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RM 192472902
Issuing Russian passports in Lugansk People's Republic
LUGANSK, LUGANSK PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC - JULY 1, 2022: The first centre issuing Russian passports in the Lugansk People's Republic. The republic's citizens were able to receive Russian passports earlier, but for this they had to travel to Russia. According to Lugansk People's Republic Head Leonid Pasechnik, over 284 thousand citizens have already been given Russian citizenship. On 24 April 2019, Russia's President Vladimir Putin signed a decree to simplify the procedure for obtaining Russian passports for residents of the Donetsk People's Republic and Lugansk People's Republic. Alexander Reka/TASS ( Original Title: Issuing Russian passports in Lugansk People's Republic )
日付:2022年7月1日
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RM 192470104
Musician programmes robot to perform three-minute duet
This young man built and programmed a robot arm from scratch that performed a three-minute duet with him. William Sun Petrus, 24, was inspired to create the robot arm when he came across a broken record player and decided it needed a new lease of life. The full-time software developer and musician was influenced by experimental performance artists such as Shawn Wasabi, Jack Conte and SoNevable. William is seen taking apart the old record player where he plans and installs the motors with a microcomputer and other electronic parts. He then programs the robot arm to move in response to his own movements. The footage ends with a shortened version of the original, three-minute song that William - and the robot - performed together. William, from Scotland, said the items for the project cost around £160 - but he destroyed about £200 worth of materials whilst trying to make his plan come to life. The clips were taken over the course of a year - the actual building took 8 months and he spent an hour every day for four months practicing his performance. William makes similar creative projects in his spare time and shares them on his YouTube channel. He said: "I was inspired by performance artists like Shawn and Jack about 10 years ago, but I wasn't very talented at making music or performing back then. "I've grown up now and learned a lot about creating and performing, "Now I'm able to make my own projects like the artists I looked up to. "I hope that my work will inspire the next generation of artists!" ( Original Title: Musician programmes robot to perform three-minute duet )
日付:2022年7月1日
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RM 192455586
習主席が香港訪問、香港サイエンスパークを視察
Under the support of the central government, Hong Kong has leveraged its own advantages to make remarkable achievements in basic research, talent cultivation, and development in the innovation and technology sector in recent years, President Xi Jinping said Thursday. Xi made the remarks during an inspection tour of the Hong Kong Science Park, accompanied by Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) Carrie Lam. He had warm exchanges with Hong Kong-based academicians from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the Chinese Academy of Engineering, researchers, and young entrepreneurs. The president arrived in Hong Kong Thursday afternoon to attend a meeting celebrating the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland and the inaugural ceremony of the sixth-term government of the HKSAR on July 1. The science park, the largest research and development and business incubation base in Hong Kong, is currently home to more than 1,100 enterprises and 17,000 innovators. The HKSAR government should give full play to the role of technological innovation in supporting and leading economic development, Xi said. In a visit to the Hong Kong Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases within the park, Xi learned about the progress in the diagnosis and treatment of Alzheimer's disease and encouraged researchers to make more world-leading achievements. When talking with academicians, researchers, and youth representatives of innovation enterprises, Xi called on Hong Kong to better cooperate with mainland cities in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, strengthen the collaborative development of enterprises, universities and research institutions, and strive to build the bay area into a global highland for scientific and technological innovation. Xi expressed the hope that the tradition of loving the motherland and Hong Kong will be carried forward and more contribution will be made to build China into a global leader in science and technology. Efforts should also be made to pave way for the youths, providing them with more growth space, Xi said. On Thursday afternoon, Xi's wife Peng Liyuan visited the Xiqu Center in the West Kowloon Cultural District, which is a venue for the art of Chinese traditional theater. She watched rehearsals and spoke highly of the performances, calling the show a display of the charm of Chinese culture. Peng also encouraged Hong Kong's younger generation to have an in-depth understanding of fine traditional Chinese culture and inherit and promote the culture. ( Original Title: President Xi hails Hong Kong's innovation, technology development )
日付:2022年6月30日
人物:習 近平, 彭 麗媛
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RM 192455584
返還25周年記念式典出席のため高速鉄道で香港入り、西九龍駅での歓迎式で演説する習主席
Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) on Thursday for a gathering celebrating the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland, the inauguration of the sixth-term HKSAR government and an inspection to the region. At around 15:10, a high-speed train carrying Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, slowly pulled into the West Kowloon railway station. After stepping off the train, President Xi and his wife Peng Liyuan were greeted by HKSAR Chief Executive Carrie Lam and her spouse Lam Siu-por. A welcome ceremony was held at the station where a lively lion dance performance was followed by an enthusiastic tune played by the band of the Hong Kong Police Force. Amid the music, Xi walked and waved to the crowd consisting of hundreds of children and representatives from all walks of life in Hong Kong, who waved the Chinese national flag, the HKSAR flag and flowers. Xi then addressed the media who had gathered at the station. "I am very happy to come to Hong Kong again on the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland. Tomorrow marks the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland. People of all ethnic groups across the country will join Hong Kong compatriots in celebrating this joyous event. Here, I would like to extend my warm congratulations and best wishes to the compatriots of Hong Kong," said the president. Xi said it has been five years since his last visit to Hong Kong, and over the past five years, he has been all along concerned about and caring for Hong Kong, adding that his heart as well as the heart of the central government are always with the Hong Kong compatriots. "For a period of time, Hong Kong has withstood severe tests again and again, overcoming challenges one by one. After wind and rain, Hong Kong has risen from the ashes and shown great vigor. Facts have proven that the great strength of 'one country, two systems' can guarantee Hong Kong's long-term prosperity and stability and ensure the well-being of the Hong Kong compatriots. The 'one country, two systems' is a good principle," Xi said. "A brighter future will beckon, if we forge ahead with perseverance. As long as 'one country, two systems' is upheld unswervingly, Hong Kong will surely have an even brighter future and make new, greater contributions to the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation," he said. Xi was also greeted by former HKSAR Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying, incoming sixth-term chief executive of the HKSAR John Lee, as well as other senior Hong Kong officials and the heads of central government agencies in Hong Kong at the station. ( Original Title: Xi arrives in Hong Kong for 25th return ceremony, inauguration of 6th-term HKSAR government )
日付:2022年6月30日
人物:習 近平, 林鄭 月娥, 彭 麗媛
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RM 192420749
Summer night economy regains vitality in east China city
STANDUP (English): HE XIYUE, Xinhua correspondent "We're now in east China's Wuhu city, Anhui Province. This is not only an important transport and trade hub in east China's Yangtze River Delta, but also a hot spot for tourism. And right now we're at the Huajie, which can be translated into 'flower street.' Its name is not derived from flowers, but from these beautiful lanterns we can see right now." With summer coming, this ancient street in east China has become a popular choice for residents to enjoy their nighttime. On this street, you can taste well-known traditional delicacies in regions south of the Yangtze River, such as Xiaolongbao (steamed buns) and shrimp roe noodles, and learn about traditional Chinese intangible cultural heritage techniques, such as iron painting and sugar painting, or just read a book quietly in a bookstore here. With the effective control of COVID-19, tourism has begun to flourish again, and the flow of people in Huajie has gradually recovered to its peak. SOUNDBITE 1 (Chinese): WU YUBIN, Staff member of the operating company of Wuhu Huajie "The government has been very helpful in restoring the night economy. For us cultural-tourism industry, the local government has issued two rounds of consumption coupons to boost consumption. We can also feel that our businesses are gaining vitality again. The flow of customers has also increased." SOUNDBITE 2 (Chinese): HUANG LAN, Store manager "We see an increasing customer flow here. Our business is picking up significantly." According to the latest data released by local authorities, since the beginning of this year, about 45 million U.S. dollars of (consumption) coupons have been issued in various parts of Anhui Province to promote consumption and benefit people's livelihood. An additional 24 million U.S. dollars of coupons will be issued here shortly as well. Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Wuhu, China. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Summer night economy regains vitality in east China city )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192414548
Digital technology revitalizes Beijing Central Axis
The Beijing Central Axis, stretching 7.8 km from the Yongding Gate in the south to the Drum Tower and Bell Tower in the north, is the core area of the old city of Beijing. Most of the significant old-city buildings of Beijing are along the Central Axis, including the Zhengyang Gate, the Forbidden City and Jingshan Park. The "digital central axis," based on 3D technology, virtually reproduces the changes and evolution of the Central Axis. SOUNDBITE 1 (Chinese): NIU RUI, Head, Beijing Institute of Surveying and Mapping "By using the latest surveying and mapping technology, we've conducted 3D laser scanning of buildings, traffic and public spaces within the core area of the Central Axis, and therefore built a real 3D Central Axis." The capital city has been making continuous efforts in getting its iconic Central Axis into UNESCO's world cultural heritage list. According to Beijing's cultural heritage bureau, progress has been made in the application process. SOUNDBITE 2 (Chinese): CHEN MINGJIE, Head, Beijing Municipal Cultural Heritage Bureau "We've attached great importance to the digital technologies in the application for the Central Axis to be included in the list of world cultural heritage sites. The digital map lays a solid foundation for the development of our monitoring system, exhibition system, and the R&D of digital products." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Beijing. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Digital technology revitalizes Beijing Central Axis )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192411171
Ukraine, Russia carry out largest prisoner exchange since conflict starts
Ukraine and Russia carried out their largest prisoner exchange since the start of the conflict on Feb. 24. This is according to the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine's Defense Ministry on Wednesday in a statement on Telegram. The agency said 144 Ukrainians aged between 19 and 65 returned home as a result of the exchange. Most of the released Ukrainians have severe injuries. Ukraine and Russia conducted their first prisoner exchange on March 24. Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Kiev. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Ukraine, Russia carry out largest prisoner exchange since conflict starts )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192400651
Turkey seeks to mend ties with regional heavyweights amid economic woes
Liquidity challenges and "worst economic woes in two decades" have prompted Turkey to mend ties with regional heavyweights such as Saudi Arabia and Israel to attract their investments to help the country through its crisis, experts say. During a rare visit to Turkey by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud last week, the two countries declared their determination to start "a new era of cooperation," setting aside years of acrimony following the 2018 murder of the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. Similar steps have also been taken by the Turkish government under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to improve its relations with the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Egypt and Israel, as Ankara is struggling with a weak currency and 24-year high inflation of 73.5 percent. SOUNDBITE 1 (Turkish): SERKAN DEMIRTAS, Foreign policy analyst, Ankara bureau chief of Hurriyet Daily News "There's evidently an economic dimension besides the political focus of the normalization drive launched by Turkey at the beginning of 2021. The comprehensive and swift normalization process with both Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates point to this economic dimension. The normalization is to be followed by concrete economic steps. For Turkey, this signifies contributions from these countries to Turkey while it is witnessing economic difficulties such as direct foreign investments and swap agreements to reinforce low currency reserves (of the Turkish central bank)." After a decade of animosity over Israel's deadly assault on a Turkish-led flotilla to the besieged Gaza Strip in 2010, Turkish and Israeli senior officials have paid mutual visits in the last couple of months to open what Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid hails "a new chapter" in bilateral relations, especially their cooperation in exporting Israeli natural gas to Europe via Turkey. SOUNDBITE 2 (Turkish): SERKAN DEMIRTAS, Foreign policy analyst, Ankara bureau chief of Hurriyet Daily News "In the past decade, Turkey was sidelined of this project because of its acrimonious ties with Greece and Egypt. It was left outside of the Eastern Mediterranean gas Forum. This has very unfavourable effects on its national interests. The rapprochement with Israel could end Turkey's exclusion from this international organization." Tulin Daloglu, a Middle Eastern foreign policy analyst based in Turkey's capital Ankara, reacted with caution to Turkey's reconciliation with Saudi Arabia and Israel, noting it will take time for them to fully restore mutual confidence. SOUNDBITE 3 (Turkish) : TULIN DALOGLU, Ankara-based Middle Eastern foreign policy analyst "While Ankara is stepping up efforts to mend ties with these countries, they may not be willing to do so at the same speed and convey this message to the Turkish government, in order to prevent a new and bigger crisis in the future." "We don't know yet how this normalization process will evolve. We have to wait and see, but it may not be finalized at the speed expected by Turkey," she concluded, highlighting Turkey's looming risks over its balance of payments. SOUNDBITE 4 (Turkish) : TULIN DALOGLU, Ankara-based Middle Eastern foreign policy analyst "There's undoubtedly the economic dimension of this drive. The economy is not doing good at all in Turkey, and risks are looming over its balance of payments. Turkey wants this normalisation, as it is at an impasse because of its economy." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Ankara. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Turkey seeks to mend ties with regional heavyweights amid economic woes )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192544143
Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says
Sweden and Finland will sign on Tuesday (July 5) the NATO accession protocol to formally join the alliance, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said. "The most important thing for us is that Finland, Sweden will become members of the alliance. We are there to protect all allies, and of course also Finland and Sweden and we are prepared for all eventualities," Stoltenberg told reporters at the end of a NATO leaders' meeting in the Spanish capital Madrid. The comment came two days after NATO member Turkey lifted its veto over the bid by Finland and Sweden to join the alliance after the three nations agreed to protect each other's security. The move means Helsinki and Stockholm can proceed with their application to join NATO, marking the biggest shift in European security in decades. The accession protocol must however be ratified by all 30 allied parliaments to allow both countries to become part of NATO and benefit from the alliance's collective defence clause. Stoltenberg also said Greece was willing to provide ships to help export grain from Ukraine's Black Sea ports that have been blocked by Russia. Russia has seized large parts of Ukraine's coast and its warships control the Black and Azov Seas, blocking Ukraine's farm exports and driving up the cost of grain. Ukraine and the West accuse Moscow of weaponising food supplies. Russia says Ukrainian mines laid at sea and international sanctions on Moscow are to blame. Ukraine exported up to 6 million tonnes of grain a month before Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24. Moscow calls its action a special military operation. Volumes have since fallen to about 1 million tonnes as Ukraine, which used to export most of its goods through seaports, has been forced to transport grain by train via its western border or via its small Danube river ports. (Production: Marco Trujillo, Michael Gore, Clement Rossignol) ( Original Title: Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says ) ( Caption: 8630WD-NATO-SUMMIT_STOLTENBERG_O_ )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192544142
Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says
Sweden and Finland will sign on Tuesday (July 5) the NATO accession protocol to formally join the alliance, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said. "The most important thing for us is that Finland, Sweden will become members of the alliance. We are there to protect all allies, and of course also Finland and Sweden and we are prepared for all eventualities," Stoltenberg told reporters at the end of a NATO leaders' meeting in the Spanish capital Madrid. The comment came two days after NATO member Turkey lifted its veto over the bid by Finland and Sweden to join the alliance after the three nations agreed to protect each other's security. The move means Helsinki and Stockholm can proceed with their application to join NATO, marking the biggest shift in European security in decades. The accession protocol must however be ratified by all 30 allied parliaments to allow both countries to become part of NATO and benefit from the alliance's collective defence clause. Stoltenberg also said Greece was willing to provide ships to help export grain from Ukraine's Black Sea ports that have been blocked by Russia. Russia has seized large parts of Ukraine's coast and its warships control the Black and Azov Seas, blocking Ukraine's farm exports and driving up the cost of grain. Ukraine and the West accuse Moscow of weaponising food supplies. Russia says Ukrainian mines laid at sea and international sanctions on Moscow are to blame. Ukraine exported up to 6 million tonnes of grain a month before Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24. Moscow calls its action a special military operation. Volumes have since fallen to about 1 million tonnes as Ukraine, which used to export most of its goods through seaports, has been forced to transport grain by train via its western border or via its small Danube river ports. (Production: Marco Trujillo, Michael Gore, Clement Rossignol) ( Original Title: Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says ) ( Caption: 8630WD-NATO-SUMMIT_STOLTENBERG_O_ )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192544141
Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says
Sweden and Finland will sign on Tuesday (July 5) the NATO accession protocol to formally join the alliance, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said. "The most important thing for us is that Finland, Sweden will become members of the alliance. We are there to protect all allies, and of course also Finland and Sweden and we are prepared for all eventualities," Stoltenberg told reporters at the end of a NATO leaders' meeting in the Spanish capital Madrid. The comment came two days after NATO member Turkey lifted its veto over the bid by Finland and Sweden to join the alliance after the three nations agreed to protect each other's security. The move means Helsinki and Stockholm can proceed with their application to join NATO, marking the biggest shift in European security in decades. The accession protocol must however be ratified by all 30 allied parliaments to allow both countries to become part of NATO and benefit from the alliance's collective defence clause. Stoltenberg also said Greece was willing to provide ships to help export grain from Ukraine's Black Sea ports that have been blocked by Russia. Russia has seized large parts of Ukraine's coast and its warships control the Black and Azov Seas, blocking Ukraine's farm exports and driving up the cost of grain. Ukraine and the West accuse Moscow of weaponising food supplies. Russia says Ukrainian mines laid at sea and international sanctions on Moscow are to blame. Ukraine exported up to 6 million tonnes of grain a month before Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24. Moscow calls its action a special military operation. Volumes have since fallen to about 1 million tonnes as Ukraine, which used to export most of its goods through seaports, has been forced to transport grain by train via its western border or via its small Danube river ports. (Production: Marco Trujillo, Michael Gore, Clement Rossignol) ( Original Title: Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says ) ( Caption: 8630WD-NATO-SUMMIT_STOLTENBERG_O_ )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192544131
Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says
Sweden and Finland will sign on Tuesday (July 5) the NATO accession protocol to formally join the alliance, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said. "The most important thing for us is that Finland, Sweden will become members of the alliance. We are there to protect all allies, and of course also Finland and Sweden and we are prepared for all eventualities," Stoltenberg told reporters at the end of a NATO leaders' meeting in the Spanish capital Madrid. The comment came two days after NATO member Turkey lifted its veto over the bid by Finland and Sweden to join the alliance after the three nations agreed to protect each other's security. The move means Helsinki and Stockholm can proceed with their application to join NATO, marking the biggest shift in European security in decades. The accession protocol must however be ratified by all 30 allied parliaments to allow both countries to become part of NATO and benefit from the alliance's collective defence clause. Stoltenberg also said Greece was willing to provide ships to help export grain from Ukraine's Black Sea ports that have been blocked by Russia. Russia has seized large parts of Ukraine's coast and its warships control the Black and Azov Seas, blocking Ukraine's farm exports and driving up the cost of grain. Ukraine and the West accuse Moscow of weaponising food supplies. Russia says Ukrainian mines laid at sea and international sanctions on Moscow are to blame. Ukraine exported up to 6 million tonnes of grain a month before Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24. Moscow calls its action a special military operation. Volumes have since fallen to about 1 million tonnes as Ukraine, which used to export most of its goods through seaports, has been forced to transport grain by train via its western border or via its small Danube river ports. (Production: Marco Trujillo, Michael Gore, Clement Rossignol) ( Original Title: Sweden, Finland to sign NATO accession protocol on Tuesday, Stoltenberg says ) ( Caption: 8630WD-NATO-SUMMIT_STOLTENBERG_O_ )
日付:2022年6月30日
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RM 192407596
タイのホテルで観光客が転落死、6階のプールの柵の上を歩いている際に足を滑らす
An Australian tourist has been found dead after falling six floors to his death from a hotel roof on a Thai island. Joshua James Connell, 19, was seen on CCTV walking along a wall at the side of the swimming pool at the Paripas Patong Resort in Phuket on Wednesday afternoon, June 30. He threw his hands in the air and tip-toed onto a narrow white rail while balancing - appearing to try and emulate a parkour free runner. However, surveillance footage shows the young backpacker reached the end of the rail then slipped - plunging around 50ft to his death. Shocked locals heard a loud thud and found Joshua on the tin roof of a cafe below the hotel at around 5:45 pm local time. Joshua, from Canberra, was rushed to the hospital but pronounced dead shortly after due to the severe injuries suffered in the fall in the notorious Patong district of the city. Resident Ning Tanyaporn, who was preparing to open a street restaurant across the road from the fall, said: 'I had just opened my shop and I heard a loud thunder sound. I thought a car had crashed or there was an explosion in their kitchen. 'People gathered around the restaurant and saw the foreign man on the roof. He was unconscious so someone called an ambulance. Everyone was shocked that he fell down and died.' Police Lieutenant Colonel Kokiat Boonplod said officers received the emergency call about a foreign man who had fallen from a hotel. They arrived at the scene shortly after 5:50 pm local time and Joshua was taken to hospital before later being confirmed dead. Police Lieutenant Colonel Kokiat, who is leading the investigation, said: The deceased fell from the hotel adjacent to the restaurant, wearing shorts and without a shirt. 'The roof of the restaurant hut was shattered and several tiles were on the floor. The deceased's legs were twisted and he had wounds on his head.' The policeman said officers had reviewed CCTV from the hotel and do not believe anybody else was involved in the death. Officers are now interviewing hotel staff about Joshua's behaviour leading up to the incident and why he was climbing on the wall. His body is undergoing a post-mortem examination, or autopsy, at the Patong Hospital. Police have informed the Australian Embassy who are in contact with Joshua's family. Patong is the most vibrant district of Phuket and home to the province's bustling 24-hour adult nightlife. Last month on May 17, Australian Billy James Simmons, 22, fell to his death form a hotel on the same island. Officers found drugs and alcohol in his room. While on May 31, webcam model Evgenia Smirnova, 37, from Russia, 37, plunged from an eighth-floor balcony of a hotel in Phuket in the early hours of the morning. ( Original Title: Australian tourist, 19, found dead after fall from hotel on Thai island )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192348579
体重わずか16gのハリネズミの赤ちゃんを保護、カテーテルを使ってミルクを与える=イギリス
A charity have been left with no choice but to feed a tiny hoglet through a canula after he was found weighing the same as half a lightbulb with bruises and an open wound. Tiny hoglet Sherlock was brought in to Cornish hedgehog rescue sanctuary Prickles and Paws weighing just 16g - the same weight as half a lightbulb - with bruising and an open wound. With Sherlock being just 24 hours old, volunteers at Prickles and Paws believe the hoglet's nest was disturbed with his mum injuring him as she abandoned the wreckage. The disturbed nest was found in a garage where the owners discovered Sherlock, as well as one dead sibling, and rushed the tiny injured hoglet to the sanctuary. Since arriving at Prickles and Paws in Cubert, near Newquay, last Wednesday [22], Sherlock had been struggling to feed from the teats at the sanctuary due to his small size but started feeding well thanks to a donated catheter. The determined little hoglet had been showing progress and has been spending most of his time in an incubator cuddled up with fellow hedgehog residents, Pinky and Perky, but started struggling again yesterday and is now being fed via a canula.A spokesperson for Prickles and Paws said: "His wound is healing but he was struggling to feed from the teats we have as he is so tiny. Sadly, with newborns, it's not uncommon for the mums to abandon if disturbed or stressed in any way. Thanks to Penmellyn donating a catheter to try, he started feeding well and is snuggled up in an incubator with Pinky and Perky. "Sadly, yesterday afternoon, Sherlock deteriorated a little and is now not taking feeds well. We've been feeding using a canula which was working well for him as our usual hoglet teats were too small. It is going to be very touch and go for him as success rates in neonates isn't good."The chances for one so young are never good but we try. His injuries and the fact he may not have had any colostrum from mum lower his chances further. Sadly, it's not looking like his story will have a happy ending, but we will do what we can for him." ( Original Title: Baby hedgehog treated by vets after being found weighing only 16 GRAMS )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192362728
ロシア軍によるクレメンチュクへのミサイル攻撃で破壊したショッピングモール 捜索活動が続く
Drone footage shows recovery crews searching through the rubble of the damaged shopping mall in the central Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk on Wednesday, June 29. The number killed by the Russian strike had risen to at least 20 civilians, according to the latest update from the Ukrainian President's Office. Video by Sergio Olmos shows the extent of the damage with crews seen clearing rubble. In an address, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said, "we have all the evidence of what the Russian military is doing against our people." Zelensky posted CCTV footage of the missile strike alongside his address. The Ukrainian President said the missile in the footage was one of 2,811 fired at Ukraine since the start of the Russian invasion on February 24. Credit: Sergio Olmos via Storyful ( Original Title: Recovery Efforts Continue After Kremenchuk Mall Strike as Death Toll Rises )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192364332
Hong Kong's development pulling at President Xi's heartstrings
Voice of news anchor "President Xi Jinping, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, will attend a meeting celebrating the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland and also the inaugural ceremony of the sixth-term government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region." "Chinese President Xi Jinping will attend a meeting celebrating the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland and also the inaugural ceremony of the sixth-term government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region." This year marks the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland Over 25 years, Hong Kong has made significant progress in various fields Hong Kong's development pulling at President Xi's heartstrings June 29, 2017 President Xi Jinping arrived in Hong Kong Voice of Xi Jinping "I'm pleased to have set foot in Hong Kong once again after nine years. Hong Kong's development has always pulled at my heartstrings." June 29, 2017 Xi attended a signing ceremony for cooperation agreement on the development of the Hong Kong Palace Museum (HKPM) at the West Kowloon Cultural District in Hong Kong The museum will open to the public on July 2, with opening exhibitions jointly curated by the HKPM and the Palace Museum in Beijing SOUNDBITE 1 (Chinese): CARRIE LAM, Chief executive of the HKSAR "The establishment of the HKPM is intertwined with the unique advantages of Hong Kong under 'one country, two systems.'" SOUNDBITE 2 (Chinese): NG CHI-WA, Director of the Hong Kong Palace Museum "Not only over 7 million people in Hong Kong, but also the people of the mainland have high expectations (for the HKPM). It's part of the celebrations for the 25th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland." Cantonese opera, one of the major Chinese opera categories, is a traditional art form that originated in Guangdong June 29, 2017 Xi watched an episode of Cantonese opera performed by children and encouraged them to inherit the fine traditional Chinese culture SOUNDBITE 3 (Chinese): LI MAN-CHIT, Performer of Cantonese opera "Grandpa Xi encouraged us to study hard. He was very pleased to see that there are successors to the Cantonese opera in Hong Kong." Li has always kept Grandpa Xi's words in mind to inherit the fine traditional Chinese culture SOUNDBITE 4 (Chinese): LI MAN-CHIT, Performer of Cantonese opera "We have a responsibility to pass on Cantonese opera to the new generation of young people in Hong Kong, as well as young people from different places, to help them understand the local culture of Hong Kong." President Xi once said, youth gives rise to infinite hope, and young people are the creators of a bright future June 30, 2017 Xi visited the Junior Police Call (JPC) Permanent Activity Center and Integrated Youth Training Camp in Hong Kong Voice of Xi Jinping "I wish you all the best. I hope you'll study hard and make progress day by day. Wish you good health, and a bright future." Before the Spring Festival of 2018, 22 members of the JPC sent Xi a greeting card hand-made by themselves, delivering festive wishes On Feb. 14, 2018, Xi wrote a reply letter, sending his Spring Festival greetings to the youth of Hong Kong, and asking them to serve Hong Kong and the country with their actions SOUNDBITE 5 (Chinese): KWOK WANG-HEI, Member of the Junior Police Call "President Xi's words became my goal in life, which inspire me to serve the society, serve the country, and serve Hong Kong in the future." SOUNDBITE 6 (Chinese): TANG YU-HIN, Member of the Junior Police Call "I will love my country as I love my family, integrate my personal and family dreams into the dreams of the country and the nation, and contribute to the development of the society, serve the country, and serve Hong Kong." In June 2017, 24 HKSAR-based academicians wrote a letter to Xi, expressing their strong intentions to make contributions to the motherland and enthusiasm to boost sci-tech innovation Xi made an important instruction, and vowed support for HKSAR to become an international center of innovative technology SOUNDBITE 7 (Chinese): IP YUK-YU, Academician from the Chinese Academy of Sciences "On the one hand, it shows that the central government attaches great importance to and supports Hong Kong's scientific research. On the other hand, it also proves that Hong Kong's scientific research capabilities have been recognized by the motherland." SOUNDBITE 8 (Chinese): CHAN CHING-CHUEN, Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering "I think what's most important is the encouragement (from President Xi). It ensures that Hong Kong-based science and technology workers and Hong Kong people are aware that the motherland and President Xi care about Hong Kong so much. We should take pride in being a Chinese." 85-year-old Chan encourages the young generation to seize unprecedented historical opportunity of HKSAR's tech development SOUNDBITE 9 (Chinese): CHAN CHING-CHUEN, Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering "Hong Kong-based science and technology workers should strengthen the sense of mission and responsibility, and take good use of Hong Kong's advantages to make our own contribution to building China into a great power in science and technology." SOUNDBITE 10 (Chinese): JIANG CHAOQIANG, Chan's student & assistant professor at City University of Hong Kong "Technology should better serve the economic development, talent training and business incubation in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area." China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025) gives HKSAR support in building itself into an international center for innovation and technology The 16 national key labs and 6 branches of national engineering research centers in HKSAR all boast high-level scientific research teams and equipment The Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area is a significant national project conceived and promoted by Xi On July 1, 2017, Xi witnessed the signing of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area development agreement In an agricultural base in Jiangmen in Guangdong Province, three Hong Kong youths start up their business of aquaponics After years of research, they have established their own business of aquaponics system with completely independent intellectual property rights SOUNDBITE 11 (Chinese): LO WAI-TAK, Hong Kong youth "We are growing up together with the Greater Bay Area. When we achieved one technological breakthrough, the Nansha Bridge in the Greater Bay Area was put into service. When we made another breakthrough, the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong high-speed railway started operation. So we can feel that we have been developing together with the Greater Bay Area." 25 years after its return to the motherland, Hong Kong has progressed and prospered alongside the rest of the country "One country, two systems" ensures long-term prosperity and stability for Hong Kong Hong Kong has achieved a return to order and is now at a crucial stage of advancing toward prosperity Hong Kong is integrating better into national development July 1, 2017 Xi delivered a speech at the meeting celebrating the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong's return to the motherland and the inaugural ceremony of the fifth-term government of the HKSAR Voice of Xi Jinping "The practice of 'one country, two systems' in Hong Kong will write a new chapter and create new splendor for Hong Kong!" Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Hong Kong, China. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Hong Kong's development pulling at President Xi's heartstrings )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192499131
NATO leaders poised to welcome Finland, Sweden
Madrid's NATO summit kicked off on Wednesday (June 29) as NATO leaders prepared to welcome Finland and Sweden to the alliance. After talks in Madrid, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday (June 28) evening agreed with his Finnish and Swedish counterparts a series of security measures to allow the two Nordic countries to progress in their bid to join the U.S.-led alliance. The breakthrough came after four hours of talks just before the NATO summit began in Madrid, averting an embarrassing impasse at the gathering of 30 leaders that aims to show resolve against Russia, now seen by the U.S.-led alliance as a direct security threat rather than a possible adversary. While the agreement removed a major hurdle to the Nordic nations joining, their bid must now be approved by the member states' parliaments, a process that could take some time. Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine has given a new impetus to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation after failures in Afghanistan and internal discord during the era of former U.S. President Donald Trump. The Western alliance is also set to agree that big allies such as the United States, Germany, Britain and Canada will pre-assign troops, weapons and equipment to the Baltics and intensify training exercises. NATO is also aiming to have as many as 300,000 troops ready for deployment in case of conflict, part of an enlarged NATO response force. For NATO, Russia is achieving the opposite of what its President Vladimir Putin sought when he launched his war in Ukraine in part to counter the expansion of the NATO alliance, Western leaders say. (Production: Miguel Gutierrez, Elena Rodriguez) ( Original Title: NATO leaders poised to welcome Finland, Sweden ) ( Caption: 8243WD-NATO-SUMMIT_FAMILY_PHOTO_O_ )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192497758
Scary times for Rwandans in Congo as rebel attacks ignite tensions
Democratic Republic of Congo authorities have called for calm and an end to growing xenophobic anti-Rwanda rhetoric amid tensions between Kinshasa and Kigali over Rwanda's suspected backing of the M23 rebel group. Congo has accused Rwanda of arming and helping the resurgent rebel group on its eastern border which has launched several incursions, occupied territory, and sparked heavy fighting with the Congolese army since May. Rwanda has denied it is backing the rebels. Despite its denial, the capture and later release of two Rwandan soldiers, and the killing of a Congolese soldier who crossed a border post and fired at Rwandan security forces, continue to inflame tensions and anti-Rwanda protests, sparking fear among Rwandans in Congo's capital. Protesters including senior political leaders have also demanded the closure of the Rwandan embassy. During a protest on May 30 in Kinshasa, a defaced picture of Rwandan President Paul Kagame with a Hitler-like mustache and Swastika is torched as the crowd cheers. In early June, a video was shared on various social media platforms showing some men, faces covered with Congolese flags, and armed with machetes, loitering in a street in Kinshasa in front of a shop owned by a Rwandan. Sitting in her living room and scrolling through online videos of the men with machetes, Rwandan national Zawadi, a mother of two who declined to give her last name for security reasons, said she has been unable to leave home out of fear. "It's not easy, it has affected me a lot because everywhere you go, you think people can kill you, people can hurt you because there are protests everywhere against Rwanda, people say a lot of things, there are the messages on Whatsapp groups, there is the hate coming from the Kinshasa citizen," Zawadi said, adding that she is waiting for the situation to calm down. Kinshasa police have arrested the men they believe were on the video holding machete and protest organisers have said they do not want to harm Rwandan citizens. Kinshasa governor Gentiny Ngobila said the government had taken measures to safeguard Rwandans in Congo who have nothing to do with the crisis. "Kinshasa residents should not slip into that xenophobic rhetoric because it would give ammunition to those who would use the excuse that Rwandans are persecuted in Congo therefore it is necessary to go to their rescue," he said (Benoit Nyemba, Christophe Van Der Perre) ( Original Title: Scary times for Rwandans in Congo as rebel attacks ignite tensions ) ( Caption: 8036AD-CONGO-SECURITY_RWANDA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192464322
Joshua 'desperate' to win heavyweight titles back off Usyk
Challenger Anthony Joshua said on Wednesday (June 29) that he is 'desperate' to win the heavyweight titles back off Oleksandr Usyk when they face off in a rematch in August. The pair stared at each other face-to-face at a London news conference ahead of the 'Rage on the Red Sea' clash in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on August 20. Usyk beat Joshua in front of a sell-out crowd at London's Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last September to take the WBA, WBO, IBF, and IBO belts. Joshua also lost the belts to Andy Ruiz Jr in 2019 before regaining them later that year in Saudi Arabia. "I'm definitely desperate to get my hands on it, " said Joshua. "Less talk more action, let me get in there and do my job. I'm definitely hungry, definitely desperate but at the end of the day how I perform will speak volumes to the masses." Usuyk, wearing a blue and yellow 'Colors of Freedom' top, said he was fighting to "save my soul". Usyk is 19-0 with 13 knockout victories, while Joshua is 24-2 with 22 knockout victories. (Production: Gerhard Mey, Sophie Penney) ( Original Title: Joshua 'desperate' to win heavyweight titles back off Usyk ) ( Caption: 8263SP-BOXING-HEAVYWEIGHT_USYK_JOSHUA__O_ )
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192338431
モールに命中する決定的瞬間 ウクライナがビデオ映像公開
ウクライナ政府は6月28日、ロシア軍の精密誘導ミサイルが、同国中部ポルタバ州のクレメンチュクにあるショッピングモールに命中する瞬間の監視カメラ映像を公開した。 映像には画面右上から飛来したミサイルが、モールを直撃し、爆発が起こる様子が捉えられている。 ロシア軍は6月27日、ロシア西部のクルスク州上空から2発のミサイルを発射。1発がアモストル・ショッピングセンターに命中。もう1発が近隣の自動車工場を直撃した。 この空爆で少なくとも18人が死亡、60人近くが負傷した。 ウクライナのゼレンスキー大統領は28日、ビデオメッセージで「ロシア軍がウクライナ国民にしていることのあらゆる証拠を持っている」と述べた。 映像に映っている精密誘導ミサイルは、2月24日の侵攻以降ロシア軍がウクライナに向けて発射した2811発のうちの1発だという。 (ウクライナ、クレメンチュク、6月29日、映像:Volodymyr Zelensky via Storyful/アフロ)
日付:2022年6月29日
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RM 192432954
Cat Climbs Curtains To Chase After Hidden Mouse
A cat owner thought they were capturing their pets amazing climbing skills but unbeknown to them, they were actually hunting a tiny mouse. Real estate negotiator Holly Wright, 24, was at her home in London, when she noticed her one year old cat Milo climbing the curtains on June 28. Wanting to capture the moment, Holly started recording Milo, unaware of the reason he was clambering up the curtains. As she watched on, she noticed a small mouse start running across her curtain pole and started screaming, while Milo continued to chase the rodent. Her other cat Tom watched on as the chaotic events unfolded. Holly said: "I found it hilarious as I was extremely surprised. "I genuinely didn't see the mouse at first so was shocked when I finally saw it. "Everyone has found the video funny but surprised it took me so long to spot the mouse." ENDS ( Original Title: Cat Climbs Curtains To Chase After Hidden Mouse )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192344214
【閲覧注意】1万匹のミールワームの中に唐辛子を入れてどうなるか実験
This YouTuber tested how a chilli pepper fared against 10,000 mealworms. The 24-hour timelapse shows the bugs devouring the vegetable. ( Original Title: YouTuber tests how chilli fares against 10,000 mealworms )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192281688
SNSで仕事の内容を紹介するエミレーツ航空のCA、スーツケースの中身を公開したりフォロワーから質問にも答える(撮影地不明)
An Emirates flight attendant gives a glimpse into the life of a crew member. Working in an international cabin crew, Tessa Johnston, 26, can be an attendant for up to 600 passengers at a time and travels between two to three countries every week. Explaining how they wear their uniform and the training they go through, Tessa gives her followers a glimpse into her life as a fight attendant. Tessa said: "I never have the same schedule so I can be sent to any country and city at any time of day. "There is an eight weeks intense training program and once completed, shifts can range between four and 24 hours. "The acceptance rate to get into emirates is actually less than the number that gets accepted to Harvard." ENDS Wallpaper by Kevin MacLeod ( Original Title: Emirates Flight Attendant Gives Insight Into Life On The Job )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192283204
A Pakistani student's "smart" trip in Tianjin, China
In the eyes of Sayyed Yasra, a Pakistani student in China, travel is the best way to explore the world while smart technologies are changing what we see and how we feel. As the sixth World Intelligence Congress kicked off in north China's Tianjin recently, Sayyed Yasra went on a trip to explore smart technologies in the city. SOUNDBITE 1 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Hi Laura." SOUNDBITE 2 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "Hi Yasra." SOUNDBITE 3 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Laura, what is our first destination today?" SOUNDBITE 4 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "Our first stop is Tianjin Museum." SOUNDBITE 5 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Wow. I am so excited to see how the new smart tech has changed our way of seeing these rare relics. Let's have a look." SOUNDBITE 6 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "OK. Let's go." SOUNDBITE 7 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "It's so beautiful. I can see a board over here." SOUNDBITE 8 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "Yes. And there is a QR code, right?" SOUNDBITE 9 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Yes. There is a QR code." SOUNDBITE 10 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "I think it will give us more information about the piece of art that is presented inside." SOUNDBITE 11 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Maybe. Let's scan it." SOUNDBITE 12 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "How can we use this App here?" SOUNDBITE 13 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Maybe we can ask one of the staff member over here." SOUNDBITE 14 (Chinese): REN YU, Staff member of Tianjin Museum "Turn the camera to the piece of art and press 'AR recognition.' Then it provides two choices, which is 3D presentation and animated video." SOUNDBITE 15 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "So we just take a picture of it." SOUNDBITE 16 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "And then here we go." SOUNDBITE 17 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "This is a video. It tells the history and background information of this inkstone. And this one." SOUNDBITE 18 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Yeah. This one is the 3D presentation of this piece of art. So we can have a look at the bottom, top and sides. We can zoom it as well. Wow. This is wonderful. Hey, Laura. I can see several touch screens over there." SOUNDBITE 19 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "OK. Let's go. Wow. So many pieces of ancient paintings." SOUNDBITE 20 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Yeah. We can select one. It's about mountains and trees. Let's zoom in. Wow. Everything is so clear." SOUNDBITE 21 (Chinese): REN YU, Staff member of Tianjin Museum "The navigation app and the digital touch screens are the examples of digital protection of cultural relics. We are using intelligent technologies to discover more about the cultural relics and better present them to visitors." SOUNDBITE 22 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Is this the shop?" SOUNDBITE 23 (English & Chinese): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "Yes. Let's take a closer look." "Excuse me, so you have a robot that can make juices, right?" "That's true. And it can work by itself without assistance." SOUNDBITE 24 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "Wow. It's interesting." SOUNDBITE 25 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Yeah. It looks so interesting." SOUNDBITE 26 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "Maybe we can order a cup of milk tea. It's sugar. I think it's tea." SOUNDBITE 27 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "I am so excited." SOUNDBITE 28 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent "So this is the milk tea made by the robot." SOUNDBITE 29 (English): SAYYED YASRA, Student of Nankai University "Wow. It's so yummy. I can finish it all." SOUNDBITE 30 (English): Sayyed Yasra, Student of Nankai University "Today I have experienced wonderful technologies. And not only it has made our life much easier, but it has changed our vision of exploring the world, culture and history. I'm really impressed today." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Tianjin, China. (XHTV) ( Original Title: A Pakistani student's "smart" trip in Tianjin, China )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192497915
Putin arrives in Tajikistan on first trip abroad since sending troops into Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, on Tuesday (June 28) in what was the first known overseas visit by the Russian leader since he ordered troops into Ukraine four months ago. Putin was greeted at Dushanbe airport by his Tajik counterpart, Emomali Rahmon. Rahmon is a close Russian ally and the longest-serving ruler of a former Soviet state; he is set to hold talks with the Russian president. Tajikistan is the first of two Central Asian countries that Putin will visit on a two-day trip: he is set to travel on to the Turkmen capital, Ashgabat, on Wednesday to attend a summit of Caspian nations including the leaders of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Iran and Turkmenistan. Putin's last known trip outside Russia was a visit to Beijing in early February, where he and Chinese President Xi Jinping unveiled a "no limits" friendship treaty hours before both attended the opening ceremony of the Olympic Winter Games. Russia says it sent troops into Ukraine on February 24 to degrade its neighbour's military capabilities, keep it from being used by the West to threaten Russia, root out nationalists and defend Russian-speakers in eastern regions. Ukraine and the West say what Moscow calls its "special military operation" is in fact an imperial-style land grab. ( Original Title: Putin arrives in Tajikistan on first trip abroad since sending troops into Ukraine ) ( Caption: 8099WD-TAJIKISTAN-RUSSIA_PUTIN_ARRIVAL_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192497812
U.S. President hails 'united' NATO in meeting with Spain's King Felipe
U.S. President Joe Biden and Spain's King Felipe hailed the importance of unity as they met ahead of the NATO summit on Tuesday (June 28). Spain, who has been a member of NATO for 40 years, is hosting the summit in Madrid. "Today NATO is as united and galvanised as I believe it's ever been and we are ready to face threats of Russian aggression because quite frankly there's no choice," Biden said at a conference at the Royal Palace. King Felipe echoed his sentiment, saying the summit this year was "especially relevant". "The allied countries must continue to show unity and determination to defend out freedom and our democratic values," said the Spanish monarch. Earlier Biden met with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and agreed to strengthen cooperation with Spain on defence and migration, five days after North African migrants stormed a border fence in the Spanish enclave of Melilla in Morocco. At least 23 migrants died and many more were injured in the attempted mass crossing on Friday (June 24) into Melilla at one of only land borders between North Africa and Europe. The three-day NATO summit ends on Thursday (June 30), with Spain intending to press its case for the alliance to focus on Europe's southern flank and address what it describes as "hybrid threats." Such threats include irregular migration, aggravated by a spike in food prices caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. (Production: Helena Williams, Violet Gonda, Mindy Burrows) ( Original Title: U.S. President hails 'united' NATO in meeting with Spain's King Felipe ) ( Caption: 8140WD-NATO-SUMMIT_BIDEN_KING_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192483899
Shopping mall attack sows fear far from Ukraine's frontline
Already displaced from the partially occupied region of Kharkiv, Alia Skrypka, 35, believed Kremenchuk, more than 170 km from the nearest frontline in the war, was safe. But since a missile strike on a shopping mall killed at least 18 people here on Monday (June 27), she is considering whether she should move her two girls, Milla, 7 and Myroslava, 4, elsewhere, perhaps abroad. "I fear for my children's lives. It is likely we will decide to leave. I really do not want to leave Ukraine but we may have to consider leaving the country until the end of the war, " she said, after helping her elder daughter to place flowers at an unofficial memorial just meters from the burned husk of the mall. This industrial city, home to Ukraine's largest oil depot, had already been hit by several air strikes since Russia's Feb. 24 assault on Ukraine, but residents said earlier attacks had not hit civilian areas. The city's name, little known beyond Ukraine before Monday, will likely be remembered alongside the Bucha and Mariupol as sites of major atrocities against civilians in the four-month-old war. At least one rocket, which investigators believe to be an X-22 cruise missile fired from inside Russia, crashed into the busy shopping center on Monday afternoon, killing at least 18 and injuring dozens, according to officials. Another 41 people were unaccounted for, Poltava regional governor Dmytro Lunin said on Tuesday. Many shoppers and staff had ignored an air-raid siren that began about 10 minutes earlier. Survivors described a maelstrom of shrapnel and debris after the strike. Russia said its strike was aimed at an ammunition store. The mall is next to a factory that Ukraine says was disused and could not be described as a military target. Residents of Kremenchuk visited the makeshift memorial -- contributing to a growing collection of flowers, soft toys and candles -- throughout the day on Tuesday, even as machinery worked in the background the clear the debris. Mother of three Ania Miakushka, 44, was in tears as she laid flowers, clutching her 5-year-old son's hand and touching at a graze fresh on his shoulder. Her own hands are also cut up, as the windows of her home were blown through by the missile blast. The family was gathered around the dinner table after a funeral for a relative when the blast hit, she said, feeling for the boy's hand as if making sure he was still there. "The shock wave hit us, we fell on the ground. We got up and ran to the shelter. What did I feel? Pain, fear for the lives of my children," she said. "I took my son in my arms and after the second explosion the shock wave hit us, and we fell on the ground. We got up and ran to the shelter. What did I feel? Pain, fear for the lives of my children," she said adding that her elder son thought the family should leave for a safer location in Ukraine or abroad. But as elsewhere in Ukraine, life must go on despite the constant threat of death from above. Many ignore the frequent air-raid sirens, deciding taking shelter each time is too much of a disruption to daily life. (Production: Anna Voitenko, Anna Dabrowska) ( Original Title: Shopping mall attack sows fear far from Ukraine's frontline ) ( Caption: 8089WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KREMENCHUK_TRIBUTES_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192483893
Spain, U.S. agree to boost cooperation on defense, migration
U.S. President Joe Biden and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez agreed in Madrid on Tuesday (June 28) to boost cooperation in areas of defense, migration, and to encourage China to respect the rules-based international order. Biden, speaking alongside Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez before a NATO summit in the Spanish capital, said two discussed an agreement to increase the number of U.S. destroyers to be based at the Rota naval base in southern Spain and ways to keep weapons flowing to Ukraine. "The United States and Spain, and other allies, are keeping NATO weapons and equipment flowing to Ukraine, they are standing up in ways that I don't think anyone anticipated, showing enormous bravery, enormous resolve. And we are continuing the tighten sanctions on Russia as well," he said. The U.S. president also offered to "do more together in Africa as well as promote stability and economic growth." Biden's commitment to help Spain manage the flow of migrants from Africa comes as Spain intends to take advantage of the summit to press its case for the alliance to focus on Europe's southern flank and address what it describes as "hybrid threats" which include irregular migration, aggravated by a spike in food prices caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. At least 23 migrants died and many more were injured in the attempted mass crossing on Friday (June 24) into the Spanish enclave of Melilla, one of the only land borders between North Africa and Europe. The two countries committed to strengthening legal migration particularly from Latin America and the Caribbean but also referenced the challenge of irregular migration from the North Africa region. Sanchez told reporters both leaders had also discussed "increasingly prominent challenges" in Africa's Sahel region, where Spain has called out the growing influence of Russia and its proxies. Migration monitoring groups have warned that terrorism, instability and hunger are driving more and more people from their homes there. (Production: Michael Gore, Elena Rodriguez) ( Original Title: Spain, U.S. agree to boost cooperation on defense, migration ) ( Caption: 8115WD-NATO-SUMMIT_SANCHEZ_BIDEN_UPDATE_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192462447
'No living people' under shopping mall rubble - Ukraine's interior minister
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: AUDIO QUALITY AS INCOMING IN SHOT 9 Ukraine's interior minister Denys Monastyrskyi on Tuesday (June 28) said "no living people" remained under the rubble of a destroyed shopping mall in Kremenchuk. Ukraine said at least 18 people were killed on Monday (June 27) by an intentional Russian missile strike against the shopping centre in Kremenchuk. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said more than 1,000 people were inside when the missiles struck. Russia on Tuesday denied hitting a shopping mall in the Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk with missiles, saying that it had struck a nearby depot of U.S. and European arms triggering an explosion which ignited a fire in the mall. Reuters was unable to independently verify the Russian account, or Zelenskiy's claim that Russia intentionally hit the shopping centre to target civilians. (Production: Abdelaziz Boumzar, Andrii Pryimachenko) ( Original Title: 'No living people' under shopping mall rubble - Ukraine's interior minister ) ( Caption: 8110WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_INTERIOR_MINISTER_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192461590
Putin holds talks with Tajikistan's President Rahmon in Dushanbe
Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in the Tajik capital, Dushanbe, on Tuesday (June 28) in what was the first known overseas visit by the Russian leader since he ordered troops into Ukraine four months ago. Putin was greeted at Dushanbe airport by his Tajik counterpart, Emomali Rahmon. Before the start of the talks, Putin said that security issues will be in the center of their attention. "I will inform you on those issues that are of the greatest interest to Russia, that are very sensitive", said the Russian President. Rahmon is a close Russian ally and the longest-serving ruler of a former Soviet state; he is set to hold talks with the Russian president. Tajikistan is the first of two Central Asian countries that Putin will visit on a two-day trip: he is set to travel on to the Turkmen capital, Ashgabat, on Wednesday to attend a summit of Caspian nations including the leaders of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Iran and Turkmenistan. Putin's last known trip outside Russia was a visit to Beijing in early February, where he and Chinese President Xi Jinping unveiled a "no limits" friendship treaty hours before both attended the opening ceremony of the Olympic Winter Games. Russia says it sent troops into Ukraine on February 24 to degrade its neighbour's military capabilities, keep it from being used by the West to threaten Russia, root out nationalists and defend Russian-speakers in eastern regions. Ukraine and the West say what Moscow calls its "special military operation" is in fact an imperial-style land grab. ( Original Title: Putin holds talks with Tajikistan's President Rahmon in Dushanbe ) ( Caption: 8127WD-TAJIKISTAN-RUSSIA_PUTIN_RAHMON_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192428221
Yasynuvata residents clear debris after night of shelling in Donetsk region
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: EDIT CONTAINS PROFANITY IN SHOT 4 People in the city of Yasynuvata, in the separatist-controlled Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine, were clearing debris on Tuesday (June 28) from residential buildings damaged in hours of overnight shelling. Firefighters were at the scene of at least one private house still ablaze hours after the strike. Yasynuvata resident Anna Andreeva, who was sweeping up broken glass near her house, described how the first volley of missiles had hit a nearby training college, and then hit the residential areas. Reuters was unable to independently verify who was responsible for the shelling, but local pro-Russian separatists have blamed Ukraine. The territorial defence force of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic reported shelling in Lysychansk, the city of Donetsk, Dokuchaievsk and other cities on the night of June 27-28. Ukraine routinely denies carrying out any attacks on the two regions that comprise the Donbas, the self-styled Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics, where separatists seized large swaths of land in 2014. Russia recognised the two regions as independent states before Moscow sent tens of thousands of its troops into Ukraine on February 24. ( Original Title: Yasynuvata residents clear debris after night of shelling in Donetsk region ) ( Caption: 8052WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_YASYNUVATA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192425687
As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THE FOLLOWING HONG KONG ANNIVERSARY RELATED EDITS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE ON REUTERS CONNECT: 0348-CHINA-HONGKONG/CITYSHOTS, run on June 24, 2022 0080-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/TIMELINE, run on June 24, 2022 5505-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/COLLECTOR, run on June 21, 2022 Hong Kong has weathered financial crises, mass demonstrations and COVID-19. As the city prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of its handover to Chinese rule, Reuters spoke to four people who described the highs and lows since 1997. (Production: Joyce Zhou) ( Original Title: As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows ) ( Caption: 7656AS-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY_PORTRAITS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192425712
As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THE FOLLOWING HONG KONG ANNIVERSARY RELATED EDITS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE ON REUTERS CONNECT: 0348-CHINA-HONGKONG/CITYSHOTS, run on June 24, 2022 0080-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/TIMELINE, run on June 24, 2022 5505-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/COLLECTOR, run on June 21, 2022 Hong Kong has weathered financial crises, mass demonstrations and COVID-19. As the city prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of its handover to Chinese rule, Reuters spoke to four people who described the highs and lows since 1997. (Production: Joyce Zhou) ( Original Title: As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows ) ( Caption: 7656AS-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY_PORTRAITS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192425709
As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THE FOLLOWING HONG KONG ANNIVERSARY RELATED EDITS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE ON REUTERS CONNECT: 0348-CHINA-HONGKONG/CITYSHOTS, run on June 24, 2022 0080-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/TIMELINE, run on June 24, 2022 5505-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/COLLECTOR, run on June 21, 2022 Hong Kong has weathered financial crises, mass demonstrations and COVID-19. As the city prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of its handover to Chinese rule, Reuters spoke to four people who described the highs and lows since 1997. (Production: Joyce Zhou) ( Original Title: As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows ) ( Caption: 7656AS-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY_PORTRAITS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192425698
As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THE FOLLOWING HONG KONG ANNIVERSARY RELATED EDITS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE ON REUTERS CONNECT: 0348-CHINA-HONGKONG/CITYSHOTS, run on June 24, 2022 0080-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/TIMELINE, run on June 24, 2022 5505-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/COLLECTOR, run on June 21, 2022 Hong Kong has weathered financial crises, mass demonstrations and COVID-19. As the city prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of its handover to Chinese rule, Reuters spoke to four people who described the highs and lows since 1997. (Production: Joyce Zhou) ( Original Title: As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows ) ( Caption: 7656AS-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY_PORTRAITS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192425702
As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THE FOLLOWING HONG KONG ANNIVERSARY RELATED EDITS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE ON REUTERS CONNECT: 0348-CHINA-HONGKONG/CITYSHOTS, run on June 24, 2022 0080-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/TIMELINE, run on June 24, 2022 5505-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY/COLLECTOR, run on June 21, 2022 Hong Kong has weathered financial crises, mass demonstrations and COVID-19. As the city prepares to mark the 25th anniversary of its handover to Chinese rule, Reuters spoke to four people who described the highs and lows since 1997. (Production: Joyce Zhou) ( Original Title: As Hong Kong marks 25 years since handover, people discuss highs and lows ) ( Caption: 7656AS-HONGKONG-ANNIVERSARY_PORTRAITS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192424831
Tycoon Deripaska casts doubt on Russian quest for 'victory' in Ukraine
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: EDIT CONTAINS WHITE FLASHES Russian aluminium tycoon Oleg Deripaska suggested on Tuesday (June 28) that no winner would emerge from Moscow's invasion of Ukraine and highlighted the economic price that Russia was paying for its actions. Deripaska's comments to reporters in Moscow represented a rare public questioning of the Kremlin's rationale for the war by one of Russia's richest men. He was careful to avoid directly criticising President Vladimir Putin. "I'm troubled by how quickly we abandoned everything that was achieved (economically) in the 90s, then we abandoned everything that we achieved in the 2000s, and now we are sitting and waiting for victory. Victory of what? Whose victory?" Deripaska asked. He added: "I think that destroying Ukraine would be a colossal mistake, including for us." Rising levels of prosperity had been linked to the development of Russia's private sector and building ties with the rest of Europe as Russia's main economic partner, he said. But it was "obvious" that Western sanctions were now hurting Russia more than Europe, said Deripaska, founder of Russian aluminium giant Rusal. That contrasts with the argument repeatedly voiced by Putin that sanctions are rebounding on Western economies, triggering their highest inflation in decades, and that Russia will emerge stronger and more self-sufficient. Deripaska - himself under sanctions from the United States, Britain and the European Union - said, however, that he had underestimated how stable Russia's economy would prove to be. Nor did he see any threat to its political leadership. "There is no potential for regime change in Russia. The opposition preferred beautiful European views and retreated from the life of the country," Deripaska said. Many of Russia's leading opposition figures, especially associates of jailed Kremlic critic Alexei Navalny, have fled to other European countries to escape being prosecuted. Deripaska, 54, is one of a group of businessmen known as oligarchs who control large parts of the economy, especially in energy and commodities, and have been able to preserve their fortunes on condition that they stay out of politics. Putin calls the Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine a special military operation to demilitarise and "denazify" the country, a line rejected by Kyiv and the West as baseless war propaganda. The Kremlin on Tuesday repeated its assertions that the operation was going according to plan. ( Original Title: Tycoon Deripaska casts doubt on Russian quest for 'victory' in Ukraine ) ( Caption: 8053BU-UKRAINE-CRISIS_RUSSIA_DERIPASKA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192424830
U.S. health official: 'All options are on the table' in response to 'despicable' abortion ruling
The top U.S. official health official said 'every option is on the table' on Tuesday (June 28) as he unveiled the Biden administration's plan following the overturning of Roe v Wade. The administration indicated earlier in the week it will seek to prevent states from banning a pill used for medication abortion in light of the Supreme Court ruling overturning the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling, signaling a major new legal fight. "We will certainly assert and defend our legal authorities. We will certainly enforce federal law. We will absolutely protect Americans' rights to care under federal law," U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said. The administration could argue in court that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) approval of mifepristone, one of the pills used for medication abortions, pre-empts state restrictions, meaning federal authority outweighs any state action. That same argument has already been raised by Las Vegas-based GenBioPro Inc, which sells a generic version of the pill, in a lawsuit challenging Mississippi's restrictions on medication abortion. More than a dozen states plan to almost totally ban abortion with the Roe v. Wade precedent upended. In a stunning ruling, the conservative majority Supreme Court overturned Roe on a 5-4 vote on Friday (June 24), saying there is no right to abortion in the U.S. Constitution. States will likely face other difficulties enforcing restrictions on medication abortion because women are still likely to be able to obtain the pills online or in other states. Biden said in remarks after the Supreme Court ruling that the government would seek to protect access to medication abortion. (Production: Greg Savoy, Deborah Gembara) ( Original Title: U.S. health official: 'All options are on the table' in response to 'despicable' abortion ruling ) ( Caption: 8076WD-USA-ABORTION_BECERRA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192423899
Sanctions will only end when Putin accepts Ukraine invasion is a failure - Scholz
Western sanctions against Russia will only end when Russian President Vladimir Putin accepts that his plans in Ukraine will not succeed, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said. "All the sanctions we imposed over Crimea are still there. All the sanctions we imposed because of the Russian-incited uprising in Donbas are still there. And the same will go for the decisions taken now, which are much more severe," he said. "There is only one way out: for Putin to accept that his plans in Ukraine will not succeed," he added on Tuesday at the closing news conference of the three-day G7 summit in Germany. The Group of Seven economic powers agreed to explore imposing a ban on transporting Russian oil that has been sold above a certain price, they said on Tuesday, aiming to hitPutin's war chest. "It is clear that this war has also shown how dependent we are on energy imports, and in this case particularly on those from Russia. And that's why it's important that we reduce these dependencies. That's why, as we have agreed together, we will continue to go forward with the expansion of renewable energies with great intensity," Scholz said. The war in Ukraine and its dramatic economic fallout, in particular soaring food and energy inflation, dominated this year's summit of the group of rich democracies at a castle resort in the Bavarian Alps. The war, which has killed thousands and displaced millions, has entered its fifth month with no signs of abating. "The rocket attack yesterday on a shopping centre in Kremenchuk, near Kyiv, that left many dead and injured, is once again proof that Putin is maintaining his brutal aggression against the population," Scholz said. "So we are not in a situation where we can see the end. This is very, very depressing, because every day that is added to the many days of this war is a day in which people die, children, families, young and old, in which an incredible amount is destroyed. And that is why it is so important that we keep up the pressure and also continue the support so that an end becomes possible at all and Russia realises that it cannot enforce a dictated peace," he added. G7 leaders pledged $4.5 billion on Tuesday to fight global hunger, according to a G7 statement. The United States will provide over half of that sum, which would go to efforts to fight hunger in 47 countries and fund regional organisations, a senior U.S. official said. (Production: Timm Reichert, Max Schwarz, Fanny Brodersen, Tanya Wood, Anna Dittrich) ( Original Title: Sanctions will only end when Putin accepts Ukraine invasion is a failure - Scholz ) ( Caption: 7947GE-G7-SUMMIT_SCHOLZ_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192423889
Two Russian missiles hit Kharkiv school
Ukrainian emergency workers sifted through the rubble of yet another school building hit by Russian missiles in Kharkiv, the country's second-largest city, on Tuesday (June 28). Russian forces have been pounding the city for over a week killing civilians, and hitting apartment buildings and schools, regional authorities said. Russia renewed shelling of Kharkiv and the surrounding countryside in what Kyiv says is a bid to force Ukraine to pull resources from the main battlefield in Donbas to protect civilians from attack. The strikes that began on Tuesday (June 21) were the worst for weeks in an area where normal life had been returning since Ukraine pushed Moscow's forces back in May. Kharkiv suffered heavy bombardment from the very start of the Russian invasion on February 24, which left much of the country's city of 1.5 million a wasteland of ruined buildings and debris. (Production: Vitalii Hnidyi, Sergiy Voloshin, Anna Dabrowska) ( Original Title: Two Russian missiles hit Kharkiv school ) ( Caption: 8022WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_SCHOOL_UPDATE_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192394276
Africa's dream of feeding China hits hard reality
As workers poke avocados from the treetops in an orchard owned by Kenyan agriculture firm Kakuzi, it's managers revel in the thought some might soon go to the crown jewel of emerging consumer markets: China. Taking advantage of Beijing's deeper focus on trade with African countries to help reduce gaping deficits, Kenya struck an export deal with China for fresh avocados in January after years of lobbying for market access. "The new markets provide a great opportunity for us as a company and even for us as a country because now you have a diversity in terms of where you can take your produce. Some markets offer better prices so, as a company you are able to make a choice and of course, the fact that China which is an emerging market has a high population means that, you have a market which is so hard to satisfy and with that you know you can be able to encourage growers to even continue expanding their orchards," said Jonathan Kipruto, the Assitant General Manager of Kakuzi's Avocado Section. Six months later, no shipments have left, Kenya's avocado society, the East African country's plant health inspectorate and Kakuzi told Reuters. While 10 avocado exporters have passed Kenyan inspections, China now wants to do its own audits and based on the experience of some other African fruit producers, it could take a decade to get the green light. Ramping up agricultural exports, however, is one of the few options many African countries must rebalance their trade relationships with China and earn the hard currency they need to service mountains of debt, much of it owed to Beijing. Take Kenya. It's annual trade deficit with China is about $6.5 billion and it has roughly $8 billion of Chinese debt. It needs nearly $631 million to service that debt alone this year, but that's almost three times its exports to China in 2021. Many African nations now say they simply cannot afford more Chinese loans and must boost exports to China. In recognition of the need to address the imbalances, or at least stop them getting worse, China announced a shift in strategy in November. At a China-Africa summit typically used by Beijing to unveil eye-popping loans, President Xi Jinping announced a raft of initiatives to boost China's imports from Africa to $300 billion over the next three years and $300 billion a year by 2035. In theory, agriculture is one the most promising avenues. China is the world's biggest food importer while the agricultural sector in Africa is both the leading employer and contributor to economic activity. What's more, 60% of the world's uncultivated arable land is in Africa, meaning there is huge potential for growth. For decades, China has loaned billions of dollars to Africa to build railroads, power plants and highways as it deepened ties with the continent while extracting minerals and oil. That has helped China-Africa trade balloon 24-fold over the past two decades and two-way trade hit a record $254 billion last year despite the turmoil of the global pandemic. But for $148 billions of Chinese goods shipped to Africa in 2021, China imported only $106 billion and five resource-rich nations - Angola, Congo Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo South Africa and Zambia - accounted for $75 billion of that. Chinese customs data shows that more than three-quarters of African nations have trade deficits with Beijing. The pandemic, meanwhile, sharpened their focus on debt. Some 60% of low-income countries - mostly in Africa - are either in debt distress or at high risk, with debt service burdens at their highest in 20 years. When it comes to food and agriculture, China's imports were worth $13 billion two decades ago. By 2020, they had leapt to $161 billion but Africa only accounted for 2.6% of that. President Xi's plan calls for centralised clearance zones, or "Green Lanes", to speed up inspections of agricultural goods from Africa, more zero-tariff access and $10 billion in trade finance for Chinese firms importing from the continent. On paper, China's growing food needs present a huge opportunity for Africa to leverage agricultural exports to raise foreign exchange. But some countries are struggling to take advantage of the opportunities, such as Kenya. It's the biggest producer of avocados in Africa and exported $154 million worth last year, mainly to Europe. Eric Were at the Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service's (Kephis) said they had jumped through hoops to get 10 avocado companies cleared this year for Chinese exports. "The requirements differ a bit, like for EU (European Union), we do not require to go and do the orchard inspection, we only do the exit inspection but now for the Chinese we have to do the orchard, we need to do the pack-house, and you need a fumigation facility. For the EU, we only do the exit inspection and maybe sometimes we only check for the pack-house to see whether the pack-house is still maintaining the required standard." Last month, the inspectorate announced that Chinese authorities had decided to conduct their own audits - which has not always been a positive experience. Experts say Beijing could negotiate broad trade deals with African countries and regional blocs, as the EU does. Instead, China continues to do bilateral deals, and even then only on individual products. ( Original Title: Africa's dream of feeding China hits hard reality ) ( Caption: 7821AD-CHINA-AFRICA_TRADE_O_ )
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192248230
ミシェル・オバマ氏ら数々の著名人が「中絶の権利」覆す米最高裁の判断に怒り【日本語字幕付き】
ミシェル・オバマ元米大統領夫人、テイラー・スウィフト、ハル・ベリーら多くの著名人が「中絶は憲法で認められた女性の権利」とした「ロー対ウェイド」判決を覆す連邦最高裁判所の判断に異議を唱えている。 24日の判決を受けアメリカ各地で抗議運動が行われている中、オバマ氏は、女性達が命の危険を覚悟で違法の中絶手術を受けていた時代を繰り返すことになると悲痛な思いを綴り、中絶する女性などを支援する非営利団体のリンクなどをシェアしている。 (アフロ)
日付:2022年6月28日
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RM 192473729
Cheeky orangutan grabs woman's boobs at zoo in Thailand
This is the amusing moment a cheeky orangutan grabbed a woman's boobs at a zoo in Thailand. The primate stood behind the tourist for a selfie but the pretty tourist was surprised when the creature cupped her breasts in Bangkok's Safari World on June 27. He also planted a kiss on the woman's cheek after flashing a wide smile to amused tourists. Dararat Suwanmai, 24, said: 'I burst out laughing when I realised what the woman was doing. He was such a friendly creature.' The orangutan then walked back to his caretaker to be ready for the next tourist to take selfies with. It was unclear, however, if the animal was trained to do that to entertain zoo visitors. Orangutans are among the smartest primates. They can use a variety of tools and construct sleeping nests from branches and leaves. ( Original Title: Cheeky orangutan grabs woman's boobs at zoo in Thailand )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192319069
ウクライナ・クレメンチュクのショッピングモール ロシア軍のミサイル命中の瞬間映像
Newly released CCTV footage shows the fatal moment a Russian missile hit a shopping mall in Kremenchuk, Ukraine, on Monday, June 27. The missile can be seen flying directly towards the site before a large explosion occurs. Two missiles struck the area: one hitting the Amostor shopping center, and the other hitting the neighboring Kredmash automotive factory. Ukrainian officials on Tuesday said at least 18 people were killed in the attack, dozens were wounded, and many others were unaccounted for. "We have all the evidence of what the Russian military is doing against our people," said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a video address on Tuesday during which he released the footage. Zelensky said the missile in the footage was one of 2,811 fired at Ukraine since the start of the Russian invasion on February 24. Credit: Volodymyr Zelensky via Storyful ( Original Title: Moment of Strike on Ukrainian Shopping Mall Captured by CCTV )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192204612
9500ドルで買った中古のスクールバスを改造し住みやすくした婚約中のカップル コロナで行けなくなった新婚旅行費用を充てる=アメリカ
This engaged couple used their honeymoon funds to convert an old school bus into a pastel paradise on wheels. Amanda Smith, 25 and Owen Kozac, 24, were supposed to jet off to XXX but the pandemic put a stop to it. The trainee teacher and video-editor partner Owen used their refund to buy an old yellow American school bus for £7,700 ($9,500). ( Original Title: Couple Live in Pink School Bus )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192195555
Drone footage of world's highest plateau railroad
In July 2006, the Qinghai-Tibet Railway linking Lhasa and Xining, the capital of Qinghai Province, went operational, ending Tibet's history without railway. In June 2021, when the Lhasa-Nyingchi Railway was put into operation, Fuxing bullet trains ran in the plateau region for the first time. The Lhasa railway station has witnessed explosive growth in passenger flow, surging from 2.24 million in 2007 to more than 4 million in 2021. Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Lhasa, China. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Drone footage of world's highest plateau railroad )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192164080
Belgian expat in China's Tianjin experiences smart market, bookstore
A Belgian expat living in China's Tianjin has visited a smart market and a smart bookstore to experience how smart technologies make life easier and better. SOUNDBITE 1 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent SOUNDBITE 2 (English): JOHN, Belgian expat in Tianjin "Hi John. You have been in China for more than 10 years. Such a long time. Do you like Chinese food? Of course. I love Chinese food and actually I like to cook, so this is why I prefer to go to Chinese traditional market. There is a smart market here in Tianjin. Really? That's really cool. And I am really interested to see this kind of new technology. Now let's go and take a closer look. OK. Let's go. Quite cool here. It's very comfortable and very clean here. It makes me want to buy a lot of food here. Let's go. Watermelon. I think it's enough. Let's go. I got a receipt actually from where we bought just now. And do you know we have a QR code? We need to scan it. And you will have, you see, everything about we have bought. It's a business certificate. Exactly. I think it's all the food that the owner is selling. The test result shows that it's safe. It's really safe. I think it's really important for the people who really care about this kind of information. It's really cool." SOUNDBITE 3 (Chinese): ZHAO NONG, Operation manager of Yuexiu Market "We have installed much smart hardware. Merchants' information and traceability information of food are all open to the public, making consumption more intelligent, convenient and reassuring." SOUNDBITE 4 (English): LIU RUNZHI, Xinhua correspondent SOUNDBITE 5 (English): JOHN, Belgian expat in Tianjin "John, now we are going to a self-service bookstore. I think it's interesting. Let's go. That's really cool. We enter the bookstore through face recognition. What a nice place. Here are many books. There are many different items. Wow. Even toys. Do you want to try? Let me see. Where should I put it? Shall I put it here? It's here. Yeah, of course. So we put it here. I don't need your help anymore. English one. Actually is buy books. Maybe here is only one. Non-member. Here we take actually the QR code. And we pay. Cool. That's nice. I have a beautiful toy. This is a large touch screen. How can we use it? Let me think. What is this? We have a big map. Why do they have these logos? The logo is of the bookstore. They have set many bookcases in the subway stations. That's really nice. It actually means that we buy books here. And we can go by the subway and take the books. That's really convenient. Let's try it. This one. Here we are. We should take a picture of the QR code. Then we will use it to take the book in the subway station. I think that is the bookcase in the subway station. Let's take our book." SOUNDBITE 6 (Chinese): WEI ZHENG, Technical director of the self-service bookstore "The bookstore uses face recognition technology, big data technology and an intelligent settlement system. It has achieved 24-hour operation, providing people with a smart shopping experience." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Tianjin, China. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Belgian expat in China's Tianjin experiences smart market, bookstore )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192148944
Hebrew Book Week back in full force after sidelined for two years
The Hebrew Book Week has finally returned in full force since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. The annual event took place from June 15 to 25 in Jerusalem, presenting a large number of books from Jewish-themed and children's books to biographies and novels. National Hebrew Book Week takes place every year in June, with large outdoor book fairs, special Book Week sales at bookstores all around the country, and a variety of accompanying events such as music, performances, children's events, workshops, and storytelling. The annual event was founded with the goal of encouraging people of all ages to read in Hebrew. The event draws many children and their families to the fair, with many of the stands consisting of children's books. The National Library of Israel reports that some 7,350 books were published in the state in 2021 and 91 percent of them were in Hebrew. According to the Israeli Association of Book Publishers, the book week has several benefits, including promoting reading in an "egalitarian and pluralistic way." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Jerusalem. (XHTV) ( Original Title: Hebrew Book Week back in full force after sidelined for two years )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192461364
"The whole place was collapsing, exploding" survivor of Russian missile strike
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT In a central Ukraine intensive-care ward, survivors are crammed into a room, their wounds bunged up with blood-saturated tamponades. A dead body lies on a stretcher just outside, covered in a blanket. This is the aftermath of a missile strike on a busy shopping mall in the city of Kremenchuk on Monday (June 27), southeast of Kyiv, an attack one of the patients described as "hell." According to Ukraine's emergency services the strike has killed at least 16 people and injured 59, but the number is expected to rise as rescuers trawl through mangled metal and debris. "This is not an accidental hit, this is a calculated Russian strike," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said in an evening video address. He estimated around 1,000 people were in the mall at the time of the strike. The city had a population of 217,000 before the invasion. People lined up at a hotel near the mall to register the names of those missing. More than 40 people had been reported missing, Ukraine's prosecutor general's office said. One patient in the hospital's general ward, Ludmyla Mykhailets, 43, said she was shopping at an electronics store with her husband, Mykola, when the blast threw her into the air. "I flew head first and splinters hit my body. The whole place was collapsing. Then I landed on the floor and I don't know if I was conscious or unconscious," she said, adding she had broken her arm and split her head open. (Production: Anna Voitenko, Nasaybah Hussain, Anna Dabrowska) ( Original Title: "The whole place was collapsing, exploding" survivor of Russian missile strike ) ( Caption: 7912WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KREMENCHUK_HOSPITAL_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192460591
'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling
A Louisiana judge on Monday (June 27) temporarily blocked the Republican-led state from enforcing laws banning abortion that were set to take effect after the U.S. Supreme Court's blockbuster decision to end the constitutional right to the procedure nationwide. "So her temporary restraining order essentially means that abortions can, at least for now, abortions can resume in Louisiana until the hearing on July 8th," said Lisa Avalos, Associate Professor at Louisiana State University's Law Center. "That is, of course, provided that no higher court, that no state at the state appellate court or the Louisiana Supreme Court intervenes in the case and lifts the stay." Louisiana is one of 13 states with "trigger laws" designed to ban or severely restrict abortions once the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized a right to the procedure was overturned, as it was on Friday (June 24). Orleans Parish Civil District Court Judge Robin Giarrusso issued a temporary restraining order blocking Louisiana from carrying out its ban shortly after Hope Medical Group for Women in Shreveport, one of Louisiana's three abortion clinics, sued. "Essentially, the, the petitioners in the case argue that the trigger law in Louisiana does not have a clear and unambiguous effective date and that it's not clear who has standing to enforce the law," Avalos said. The judge scheduled a July 8 hearing to decide whether to further enjoin enforcement of the abortion ban. Republican Attorney General Jeff Landry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He hailed the Supreme Court's decision on Friday, and at an event said that those who challenge the state's bans were "in for a rough fight." The case is one of several challenging Republican-backed abortion laws under state constitutions after the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling. A Utah branch of Planned Parenthood on Saturday (June 25) sued over that state's trigger ban, and abortion rights advocates plan to challenge an Ohio ban on abortions after six weeks that took effect on Friday. In Louisiana, Hope Medical argued the state's laws make it impossible to tell when they are in effect, if one or all of them collectively are in force, and what exact conduct is prohibited, such as if exceptions exist to save a pregnant woman's life. That vagueness has resulted in state and local officials issuing conflicting statements about whether the trigger bans are in effect, the lawsuit in Orleans Civil District Court contended. (Production: Christine Kiernan) ( Original Title: 'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling ) ( Caption: 7876WD-USA-ABORTION_LOUISIANA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192460585
'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling
A Louisiana judge on Monday (June 27) temporarily blocked the Republican-led state from enforcing laws banning abortion that were set to take effect after the U.S. Supreme Court's blockbuster decision to end the constitutional right to the procedure nationwide. "So her temporary restraining order essentially means that abortions can, at least for now, abortions can resume in Louisiana until the hearing on July 8th," said Lisa Avalos, Associate Professor at Louisiana State University's Law Center. "That is, of course, provided that no higher court, that no state at the state appellate court or the Louisiana Supreme Court intervenes in the case and lifts the stay." Louisiana is one of 13 states with "trigger laws" designed to ban or severely restrict abortions once the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized a right to the procedure was overturned, as it was on Friday (June 24). Orleans Parish Civil District Court Judge Robin Giarrusso issued a temporary restraining order blocking Louisiana from carrying out its ban shortly after Hope Medical Group for Women in Shreveport, one of Louisiana's three abortion clinics, sued. "Essentially, the, the petitioners in the case argue that the trigger law in Louisiana does not have a clear and unambiguous effective date and that it's not clear who has standing to enforce the law," Avalos said. The judge scheduled a July 8 hearing to decide whether to further enjoin enforcement of the abortion ban. Republican Attorney General Jeff Landry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He hailed the Supreme Court's decision on Friday, and at an event said that those who challenge the state's bans were "in for a rough fight." The case is one of several challenging Republican-backed abortion laws under state constitutions after the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling. A Utah branch of Planned Parenthood on Saturday (June 25) sued over that state's trigger ban, and abortion rights advocates plan to challenge an Ohio ban on abortions after six weeks that took effect on Friday. In Louisiana, Hope Medical argued the state's laws make it impossible to tell when they are in effect, if one or all of them collectively are in force, and what exact conduct is prohibited, such as if exceptions exist to save a pregnant woman's life. That vagueness has resulted in state and local officials issuing conflicting statements about whether the trigger bans are in effect, the lawsuit in Orleans Civil District Court contended. (Production: Christine Kiernan) ( Original Title: 'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling ) ( Caption: 7876WD-USA-ABORTION_LOUISIANA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192460583
'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling
A Louisiana judge on Monday (June 27) temporarily blocked the Republican-led state from enforcing laws banning abortion that were set to take effect after the U.S. Supreme Court's blockbuster decision to end the constitutional right to the procedure nationwide. "So her temporary restraining order essentially means that abortions can, at least for now, abortions can resume in Louisiana until the hearing on July 8th," said Lisa Avalos, Associate Professor at Louisiana State University's Law Center. "That is, of course, provided that no higher court, that no state at the state appellate court or the Louisiana Supreme Court intervenes in the case and lifts the stay." Louisiana is one of 13 states with "trigger laws" designed to ban or severely restrict abortions once the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized a right to the procedure was overturned, as it was on Friday (June 24). Orleans Parish Civil District Court Judge Robin Giarrusso issued a temporary restraining order blocking Louisiana from carrying out its ban shortly after Hope Medical Group for Women in Shreveport, one of Louisiana's three abortion clinics, sued. "Essentially, the, the petitioners in the case argue that the trigger law in Louisiana does not have a clear and unambiguous effective date and that it's not clear who has standing to enforce the law," Avalos said. The judge scheduled a July 8 hearing to decide whether to further enjoin enforcement of the abortion ban. Republican Attorney General Jeff Landry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He hailed the Supreme Court's decision on Friday, and at an event said that those who challenge the state's bans were "in for a rough fight." The case is one of several challenging Republican-backed abortion laws under state constitutions after the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling. A Utah branch of Planned Parenthood on Saturday (June 25) sued over that state's trigger ban, and abortion rights advocates plan to challenge an Ohio ban on abortions after six weeks that took effect on Friday. In Louisiana, Hope Medical argued the state's laws make it impossible to tell when they are in effect, if one or all of them collectively are in force, and what exact conduct is prohibited, such as if exceptions exist to save a pregnant woman's life. That vagueness has resulted in state and local officials issuing conflicting statements about whether the trigger bans are in effect, the lawsuit in Orleans Civil District Court contended. (Production: Christine Kiernan) ( Original Title: 'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling ) ( Caption: 7876WD-USA-ABORTION_LOUISIANA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192460581
'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling
A Louisiana judge on Monday (June 27) temporarily blocked the Republican-led state from enforcing laws banning abortion that were set to take effect after the U.S. Supreme Court's blockbuster decision to end the constitutional right to the procedure nationwide. "So her temporary restraining order essentially means that abortions can, at least for now, abortions can resume in Louisiana until the hearing on July 8th," said Lisa Avalos, Associate Professor at Louisiana State University's Law Center. "That is, of course, provided that no higher court, that no state at the state appellate court or the Louisiana Supreme Court intervenes in the case and lifts the stay." Louisiana is one of 13 states with "trigger laws" designed to ban or severely restrict abortions once the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized a right to the procedure was overturned, as it was on Friday (June 24). Orleans Parish Civil District Court Judge Robin Giarrusso issued a temporary restraining order blocking Louisiana from carrying out its ban shortly after Hope Medical Group for Women in Shreveport, one of Louisiana's three abortion clinics, sued. "Essentially, the, the petitioners in the case argue that the trigger law in Louisiana does not have a clear and unambiguous effective date and that it's not clear who has standing to enforce the law," Avalos said. The judge scheduled a July 8 hearing to decide whether to further enjoin enforcement of the abortion ban. Republican Attorney General Jeff Landry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He hailed the Supreme Court's decision on Friday, and at an event said that those who challenge the state's bans were "in for a rough fight." The case is one of several challenging Republican-backed abortion laws under state constitutions after the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling. A Utah branch of Planned Parenthood on Saturday (June 25) sued over that state's trigger ban, and abortion rights advocates plan to challenge an Ohio ban on abortions after six weeks that took effect on Friday. In Louisiana, Hope Medical argued the state's laws make it impossible to tell when they are in effect, if one or all of them collectively are in force, and what exact conduct is prohibited, such as if exceptions exist to save a pregnant woman's life. That vagueness has resulted in state and local officials issuing conflicting statements about whether the trigger bans are in effect, the lawsuit in Orleans Civil District Court contended. (Production: Christine Kiernan) ( Original Title: 'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling ) ( Caption: 7876WD-USA-ABORTION_LOUISIANA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192460580
'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling
A Louisiana judge on Monday (June 27) temporarily blocked the Republican-led state from enforcing laws banning abortion that were set to take effect after the U.S. Supreme Court's blockbuster decision to end the constitutional right to the procedure nationwide. "So her temporary restraining order essentially means that abortions can, at least for now, abortions can resume in Louisiana until the hearing on July 8th," said Lisa Avalos, Associate Professor at Louisiana State University's Law Center. "That is, of course, provided that no higher court, that no state at the state appellate court or the Louisiana Supreme Court intervenes in the case and lifts the stay." Louisiana is one of 13 states with "trigger laws" designed to ban or severely restrict abortions once the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized a right to the procedure was overturned, as it was on Friday (June 24). Orleans Parish Civil District Court Judge Robin Giarrusso issued a temporary restraining order blocking Louisiana from carrying out its ban shortly after Hope Medical Group for Women in Shreveport, one of Louisiana's three abortion clinics, sued. "Essentially, the, the petitioners in the case argue that the trigger law in Louisiana does not have a clear and unambiguous effective date and that it's not clear who has standing to enforce the law," Avalos said. The judge scheduled a July 8 hearing to decide whether to further enjoin enforcement of the abortion ban. Republican Attorney General Jeff Landry did not immediately respond to requests for comment. He hailed the Supreme Court's decision on Friday, and at an event said that those who challenge the state's bans were "in for a rough fight." The case is one of several challenging Republican-backed abortion laws under state constitutions after the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling. A Utah branch of Planned Parenthood on Saturday (June 25) sued over that state's trigger ban, and abortion rights advocates plan to challenge an Ohio ban on abortions after six weeks that took effect on Friday. In Louisiana, Hope Medical argued the state's laws make it impossible to tell when they are in effect, if one or all of them collectively are in force, and what exact conduct is prohibited, such as if exceptions exist to save a pregnant woman's life. That vagueness has resulted in state and local officials issuing conflicting statements about whether the trigger bans are in effect, the lawsuit in Orleans Civil District Court contended. (Production: Christine Kiernan) ( Original Title: 'Minute by minute, it's a changing situation,' law professor on Louisiana judge's abortion ruling ) ( Caption: 7876WD-USA-ABORTION_LOUISIANA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192414189
Russian missile hits primary school in central Kharkiv
Russian rocket hit a primary school in the centre of Kharkiv in the early morning hours of Monday (June 27), causing no casualties but damaging classrooms and turning the schoolyard into a huge crater. "The school has been badly damaged," Olena Fomichova, the school's director said after inspecting the damage. "We will do our best to enable our children to come back to school, be it online or off-line but we will make sure they do not lose out, she said." Another rocket hit a nearby area damaging a privately owned garage and sparking a fire at a residential building. Russian forces renewed shelling of Kharkiv and surrounding countryside in what Kyiv says is a bid to force Ukraine to pull resources from the main battlefield in Donbas to protect civilians from attack. The strikes that began on Tuesday (June 21) were the worst for weeks in an area where normal life had been returning since Ukraine pushed Moscow's forces back in May. Kharkiv suffered heavy bombardment from the very start of the Russian invasion on February 24, which left much of the country's city of 1.5 million a wasteland of ruined buildings and debris. (Production: Vitalii Hnidyi, Anna Dabrowska) ( Original Title: Russian missile hits primary school in central Kharkiv ) ( Caption: 7774WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_AFTERMATH_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402152
Peruvian truckers strike kicks off as government declares state of emergency on roads
Peruvian freight transport drivers went on an indefinite strike on Monday (June 27) seeking measures to reduce the impact of steep global price rises of fuel as Peru's government declared a state of emergency to rein in the protest. Honking horns, truckers filled a highway around the port city of Callao demanding authorities to step in. The freight transport union leader, Ivan Valencia, said truckers are broken due to the country's economic woes. High global fuel prices linked to Russia's invasion of Ukraine have stoked unrest in Peru. President Pedro Castillo's government has taken measures to curb the rising cost of living, but the annual inflation rate remains at around 8%, its highest level in 24 years. Under the state of emergency, the police and the army will be deployed throughout the country's roads to avoid blockages and the freedom of movement and reunion are suspended. (Production: Carlos Valdez, Anna Portella) ( Original Title: Peruvian truckers strike kicks off as government declares state of emergency on roads ) ( Caption: 7903LA-PERU-PROTESTS__O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402151
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402150
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402148
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402144
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402147
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402142
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402146
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402145
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192402141
Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO CONTAINS GRAPHIC CONTENT Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine killed five people and wounded 22 on Monday (June 27), including five children, the regional governor said. Trails of blood and bodies were seen on the grounds of a residential area in a central Kharkiv district after a Russian artillery strike. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies targeting civilians. Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24. Residents and family members of some of the wounded described explosions that rocked the buildings. A 12 year old boy, Gleb Bondarenko, was wounded in various parts of his body and was treated by emergency services who arrived at the scene following the attack. Evgeni Vasilenko, press spokesman for Kharkiv emergency services, said Russian bombs hit a children's playground and buildings in a residential area of Novyie Budynki district. He said Smerch, a 300 mm multiple launch system was used by the Russian to fire the artillery. Remains of a 220mm Uragan rocket were seen in a different district of central Kharkiv. (Production: Anna Dabrowska, Vitalii Hnidyi, Avivit Delgoshen) ( Original Title: Russian shelling kills five civilians in Ukraine's Kharkiv - regional governor ) ( Caption: 7875WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192399935
Pro-choice supporters protest outside U.S. embassy in Argentina
Pro-choice activists in Argentina marched to the U.S. Embassy in Buenos Aires on Monday (June 27) after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v Wade abortion decision. Protesters held green handkerchiefs - which represent the fight for the legalization of abortion in Latin America - as they chanted phrases such as 'My body, my choice'. During the march, women held banners in English which read 'Keep abortion legal' and 'Legal and free abortion on demand'. On Friday (June 24), the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized women's constitutional right to abortion, a decision condemned by President Joe Biden that will dramatically change life for millions of women in the United States and exacerbate growing tensions in a deeply polarized country. (Production: Miguel Lo Bianco, Nina Lopez) ( Original Title: Pro-choice supporters protest outside U.S. embassy in Argentina ) ( Caption: 7893LA-USA-ABORTION_ARGENTINA_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192398544
Russian artillery captured by Ukraine go on display in Poland
People in Warsaw gathered to see a Russian tank and a self-propelled howitzer captured by Ukrainian forces as they went on display in the Polish capital on Monday (June 27). According to information complied by Ukrainian defence ministry and displayed alongside the captured artillery, the T-72B tank was destroyed in a tank battle in the Bucha district near Kyiv, while the 2S19 MSTA-S howitzer was captured in the north-eastern Sumy region. Among the onlookers were Taras and Victoria, a husband and wife from the western city of Lviv who left Ukraine several years ago. "I can't imagine something like that coming your way" Victoria said, adding she hoped the war would end soon. Russian forces on Monday bombarded Lysychansk, the last big city still held by Ukrainian troops in eastern Luhansk province, following the fall of neighbouring Sievierodonetsk over the weekend. Russia switched the focus of its invasion to the east of Ukraine after fierce resistance meant it was unable to capture the capital Kyiv. "We saw and destroyed many of those tanks," said James, a 56-year old lawyer from Oregon in the United States who said he had been fighting alongside the Ukrainian army before coming to Poland. "Morale is still very high," he said, saying Ukrainians were fighting for their homes and families. Long suspicious of Russian intentions in central and eastern Europe, Poland has positioned itself as one of Kyiv's staunchest allies since President Vladimir Putin's forces invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24. The Kremlin says it launched a "special military operation" to rid Ukraine of far-right nationalists and ensure Russian security. Kyiv and the West dismiss that as a baseless pretext for a war of aggression that has killed thousands, sent millions fleeing Ukraine, destroyed cities and driven up food and energy prices. (Production: Kuba Stezycki, Lewis Macdonald) ( Original Title: Russian artillery captured by Ukraine go on display in Poland ) ( Caption: 7801CE-UKRAINE-CRISIS_POLAND_TANK_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192398525
At least three killed in Russian missile strike on shopping mall, Ukraine says
Two Russian missiles slammed into a crowded shopping centre in the central Ukrainian city of Kremenchuk on Monday (June 27), killing at least three people and wounding 40, senior Ukrainian officials said. The attack caused a huge fire and sent dark smoke billowing into the sky, footage circulated by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy showed. A Reuters reporter saw the charred husk of a shopping complex with a caved-in roof. Firefighters and soldiers were pulling out mangled pieces of metal as they searched for survivors. Zelenskiy said more than 1,000 people were in the shopping centre at the time of the attack. He gave no details of casualties but said: "It is impossible to even imagine the number of victims." Dmytro Lunin, the regional governor said it was unlikely many survivors would be found in the smouldering rubble, because "it was a big fire and there was a lot of smoke." He said there was no military target nearby that Russia could have been aiming at and added: "It's an act of terrorism against civilians." At one point, paramedics rushed into the building after rescuers called out "200" meaning they had found one or more bodies in the building. A rescue operation was under way and nine of the wounded were in a serious condition, said Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of the presidential office. Kremenchuk, an industrial city of 217,000 before Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, lies on the Dnipro river in the region of Poltava and is the site of Ukraine's biggest oil refinery. There was no immediate comment from Russia, which denies deliberately targeting civilians. (Production: Anna Voitenko, Ivan Lyubish-Kirday, Anna Dabrowska) ( Original Title: At least three killed in Russian missile strike on shopping mall, Ukraine says ) ( Caption: 7854WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KREMENCHUK_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192394668
TIMELINE: History of NATO's founding and expansion ahead of Madrid summit
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THIS EDIT CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES / PART QUALITY AS INCOMING Leaders of NATO member countries will meet at a summit in Madrid on Wednesday (June 29) and Thursday (June 30) as the organization faces the unprecedented challenge of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. NATO is expected to consider the bid, opposed by alliance-member Turkey, for Finland and Sweden to join. The Nordic nations applied in the wake of the Russian assault on Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin calls the war a special military operation he says in part responds to the accession to NATO of other countries near post-Soviet Russia's borders since the 1990s. (Production: Vanessa Romeo, Natasa Bansagi) ( Original Title: TIMELINE: History of NATO's founding and expansion ahead of Madrid summit ) ( Caption: 3746WD-NATO-TIMELINE__O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192394643
TIMELINE: History of NATO's founding and expansion ahead of Madrid summit
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THIS EDIT CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES / PART QUALITY AS INCOMING Leaders of NATO member countries will meet at a summit in Madrid on Wednesday (June 29) and Thursday (June 30) as the organization faces the unprecedented challenge of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. NATO is expected to consider the bid, opposed by alliance-member Turkey, for Finland and Sweden to join. The Nordic nations applied in the wake of the Russian assault on Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin calls the war a special military operation he says in part responds to the accession to NATO of other countries near post-Soviet Russia's borders since the 1990s. (Production: Vanessa Romeo, Natasa Bansagi) ( Original Title: TIMELINE: History of NATO's founding and expansion ahead of Madrid summit ) ( Caption: 3746WD-NATO-TIMELINE__O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192369576
Fuel queues grow longer, schools close as Sri Lanka crisis worsens
Queues for petrol in Sri Lanka grew longer on Monday (June 27), amid a severe fuel shortage in the nation battling its worst economic crisis in seven decades, while schools shut in Colombo and public employees were asked to work from home. Troops handed tokens out to motorists waiting in line, which were meant to hold queue positions for when fuel becomes available. "I have been here from midnight on Friday (June 24)… although I got a token, I don't know if I will receive petrol, or if they are trying to fool us," said K. Shamugarajan, 49, one of those who received a token. Power and Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera said on Sunday (June 26) that intermittent queues for petrol were expected in light of the country's unstable financial situation. Stockpiles stood at about 9,000 tonnes of diesel and 6,000 tonnes of petrol, but no fresh shipments are due according to him. It was not immediately clear how far the government could stretch its fuel reserves. (Production: Channa Kumara, Waruna Karunatilake) ( Original Title: Fuel queues grow longer, schools close as Sri Lanka crisis worsens ) ( Caption: 7642BU-SRI LANKA-CRISIS_ECONOMY_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192369554
Fuel queues grow longer, schools close as Sri Lanka crisis worsens
Queues for petrol in Sri Lanka grew longer on Monday (June 27), amid a severe fuel shortage in the nation battling its worst economic crisis in seven decades, while schools shut in Colombo and public employees were asked to work from home. Troops handed tokens out to motorists waiting in line, which were meant to hold queue positions for when fuel becomes available. "I have been here from midnight on Friday (June 24)… although I got a token, I don't know if I will receive petrol, or if they are trying to fool us," said K. Shamugarajan, 49, one of those who received a token. Power and Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera said on Sunday (June 26) that intermittent queues for petrol were expected in light of the country's unstable financial situation. Stockpiles stood at about 9,000 tonnes of diesel and 6,000 tonnes of petrol, but no fresh shipments are due according to him. It was not immediately clear how far the government could stretch its fuel reserves. (Production: Channa Kumara, Waruna Karunatilake) ( Original Title: Fuel queues grow longer, schools close as Sri Lanka crisis worsens ) ( Caption: 7642BU-SRI LANKA-CRISIS_ECONOMY_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192367003
Tight security in Madrid ahead of NATO summit
Heavy police presence and tight security were seen on Monday (June 27) in Madrid as the Spanish capital prepares to host the NATO summit on June 29-30. Ten thousand police officers from the different Spanish law enforcement bodies will work in the security deployment of the summit, Interior Minister sources said. Madrid's main roads and boulevards will be partially closed during the summit, with government officials asking people to move just for the necessary and urging companies to work from home during the week to avoid further disruptions. "It's a very large international and national deployment, on which we are collaborating with other agencies like CNI (National Intelligence Center) , CIFAS (Army intelligence center), EUROPOL, INTERPOL. We all work in synergy and aligned for a joint goal, also with NATO security body, which is that everything goes perfectly," said Luis Lopez Blanco, Spanish police inspector for NATO summit operational intelligence. Defence minister will take care of aerial security, National police will control illegal drone flights and security perimeter will be closed and only open to people with accreditation. NATO will increase the number of its forces at high readiness massively to over 300,000, Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday. At the Madrid summit, NATO will change its language on Russia that in the alliance's last strategy from 2010 was still described as a strategic partner. (Production: Marco Trujillo, Michael Gore, Guillermo Martinez, Miguel Gutierrez) ( Original Title: Tight security in Madrid ahead of NATO summit ) ( Caption: 7722WD-NATO-SUMMIT_SECURITY_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192366445
Kupp says steady improvement key to winning Super Bowl
Los Angeles wide receiver Cooper Kupp said the Rams have the passion and personnel to win back-to-back Super Bowls and can do so if they focus on steadily improving every week. In his breakout fifth season, Kupp led the league in receptions, receiving touchdowns, and receiving yards and saved his best for last, catching two touchdown passes, including the dramatic game winner to earn Super Bowl MVP honors. "Winning the Super Bowl is an incredibly challenging thing to accomplish," Kupp told Reuters. "So much that has to go right including things that are outside of your control. All you can do is trust your process and trust that you can put yourself in the best position possible to win. "And then, week after week, try to be a better football team. We want be a better football team in Week 17 than we were in Week One." Kupp, who suffers from seasonal allergies and who has partnered with Pataday to promote their once-a-day eye drops, earlier this month signed a three-year, $80 million contract extension with the Rams, a record for a wide receiver. The contract's guarantee of $75 million is the highest amount of guaranteed money ever given to an NFL wide receiver - not bad for a third-round pick out of Eastern Washington. The selfless Kupp, who wore quarterback Matthew Stafford's jersey while inking the eye-popping deal, credited his teammates, coaches and family for his success. "It's the culmination of so many people who have had a hand in my life and my wife's as well," he said. "That was what was on my mind as we were headed up to the facility to finalize things - how lucky and blessed we have been to have the people in our lives that have touched us and given us guidance. "This is a culmination of so many people. I'm just a small piece of the whole. I'm incredibly thankful to be able to secure my family and my boys and their children in the future. "We don't take that lightly and I'm very thankful to the Rams and giving us that opportunity." Kupp, 29, grew up in the small Washington town of Yakima but said he is embracing big city life in Los Angeles. "It is a long way from Washington but we love it here," he said. "It is such an incredible melting pot of people. You get to be able to see people from all different walks of life." With the new contract secured, he said he is looking to give back to the region. "There's obviously some great needs in the city of LA and that is something that we're diving into because we are a part of this community." (Production: David Grip) ( Original Title: Kupp says steady improvement key to winning Super Bowl ) ( Caption: 7619HO-FOOTBALL-NFL_KUPP_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192366441
Kremlin rejects Russian default, says bond payments executed
The Kremlin on Monday (June 27) rejected claims that it has defaulted on its external debt for the first time in more than a century, after a grace period on $100 million interest payments ran out. In a call with reporters, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russia made bond payments due in May but the fact they had been blocked by Euroclear because of Western sanctions on Russia was "not our problem". Russia has struggled to keep up payments on $40 billion of outstanding bonds since its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, as sweeping sanctions have effectively cut the country off from the global financial system and rendered its assets untouchable to many investors. Russia has long said it has the money to pay, calling the default artificial, as sanctions block foreign bondholders from receiving the cash. On Monday, a U.S. official said the default showed how dramatically the sanctions were impacting Russia's economy. Around a half of Russian gold and foreign exchange reserves - some $300 billion - were earlier blocked by western sanctions imposed after Moscow sent troops to Ukraine. "Our position is well known. Our reserves are blocked unlawfully and all attempts to use these reserves will also be unlawful and would amount to outright theft," Peskov said. Euroclear did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In another step to widen sanctions on Moscow, the British government said on Sunday that Britain, the United States, Japan and Canada would ban new imports of Russian gold. Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what the Kremlin calls a "special military operation" to rid the country of far-right nationalists and ensure Russian security. Kyiv and the West dismiss that as a baseless pretext for a war of aggression that has killed thousands. ( Original Title: Kremlin rejects Russian default, says bond payments executed ) ( Caption: 7732WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_RUSSIA_DEFAULT_KREMLIN_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192366433
Kremlin rejects Russian default, says bond payments executed
The Kremlin on Monday (June 27) rejected claims that it has defaulted on its external debt for the first time in more than a century, after a grace period on $100 million interest payments ran out. In a call with reporters, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russia made bond payments due in May but the fact they had been blocked by Euroclear because of Western sanctions on Russia was "not our problem". Russia has struggled to keep up payments on $40 billion of outstanding bonds since its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, as sweeping sanctions have effectively cut the country off from the global financial system and rendered its assets untouchable to many investors. Russia has long said it has the money to pay, calling the default artificial, as sanctions block foreign bondholders from receiving the cash. On Monday, a U.S. official said the default showed how dramatically the sanctions were impacting Russia's economy. Around a half of Russian gold and foreign exchange reserves - some $300 billion - were earlier blocked by western sanctions imposed after Moscow sent troops to Ukraine. "Our position is well known. Our reserves are blocked unlawfully and all attempts to use these reserves will also be unlawful and would amount to outright theft," Peskov said. Euroclear did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In another step to widen sanctions on Moscow, the British government said on Sunday that Britain, the United States, Japan and Canada would ban new imports of Russian gold. Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what the Kremlin calls a "special military operation" to rid the country of far-right nationalists and ensure Russian security. Kyiv and the West dismiss that as a baseless pretext for a war of aggression that has killed thousands. ( Original Title: Kremlin rejects Russian default, says bond payments executed ) ( Caption: 7732WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_RUSSIA_DEFAULT_KREMLIN_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192366421
Kremlin rejects Russian default, says bond payments executed
The Kremlin on Monday (June 27) rejected claims that it has defaulted on its external debt for the first time in more than a century, after a grace period on $100 million interest payments ran out. In a call with reporters, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russia made bond payments due in May but the fact they had been blocked by Euroclear because of Western sanctions on Russia was "not our problem". Russia has struggled to keep up payments on $40 billion of outstanding bonds since its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, as sweeping sanctions have effectively cut the country off from the global financial system and rendered its assets untouchable to many investors. Russia has long said it has the money to pay, calling the default artificial, as sanctions block foreign bondholders from receiving the cash. On Monday, a U.S. official said the default showed how dramatically the sanctions were impacting Russia's economy. Around a half of Russian gold and foreign exchange reserves - some $300 billion - were earlier blocked by western sanctions imposed after Moscow sent troops to Ukraine. "Our position is well known. Our reserves are blocked unlawfully and all attempts to use these reserves will also be unlawful and would amount to outright theft," Peskov said. Euroclear did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In another step to widen sanctions on Moscow, the British government said on Sunday that Britain, the United States, Japan and Canada would ban new imports of Russian gold. Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what the Kremlin calls a "special military operation" to rid the country of far-right nationalists and ensure Russian security. Kyiv and the West dismiss that as a baseless pretext for a war of aggression that has killed thousands. ( Original Title: Kremlin rejects Russian default, says bond payments executed ) ( Caption: 7732WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_RUSSIA_DEFAULT_KREMLIN_O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192355454
'We must turn the tide' to tackle ocean crisis, says U.N. chief Guterres
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres appealed to governments and companies on Monday (June 27) to join the fight to save the world's dying oceans, by committing more funds to help create a sustainable economic model for managing them. About 7,000 people are expected to attend the the U.N. Ocean Conference in Lisbon, including heads of state, scientists and NGOs, to assess progress in implementing a directive to protect marine life. "Sadly, we have taken the ocean for granted, and today we face what I would call an 'ocean emergency'," Guterres told the conference. "We must turn the tide." Guterres said there was a need for symbiotic business models that could help the ocean produce more food and generate more renewable energy. The ocean covers about 70% of the planet's surface, generating 50% of the oxygen and absorbing 25% of all carbon dioxide emissions. But climate change is pushing ocean temperatures to record levels and making it more acidic, he said, adding that some eight million tonnes of plastic waste enter the oceans each year. "Without drastic action, it (plastic) could outweigh all the fish in the oceans by 2050," Guterres said. In March, U.N. member states failed to agree on a treaty to protect the high seas from exploitation. Peter Thomson, the U.N. Special Envoy of the Ocean, told Reuters he was confident a consensus would be reached this year. Thomson said hopes of a post-COVID nature's 'green and blue rebound' were fading and that by using plastics for general use 'We have put a plague upon this planet.' (Production: Miguel Pereira, Catarina Demony) ( Original Title: 'We must turn the tide' to tackle ocean crisis, says U.N. chief Guterres ) ( Caption: 7729WD-UN-OCEAN__O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192348559
Wimbledon open for business, not quite as usual
The world's most famous queue began streaming into the All England Club on Monday (June 27) as the gates opened at the start of the 135th edition of the Wimbledon championships. The quintessential English sight of thousands of tennis fans waiting patiently, often having camped overnight, to gain entry to the grounds has been missing since 2019. COVID-19 put paid to Wimbledon in 2020 and last year the queue was scrapped on safety grounds as the tournament returned to semi-normality, albeit with restricted attendances and players based in secure hotel bubbles. Although all that makes Wimbledon such a spectacle has returned, it is not quite business as usual despite the buzz around the grounds as the gates swung open at 0900GMT on a breezy morning in south west London. For a start, Roger Federer, the king of the lawns with a record eight men's singles titles, is absent for the first time since winning the junior event in 1998. The 40-year-old Swiss is recovering from a knee injury and has not played since losing to Poland's Hubert Hurkacz in the quarter-finals a year ago. Also missing is men's world number one Daniil Medvedev after organisers banned Russian and Belarusian players in response to the invasion of Ukraine while women's defending champion Ash Barty has retired. The ban on Russians and Belarusians prompted the ATP and WTA to take away ranking points from Wimbledon this year. Play is also scheduled for 14 days, rather than the traditional 13, with middle Sunday no longer a rest day, meaning the end of so-called Manic Monday when all the men's and women's fourth-round matches used to be played. While the build-up to Wimbledon has been mired in controversy, there are enough plot lines to suggest the next fortnight could be a classic edition. Serena Williams returns after a year out, gunning for the 24th Grand Slam singles title that has eluded her since 2017. Serbia's Novak Djokovic was due to open play on Centre Court on Monday as he seeks to defend his title, win a 21st Grand Slam crown and close the gap on Rafa Nadal who has a record 22. Spaniard Nadal is halfway to a calendar-year Grand Slam after winning the Australian and French Opens. Briton Emma Raducanu's appearance is being billed as a "homecoming" after her extraordinary U.S. Open title win as a qualifier and the spotlight will be fully focused on the teenager when she faces Belgian Alison Van Uytvanck after Djokovic's match against Kwon Soon-woo. With the famous Centre Court celebrating its 100th anniversary this year, the opening day has a very British flavour with twice former champion Andy Murray concluding the action against Australian James Duckworth. Murray is one of 17 British players in the singles draws -- the largest home contingent since 2001. While the stage is set for a feast of tennis over the next two weeks, a rain shower half an hour after play started put a dampener on the early action. Some things, it seems, never change. (Production: Andy Ragg) ( Original Title: Wimbledon open for business, not quite as usual ) ( Caption: 7668SP-TENNIS-WIMBLEDON__O_ )
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192165677
押収した酒を破壊するインドの警察
インドのアーンドラ・プラデーシュ州ヴィシャーカパトナム市のビーミュニパットナムで6月24日、警察が押収した約1万2000本以上の酒を踏み潰した。 ビーミュニパットナムの警察署によると、1万2000本以上ある酒は、これまでに13の作戦で押収されたもので、酒瓶を並べて「SEB ビーミュニパットナム VSP」の文字を作り、その上を重機が通過し踏み潰した。 (インド、アーンドラ・プラデーシュ州、6月27日、映像:Newsflare/アフロ)
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192160442
重火力投射システムTOS-1A ロシア国防省が映像を公開
モスクワ、ロシア、6月27日(AP)― ロシア国防省は6月24日、ウクライナ軍陣地を砲撃するという、TOS-1A「ブラチーノ」多連装ロケットランチャーの映像を公開した。 T-72戦車の車体が流用されているTOS-1の改良型TOS-1Aには、220ミリロケット弾24発を収めるランチャーと、操作員2人を収容する基部の小型砲塔が搭載されている。 ロケット弾は無誘導の燃料気化爆発型で、気圧の変化により目標の上空で炸裂し、正面の幅数十メートル、縦深数百メートルにわたり、一気に燃え上がらせることが可能だ。 (日本語翻訳・編集 アフロ)
日付:2022年6月27日
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RM 192098925
リャザン地方に不時着し亡くなったイリューシンIL-76輸送機のパイロットを追悼するセレモニー
ORENBURG, RUSSIA - JUNE 26, 2022: A mourning ceremony for pilot Vladimir Petrushin, senior flight engineer Nikolai Gorbunov, onboard flight technician Dmitry Andreyev, and flight navigator Stepan Perminov of an Ilyushin Il-76 airlifter, at the Orenburzhye sports complex. On June 24, the Ilyushin Il-76 airlifter crash landed in the Ryazan Region due to engine malfunction; five people died, another four are being treated in hospital. Sergei Medvedev/TASS ( Original Title: Mourning ceremony for pilots of Ilyushin Il-76 that crash landed in Ryazan Region )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192131210
ロシア・クリミアのシンフェロポリ地区 大雨による鉄砲水で浸水した地域から住民らを避難させるレスキュー隊
CRIMEA, RUSSIA - JUNE, 2022: This video shows rescue workers taking local residents to safety in the flood affected Simferopol District of Crimea. Two blocks of flats, 65 curtilages and 24 private residential properties have been affected by flash floods caused by heavy rain. Rescue workers are providing assistance to local residents, pumping water out and evacuating people from the flooded areas whenever necessary. Press Service of the Crimean Branch of the Russian Emergencies Ministry/TASS THIS VIDEO WAS PROVIDED 26 JUNE 2022 BY A THIRD PARTY. EDITORIAL USE ONLY ( Original Title: Flash floods in Crimea, Russia )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192109724
GLOBALink | NW China's mining city explores path of green development
Relying on rich mining resources, Jinchang City in northwest China's Gansu Province, which was a major mining city in the region, has explored a path of green development over the past few years. STANDUP (English): WANG ZIXUAN, Xinhua correspondent "How to boost green development in traditional industrial cities based on mining resources? Northwest China's Jinchang City gives the answers with practice. In recent years, relying on the rich nickel, copper, cobalt resources and the advantages of chemical materials of Jinchuan Group Co., Ltd., Jinchang has successfully transformed and embraced the new energy materials and battery industry." At present, the industrial chain of new energy battery has been initially formed here. As the localization rate of raw materials required by battery industry reaches over 65 percent, this city has gradually gotten into the era of green development. SOUNDBITE (Chinese): XIE ZONGHUA, Deputy director of management committee of Jinchang National Economic and Technological Development Zone "This year, we focus on developing power battery and energy storage battery and building an industrial cluster by inviting more companies to join in the network." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from Lanzhou, China. (XHTV) ( Original Title: GLOBALink | NW China's mining city explores path of green development )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192092027
U.S. torn by Supreme Court's decision to strike down landmark ruling on abortion rights
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday overturned Roe v. Wade, a landmark decision that established a constitutional right to abortion in the nation nearly half a century ago. SOUNDBITE 1 (English): NAT, New York resident "It's an attack on human rights." SOUNDBITE 2 (English): SHERYL NELSON, New York resident "Definitely an attack on women's rights. And if women's health is threatened, the entire society is threatened." Americans' confidence in the Supreme Court has dropped sharply over the past year and reached a new low in Gallup's nearly 50-year trend. SOUNDBITE 3 (English): EMILY ENG, University student in New York "They don't have the inside perspective of how it's like to be a minority, not rich, poor, and have to make these decisions if they come with a child. They shouldn't have to make decisions for other people." SOUNDBITE 4 (English): REVEN, New York resident "Money, political... as they're pushing like an agenda, very minority group has taken control." Some U.S. residents believed the politically motivated ruling could further divide the United States. SOUNDBITE 5 (English): ADRIANA GONZALES, University student in New York "For minorities, immigrants, low-income families, they are not considered at all. I feel like as a nation, we've been divided for like so long, even though people are like, America is the land of freedom. No, it's not." United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet warned that "this decision strips such autonomy from millions of women in the U.S., in particular those with low incomes and those belonging to racial and ethnic minorities, to the detriment of their fundamental rights." Xinhua News Agency correspondents reporting from New York, U.S. (XHTV) ( Original Title: U.S. torn by Supreme Court's decision to strike down landmark ruling on abortion rights )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192353867
'I'm nervous' - New York celebrates gay pride in wake of Supreme Court rulings
Pride celebrations hosted by LGBTQ communities in New York and across the United States this weekend took on a tone of outrage following the Supreme Court's decision to overturn the constitutional right to abortion and a wave of anti-transgender legislation. The weekend's Pride events, which included Sunday parades in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Seattle and Denver, came on the heels of fervent protests in some of the same cities since Friday, when abortion rights supporters took to the streets to decry the Supreme Court's decision to reverse the 1973 Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion nationwide. They also marked the first full celebrations since the pandemic. LGBTQ leaders fear the ruling endangers personal freedom beyond abortion rights. In a concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that the Court might reconsider other precedents, mentioning specifically the rulings protecting the rights to contraception, same-sex intimacy and gay marriage. "We are at this point in this country where established precedent and established laws that have been guiding for 50 years, gone overnight it seems," said Jolene Marchetti, a Philadelphia-based musical instrument repair worker on hand in New York. "Honestly, I am nervous." Even before the Supreme Court's ruling against abortion rights, the LGBTQ community's Pride month jubilation was weighed down by a raft of Republican-backed state laws that specifically target transgender youth. The measures enacted in several red states bar classroom discussion of gender identity, block access to healthcare to help young people transition, and restrict participation in sports. At New York City's Pride parade, women's health provider Planned Parenthood was the first group to kick off the march. Throngs of people dressed in rainbow colors cheered as Planned Parenthood representatives, holding pink signs that read "Together. We fight for all" started the parade in Manhattan around noon on Sunday. "Everybody please scream for Planned Parenthood!" an announcer called over a loudspeaker. The crowd then began a chant of, "We won't back down!" (Production by: Soren Larson and Dan Fastenberg) ( Original Title: 'I'm nervous' - New York celebrates gay pride in wake of Supreme Court rulings ) ( Caption: 7607WD-GAY-PRIDE_NEW_YORK_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192350579
"Thank god for President Donald J. Trump:" Texas Pastor after Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade
Words of thanks and praise were spoken at the First Baptist church in Dallas after the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday (June 24) overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized women's constitutional right to abortion. "Thank god for President Donald J. Trump," senior Pastor Robert Jeffress told congregants Sunday (June 26). Texas is one of 13 states that in past months approved so-called trigger laws that ban or severely restrict abortions once the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling is struck down. Friday's decision will ultimately restrict abortion rights in about half of the country's 50 states. Texas is a pioneer against women's reproductive rights. Last year, the Republican-controlled state was the first to enact what was then the strictest anti-abortion law in the country, inspiring other legislatures to do the same. Republicans banned the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy, illegal since September, and passed the trigger-law that completely bans abortions once the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade. It was a victory for conservatives, who have long sought to eliminate abortion access in the United States. Texas trigger-law bans abortions starting from conception and enforces birth even of pregnancies resulting from rape or incest or that show severe fetal abnormalities. The law includes only narrow exceptions for pregnant people at risk of dying or suffering "substantial impairment." It also allows fines against individuals who help a person access or perform an abortion - such as Uber drivers - and subjects doctors to life in prison if they violate the law. A broad majority of Americans did not want to see Roe v. Wade overturned, according to polls. (Video: Shelby Tauber; Production: Deborah Lutterbeck) ( Original Title: "Thank god for President Donald J. Trump:" Texas Pastor after Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade ) ( Caption: 7606WD-USA-ABORTION_TEXAS_CHURCH_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192350489
"Thank god for President Donald J. Trump:" Texas Pastor after Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade
Words of thanks and praise were spoken at the First Baptist church in Dallas after the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday (June 24) overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized women's constitutional right to abortion. "Thank god for President Donald J. Trump," senior Pastor Robert Jeffress told congregants Sunday (June 26). Texas is one of 13 states that in past months approved so-called trigger laws that ban or severely restrict abortions once the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling is struck down. Friday's decision will ultimately restrict abortion rights in about half of the country's 50 states. Texas is a pioneer against women's reproductive rights. Last year, the Republican-controlled state was the first to enact what was then the strictest anti-abortion law in the country, inspiring other legislatures to do the same. Republicans banned the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy, illegal since September, and passed the trigger-law that completely bans abortions once the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade. It was a victory for conservatives, who have long sought to eliminate abortion access in the United States. Texas trigger-law bans abortions starting from conception and enforces birth even of pregnancies resulting from rape or incest or that show severe fetal abnormalities. The law includes only narrow exceptions for pregnant people at risk of dying or suffering "substantial impairment." It also allows fines against individuals who help a person access or perform an abortion - such as Uber drivers - and subjects doctors to life in prison if they violate the law. A broad majority of Americans did not want to see Roe v. Wade overturned, according to polls. (Video: Shelby Tauber; Production: Deborah Lutterbeck) ( Original Title: "Thank god for President Donald J. Trump:" Texas Pastor after Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade ) ( Caption: 7606WD-USA-ABORTION_TEXAS_CHURCH_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192350463
"Thank god for President Donald J. Trump:" Texas Pastor after Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade
Words of thanks and praise were spoken at the First Baptist church in Dallas after the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday (June 24) overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that recognized women's constitutional right to abortion. "Thank god for President Donald J. Trump," senior Pastor Robert Jeffress told congregants Sunday (June 26). Texas is one of 13 states that in past months approved so-called trigger laws that ban or severely restrict abortions once the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling is struck down. Friday's decision will ultimately restrict abortion rights in about half of the country's 50 states. Texas is a pioneer against women's reproductive rights. Last year, the Republican-controlled state was the first to enact what was then the strictest anti-abortion law in the country, inspiring other legislatures to do the same. Republicans banned the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy, illegal since September, and passed the trigger-law that completely bans abortions once the Supreme Court overruled Roe v. Wade. It was a victory for conservatives, who have long sought to eliminate abortion access in the United States. Texas trigger-law bans abortions starting from conception and enforces birth even of pregnancies resulting from rape or incest or that show severe fetal abnormalities. The law includes only narrow exceptions for pregnant people at risk of dying or suffering "substantial impairment." It also allows fines against individuals who help a person access or perform an abortion - such as Uber drivers - and subjects doctors to life in prison if they violate the law. A broad majority of Americans did not want to see Roe v. Wade overturned, according to polls. (Video: Shelby Tauber; Production: Deborah Lutterbeck) ( Original Title: "Thank god for President Donald J. Trump:" Texas Pastor after Supreme Court overturns Roe v Wade ) ( Caption: 7606WD-USA-ABORTION_TEXAS_CHURCH_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192349021
How Ukrainian defenders left Sievierodonetsk in boats under cover of night
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: EDIT CONTAINS PROFANE LANGUAGE IN SHOTS 24, 2 EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: VIDEO OF FIGHTING IN SIEVIERODENTSK AND UKRAINIAN TROOPS CROSSING RIVER AND WALKING ALONG ROAD IS RECENT AND WAS FILMED ON JUNE 19 AND 20 BEFORE WITHDRAWAL OF UKRAINIAN TROOPS FROM SIEVIERODONETSK One of the last Ukrainian defenders of Sievierodonetsk said he withdrew in a boat, bitter to be leaving after weathering a weeks-long Russian onslaught on the ruined city but happy to be alive as he and others crossed the river to higher ground. Russian forces fully occupied the frontline eastern city on Saturday, both sides said, confirming Kyiv's biggest battlefield setback for more than a month following some of the war's bloodiest fighting. "It was a shame of course because a lot of effort was put into defending it - it went on for months," Danylo, a 24-year-old soldier who said he was among almost the last to leave, said. "But... we're not too upset as we also want to live." He and another soldier, Anton, who also left in the final days, described their pullback across the Siverskyi Donets river in interviews on Sunday. They spoke to Reuters in Sloviansk, a town some 60 km (35 miles) west of Sievierodonetsk that has now become one of Ukraine's key strongholds for its defense of the industrial Donbas heartland that Russia's assault is focused on capturing. "It was mostly under darkness for safety. The locations of the crossings were constantly changed because they were also shelled," Danylo said. Anton said Sievierodonetsk's defenders feared a rerun of the encirclement of the Azovstal steel works in the southern port city of Mariupol, where hundreds of Ukrainian fighters holed up before eventually surrendering. In Sievierodonetsk, the Ukrainian forces were also pushed back to a sprawling industrial area, this time that of the Azot chemical plant. "There were a lot of civilians, soldiers and everything was moving towards us being encircled," Anton said. "They're just testing our endurance. There are no logical explanations for their actions, but they're just draining us, that's their whole tactic," Danylo said. Moscow denies targeting civilians in what it calls a "special military operation" in Ukraine. Kyiv and the West accuse Russian forces of war crimes in a conflict that has killed thousands and sent millions fleeing abroad. Anton said the defenders were ordered to pull back because, due to heavy losses, there was no point in holding on. He said he believed Russian forces had taken much heavier losses. Back in Sloviansk, Tatyana Khimeon, formerly a choreographer, said she was volunteering to distribute supplies including socks, wet wipes, body armour and helmets. "It's difficult for the boys when they leave occupied cities. So we smile and hug them to lighten the mood a bit," she said. "But in general their morale is good. We believe in them, we're hoping for them." (Production: Natalie Thomas, Oleksandr Ratushniak, Margaryta Chornokondratenko) ( Original Title: How Ukrainian defenders left Sievierodonetsk in boats under cover of night ) ( Caption: 7576WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_SLOVYANSK_SOLDIERS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192349054
Survivors of multiple missile strikes in Ukraine's Kharkiv inspect destruction
Residents of a multi-storey building in Kharkiv's Nemyshlianskyi neighbourhood on Sunday (June 26) took in the destruction left behind in the wake of Russian missile strikes the night before. The attack launched late on Saturday (June 25) also damaged a hospital and private houses. Oleksandr Klymenko, a local resident who witnessed the strike described the moment of the attack. "I woke up from an explosion. At first, I didn't understand: I thought these are the usual outgoing and incoming projectiles. But then I received a call. I was told that there is a fire, and our house got hit. I ran out to the stairwell - there was a lot of dust, it was horrendous. I packed my emergency bag and ran towards the basement," Klymenko told Reuters, as put his belongings into the back of his car. At another neighbourhood struck, one local resident who was left trapped under rubble after his house in Kholodnohirskyi was hit, described how he and his wife tried to claw their way out. "We dug ourselves out until we could. But our legs were trapped by rubble. They (rescuers) arrived quickly, they had all the required equipment. We spent around an hour under the rubble," said Ihor Bidenko. Kharkiv suffered heavy bombardment from the very start of the Russian invasion on February 24, which left much of the city of 1.5 million a wasteland of ruined buildings and debris. Russian strikes that began on Tuesday (June 21) on Ukraine's second city, near the Russian border, were the worst for weeks in an area where normal life had been returning since Ukraine pushed Moscow's forces back in May. (Production: Vitalii Hnidyi, Andrii Pryimachenko) ( Original Title: Survivors of multiple missile strikes in Ukraine's Kharkiv inspect destruction ) ( Caption: 7561WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KHARKIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192334166
Protesters in Madrid stage performance to condemn migrants deaths
Hundreds of protesters rallied in Madrid on Sunday (June 26) to condemn the death of at least 23 migrants by the Moroccan border fence in the aftermath of an attempted mass crossing into a Spain on Friday (June 24). Demonstrators lay on the ground, in a staged a performance emulating videos that have emerged in the last two days showing dozens of migrants lying on the ground, some bleeding and many apparently lifeless. Moroccan authorities said the disaster occurred after migrants attempted to breach a fence into the Melilla enclave, with some dying in a crush after what authorities called a stampede, and others falling as they climbed. Some 2,000 migrants had tried to reach Spanish territory by storming the enclave fence before battling border guards for two hours, with about 100 making it across the frontier. In Madrid, demonstrators rallied at Callao Square holding signs reading "Black Lives Matter" and "45 dead because of police violence", demanding safe routes for migrants. "The measures that can be taken are to open safe routes so people that want to ask for asylum can do so," social worker Pablo Rodriguez told Reuters. "This has been done with asylum seekers from other countries. From Ukraine, in four months, thousands of people have come to Spain. We do not understand why the same can't be done in other countries," added the 51-year old. "I'm a migrant and I want to ask the left-wing government and Mr Pedro Sanchez if he is happy and proud of Spain's migration policies, or if they are dictating these policies from above," said 40-year-old social worker Sandra Gallardo, from Paraguay. Morocco said 23 migrants had died and scores were injured, but Moroccan Association for Human Rights (AMDH) said the death toll was 29, citing unnamed local medical officials. Reuters has not managed to speak to any of the migrants who tried to cross. The mass crossing was the first attempted from Morocco into one of Spain's two North African enclaves since Rabat and Madrid agreed this year to bolster cooperation on border control. (Production: Michael Gore, Elena Rodriguez) ( Original Title: Protesters in Madrid stage performance to condemn migrants deaths ) ( Caption: 7603WD-EUROPE-MIGRANTS_SPAIN_PROTESTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192274571
Explosions shake Kyiv's centre, fire at residential building
Several explosions shook Kyiv's central Shevchenkivskiy district early on Sunday (June 26), causing widespread damage and a fire at a residential building, officials said, in the first assault on Ukraine's capital since early June. Emergency services said that as a result of the Russian shelling a fire broke out in a 9-storey residential building that had been partially damaged in the attack. Kyiv's mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said that residents are being rescued and evacuated from two buildings. "There are people under the rubble," Klitschko said. Air raid sirens regularly disrupt life in Kyiv, but there have been no major strikes on the city since June 5 when a rail car repair facility was hit on the outskirts and a late April shelling when a Radio Liberty producer was killed in a strike that hit the building she lived in. The Shevchenkivskiy historic district, one of Kyiv's central, is home to a cluster of universities, restaurants, and art galleries. Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 but abandoned an early advance on Kyiv in the face of fierce resistance bolstered by Western arms. Since then Moscow and its proxies have focused on the south and Donbas, an eastern territory made up of Luhansk and its neighbour Donetsk, deploying overwhelming artillery in some of the heaviest ground fighting in Europe since World War Two. (Production: Gleb Garanich, Andrii Pryimachenko, Anna Dabrowska) ( Original Title: Explosions shake Kyiv's centre, fire at residential building ) ( Caption: 7492WD-UKRAINE-CRISIS_KYIV_BLASTS_O_ )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192081132
Drew Barrymore looks stunning as she arrives at 49th Daytime Emmy Awards Red carpet
***NO MAILONLINE, NO DAILYMAIL*** Drew Barrymore looks stunning as she arrives at 49th Daytime Emmy Awards Red carpet at Pasadena Convention Center on June 24, 2022 in Pasadena, California, USA ( Original Title: Drew Barrymore looks stunning as she arrives at 49th Daytime Emmy Awards Red carpet )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192079490
Drew Barrymore attends the 49th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards in Pasadena
Drew Barrymore on the red carpet at the 49th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards held at the Pasadena Convention Center in Pasadena, California USA on Friday June 24th, 2022 ( Original Title: Drew Barrymore attends the 49th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards in Pasadena )
日付:2022年6月26日
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RM 192055669
女性の中絶権を長年守ってきた判断を覆した最高裁判所の決断を受け怒りの声を上げる女性=アメリカ
WASHINGTON, D.C. - June 25, 2022: Abortion rights demonstrators rallied in front of the United States Supreme Court following the release of the court's opinion overturning Roe v. Wade on June 24, 2022. (Ben Von Klemperer / BVK Images LLC) ( Original Title: Abortion rights demonstrator addresses rally in front of Supreme Court on day after Roe is overturned )
日付:2022年6月25日
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RM 192053270
女性の中絶権を守ってきた「ロー対ウェイド」判決を覆したことを受けて抗議をする人たち=アメリカ
WASHINGTON, D.C. - June 25, 2022: Abortion rights demonstrators rallied in front of the United States Supreme Court following the release of the court's opinion overturning Roe v. Wade on June 24, 2022. (Ben Von Klemperer / BVK Images LLC) ( Original Title: Abortion rights demonstrations rally in front of Supreme Court on day after Roe is overturned )
日付:2022年6月25日
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RM 192274573
「世界一醜い犬コンテスト」米カリフォルニア州ペタルーマで開催⑤
The World's Ugliest Dog contest returned to Petaluma, California on Friday (June 24) after a two-year absence due to the pandemic, and the crowned winner looks more like an alien than a dog, according to the rescue shelter where he was retrieved. "Mr. Happy Face" came all the way from Flagstaff, Arizona, with his owner, 48-year-old musician Jeneda Benally, who calls herself his emotional support human. "It feels incredible that there's recognition of true inner beauty and that is just amazing. So I don't know that I feel like I've got the world's ugliest dog. I know I've got the world's most lovable dog," Benally said, adding that they believe he's 17 years old. "Mr. Happy Face" blew away the judges and the crowd with his crooked head, gray mohawk, hairless, pimple-ridden body, awkward hobble, and snort-like breathing. With the backing of the audience, he was the clear winner. "Mr. Happy Face is wonderful. I love his crooked head, his hairless body. He's all pimply. And he's just adorable but ugly at the same time," Dr. Dave Rupiper, one of the judges and a local veterinarian at the East Petaluma Animal Hospital. One dog named Josie sported hair similar to the character Doc Brown from the film franchise "Back to the Future," according to one of the judges. Wild Thang, a 6-year-old Pekinese with more hair than body and with no teeth to hold its tongue in its mouth, won second place, while a 12-year-old Blue Factor Brussels Griffon named Monkey won third. Other contestants included a Mexican hairless named Morita, who was found on the streets of Puerto Penasco, Mexico, and brought to the U.S. via the Santa Rosa rescue organization, Compassion without Borders. A pair of pugs - both coincidentally rescued separately from Asia and now living at the Pug Hotel Senior Sanctuary in Sonoma County - also competed. (Production: Nathan Frandino) ( Original Title: Meet the crowned winner of the 'World's Ugliest Dog' contest ) ( Caption: 7330LI-CALIFORNIA-UGLIEST_DOG__O_ )
日付:2022年6月25日
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RM 192274570
「世界一醜い犬コンテスト」米カリフォルニア州ペタルーマで開催④
The World's Ugliest Dog contest returned to Petaluma, California on Friday (June 24) after a two-year absence due to the pandemic, and the crowned winner looks more like an alien than a dog, according to the rescue shelter where he was retrieved. "Mr. Happy Face" came all the way from Flagstaff, Arizona, with his owner, 48-year-old musician Jeneda Benally, who calls herself his emotional support human. "It feels incredible that there's recognition of true inner beauty and that is just amazing. So I don't know that I feel like I've got the world's ugliest dog. I know I've got the world's most lovable dog," Benally said, adding that they believe he's 17 years old. "Mr. Happy Face" blew away the judges and the crowd with his crooked head, gray mohawk, hairless, pimple-ridden body, awkward hobble, and snort-like breathing. With the backing of the audience, he was the clear winner. "Mr. Happy Face is wonderful. I love his crooked head, his hairless body. He's all pimply. And he's just adorable but ugly at the same time," Dr. Dave Rupiper, one of the judges and a local veterinarian at the East Petaluma Animal Hospital. One dog named Josie sported hair similar to the character Doc Brown from the film franchise "Back to the Future," according to one of the judges. Wild Thang, a 6-year-old Pekinese with more hair than body and with no teeth to hold its tongue in its mouth, won second place, while a 12-year-old Blue Factor Brussels Griffon named Monkey won third. Other contestants included a Mexican hairless named Morita, who was found on the streets of Puerto Penasco, Mexico, and brought to the U.S. via the Santa Rosa rescue organization, Compassion without Borders. A pair of pugs - both coincidentally rescued separately from Asia and now living at the Pug Hotel Senior Sanctuary in Sonoma County - also competed. (Production: Nathan Frandino) ( Original Title: Meet the crowned winner of the 'World's Ugliest Dog' contest ) ( Caption: 7330LI-CALIFORNIA-UGLIEST_DOG__O_ )
日付:2022年6月25日
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RM 192274550
「世界一醜い犬コンテスト」米カリフォルニア州ペタルーマで開催③
The World's Ugliest Dog contest returned to Petaluma, California on Friday (June 24) after a two-year absence due to the pandemic, and the crowned winner looks more like an alien than a dog, according to the rescue shelter where he was retrieved. "Mr. Happy Face" came all the way from Flagstaff, Arizona, with his owner, 48-year-old musician Jeneda Benally, who calls herself his emotional support human. "It feels incredible that there's recognition of true inner beauty and that is just amazing. So I don't know that I feel like I've got the world's ugliest dog. I know I've got the world's most lovable dog," Benally said, adding that they believe he's 17 years old. "Mr. Happy Face" blew away the judges and the crowd with his crooked head, gray mohawk, hairless, pimple-ridden body, awkward hobble, and snort-like breathing. With the backing of the audience, he was the clear winner. "Mr. Happy Face is wonderful. I love his crooked head, his hairless body. He's all pimply. And he's just adorable but ugly at the same time," Dr. Dave Rupiper, one of the judges and a local veterinarian at the East Petaluma Animal Hospital. One dog named Josie sported hair similar to the character Doc Brown from the film franchise "Back to the Future," according to one of the judges. Wild Thang, a 6-year-old Pekinese with more hair than body and with no teeth to hold its tongue in its mouth, won second place, while a 12-year-old Blue Factor Brussels Griffon named Monkey won third. Other contestants included a Mexican hairless named Morita, who was found on the streets of Puerto Penasco, Mexico, and brought to the U.S. via the Santa Rosa rescue organization, Compassion without Borders. A pair of pugs - both coincidentally rescued separately from Asia and now living at the Pug Hotel Senior Sanctuary in Sonoma County - also competed. (Production: Nathan Frandino) ( Original Title: Meet the crowned winner of the 'World's Ugliest Dog' contest ) ( Caption: 7330LI-CALIFORNIA-UGLIEST_DOG__O_ )
日付:2022年6月25日
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