Skip to content

529NEWS

Seattle Sports News Report

  • HOME
  • Health
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Buy A Car

Category NEWS

  • Home   /  
  • Archive by category "NEWS"
  • ( Page34 )
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Rare reconstructed Roman armour goes on display

Duncan McGlynn/NMS A museum display with a partially reconstructed arm guard and breast plate from the Roman era in a glass cabinetDuncan McGlynn/NMSThe armour has been reconstructed from more than 100 pieces found in the Scottish BordersA rare piece of Roman armour – reconstructed from dozens of fragments – has gone on display in its entirety for the first time in Scotland.
Dating from the middle of the 2nd Century, the brass arm guard is the most intact example of its kind and one of only three known from the whole Roman Empire.
The armour was discovered in over 100 pieces at the site of the Trimontium Fort near Melrose in 1906.
It has now gone on permanent display at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.
Duncan McGlynn/NMS A man wearing purple gloves delicately places a Roman artefact into a glass display unit with some reflection of his hands and the armourDuncan McGlynn/NMSThe arm guard took weeks to rebuild earlier this yearThe armour is said to be in "remarkably good condition", with remnants of leather straps still attached to the metal.
Conservators in Edinburgh spent weeks rebuilding the arm guard earlier this year.
It went on loan to the British Museum’s exhibition Legion: Life in the Roman Army and has now gone on display in Scotland.
Dr Fraser Hunter, principal curator of prehistoric and Roman archaeology at National Museums Scotland (NMS), said he was delighted people could now see the "rare and special object".
Russel Wills A large stone monument marking a site of the Roman occupation of southern Scotland with fields and a hill in the backgroundRussel WillsThe armour was found near the site of an old Roman fort in the Borders"Brass armour like this would have been expensive and would have acted as both a means of protection and an eye-catching status symbol," he said.
"The arm guard is displayed alongside a well-preserved section of iron body armour uncovered in the same building of the fort, and together they offer a tantalising glimpse into the life of a legionary in Roman Scotland."
The fragments have been in the NMS collection for more than a century.
Before being fully reconstructed, the upper section was on display for 25 years, with the lower section loaned to the Trimontium Museum and dozens of fragments stored at the NMS collection centre.

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Drama about hunt for Raoul Moat part of Royal Court’s new season

Other plays to feature include a production of Sarah Kane’s final work and a saga involving a British Museum artefact
Lanre BakareThu 17 Oct 2024 12.00 BSTLast modified on Thu 17 Oct 2024 14.04 BSTShareA new Robert Icke drama about the hunt for Raoul Moat, a revival of Sarah Kane’s final play, and a saga about a Chinese request for the return of a stolen artefact from the British Museum are among the standout pieces that have been announced as part of the latest Royal Court season.
The theatre’s artistic director, David Byrne, said the season was “internationalist” with South African (A Good House) and Palestinian writers (A Knock on the Roof) alongside more established British talent, such as Icke.
Byrne said: “It’s a combination of the best stuff I’ve seen over the last year and the most urgent bits of writing that need to be heard from our stages right now, things from our recent past to glimpses of what our future could be.”
Byrne believes that Icke’s handling of the Moat affair will be one of the most anticipated theatre moments of 2025. It could also be one of the most controversial.
There has been a book about the incident (Andrew Hankinson’s You Could Do Something Amazing With Your Life [You Are Raoul Moat]) and a television drama, ITV’s Hunt for Raoul Moat, which aired last year.
Raoul Moat mugshotView image in fullscreenRaoul MoatThe search for Moat resulted in one of the largest manhunts in British history, as the bodybuilder and bouncer was pursued across Northumberland. As Moat camped out in woodland after killing one man and shooting two other people, survival expert Ray Mears was asked to help find him.
Before the ITV drama was broadcast, the Guardian visited Rothbury, the village where Moat was eventually apprehended and found several people who said the 2010 incident was still “too fresh in people’s memory”.
Byrne wouldn’t be drawn on whether all the saga’s twists and turns, including an appearance from Paul Gascoigne who appealed for Moat to turn himself in, would be included in Manhunt, which opens in March next year.
“It’s the part of the world where Robert is from, and it is an epic piece of work,” says Byrne. “He’s going to look at every aspect of that story and it’s a very different piece of work for Robert but he’s used to taking on those big stories and this is the modern version of that.”
B/W closeup of Sarah Kane smilingView image in fullscreenSarah Kane in 1998. Photograph: Jane Bown/The ObserverA Guardian review of Kane’s 4:48 Psychosis said the play, which she wrote shortly before taking her own life in 1999, had “been trapped in the shadows” of what happened to her, but Byrne hopes the new production will reposition it.
“It’s going to be incredibly special, that original creative team returning to that show 25 years later in the space that they originally made it, plugs into a really deep theatre magic,” he said.
Byrne added that the new staging would hopefully cement it as one of the most “important and influential pieces of theatre writing of the last 100 years”.
The final performance of the play’s run at the Royal Shakespeare in Stratford-upon-Avon, where it transfers after the Royal Court, will be held at 4.48am in the morning, which is the time that Kane regularly awoke during the final stages of her depressive illness.
Joel Tan’s Scenes From a Reparation tackles the restitution debate surrounding disputed artefacts in museum collections.
Byrne said the play, which will have its premiere in the Jerwood Theatre Upstairs, “has a cast of over 40 characters, none of whom appear in more than a single scene, in fact the only consistent character throughout is that statue.”

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Tinubu Mandates Shettima to Lead Nigerian Delegation to 2024 CHOGM

* VP to join other world leaders to brainstorm on global economy, environmental and security challenges 
* Six-day event holding in Samoa begins  Monday 
* Meeting expected to elect next Secretary-General for the body from Africa
Deji Elumoye in Abuja
President Bola Tinubu has mandated Vice-President Kashim Shettima to lead Nigeria’s delegation to the 2024 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).
According to a release issued on Sunday by the media assistant to the Vice-President, Stanley Nkwocha, Shettima will join King Charles of England and other world leaders from 56 member-countries at the first CHOGM to be held in the small Pacific island of Apia, Samoa from October 21 to 26, where they will deliberate on the theme ‘One Resilient Common Future: Transforming our Common Wealth.’
The theme will focus attention on how member-nations can harness their strengths through resilience, unlocking potential, leveraging the ‘Commonwealth Advantage’, and fostering a connected, digital Commonwealth.
At the meeting, Nigeria and other member- countries will also elect and appoint the next Commonwealth Secretary-General.
In line with the Agreed Memorandum on the Establishment and Functions of the Commonwealth Secretariat (revised 2022) and the principle of regional rotation, the next Commonwealth Secretary-General will come from the Africa region.
The candidates for the role are from Lesotho, Ghana and The Gambia, while Nigeria will have a major role to play as the largest African member in this regard.
Consolidating the progress made at CHOGM 2022, Shettima and other world leaders will also deliberate on the global economy, environmental and security challenges, discussing how Commonwealth countries can work together to build resilience, boost trade, innovation, growth and empower the Commonwealth’s 1.5 billion young people for a more peaceful and sustainable future.
The vice-president is expected to use the platform provided by the Commonwealth Business Forum to further attract investors to Nigeria, as global experts from businesses and the private sector convene to recommend and champion solutions to global challenges.
Shettima will also participate in the People’s Forum, the single largest opportunity organized by the Commonwealth Foundation for people to engage with leaders on global development issues.
He will also engage in bilateral meetings and other executive sessions.

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Children’s soft play centre apologises over ‘body bag’ Halloween decorations

Indoor facility in Cirencester removes objects resembling corpses covered in plastic after parents complain
Nadeem BadshahSun 20 Oct 2024 14.07 EDTLast modified on Sun 20 Oct 2024 14.27 EDTShareA children’s soft play centre has removed its hanging “body bag” Halloween decorations after concerns were raised by parents.
Rugrats and Halfpints in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, has apologised over the objects resembling human corpses covered in black plastic.
Some appeared to be wrapped with tape bearing the words “caution” and “danger” and were hanging upside down from poles adjoining one of the soft play structures, according to pictures posted online.
One parent who took her daughter to the indoor play park in the Cotswolds on Sunday said she did a “double take” when she spotted the decorations. The woman, who wished to remain anonymous, told Sky News: “The body bags were at the back which can’t be seen from the cafe area, only by kids inside. “When I saw them I did a double take – surely that can’t be what I think it is? I just didn’t want to have to explain to my kid what they were.
“I spoke to some other parents after who were as shocked as I was that it was deemed appropriate. It’s a great soft play, but that did shock me a bit.”
A spokesperson for the centre told Sky News: “This is the first time someone has brought it to our attention so of course due to this we will take them down immediately. It wasn’t to cause distress and we apologise this is how they have felt.”
The centre’s website says it is “committed to providing a safe, clean and stimulating environment, with the emphasis on fun”, with prices ranging from £5.75 up to £11.75 per child. It offers parents “a variety of different play areas and entertainment for your kids to get stuck in while you can enjoy our on-site cafe”.

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Former Las Vegas official who killed journalist must serve at least 28 years

Robert Telles was convicted of stabbing Jeff German of Las Vegas Review-Journal who had written critical articles
Guardian staff and agencyWed 16 Oct 2024 19.04 BSTLast modified on Wed 16 Oct 2024 19.19 BSTShareA former Las Vegas official was sentenced to serve nearly three decades in Nevada state prison for killing an investigative journalist who wrote articles critical of his conduct in office two years ago and exposed an intimate relationship with a female co-worker.
Judge Michelle Leavitt of the Clark county district court on Wednesday sentenced Robert Telles to serve at least 28 years for the September 2022 murder of the Las Vegas Review-Journal reporter Jeff German.
A jury had found Telles guilty of murder in August and sentenced the former official to life in prison with eligibility for parole after 20 years.
The judge on Wednesday invoked sentencing enhancements for elements including use of a deadly weapon, lying in wait and the age of the reporter to add eight years to the minimum 20-year sentence that the jury had set.
At the trial, Telles, 47, denied stabbing German to death. But evidence against him was strong – including his DNA beneath German’s fingernails.
At the time, Telles was the elected administrator of a county office that handles unclaimed estate and probate property cases. He has been jailed without bail since his arrest several days after the attack.
Telles’s defense attorney, Robert Draskovich, has said Telles intends to appeal his conviction.
German was 69. He was a respected reporter who spent 44 years covering crime, courts and corruption in Las Vegas.
Telles lost his primary for a second term in office after German’s stories in May and June 2022 described turmoil and bullying at the office Telles led, as well as a romantic relationship between Telles and a female employee. Telles’s law license was suspended following his arrest.
German was murdered on 2 September 2022 outside his home in Las Vegas. Police sought public help to identify a person captured on neighborhood security video driving a maroon SUV and walking while wearing a broad straw hat that hid his face and an oversized orange long-sleeve shirt.
Telles was arrested a few days after. At the trial, prosecutor Pamela Weckerly showed footage of the person wearing orange slipping into the side yard where German was stabbed, slashed and left dead.
Prosecutors detailed how police found a maroon SUV and cut-up pieces of a straw hat and a gray athletic shoe which looked like those worn by the person seen on neighborhood video at Telles’s house. Authorities did not find the orange long-sleeve shirt or a murder weapon.
Telles testified for several rambling hours at his trial, admitting for the first time that reports of the office romance were true. He denied killing German and said he was “framed” by a broad conspiracy involving a real estate company, police, DNA analysts, former co-workers and others. He told the jury he was victimized for crusading to root out corruption.
“I am not the kind of person who would stab someone. I didn’t kill Mr German,” Telles said. “And that’s my testimony.”
But prosecutors had other evidence incriminating Telles – including his DNA under German’s fingernails.
Telles told the jury he took a walk and went to a gym at the time German was killed. But evidence showed Telles’s wife sent text messages to him about the same time German was killed asking, “Where are you?” Prosecutors said Telles left his cellphone at home so he couldn’t be tracked.
The jury deliberated nearly 12 hours over three days before finding Telles guilty. The panel heard pained sentencing hearing testimony from German’s brother and two sisters, along with emotional pleas for leniency from Telles’s wife, ex-wife and mother, before deciding that Telles could be eligible for parole.
German was the only journalist killed in the US in 2022, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. The non-profit has records of 17 media workers killed in the US since 1992.
Katherine Jacobsen, the US, Canada and Caribbean program coordinator at the committee, said in August that Telles’s conviction sent “an important message that the killing of journalists will not be tolerated”.
Glenn Cook, the executive editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, said in a statement shortly after Telles’s guilty verdict in August that Telles “could have joined the long line of publicly shamed Nevada politicians who’ve gone on with their lives, out of the spotlight or back in it. Instead, he carried out a premeditated revenge killing with terrifying savagery.
“Today also brought a measure of justice for slain journalists all over the world,” Cook added. “Our jobs are increasingly risky and sometimes dangerous. In many countries, the killers of journalists go unpunished. Not so in Las Vegas.”

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Edo Queens, Heartland, Bayelsa Queens, Qualify for S’finals

Adibe Emenyonuin Benin City
Edo  Queens  and Heartland Queens have advanced to the semifinals of the Betsy Obaseki Women Football Tournament (BOWFT) after an impressive display at the quarterfinals of the tournament on Saturday.
The twelve-day tournament, in its fourth edition, started on October 6, 2024 and will run through October 17, 2024.
In the opening quarter-final match, Edo Queens sailed through to the next round after crushing their opponent, Abia Anglels Football Club with a 4-0 score line.
The match took place at the University of Benin Sports Complex in Benin City.
Elsewhere, the second quarter-final encounter held at the Western Boys High School between Heartland Queens of Owerri and Benin Republic Espoir FCended 1-0 after 90 minutes of play in favour of the Nigerian team.
In another quarter-final encounter at Western Boys High School in Ikpoba-Okha LGA, Bayelsa Queens thrashed Fortress Ladies FC 2-0 to qualify for the semi-finals.
However, the last quarter-final match between Nasarawa Amazons and Remo Stars Ladies at the UNIBEN Sports Complex was stopped after 78 minutes of play as a result of the heavy downpour with the score line at 1-1.
The organisers have announced the decision to continue the match between Nasarawa Amazons and Remo Stars Ladies today at 9pm for the 12 remaining minutes of play.
The FIFA accredited tournament is a brainchild of the Edo State First Lady, Mrs. Betsy Obaseki. The ongoing fourth edition of the tournament is themed “Say No to Teenage Pregnancy and Abandonment”.

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Harris stresses abortion rights and early voting in packed Atlanta rally

Thousands of supporters, including Usher, rally in battleground Georgia, as campaign focuses on early votes
George Chidi in Atlanta, GeorgiaSat 19 Oct 2024 20.14 EDTLast modified on Sun 20 Oct 2024 12.47 EDTShareKamala Harris highlighted the threat to women’s reproductive rights and Donald Trump’s apparent exhaustion at a rally Saturday in south Atlanta, continuing a full-court press for votes in Georgia as early voting breaks records here.
The race continues to appear close in Georgia, with polls suggesting the Republican nominee holds a one-point lead in the state. Trump has made multiple appearances in Georgia and has a rally with Turning Point Action planned in Gwinnett county, outside Atlanta, next week.
However, the National Rifle Association canceled a planned Saturday rally with Trump in Savannah, citing a “scheduling conflict”. Trump has also canceled several news interviews over the last week.
The Trump campaign has angrily pushed back against a suggestion raised by a staffer that Trump had been exhausted by the appearances. But Harris has seized the idea as a rallying cry.
“And now, he’s ducking debates, and canceling interviews because of exhaustion,” Harris said. “And when he does answer a question or speak at a rally, have you noticed that he tends to go off script and ramble, and generally for the life of him can’t finish a thought? … Folks are exhausted with someone trying to have Americans point their fingers at each other. We’re exhausted. That’s why I say it’s time to turn the page on that.”
Man in long gray trench coat on stage.View image in fullscreenUsher in Atlanta. Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/APHarris returned to familiar themes on a day of perfect Atlanta weather, describing the “opportunity economy” as one that brings down the cost of living for prescription medication, groceries and housing through anti-price-gouging initiatives, while providing financial support for new parents and entrepreneurs.
Extending Medicare coverage for home healthcare services would prevent working adults from having to quit a productive job or spend down savings to take care of aging parents. “It’s about dignity,” she said in the city’s Lakewood Amphitheater.
Harris will attend services Sunday at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, a majority-Black megachurch in the heart of Atlanta’s Black suburbs in south DeKalb county. New Birth and other large Black churches in Georgia traditionally organize a “souls to the polls” push on Sunday early voting days.
As of 5pm Saturday, about 1.3 million Georgians had cast ballots early in person, more than double the 2020 pace on the fifth day of early voting in Georgia. In 2020, about 2.7 million out of 5 million voters cast ballots early in person, with more than two-thirds of votes cast before election day. Absentee ballots are down sharply, however, a reflection of the end of the pandemic and changes to absentee ballot rules.
Early voting provides real-time feedback for campaign strategists hoping to target voters who have not yet cast a ballot. Democrats pressed their supporters in Georgia to vote early in 2020 and 2022, a strategy that helped lead the party to victory in the 2020 presidential race and Georgia’s two vital wins in the US Senate.
“Georgia, out of nowhere, we made a way,” said the US senator Jon Ossoff. “This is an election that will determine the character of our republic. This is much deeper than Democrats versus Republicans. Former president Trump is unfit for the presidency.”
But so far this year, early voting in rural and ex-urban areas of Georgia, rich in Republican votes, have outpaced core Atlanta turnout rates. Donald Trump has pointedly encouraged his supporters to vote early this year, a tacit acknowledgement of the strategic error of 2020.
Early voting also began on Saturday in Nevada, where Barack Obama campaigned for Harris in Las Vegas. The former president also poked fun at Trump, telling the audience: “We don’t need to see what an older, loonier Donald Trump with no guardrails looks like.”
Obama pokes fun at Trump's town hall concert – video1:56Obama pokes fun at Trump’s town hall concert – videoIn Georgia, early voters among Democrats have been vocal about abortion policy driving their votes. The deaths of Amber Thurman and Candi Miller, two Georgia women who couldn’t access timely maternal health service or legal abortions, have resonated in the rhetoric of the election.
“Let us agree, one does not have to abandon their faith or deeply held beliefs to agree: the government should not be telling her what to do,” Harris said. The rally rolled clips of Thurman’s family describing their grief, and then of Trump mocking their loss in a town hall interview hosted by Fox News.
“He belittles their sorrow, making it about himself and his television ratings,” Harris said. “It’s cruel.”
But the Lakewood rally was plainly about driving turnout and enthusiasm among Black voters. Usher, the Atlanta-based R&B musician and dancer, spoke early to the crowd, calling on people to vote early for Harris, and to reach out to friends and family.
“How we vote – I mean, everything that we do in the next 17 days – will affect our children, our grandchildren, of the people we love the most,” Usher said.
Ryan Wilson, the co-founder of private networking hub the Gathering Spot and a notable Atlanta entrepreneur, discussed the Harris proposal to offer up to $50,000 in grants to Black entrepreneurs. “That would have been a game changer for me,” he said.
“Vice-President Harris’s opportunity agenda for Black men who provide folks like me the tools to achieve generational wealth, lower costs and protect their rights. And what would Donald Trump do? I think it’s fair to say: nothing.”

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

UN condemns ‘large number of civilian casualties’ in north Gaza

AFP File photo showing Palestinian children sitting on top of their family's belongings as they flee areas north of Gaza City, in the northern Gaza Strip (12 October 2024)AFPThe Israeli military has told residents of Jabalia refugee camp and neighbouring towns to evacuate to southern GazaThe UN has condemned the "large number of civilian casualties" caused by Israeli strikes on northern Gaza in recent days.
The comments – made by a spokesperson for Secretary General Antonio Guterres – come as at least 10 people have reportedly been killed by Israeli artillery fire at a food distribution centre at Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza, where Israeli tanks and troops are continuing a ground offensive.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) said shells hit inside and outside the centre on Monday morning as some hungry people were trying to get food handouts.
The Israeli military said it was reviewing the incident, adding that it operates "only against terror targets".

Follow live updates on this storyAnalysing footage from the Gaza strikesWatch: ‘I say bye to my kids, in case we don’t wake up’ – two Gazans film a year under attack by IsraelWhy is the US giving Israel a powerful Thaad anti-missile system?Gaza Strip in maps: How a year of war has drastically changed life in the territory
Hundreds of people are reported to have been killed since the military said it was launching the offensive in the area and two neighbouring northern towns nine days ago to root out Hamas fighters who had regrouped there.
The UN said on Sunday that more than 50,000 people had fled the Jabalia area, but that others remained stranded in their homes amid increased bombardment and fighting on the ground. UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said civilians must "be protected at all times".
"The secretary general condemns the large number of civilian casualties in the intensifying Israeli campaign in northern Gaza, including its schools, displacing sheltered Palestinian civilians," he told reporters at a news conference in New York.
The offensive had also forced the closure of water wells, bakeries, medical points and shelters, as well as the suspension of other humanitarian services, including malnutrition treatment, it warned.
The UN said it had not been allowed to deliver essential supplies, including food, since 1 October, with two nearby border crossings closed and no deliveries allowed from the south.
Map showing Israeli military evacuation orders in northern Gaza (October 2024)The Israeli military said a convoy of 30 aid lorries entered through a crossing south of Gaza City on Sunday, when US President Joe Biden told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of what the White House called the “imperative to restore access to the north”.
The military has ordered residents of Jabalia and neighbouring areas to evacuate to the Israeli-designated “humanitarian area” in southern Gaza, saying it is “operating with great force against the terrorist organisations and will continue to do so for a long time”.
But many of the estimated 400,000 Palestinians living in the north say they are reluctant to flee to the south, fearing that if they do they will not be allowed to return home.
They believe the Israeli military is planning to implement a plan, proposed by retired Israeli generals, to completely empty the north of civilians and besiege Hamas fighters remaining there until they release Israeli hostages held since Hamas's 7 October 2023 attack on Israel.
The Israeli military has denied it is implementing the plan. "We are making sure we're getting civilians out of harm's way while we operate against those terror cells in Jabalia," spokesman Lt Col Nadav Shoshani told reporters.
Watch: People battle to put out fires after Israeli strike hits Gaza hospital tent campOvernight, four people were killed when an Israeli aircraft struck a tented camp for displaced people next to al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital in the central town of Deir al-Balah.
The Israeli military said it had conducted a “a precise strike on terrorists who were operating inside a command-and-control centre in the area of a parking lot”, and that it took measures to mitigate harm to civilians.
“Shortly after the strike, a fire ignited in the hospital's parking lot, most likely due to secondary explosions. The incident is under review,” Lt Col Shoshani wrote on X. “The hospital and its functionality were not affected from the strike.”
A video posted online appeared to show secondary explosions, but it was not clear whether they were caused by weapons or fuel tanks.
A spokesman for al-Aqsa hospital, Dr Khalil al-Daqran, said more than 50 tents were burned and that it was struggling to treat about 50 people who were injured, including children, women and the elderly, as well as casualties from other recent Israeli strikes.
A resident of the camp, Umm Mahmoud Wadi, said her family lost everything.
"Where should I take my daughters? Winter is coming. There's no bedding, no clothes, nothing. I'm devastated. The gas bottle exploded – and we [our world] exploded.”
On Sunday night, more than 20 people were reportedly killed by tank fire at a UN-run school being used as a shelter for displaced families in Nuseirat refugee camp, which just north of Deir al-Balah.
A spokeswoman for Unrwa told the BBC that it had been “another night of absolute horror for people in the Gaza Strip”.
Louise Wateridge said the severe damage to al-Mufti school in Nuseirat meant it could not be used for the second round of the major polio vaccination campaign in Gaza, which began in the centre of the territory on Monday.
Local medics and Unrwa workers are leading the effort to give drops of the vaccine to 590,000 children aged under 10 over the next two weeks.
The campaign was organised by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Unicef after the first case of polio in two decades was discovered in an unvaccinated baby in central Gaza, where 80% of Gaza’s 2.3 million population is now sheltering.
UN officials are pressing for humanitarian pauses to be respected during the vaccination drive.
“This is critical because we cannot issue vaccinations for children who are fleeing for their lives, who are forcibly displaced. We cannot issue vaccination while there are bombs coming from the sky,” Ms Wateridge said.
She added: “These pauses are in the daytime, there are very specific timeframes for us to reach these thousands of children. The strikes and the military operations do continue around that and it's incredibly dangerous and terrifying experience to run any kind of humanitarian response in these conditions."
Israel launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to the group's unprecedented attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.
More than 42,280 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

Pioneering South African politician dies aged 65

Getty Images Tito Mboweni at a summit in Germany in 2019.Getty ImagesTito Mboweni was an ANC veteran and widely respected economistThe first black central bank governor of South Africa, who later went on to become finance minister, has died at the age of 65.
Tito Mboweni had suffered a "short illness", the presidency confirmed on Saturday evening, without specifying further.
"We have lost a leader and compatriot who has served our nation as an activist, economic policy innovator and champion of labour rights," President Cyril Ramaphosa said.
Mboweni's family said they were "devastated" and that he had died in a hospital in Johannesburg "surrounded by his loved ones".
A former anti-apartheid activist, Mboweni spent almost a decade in exile in Lesotho where he attended university.
That was followed by a Masters degree from the University of East Anglia in the UK.
"I suppose you can call me an exile kid, and international kid born in South Africa," he was quoted as saying in later years.
"But my home is in South Africa, Lesotho, Mozambique, the United Kingdom, Zambia, Angola, Tanzania, Swaziland, the USA, Switzerland, and everywhere I stayed in my youth. I hate narrow nationalism – I cannot stand it. I hate xenophobia."
He returned to South Africa in 1990, then served as the first labour minister under President Nelson Mandela, playing a key role in shaping post-apartheid labour laws.
These laid the foundation for collective bargaining agreements and labour courts to protect workers' rights.
He gained a reputation for being principled and ready to debate issues openly, says News 24.
Mboweni's penchant for wearing battered old clothes and shoes only added to his earnest public profile.
In his 10 years as governor of the reserve bank, Mboweni earned plaudits for his performance, at one point being named central bank governor of the year by the financial magazine Euromoney – who wrote that "his biggest success has been in bringing inflation under control".
This was followed by a stint in the private sector, including as an international adviser to the global investment bank Goldman Sachs.
More recently, as finance minister in President Ramaphosa's government between 2018 and 2021, Mboweni was credited with stabilising the economy.
He took that post despite suggesting months earlier that he was too long in the tooth and it was perhaps time for new blood.
"Against the wisdom of my team, please don’t tell them this. It’s between us, I am not available for minister of finance. You cannot recycle the same people all over again. It is time for young people. We are available for advisory roles. Not cabinet. We have done that," he wrote on X (formerly Twitter).
In his later years, he charmed South Africans with his laidback lifestyle and humorous cooking posts, sharing recipes and engaging with followers on social media.
One follower remarked after learning of Mboweni's death, "He's left shoes too big to fill".
Allow Twitter content?This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy and privacy policy before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.Accept and continueMore BBC stories on South Africa:Chris Brown concert shines spotlight on violence against women in South AfricaRamaphosa won't be charged over farm scandal – SA prosecutorSouth Africa outrage over farmer accused of feeding women to pigsJacob Zuma's daughter marrying polygamous king 'for love'Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.

Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica

by 529mai.com
NEWS Oct 21,2024

A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things review – lovingly eccentric ode to a forgotten abstract painter

The work of the late Scottish artist Wilhelmina Barns-Graham is brought to life by this idiosyncratically persuasive Mark Cousins film
Peter BradshawPeter BradshawThu 17 Oct 2024 09.00 BSTShareA rogue preposition in the title betrays this film’s distinctive, dartingly eccentric idiom: not “of deeper things” but “to deeper things”. It is about neglected abstract painter Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, born in Scotland in 1912 and a resident of St Ives, whose landscapes she represented with endless curiosity and passion; she died in 2004. Film-maker Mark Cousins makes an idiosyncratic but compellingly persuasive case for this artist to be restored (or in fact introduced for the first time) to the pantheon of accepted greatness, with Tilda Swinton giving us Barns-Graham in voiceover.
The film grew out of a Barns-Graham installation Cousins curated in Edinburgh; the title is taken from her diaries, recording her ecstatic encounter with the Grindelwald glaciers in Switzerland in the late 1940s, whose forms and colours revolutionised her life and art, and took her vision into an intriguing space outside the purely abstract. She in fact called it “a sudden glimpse into deeper things”, which sounds a bit less eccentric. (It might have been more elegant to call it just A Sudden Glimpse, though that sounds misleadingly Hockneyesque.)
With a playful procedure of his own, bringing parts of himself into the frame (though not his face), Cousins muses over Barns-Graham’s identity and her creative brain; he also comments on photos of the older Barns-Graham, noting how to the general observer she might have seemed like a stereotypical old lady. Then he upends that condescension by showing us a picture of Barns-Graham in her prime: a blazingly beautiful, charismatic figure whose gaze meets the camera with a calm confidence. She perhaps has something grandly Bohemian and almost Bloomsbury-ish in her manner which went out of style; amusingly, Cousins shows us the later Barns-Graham with a group of older folk in the 1960s who were part of a religious pilgrimage, noting that they don’t look very cool or with-it – but he rather brilliantly suggests that her own later abstract canvases are like songs the Beatles made towards the end of their recording life. It’s a comparison that can’t be proved either way, but I think I see it, too.
The Red Table by Wilhelmina Barns-Graham.View image in fullscreenThe Red Table by Wilhelmina Barns-Graham. Photograph: © Wilhelmina Barns-Graham TrustOne of Cousins’s starting points is personally coming into possession of a painting attributed to Barns-Graham, but whose signature looks wrong and which does not appear in the catalogues. Its forms look like an Escher design or like the grid illustrations in On Growth and Form by the mathematical biologist D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson, whose work Barns-Graham admired. The origin of Cousins’s painting might remain a mystery, but Barns-Graham’s own mesmeric colour-grid designs were perhaps an influence on Gerhard Richter. Later, Cousins shows us a succession of fascinating canvases by Barns-Graham and leaves it up to us to notice the debt to Picasso, although he explicitly denies her alleged resemblance to Barbara Hepworth; the work, he says, is “more primal than just the influence of art”.
Characteristically, Cousins injects a note of wayward invention; he imagines what Barns-Graham was thinking while flashing up some of her work onscreen, and even devises a kind of dialogue between her younger and older self. (He did something similar with Alfred Hitchcock.) Again, only Cousins could get away with it – and he does so because of his real, overwhelming rapture at her work; similar, perhaps, to the over-oxygenated euphoria he shows Barns-Graham experiencing in the glacier.
A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things is in UK and Irish cinemas from 18 October.

by 529mai.com

Previous 1 … 33 34 35 … 47 Next

NEWS

  • Xi Jinping meets with Egyptian President Sisi
  • Supermodel turned into a sex slave, accuses New York famous doctor boyfriend of beating and drugging her, demanding tens of millions of dollars in compensation
  • MC Dammy Celebrates 10 Years with Star-Studded Concert
  • UBS report- Bubble risk is serious, Los Angeles housing prices may plummet_1
  • Guangdong real estate financing -white list- projects have landed more than 83.7 billion yuan

COMMENTS

No comments to show.

LIST

  • November 2024
  • October 2024

CATEGORY

  • SZ-News | Tnpump News | Hannover News | GoLuckGame
  • NEWS

Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: BusiProf by Webriti