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Nick Movie: Dated & Related | Official Teaser | Netflix Time: 2d ago Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: - Trailer:
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Nick Movie: Love in the Villa | Official Trailer | Netflix Time: Aug 4, 2022 Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: - Trailer:
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Nick Movie: House of Ho Season 2 | Official Trailer | HBO Max Time: Aug 3, 2022 Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: HBO Duration of the movie: - Trailer:
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Nick Movie: The Brave Ones Official Teaser | Netflix Time: Aug 2, 2022 Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: - Trailer:
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Happy birthday 🎉🥳
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Nick Movie: I Came By | Official Trailer | Netflix Time: 18h ago Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: - Trailer:
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Musician Name: Ls paul Birthday / Location: June 9, 1915 Main instrument: harmonica Musician Picture: Musician Awards & Nominations: Best Performance: Les Paul and Chet Atkins - Stompin at the Savoy. ... Les Paul and Mary Ford - Alabamy Bound/Darktown Strutters Ball. ... Les Paul - Sleepwalk. ... Les Paul and Mary Ford - The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise. ... Les Paul - Dark Eyes and more. ... Les Paul - Somewhere Over the Rainbow. ... Les Paul and Steve Vai - Summertime Other Information: no
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The US has killed the leader of al-Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, in a drone strike in Afghanistan, President Joe Biden has confirmed. He was killed in a counter-terrorism operation carried out by the CIA in the Afghan capital of Kabul on Sunday. He and Osama Bin Laden plotted the 9/11 attacks together, and he was one of America's "most wanted terrorists". Mr Biden said Zawahiri had "carved a trail of murder and violence against American citizens". "Since the United States delivered justice to bin Laden 11 years ago, Zawahiri has been a leader of al-Qaeda," Mr Biden said. "From hiding, he co-ordinated al-Qaeda's branches and all around the world, including setting priorities for providing operational guidance and calling for and inspired attacks against US targets." "Now justice has been delivered and this terrorist leader is no more," he added. Zawahiri took over al-Qaeda after the death of Bin Laden in 2011. Officials said Zawahiri was on the balcony of a safe house when the drone fired two missiles at him. Other family members were present, but they were unharmed and only Zawahiri was killed in the attack, they added. Who was Ayman al-Zawahiri? What happened on 9/11? Mr Biden said he had given the final approval for the "precision strike" on the 71-year-old Egyptian after months of planning. His killing will bring closure to families of the nearly 3,000 victims of the 2001 attacks, Mr Biden added. "No matter how long it takes, no matter where you hide, if you are a threat to our people, the United States will find you and take you out," said Mr Biden, adding that "we shall never waver from defending our nation and its people". Mr Biden said Zawahiri had also masterminded other acts of violence, including the suicide bombing of the USS Cole naval destroyer in Aden in October 2000 which killed 17 US sailors, and the 1998 attacks on the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, in which 223 people died. He insisted that Afghanistan would never again become a safe haven for terrorists. A Taliban spokesman described the US operation as a clear violation of international principles - but did not mention Zawahiri. "Such actions are a repetition of the failed experiences of the past 20 years and are against the interests of the United States of America, Afghanistan and the region," the spokesman added. However, US officials maintained that the operation had had a legal basis. The killing of Zawahiri comes nearly a year after US troops completed their withdrawal from Afghanistan on the orders of Mr Biden, bringing an end to a 20-year military presence there.Under a 2020 peace deal with the US, the Taliban agreed not to allow al-Qaeda or any other extremist group to operate in areas under their control. However, the Taliban and al-Qaeda are long-time allies and US officials said the Taliban were aware of Zawahiri's presence in Kabul. In background briefings, US intelligence officers said Taliban affiliates had visited the safe house after the strike in an attempt to cover up evidence of his presence there. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that by hosting and sheltering Zawahiri in Kabul, the Taliban had "grossly violated" the peace agreement.Ayman al-Zawahiri was the ideological brains behind al-Qaeda. An Egyptian doctor who was imprisoned in the 1980s for involvement in militant Islam, he left the country after his release and became involved in violent international jihadist movements. Eventually he settled in Afghanistan and joined forces with a rich Saudi, Osama Bin Laden. Together they declared war on the US and organised the 11 September 2001 attacks. It took a decade for Bin Laden to be tracked down and killed by the US. After that, Zawahiri assumed leadership of al-Qaeda, but he became a remote and marginal figure, only occasionally issuing messages. The US will herald his death as a victory, particularly after the chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan last year, but Zawahiri held relatively little sway as new groups and movements such as Islamic State have become increasingly influential. A new al-Qaeda leader will no doubt emerge, but he will likely have even less influence than his predecessor. 2px presentational grey line The drone strike is the first known US intervention inside Afghanistan since the military pullout last August and, despite the withdrawal, the decades-old "war on terror" grinds on, the BBC's North America Correspondent John Sudworth observes. Days before the withdrawal, a miscalculated US drone strike killed 10 innocent people in Kabul, including an aid worker and seven children. The US said it had been a "tragic mistake" and had been aiming to target a local branch of the Islamic State group. Link:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-62387167
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Contra
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When the Taliban took control of Afghanistan last August, life for many women in the country changed overnight. For one TV presenter, it meant the end of her career, along with her hopes and dreams. Now, almost a year on, she is trying to a build a new life as a refugee in the UK. On 14 August 2021, the night before the Taliban took control of Kabul, Shabhnam Dawran was preparing to present the prime time news show on Tolo News and Radio Television Afghanistan. In recent days, the Taliban had swept across Afghanistan and had now reached the outskirts of the capital. The 24-year-old Shabhnam was a rising star. She went on air to break the news to viewers who were glued to their TV screens following every development of the story. "I was so emotional that I couldn't even read the lead story. People watching me at home could tell what I was going through," she says. When she woke the next morning, Kabul had fallen to the militant group. A Taliban member, with the group's black and white flag behind him, was now sitting in the same seat in the studio where Shabhnam had sat the night before. At their first official news conference, a Taliban spokesman told a room filled with journalists that women could work "shoulder to shoulder with men". The next day, a nervous but excited Shabhnam put on her work clothes and made her way to the office. But as soon as she arrived, she was confronted by Taliban soldiers, who she says were guarding the building and only allowing male workers to enter. Shabhnam says a soldier told her that "in the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, we haven't decided about women yet". Another soldier, she says, told her: "You've worked enough, now it's our time." When she told them she had every right to work, Shabhnam says one of the soldiers pointed his rifle at her, placed his finger on the trigger and said: "One bullet will be enough for you - will you leave or should I shoot you here?" She then left, but posted a video describing the encounter on social media. It went viral, putting her and her family's life in danger. She packed a small bag and fled the country a few days later, taking her two younger siblings - Meena and Hemat - with her. Shabhnam and her siblings later arrived in the UK, along with thousands of other Afghan refugees. They faced a long wait to be settled. As a refugee with no English and limited job prospects, Shabhnam had a hard time adjusting to her new surroundings. "I feel like I lost the six years I worked in Afghanistan. Now I have to learn English and go to university. On the first days we couldn't even go shopping. If we needed some essentials, we couldn't express what we wanted. It was extremely difficult and painful." Almost a year on, the majority of recent Afghan refugees in the UK remain in hotels across the country. Shabhnam and her siblings, however, have been lucky - they were provided with a council house earlier this year. "Our life starts now. We're like a new baby that has to start from the very beginning," she says with a smile as she instructs her sister Meena to put the kettle on to make "chai sabz", the traditional Afghan green tea that contains cardamom. They are slowly getting used to life in London and have been enjoying their first English summer, though they still miss home. "I'm a local now," Shabhnam says, giggling. She knows where to find the bakery with the warm bread that looks and smells like the ones they had back home, and where to get the best dried fruit and green tea. She and her sister are now studying English at a college and her brother attends secondary school. Shabhnam believes her family has been well supported by the UK government, but worries about other Afghan refugees, some of whom are her friends. She says their plight has been overshadowed by the war in Ukraine. "Processing the cases of Afghans, and especially those stuck in hotels, has been massively delayed because of Ukrainian refugees. They [the British government] have put a limit on Afghans coming to the UK but not on Ukrainians. They shouldn't have behaved like that with Afghans." The BBC put her concerns to the UK Home Office. It said: "It is wrong to set these two vulnerable groups against each other. Our Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme will provide up to 20,000 women, children and other at risk groups with a safe and legal route to resettle in the UK. "The housing of Afghan individuals and families can be a complex process. We are working with over 300 local authorities across the UK to meet the demand and have moved - or are in the process of moving - over 6,000 people into homes since June 2021." A lot has changed in Afghanistan since Shabhnam left home. Girls have been banned from going to secondary school in most parts of the country, parks have been segregated and women have been ordered to cover their faces. This rule has particularly affected female TV presenters who have been forced to wear face coverings on air. Shabhnam sympathises with her colleagues who have no choice but to accept the harsh edicts if they wish to continue working. "[The Taliban] want to force women to say 'we give up, we don't want to come to work anymore and we submit to staying at home'," she says. "Until they change their way of thinking, they'll not bring a positive change in society." But she has not given up hope of one day returning to Afghanistan. "Like a glass that falls on the floor and breaks into pieces, my hopes, plans and dreams were shattered," she says. "I hope for a day when Afghanistan is a place where people are not just surviving - but thriving. I will not be in doubt of returning then." link:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-62124485
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Russian energy giant Gazprom says it has suspended gas supplies to Latvia - the latest EU country to experience such action amid tensions over Ukraine. Gazprom accused Latvia of violating conditions of purchase, but gave no details of that alleged violation. Latvia relies on neighbouring Russia for natural gas imports, but its government says it does not expect Gazprom's move to have a major impact. Meanwhile, Ukraine says it killed 170 Russian troops in the past 24 hours. Ukraine's military also said its forces had destroyed two Russian arms dumps in the Kherson area. Ukraine has stepped up efforts to push the Russians out of Kherson, a major strategic city in the south. The BBC was unable to verify the latest Ukrainian claims. The UK Ministry of Defence says Russian forces have probably established two pontoon bridges and a ferry system to enable them to resupply Kherson, after Ukrainian rockets damaged key bridges in recent days. EU states accuse Russia of weaponising gas exports in retaliation for far-reaching Western sanctions imposed over its invasion of Ukraine. In Latvia, gas forms only 27% of energy consumption. Edijs Saicans, a senior Latvian economics ministry official quoted by Reuters news agency, said Gazprom's move on Saturday was not expected to have a major impact. Can the world cope without Russian oil and gas? Nato has bolstered forces in Latvia and its Baltic neighbours Estonia and Lithuania, as the region has long been seen as a potential flashpoint with Russia. Ethnic Russians form large minorities in the Baltic states. Those states - formerly part of the Soviet Union - plan to stop importing Russian gas next year. Gazprom sharply cut gas deliveries to Europe via the Nord Stream pipeline on Wednesday to about 20% of its capacity. The EU rejects Russia's demand that member states pay for Gazprom gas in roubles, not euros. The EU says there is no contractual condition for rouble payments. On Thursday the Latvian gas utility Latvijas Gaze said it was buying Russian gas but paying in euros. Since Russia's February invasion of Ukraine and the tightening of Western sanctions, Gazprom has suspended gas deliveries to Bulgaria, Finland, Poland, Denmark and the Netherlands over non-payment in roubles. Russia has also halted gas sales to Shell Energy Europe in Germany. The EU is now striving to boost gas imports from elsewhere, including liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Norway, Qatar and the US. Link:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-62359890
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Hay bales in flames, manure dumped on highways, blockades at supermarket distribution centres and demonstrations on politicians' doorsteps. Dutch farmers have been generating global headlines with protests described by Prime Minister Mark Rutte as "wilfully endangering others, damaging our infrastructure and threatening people who help with the clean-up". This proud farming nation is under immense pressure to make radical changes to cut harmful emissions, and some farmers fear their livelihoods will be obliterated. "It's in our blood, I want to do this, and if we have to adapt to new situations, I want to, but we have to be fair, it takes time - give me a chance," says Geertjan Kloosterboer, a third-generation dairy farmer. We are standing in his recently built barn, surrounded by red and white cows, as his eldest son sweeps past us on a small digger. I ask if Geertjan sees a future for his children in farming. "I don't know if that's what they want. When we talk about farming it's just stress. But I want them to have a choice, not for the government to make that choice for them." Dutch government proposals for tackling nitrogen emissions indicate a radical cut in livestock - they estimate 11,200 farms will have to close and another 17,600 farmers will have to significantly reduce their livestock. Other proposals include a reduction in intensive farming and the conversion to sustainable "green farms". As such, the relocation or buyout of farmers is almost inevitable, but forced buyouts are a scenario many hope to avoid. The cabinet has allocated €25bn (£20bn) to slicing nitrogen emissions within the farming industry by 2030, and the targets for specific areas and provinces have been laid out in a colour-coded map. By July 2022 the provincial governments must submit their ideas for hitting those goals - but a handful of provinces have hinted they will not play ball. 'We need insects' Biodiversity is under threat. Native species are disappearing more rapidly here than elsewhere in Europe, according to the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency. Rudi Buis, a representative from the ministry of agriculture, tells me the stakes are high: "It's necessary to improve the nature, for our health, for clean air, water, soil and also for the agriculture because we need biodiversity. We need insects for our crops... if we want some economic activity in the future, we also have to improve our nature." In May 2019, the Council of State ruled the government's strategy for reducing excess nitrogen breached EU directives on preserving vulnerable habitats. The judgment meant every activity that led to nitrogen being emitted, from building new homes to farming, required a permit. Pinning hopes on technology Agriculture is accountable for nearly half of Dutch nitrogen emissions. Ammonia (nitrogen and hydrogen, or NH3) comes from manure mixed with urine, and when this washes away into ditches, rivers and the sea, it can be harmful to nature. Nitrogen oxides (nitrogen and oxygen, NOx) are mainly produced when fossil fuels are burned - traffic, aviation, shipping and industry all contribute. Plans are also afoot to reduce pollution around Amsterdam's Schiphol airport, the port of Rotterdam, on roads and in households. Meanwhile, many are pinning their hopes on technological solutions. Already, air scrubbers and excrement-sweeping robots operate in barns, while sloping floors are encouraged to reduce contact between the manure and urine - but in most cases they still meet in the cellar. Diluting manure with water or acidifying it, leaving cows out to pasture more and giving them lower protein feed can also help to reduce harmful gasses. But this new technology and these practices alone are unlikely to achieve the ambitious environmental goals. 'I'm not a fire-starter' The Farmer-Citizen Movement (BBB) is surging in the polls. On a visit to a farm near the Dutch city of Deventer, party leader Caroline van der Plas expressed concern about the increasingly toxic nature of the debate. She warned that small groups of frustrated farmers were being radicalised on social media, in Telegram groups and in chat rooms mani[CENSORED]ted by far-right politicians who saw the potential to jump on the tractor protests to plough their own agendas. "I understand their anger but I am not a fire-starter... and let's be real, the country is not exploding, it's not like there will be a civil war in the next months, but the government has to start talking to the farmers, not just talking but listening and really hearing them or things will get worse." Despite this, Ms Van der Plas says her party will not sit down with government negotiators: "We want the whole nitrogen policy and plans that are on the table right now put on hold and to look for other solutions. "I said in the [parliamentary] debates, be careful what you wish for because when the farmers are gone, they are not going to come back. If we depend on imports - you see it with gas from Russia - we have a big problem." She says while some farmers might be forced to leave the industry, others could adapt and provide different services in a changing climate. "Storing water when there's too much rain - in a densely po[CENSORED]ted country like the Netherlands, this can provide huge opportunities for farmers to gain extra income and work in the future." But, Ms Oerlemans warns, the Netherlands is facing a painful period of uncertainly and unrest, describing the agricultural system as "broken". She says for years the government has failed to act on scientific data, meaning drastic measures are now needed to tackle the issue. The farming industry's focus on increasing livestock productivity, she adds, has had a detrimental impact on the ecosystem. "My lesson would be don't follow the pathway that the Dutch agricultural system has followed over the past decades, because that's a dead end." link:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-62335287