary because there are risks related to terrorism in the country." The law, if passed, obliges every young Iraqi between the ages of 18 and 35 to enlist for a maximum period of 18 months, and a minimum of 3 months, according to the person's educational attainment. The Security and Defense Committee explained that the implementation of the draft law on military service will take place after its legislation and two years after its publication in the Iraqi Gazette, which means that there is plenty of time to prepare all its financial requirements and set up the camps. She added that those joining the service receive a monthly salary ranging between 600,000 and 700,000 dinars (about $480). On the other hand, some people are exempted from it according to certain conditions, especially the only son or breadwinner of the family. Soon, the science service bill was criticized even by lawmakers. In an interview with AFP, Yazidi MP Saeb Khadr considered that "the militarization of society will not create love for the homeland." In a country where 4 youth out of 10 suffer from unemployment, former Minister of Electricity Louay al-Khatib saw in a tweet that it would be more useful, instead of approving the compulsory service law, “to provide vocational training centers (for youth) and make them obligatory so that they acquire skills that will help them develop their competencies and involve them in reconstruction projects. Iraq". On the other hand, Fahd Mishaan Turki, a deputy from the Sunni Advance Alliance, believes that "serving the flag will enable us to eliminate unemployment and will make the young man feel loyal to the homeland." a national necessity While some considered it a national necessity to prepare a young generation capable of deflecting any security risk from Iraq, others saw it as a new door to corruption and would cost the state huge sums of money amid widespread rejection of what they described as "the militarization of society." The hashtag #compulsory_recruitment and #no_for_compulsory_recruitment are issued on social media platforms in Iraq. LINK
  13. West London boroughs are a destination for super-rich tenants, with business centers, foreign embassies and the royal family's palace, while these upscale neighborhoods testify to the forgotten life of Mary Davis, the future of the land she was dowry to, and the cause of her death alone in a mental institution. Miracle-making dowry The Great Plague of London wiped out a quarter of the British capital's po[CENSORED]tion in 1665, so architects are considering expanding the capital to ensure social distancing and prevent future epidemics. The borders of the new capital extended westward into the countryside, so rents for agricultural land increased, and a rich class appeared among the rural people. Mary Davis' rural family seized the opportunity, seeking to associate her modest name with the lucky aristocracy, and began to broker the marriage of the child, Mary, when she was eight years old. The family agreed with a wealthy man to marry off her daughter to his son after she had reached the legal marriage age (12 years old at the time). The rich paid £ 5,000 as a first dowry, so Mary's family spent the amount on building a palace, then asked the man for a plot of land to prove his seriousness, so he gave the bride's family 300 acres of swamps, but the engagement failed because he was unable to provide more land. Mary's parents also failed to return the dowry, and they waited until Sir Thomas Grosvenor proposed to Mary, who generously paid her father and the former groom's father, to dissolve the unsuccessful betrothal, but he not only got a nice girl, but also won the 300 acres of swamp that became his property after marriage. The two married in 1677, had five children, and Grosvenor turned the swamps into farms and orchards and doubled the family fortune until he died in 1700 at the age of 45. Then Mary died alone and poor in a mental institution after a court order, and after her husband's heirs brought a suit of merit against her, and her name is immortalized today only in one of the least luxurious streets in London. marriage blogs Bloomberg Index estimated the property of the Mary Davis family at about 11 billion pounds (networking sites) golden swamps In the 19th century, the American writer Edgar Allan Poe described the swamps of the Grosvenor family as "wet, barren, and fetid waste", a pejorative term that the family is proud of today on its official group website, referring to the great effort made by its members and turning "stinking waste" into the most expensive lands in Britain. The Grosvenor family tells its success story as one of the first real estate companies in the world; As London continued to expand in the 19th century, the family reclaimed their farmlands and built real estate on them, becoming one of the most sought-after residential areas in London, a preferred location for many embassies and a center of political activity, close to the Houses of Parliament and the Royal Palace. The family was not satisfied with its real estate career, but its interests were intertwined with the cultural milieu. She competed with the inventor of the telephone, Graham Bell, and 5 generations of the family took over the editor-in-chief and management of the "National Geographic" magazine, and contributed to the development of the magazine's editorial line and building a complex in Washington. The Grosvenor family also had good relations with the British royal family; Queen Victoria granted the Duchy of Westminster to Hugh Grosvenor in 1874, although he was not a royal, and then five generations inherited the Duchy of Grosvenor from Grosvenor. Prince William, the eldest son of King Charles III, has also chosen the current Grosvenor heir to be the godfather to his son, Prince George, who was born in 2013. Male monopoly on wealth In December 2021, the Bloomberg Billionaires Index ranked the Grosvenor family's wealth as the largest among Britain's aristocratic families. The index estimated the family's holdings of about £11 billion between fertile rural land and residential properties in 60 countries and much of Silicon Valley, other than the paintings the family has amassed over centuries for which there is no official estimate. Only the males of the family owned the wealth for four decades thanks to the Grosvenor Estate Act of Parliament in 1933, which granted males the sole right to inherit and administer the property. After 345 years, Grosvenor Group has had to change its bias in order to improve the company's position on occupational gender gap reporting in the coming years. In early August, Bloomberg published a statement about the improvement in the position of women in the Grosvenor Group, and the appointment of half of the family's 13 women to senior leadership positions in the group at the end of last year. However, sisters still earned an average of 38% less than their brothers for their work in the same positions. LINK
  14. Italian authorities on Sunday allowed minors and people in need of urgent medical care to leave the ship, a non-governmental organization operating a German-flagged ship in the Sicilian port of Catania said. Four ships carrying nearly 1,000 migrants have been waiting at sea off the coast of Italy for more than a week for permission to dock from the country's right-wing government that took power last month. Rome is under increasing pressure to allow humanitarian ships to dock; Germany sent a diplomatic note to Italy on Thursday asking its government to provide assistance urgently. Italian Interior Minister Matteo Bentidosi said that the ship (Humanity 1), flying the German flag with 179 people on board, will allow minors and those with health problems to go ashore, adding that the ship and the rest of those on board will then be removed from the territorial waters. The German NGO Humanity said the order to leave would be a violation of international law, and it was unclear whether the ship would be forced to leave. "An order to leave the port of Catania while the rescued people remain on board would constitute a legal setback," the organization added. She added that after inspecting the ship, the authorities allowed 144 migrants, most of them minors, to leave it, while about 35 adults they considered in good health were forced to stay on board. The Italian Ministry of the Interior refused to comment on Sunday, and the media official of the Gio Barents ship said that another charity ship had asked Rome to provide a safe port for the disembarkation of 572 migrants, which the Italian authorities had also ordered to go to Catania. Italy's new hard-right government, which took office last month, has vowed to crack down on migrant boats sailing from North Africa towards Europe. LINK
  15. Live Performance Title: Flenn - Méme Ana Signer Name: Flenn Live Performance Location: - Official YouTube Link: Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video): 10/10
  16. Music Title: Electro house 2016 bounce party mix(part 2 ) shiffle dance(musica video) Signer: i bounce Release Date: 23/09/2017 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer: - Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video): 10/10
  17. Nick : The*Devils*Kings Grade : Semi-Elder Reason : Accepted Reporet Request Days : Forever Date : 02/11/2022 10:39
  18. Nick : The*Kings*Devils Grade : Semi-Elder Reason : Accepted Report Request Warning: Last Warning
  19. • Name: @-Ace Ϟ ™ • Time & Date: 06/11/2022 - 04:13 • Screenshot: HERE
  20. congrats !! ❤️ 

    1. M A N I A C

      M A N I A C

      @Amaterasu congratulations from me too man!

       

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