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Connecticut, believed to have been committed before the movie theater stabbing.
=== Jilin City, China ===
On June 10, 2024, four Americans from Cornell College, Iowa were stabbed while visiting a temple in Beishan Park, along with one Chinese national.
=== Charlotte, North Carolina ===
On June 12 and 13 2024, a 19-year-old man stabbed three people in different neighborhoods throughout Charlotte.
=== Indianapolis, Indiana ===
On June 17, 2024, a 27-year-old man stabbed and injured nine people during a confrontation between two groups outside of a restaurant on Indianapolis's northwest side. The man was later arrested.
=== Huntington Beach, California ===
On July 4, 2024, two people were killed and three others were injured when a man exited a vehicle and began stabbing people celebrating Independence Day on a residential street.
=== Hayes, United Kingdom ===
Between 3 July and 8 July 2024 four men were attacked in Hayes, West London by a man described by the officers as a
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continue blocking the Gazela Bridge "until all demands are to be accepted". Soon after, demonstrators began setting up tents. The protest ended around 6:00 am, after which the traffic at Gazela Bridge resumed. Savo Manojlović, the representative of the Kreni-Promeni organisation, and two women were attacked and harassed by a member of the far-right People's Patrol organisation.
=== 27 May ===
Serbs in diaspora announced they would organise meetings supporting the Serbia Against Violence protests in London and Vienna on 26 May. The fourth Serbia Against Violence protest was held on 27 May, a day after Vučić's gathering in front of the National Assembly. During the protest, the demonstrators walked around Tašmajdan Park and towards the building of Radio Television of Serbia, where they formed a "ring" around the building. Radio Television of Serbia broadcast the protests live when demonstrators came to its building. A group of provocateurs attempted to break into the building, but
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injured in a collision between a bus and a pickup truck in Abulug, Cagayan.
President Marcos vetoes the proposed Philippine National Police Organizational Reforms Act, citing administrative and financial concerns.
July 15:
The Tagum RTC convicts Alliance of Concerned Teachers partylist representative France Castro and former Bayan Muna partylist representative Satur Ocampo of child abuse over the transportation of 14 Lumad students in Talaingod, Davao del Norte in 2018 and sentences them to between four and six years' imprisonment.
The Ombudsman releases a June 11 ruling reversing its dismissal of Sindangan, Zamboanga del Norte mayor Rosendo Labadlabad for grave misconduct over the issuance of cockfighting permits in 2023 and orders his reinstatement, citing a lack of evidence.
The Sandiganbayan releases a July 12 ruling acquitting former Philippine Normal University president Ester Ogena of graft in relation to a 2011 case involving a P1.1-million ad placement contract with Foreign
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on 20 August.
=== Impact on the election ===
Diana Atamaint, the president of the National Electoral Council (CNE), said that since the ballot papers had already been printed, Villavicencio's name and photograph would still appear on them on election day and votes cast for him would be counted towards any substitute candidate nominated by Movimiento Construye (MC-25). On 11 August, MC-25 sent the CNE a series of questions to clarify the legal situation regarding his replacement. Some constitutional experts said that Andrea González, Villavicencio's running mate and the party's preferred choice, would be ineligible because she was already registered as a vice-presidential candidate and, once registered, "candidacies were non-renounceable".
On 12 August, MC-25 announced González as its replacement presidential candidate, with her running mate to be announced "in the coming hours"; however, because of the legal uncertainties regarding her eligibility and the absence of a response from
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passes legislation requiring electric cars and plug-in hybrids to pay road user charges.
29–31 March – The 2024 Warbirds over Wanaka airshow is held, with 64,800 people attending.
=== April ===
1 April
The minimum wage is increased from $22.70 to $23.15 an hour.
Pharmacies become permitted to vaccinate children under the age of five.
4 April – The New Zealand Government announces that local councils will have to hold referendums on Māori wards and constituencies.
5 April – Thousands of students participate in 20 "climate strikes" events across the country.
7 April – Changes to the Accredited Employer Worker Visa are announced due to 'unsustainable' immigration levels.
9 April – TVNZ confirms its decision to discontinue its consumer affairs programme Fair Go, along with its midday and late night news bulletins.
10 April
The OCR remains at 5.5%.
Heavy rain in the West Coast causes the closure of State Highway 6 and power outages due to three power poles being knocked down. Sandbags
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Senate ===
Since the sixth state reform of 2011, the Senate is no longer directly elected. The regional parliaments elect 50 senators based on the results of the concurrent regional elections (the Flemish Parliament elects 29, the Parliament of the French Community elects ten, the Walloon Parliament elects eight, the Parliament of the Brussels-Capital Region elects two Francophone senators and the Parliament of the German-speaking Community elects one). The elected senators in turn co-opt 10 senators (six Dutch-speaking and four Francophone), who are allocated based on the preceding election results of the Chamber of Representatives, making a total of 60 senators.
The distribution of seats among parties resulted as following:
== Aftermath ==
Following the release of the election results, Alexander De Croo announced his resignation as Prime Minister effective on 10 June. After this, he will remain as caretaker prime minister until a new federal government is formed. Tom Ongena also
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Ukraine), which included the removal of controversial passages from Our country — Russia. However, there is evidence that the lessons continue to actively reference the war in Ukraine. Teachers who refused to teach the lessons risk either losing their jobs or being designated as a "foreign agent", and some teachers have left (or considered leaving) Russia in protest of Important Conversations.
Parents have also called for the right to withdraw their children from Important Conversations lessons: although the Russian Ministry of Education initially claimed that the lessons were voluntary extracurricular activities, Russian students and their parents have been investigated by the police, or threatened with expulsion, for refusing to attend Important Conversations lessons.
The Ministry of Education later admitted that the classes were compulsory, warning that students may be sanctioned for skipping the lessons. On 19 February 2023, the Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group reported that
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capital injection of up to PGK1 billion from the government. Many goods stolen in the riots were returned over the weekend following an appeal by Acting Police Commissioner Donald Yamasombi for people possessing such items to leave them outside their homes for the security forces to retrieve. A couple in Lae was also arrested for making statements supporting the looters and disparaging the police on social media. Marape apologized to affected business owners and said that the government would look at offering tax relief measures for them "to recover some losses".
Amid reports that some participants in the riots were unemployed youths, Marape announced that efforts would be made to mobilise people aged 16 to 30 nationwide who are not in work or school through district development authority chief executive officers, district education advisors, and community development advisors.
On 19 January, Marape announced a cabinet reshuffle in which he replaced Ian Ling Stuckey as Treasurer and
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Bumerang appeared on the parade. No short range air defense systems were seen either, a break from previous parades. Finally the relatives of those that fought in Great Patriotic War, the Immortal Regiment, were not allowed to march.
As in earlier years, missile launchers and artillery were also included. ICBMs were shown and among these were three RS-24 Yars.
== Putin's speech ==
In his speech to the Russian audience, Putin claimed that Russia is the defender of peace, freedom, and stability, saying that "We believe that any ideology of superiority is inherently disgusting, criminal and deadly." Putin accused "Western globalist elites" for "provoking bloody conflicts and upheaval," professing an "aggressive nationalism," sowing hatred and Russophobia, and destroying traditional family values.
== Foreign dignitaries in attendance ==
Amongst those in attendance were:
President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko
President of Kazakhstan Kassym-Jomart Tokayev
President of
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Men's winners: Anders Mol & Christian Sørum
Women's winners: Svenja Müller & Cinja Tillmann
August 21–25: BV Elite 16 #8 in Hamburg
August 28 – September 1: BV Elite 16 #9 in Montreal
Challenge
March 20–24: BV Challenge #1 in Recife
Men's winner: Evandro Gonçalves Oliveira Júnior & Arthur Diego Mariano Lanci
Women's winner: Tīna Graudiņa & Anastasija Samoilova
March 27–31: BV Challenge #2 in Saquarema
Men's winner: George Wanderley & André Stein
Women's winner: Xue Chen & Xia Xinyi
April 10–14: BV Challenge #3 in Guadalajara
Men's winner: Trevor Crabb & Theo Brunner
Women's winner: Esmée Böbner & Zoé Vergé-Dépré
April 24–28: BV Challenge #4 in Xiamen
Men's winner: Marco Grimalt & Esteban Grimalt
Women's winner: Sandra Ittlinger & Karla Borger
May 29 – June 2: BV Challenge #5 in Stare Jabłonki
Men's winner: Ondřej Perušič & David Schweiner
Women's winner: Xue Chen & Xia Xinyi
October 17–20: BV Challenge #6 in João Pessoa
November 21–24: BV Challenge #7 in
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or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof." The full text of this section reads:
Trump's role in the January 6 United States Capitol attack is cited by opponents as a reason for his disqualification from seeking public office. A state may also make a determination that Trump is disqualified under Section 3 from appearing on that state's ballot. Trump could appeal in court any disqualification by Congress or by a state. In addition to state or federal legislative action, a court action could be brought against Trump seeking his disqualification under Section 3. The 14th Amendment itself provides a path for Congress to allow such a candidate to run, but this would require a vote of two-thirds of each House to remove such disability.
=== Second Trump impeachment ===
On January 10, 2021, Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker of the House, formally requested Representatives' input as to whether to pursue Section 3 disqualification of outgoing President Donald Trump because of his role in the
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and several others are injured, when two cars carrying civilians are hit by an Israeli airstrike near the towns of Ainata and Aitaroun, Lebanon, and four paramedics are injured when two ambulances are bombed in Tayr Harfa. In response to these attacks, Hezbollah launches an anti-tank guided missile towards Kiryat Shmona, killing a civilian. Three Hezbollah members are later killed in retaliation during a series of Israeli airstrikes.
November 6 – IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari says fighter jets have struck a "broad range" of Hezbollah targets in Lebanon in response to a barrage of rockets fired at northern Israeli cities.
November 21 – Four Hamas gunmen, are killed by Israeli shelling in Tayr Harfa, Lebanon; the pro-Hezbollah Al-Mayadeen television station also claimed two journalists and a civilian were killed, shortly after the Israel Defense Forces said it struck several Hezbollah anti-tank missile squads in southern Lebanon and other sites in response to missile fire toward
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Soleimani's daughter Zeinab condemned the attacks and expressed hope that "the perpetrators of the crime will be identified and punished for their actions".
=== International ===
==== Countries ====
Russian president Vladimir Putin expressed condolences to the victims of the attacks, calling it "shocking in cruelty and cynicism". Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan expressed his condolences to the "friendly and brotherly" people of Iran via a social media post. Pope Francis issued a telegram expressing his deep sadness over the "loss of life".
Pakistan's foreign minister Jalil Abbas Jilani strongly condemned "inhuman terrorist attacks" and said "Pakistan stands in solidarity with Iran at this hour of grief". Syria, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates expressed condemnation of the attack. The foreign ministries of Afghanistan, Iraq, Armenia, Azerbaijan and India also expressed support for the Iranian people as well. North Korean leader Kim Jong-un expressed support to
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of potential running mates for Trump who received media speculation. Trump's eventual pick of Senator JD Vance (R-OH) was officially announced on July 15, 2024, and confirmed by acclamation via parliamentary procedure amongst delegates to the 2024 Republican National Convention on July 15, 2024.
United States senator JD Vance (R-OH) was elected Vice President of the United States, receiving 312 projected electoral votes, compared to the governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, who received 226 projected electoral votes in the election. The formal certification of the results will take place on January 6, 2025. He will assume office on January 20, 2025. Vance will be the third youngest vice president in U.S. history.
== Selected candidates for Cabinet positions ==
The following cabinet positions are listed in order of their creation (also used as the basis for the United States presidential line of succession).
=== Secretary of State ===
A nomination for Secretary of State is reviewed
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– 5 May: 2024 South American Under-20 Women's Football Championship in Ecuador
: Brazil
: Paraguay
: Colombia
4th: Argentina
26 October – 3 November: 2024 South American Under-20 Women's Futsal Championship in Paraguay
: Colombia
: Brazil
: Argentina
4th: Uruguay
==== OFC ====
7–19 February: 2024 OFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament in Samoa
: New Zealand
: Solomon Islands
17–25 August: 2024 OFC Futsal Women's Nations Cup in Solomon Islands
: New Zealand
: Fiji
Tahiti
4th Solomon Islands
8–21 September: 2024 OFC U-16 Women's Championship in Fiji
: New Zealand
: Samoa
Tonga
4th New Caledonia
==== UEFA ====
21–28 February: 2023–24 UEFA Women's Nations League Finals in Spain、 France and Netherlands
: Spain
: France
: Germany
4th: Netherlands
5–18 May: 2024 UEFA Women's Under-17 Championship in Sweden
: Spain
: England
: Poland
4th: France
14–27 July: 2024 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship in Lithuania
: Spain
: Netherlands
10–15
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South Korea 8–3.
Following the round robin portion, the top six team made the playoffs. Switzerland earned the top seed with an 11–1 record, while Scotland earned the second seed with a 10–2 record. Both teams earned a bye to the semifinals. The third seed went to Norway (also 10–2), who played the six seeded Italians (8–4) in a qualification game, while the fourth seeded Canadians (9–3) played the number five ranked Swedes (also 9–3). The winners of the qualification games advanced to the semifinals.
In the qualification games, Canada easily dispatched Sweden 9–1, ending their reign as four-time defending World champions, while Italy eliminated Norway, 8–4. Canada then went on to defeat the number one seeded Swiss in the semifinals 7–5, while Italy lost to Scotland 8–9 in an extra end. Italy nearly won the game in the 10th, as with 12 seconds left on their game clock, skip Joël Retornaz nearly made a long split to score three, but one of their rocks landed a few millimetres from the
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been imprisoned due to his involvement in a pedophilia case implicating the orphanage's director.
February 5 – The ruling party Fidesz boycotts an extraordinary National Assembly session called by opposition groupings to speed up the approval of Sweden's NATO membership bid.
February 10 – President Novák resigns due to the scandal involving her pardon of Endre Kónya. Judit Varga, who was serving as Minister of Justice in 2023 and had countersigned the pardon, also resigns as a Member of Parliament and withdraws her candidacy for member of the European Parliament in the 2024 election.
February 11 – Péter Magyar, Judit Varga's ex-husband, gives a live interview on the left-wing YouTube channel Partizán
February 16 –
Kormányinfó government press conference held by Gergely Gulyás
Zoltán Balog resigns from the synodal presidency of the Hungarian Reformed Church
Tens of thousands protest in Heroes Square, Budapest against child abuse, organised by Hungarian social media influencers
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The Digital Policy Office is established through a merger of the Office of the Government Chief Information Officer (OGCIO) with the Efficiency Office (EffO).
=== August ===
6 August: The national security exhibition gallery officially opens at the Hong Kong Museum of History in Tsim Sha Tsui.
29 August:
The pro-democracy news outlet Stand News and its former chief editors Chung Pui-kuen and Patrick Lam become the first defendants to be convicted of sedition in Hong Kong since its handover to China in 1997, which Chung sentenced to 21 months' imprisonment on 26 September.
Lai Chun-pong is convicted by a jury of planning to stage bomb attacks during the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests. Six other defendants are acquitted.
=== September ===
2 September: Cathay Pacific grounds 48 of its Airbus aircraft following an engine fire on a flight heading to Zurich.
10–15 September: The Hong Kong Open Badminton competition is held.
=== October ===
13-14 October: Nine monkeys die at the Hong
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that a Libyan network with ties to Khalifa Haftar, was responsible for the smuggling.
== Reactions ==
António Guterres, UN Secretary General, stated on 14 June 2023, that “this is yet another example of the need for Member States to come together and create orderly safe pathways for people forced to flee and for comprehensive action to save lives at sea and reduce perilous journeys.”
UN Committee on Migrant Workers (CMW), released a statement on 21 June 2023, calling on the European Union, the African Union and the League of Arab States to work together to establish safe and regular migration routes after at least 81 migrants drowned and hundreds more went missing in one of Europe’s deadliest shipwreck.
Dunja Mijatović, Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, sent a letter on 19th of July 2023 to the Prime Minister of Greece, Kyriakos Mitsotakis stressing that Greece has a legal obligation to conduct effective investigations into the Pylos shipwreck, which resulted in the
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/ Fantasy in F for Piano-Four Hands, D. 940 (Maurizio Pollini, Daniele Pollini; the final recording of Maurizio Pollini)
Giacinto Scelsi – String Quartets (complete), String Trio
Rita Strohl – Volume 3, Orchestral Works (premiere recordings)
Grace Williams – 'Orchestral Works' (Four Illustrations for the Legend of Rhiannon, Castell Caernarfon: Prelude – Processional, Ballads, Sea Sketches)
Arash Yazdani – Propagation of Uncertainty (orchestral works)
John Zorn – Her Melodious Lay
== Deaths ==
1 January – Oldřich Semerák, Czech composer, trombonist and pedagogue, 91
6 January – Deborah Reeder, American cellist, 83
7 January – William McColl, American clarinetist, 90
8 January
Tuomo Haapanen, Finnish violinist, pedagogue, and conductor, 99
Karel Janovický, Czech composer, pianist, radio producer, translator and administrator, 93
Phill Niblock, American avant-garde composer, filmmaker, and videographer, 90
10 January – Tamara Milashkina, Russian soprano, 89
12 January
David Lumsdaine,
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2024, the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill was introduced to the House of Commons. The full text of the bill (as presented for second reading) was published on 11 November 2024. Starmer acknowledged the vote for Leadbeater's bill as being "very important". Additionally, Starmer noted parliament's future intentions to strengthen NHS care for all needs, "including end-of-life care."
=== Parliamentary business ===
Following the general election, chairs and member of select committees are yet to be appointed. The House of Commons allocated which parties would hold each Chair in advance of the summer recess on 30 July 2024. Nominations for Chairs and memberships will run until 9 September, with ballots taking place on 11 September.
=== Foreign affairs ===
The first foreign meeting that Starmer attended as prime minister was the 2024 NATO summit. On the flight to the summit, he laid out a "cast iron" commitment to increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP, following a "root and
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on to scrutinize other relevant documents. Many candidates were rejected due to missing documents, insufficient sponsors or sponsors supporting more than one candidate, including former prime ministers Aminata Toure and Cheikh Hadjibou Soumaré, as well as Macky Sall's brother-in-law Adama Faye. This prompted Toure and 27 other candidates to collectively criticise the sponsorship control system.
In January 2024, candidate Thierno Alassane Sall filed a complaint against fellow candidate Karim Wade being of dual French-Senegalese nationality. Wade, a former minister and the son of former president Abdoulaye Wade, subsequently renounced his French citizenship. At the same time, the National Assembly created a commission of inquiry responsible for monitoring the electoral process.
On 20 January, the Senegalese Constitutional Council published the final list of candidates for the presidential election. It was made up of 20 candidates including Amadou Ba, former prime ministers Idrissa
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to win their 27th World Championship title.
The United States defeated Germany, 6–1, to win the bronze medal.
December 25, 2020 – January 5, 2021: 2021 IIHF World Junior Championship in Edmonton and Red Deer, Canada
The United States defeated Canada, 2–0, to win their fifth World Junior Ice Hockey Championship title.
Finland defeated Russia, 4–1, to win the bronze medal
August 20 – 31: 2021 IIHF Women's World Championship in Calgary, Canada
Canada defeated the United States, 3–2 in overtime, to win their 11th Women's World Championship title.
Finland defeated Switzerland, 3–1, to win the bronze medal.
== Divisions ==
All divisional tournaments aside from the top championship division were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021 IIHF Ice Hockey World Championships
March 3 – 5: Division IV in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
April 10 – 16: Division II – Group A in Ljubljana, Slovenia
April 18 – 24: Division II – Group B in Katowice, Poland
April 18 – 24: Division III – Group A in
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where the landslide happened. It struck 126.2 km (78.4 mi) below the surface and has been suggested as a possible cause of the landslide. However, the Red Cross has stated that there was no indication that the earthquake caused the landslide, instead attributing it to either gold mining or heavy rain.
Papua New Guinea's prime minister James Marape has blamed climate change for the disaster.
== Impact ==
The landslide occurred at approximately 03:00 PGT on 24 May 2024 (17:00 UTC on 23 May), after a large amount of debris was dislodged from the limestone slopes of Mount Mungalo. Some survivors said that they heard two loud cracks around one to two hours before the disaster, alerting them to possible danger and enabling their escape. The landslide destroyed six villages in Maip Muritaka Rural LLG. In Kaokalam village alone, dozens of houses were destroyed and at least 150 people died. It blocked a highway near the Porgera Gold Mine, and destroyed 150 metres (490 ft) of the main
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doi:10.1093/biosci/biae087.
"Surging Seas in a Warming World: The latest science on present-day impacts and future projections of sea-level rise" (PDF). United Nations. 26 August 2024. Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 October 2024.
Olhoff, Anne; Bataille, Chris; Christensen, John; Den Elzen, Michel; Fransen, Taryn; Grant, Neil; Blok, Kornelis; Kejun, Jiang; Soubeyran, Eleonore; Lamb, William; Levin, Kelly; Portugal-Pereira, Joana; Pathak, Minal; Kuramochi, Takeshi; Strinati, Costanza; Roe, Stephanie; Rogelj, Joeri (24 October 2024). Emissions Gap Report 2024 (PDF). United Nations Environment Programme. doi:10.59117/20.500.11822/46404. ISBN 978-92-807-4185-8.
"2024 Living Planet Report - A System in Peril" (PDF). World Wildlife Fund. 27 October 2024. Archived (PDF) from the original on 30 October 2024.
"Adaptation Gap Report 2024". United Nations Environment Programme. 7 November 2024. Archived from the original on 10 November 2024.
== See also ==
Meteorology in the 21st
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one identifies the relevant considerations and then balances them according to their weight. Indeed, reasonableness is an evaluative process, not a descriptive process. It is not a concept that is defined by deductive logic. It is not merely rationality. A decision is reasonable if it was made by weighing the necessary considerations, including fundamental values in general and human rights in particular. Nothing is reasonable 'in itself'.
This expansive doctrine empowers the Supreme Court to strike down almost any administrative decision, even if it was taken by due legal authority. In an interview with Haaretz, former Supreme Court Justice Moshe Landau criticized the use of the "unreasonableness" doctrine:
The justices in the older court did not set themselves up as the teachers of the generation. We did not think that our task was to teach the public fundamental or deep values of private or public morality. This doesn't mean that we didn't pay attention to values. This doesn't
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near Fall Brook and the North Nashua River. Several minor injuries also occurred, as many vehicles were submerged in floodwaters. MBTA Commuter Rail service was also affected, with trains and buses being terminated, diverted, or originating at a different station, including trains along the Fitchburg Line. Leominster mayor Dean Mazzarella stated, "Find a high spot somewhere. Find a high spot and stay there until this is over.", and also claimed that at least 11 inches (280 mm) of rain fell. More than $40 million in damages occurred to city infrastructure.
Flood damage also occurred in North Attleborough, where 200 homes were flooded, including basements, and vehicles were submerged. Several roads were closed, and the emergency operations center was activated there. Two Boston Red Sox games were postponed due to the rainfall. Nearly 2,400 power outages occurred across the state. A tornado warning was also issued for Bristol, Norfolk, and Plymouth counties after the storm which
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more likely caused by environmental changes than by competition between endemic and immigrant ungulates is presented by Weppe et al. (2023).
Watmore et al. (2023) revise the systematics of the late Eocene "oreonetine" oreodonts, interpreting Oreonetinae as a paraphyletic group and reinterpreting Limnenetes as a leptauchenine.
A new specimen of Camelops hesternus is described from the Late Pleistocene sediments of the Cerro Grande de la Mesa Calderón monogenetic volcano (Valsequillo Basin, Mexico) by Carbot-Chanona et al. (2023), who determine the studied specimen to have a browsing diet, and estimate low population density of C. hesternus in the Valsequillo Basin.
Tsubamoto, Kunimatsu & Nakatsukasa (2023) describe fossil material of Cainochoerus from the Miocene Nakali Formation (Kenya), representing the oldest record of the genus reported to date.
Wimberly (2023) determines which skeletal proxies are the best predictors of body mass in extant ruminants, and estimates the body mass
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==
Queensland Police and the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) are investigating the collision. Investigators from ATSB offices in Brisbane and Canberra arrived the following day, removing both aircraft from the sandbar and retrieving electronic recording equipment.
Phone footage aired by Seven News and obtained by a passenger of the arriving helicopter shows a passenger pointing at the departing helicopter, tapping pilot Michael James on his shoulder and grabbing hold of his seat moments before the collision. Footage from three lipstick cameras attached to the departing helicopter will also be examined by the ATSB.
The Bureau is investigating whether the pilots could see the other helicopter, radio calls made by the pilots and whether they could be heard by the other aircraft, operator procedures and regulatory approvals.
Traces of cocaine were later found in the deceased pilot Ash Jenkinson's system. Experts claim it could lead to increased testing regulations.
== See
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today was an effort to show, and not just tell, that we will continue to stand strong." White House officials described the visit as "unprecedented in modern times", due to the regular attacks that the site of the visit was under.
Ukrainian residents and officials welcomed the visit as a historic moment and Zelenskyy said it "is an extremely important sign of support for all Ukrainians." Andriy Yermak, the Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, said the visit also had strategic effect: "A lot of issues are being resolved and those that have been pending will be expedited".
=== International reactions ===
Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev dismissed the visit as an effort to increase the "huge quantities" of weapons and money already sent to Ukraine. Many of Russia's military pundits reacted with anger or embarrassment.
Igor Girkin suggested "the grandfather" could have gone to the heavily contested Bakhmut area without any personal danger.
Journalist Sergey Mardan
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=== Populist blocs ===
The Popular Action Bloc led by former MP Musallam Al-Barrak announced three candidates for this election. Basel Al-Bahrani in the first constituency, Mutib Al-Rathaan of the fourth constituency and Mohammad Al-Dossari in the fourth constituency.
=== Sunni Islamist blocs ===
Hadas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, decided to field four candidates in four different constituencies. Mohammad Al-Matar replacing Osama Al-Shaheen in the first constituency. Hamad Almatar and Abdulaziz Al-Saqabi will rerun in the second and third constituencies respectively. Muaath Al-Duwaila, son of former MP Mubarak Al-Duwaila, will run in the fourth constituency.
The Islamic Salafi Alliance have four candidates in this election. Three of these candidates were in the last session, Fahad Al-Masoud of the second constituency, Hamad Al-Obaid of the third, and Mubarak Al-Tasha of the fourth. Abdullah Al-Kandari will run in the fifth constituency for the Salafi Alliance. The
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Toby Keith, 62, country music singer-songwriter, actor, producer
February 28 – Cat Janice, 31, pop singer-songwriter
March 3 – Brit Turner, 57, drummer (Blackberry Smoke)
March 5 – Debra Byrd, 72, vocal coach and actress
March 11 –
Eric Carmen, 74, rock singer-songwriter, guitarist (Raspberries)
Boss, 54, rapper
April 5 – C. J. Snare, 64, hard rock and metal singer (FireHouse)
April 7 – Clarence "Frogman" Henry, 87, R&B singer and pianist
April 18 –
Dickey Betts, 80, rock guitarist and singer-songwriter (The Allman Brothers Band)
Mandisa, 47, gospel singer, contestant on American Idol season 5
May 7 – Steve Albini, 61, rock singer-songwriter, guitarist, producer, engineer (Big Black, Shellac)
May 9 – Dennis Thompson, 75, rock drummer (MC5)
May 12 – David Sanborn, 78, jazz and R&B saxophonist
May 22 – Charlie Colin, 58, pop rock bassist (Train)
May 25 – Richard M. Sherman, 95, musical film songwriter (Sherman Brothers)
June 3 – Brother Marquis, 58, rapper (2 Live Crew)
June 11 –
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RAM, a larger battery, and other improvements, retailing for US$799.
== Hardware ==
The ROG Ally implements an AMD APU, based on AMD's Zen 4 and RDNA 3 architectures. Two different models of the ROG Ally were released, one with a Ryzen Z1 processor and another with a Ryzen Z1 Extreme. The Z1 CPU runs a six-core/twelve-thread unit and the Z1 GPU runs on four compute units with a total estimated performance of 2.56 TFLOPS. The Z1 Extreme CPU runs an eight-core/sixteen-thread unit while its GPU runs on twelve compute units at an estimate of 8.6 teraflops. Both processors use variable timing frequencies, with the Z1 running between 3.2 and 4.9 GHz and the Z1 Extreme running between 3.3 and 5.1 GHz. The main unit of the Ally is designed for handheld use. It features a 7-inch touchscreen LCD display with a 1080p resolution and variable refresh rate that goes from 48Hz up to 120 Hz. Controls resemble those of an Xbox Wireless Controller, including two thumbsticks, a directional pad,
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is injured following an avalanche on Mount Yotei in Hokkaido.
March 12 – A court in Fukuoka overturns the death sentence of Yakuza Kudo-kai leader Satoru Nomura imposed for a 1998 murder and sentences him to life in prison.
March 13 –
KAIROS-1, designed by Space One as Japan's first privately-manufactured rocket, explodes seconds after its maiden launch from Kushimoto, Wakayama Prefecture.
The Fuji-Q Highland amusement park announces the removal of the famed high-speed roller coaster Do-Dodonpa, which had been closed since August 2021 following numerous incidents resulting in injuries within a year.
The Tokyo District Court orders the government to return the remains of Aum Shinrikyo leader Shoko Asahara, who was executed in 2018 for the Tokyo subway attack in 1995, to his family.
March 14 –
In separate lawsuits, the Sapporo High Court and the Tokyo District Court rule that the non-recognition of same-sex marriage in Japan is unconstitutional.
The Tokyo District Court convicts former
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USB sticks containing K-pop songs and South Korean dramas to North Korea with 10 balloons, sent by a South Korean activists’ group led by North Korean defector Park Sang-hak in retaliation for North Korea sending balloons carrying trash to South Korea.
9 June – A group of North Korean soldiers enter the South Korean side of the DMZ, prompting warning shots from South Korean forces that force them to retreat.
18 June – A group of North Korean soldiers enter the South Korean side of the central section of the DMZ, prompting warning shots from South Korean forces that force them to retreat.
19 June – Russian president Vladimir Putin visits Pyongyang as part of the first visit of a Russian leader to North Korea since 2000, the two sign an agreement to grant mutual aid and support in case either nation faces aggression.
20 June – A group of North Korean soldiers enter the South Korean side of the DMZ, prompting warning shots from South Korean forces that force them to retreat.
=== July
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emotionally fraught lyrics, detailing Rodrigo's struggles with identity, romantic and professional disillusionment, unexpected stardom, and societal expectations as a young woman.
Guts topped album charts in 15 countries, including the United States, Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. In its US debut, it recorded 302,000 first-week album-equivalent units while charting all 12 of its songs in the top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100. Three singles were released from the album, including the international number-one track "Vampire", and the top-10 charting "Bad Idea Right?" and "Get Him Back!". The album's deluxe edition, subtitled Spilled, was released on March 22, 2024, along with its lead single "Obsessed".
At the 66th Annual Grammy Awards, the album received nominations for Album of the Year and Best Pop Vocal Album, becoming her second consecutive Album of the Year nomination. Two of the album's tracks—"Vampire" and "Ballad of a Homeschooled
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White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the US was "not encouraging or enabling Ukraine to strike beyond its border."
Phillips O'Brien, professor of strategic studies at the University of St Andrews, said, "It certainly wasn't an attempt to assassinate Putin, because he doesn't sleep in the roof and he probably never sleeps in the Kremlin." James Nixey, director of the Russia and Eurasia Program at the Chatham House think-tank, said "the two most likely possibilities are a 'warning shot across the bows' by Kyiv or a false flag operation by Moscow designed to justify more intense attacks in Ukraine or more conscription."
U.S. officials said it was likely that a Ukrainian intelligence or special military unit was behind the attack, though they had "low confidence" that the Ukrainian government directly authorized the attack due to U.S. intelligence agencies having not yet identified specific units or officials involved in the attack.
== See also ==
Drone warfare
2022–2023
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Mining, is arrested in Bamako along with two other company employees while visiting Mali to negotiate a business dispute.
13 November – Issa Kaou N’Djim, a former vice president of the National Transitional Council, is arrested on charges of insulting a foreign head of state after expressing criticism of the military regime in neighbouring Burkina Faso on television. The incident also leads to the junta cutting the signal of Joliba TV News, on which the criticism occurred, on 26 November.
18 November – Resolute Mining agrees to pay $160 million to the Malian government to resolve a tax dispute amid the continued detention of its CEO Terence Holohan and two other employees in Bamako since 8 November.
20 November – The junta dismisses Choguel Kokalla Maïga as prime minister along with his cabinet following Maïga accusing the junta of postponing elections to restore civilian rule without informing him.
21 November –
The junta appoints an army officer, Abdoulaye Maïga as prime minister.
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bombing: A suicide bomber detonates at a platform inside Quetta railway station, killing 26 people and injuring 62 others. The Balochistan Liberation Army claims responsibility.
11 November – A police constable is arrested on suspicion of helping aid the perpetrator of the 2023 Peshawar mosque bombing.
12 November – A bus falls into the Indus River in Gilgit-Baltistan, killing 18 people and injuring another.
13 November –
Eight members of the Pakistani Taliban are killed in a raid by security forces in North Waziristan.
Four militants are killed in a raid by security forces in Kech District, Balochistan.
14 November – Seven people are killed in the accidental explosion of a car bomb inside the house of a Pakistani Taliban commander in Mir Ali.
15 November –
A health emergency is declared in Punjab due to heavy smog that also forces a lockdown in Lahore and Multan.
Seven soldiers and six BLA militants are killed in a shootout in Kalat District, Balochistan.
18 November –
The Council
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presented a map with a different location of the supposed launch site; it was a place located a few kilometers away from the hospital, and no cemetery is located there.
The IDF also published audio that it says contains intercepted discussions among Hamas militants saying that a misfired Islamic Jihad rocket caused the explosion. BBC Verify said that it could not verify the recording. Hamas said the recording was fabricated. Channel 4 said that it was told by "two independent Arab journalists" that the audio was not credible "because of the language, accent, dialect, syntax and tone".
On 18 October, the IDF released drone footage, which it said showed the hospital before and after the explosion. The annotated video showed burned vehicles in the hospital parking lot, and noted the apparent lack of a crater or significant structural damage to surrounding buildings. The IDF said these attributes were inconsistent with the aftermath of Israeli munition strikes.
Following the explosion,
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speed up the delivery of aid. Ten teams including 50 rescue workers and 500 tents, 1,000 pieces of moquette, 4,000 blankets, 500 dishes, and 500 food packages, along with search equipment were sent.
Japan: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement saying it was providing US$ 3 million to international organizations. Japanese non-governmental organizations would also receive US$ 1.46 million to provide food, health and other necessities.
Kazakhstan: President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev announced the delivery of humanitarian assistance including food, tents, medicines, clothing and other necessary items, as well as the deployment of rescue personnel and dogs to Afghanistan. A total of 1,659 tons of humanitarian aid was sent. LLP "SK Pharmacy" allocated medicines for shipment. Forty-five employees of the Ministry of Emergency Situations were sent to Herat province to carry out search and rescue operations. They managed to work through 76 affected areas within the first 24 hours of
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toll from clashes in Geneina increases to 1,300 people, with more than 2,000 injured. The UNHCR also confirms that around 8,000 people have fled to Chad from Geneina in the past week.
Heavy fighting is reported in Jabal Awliya, south of Khartoum, as the RSF attempt to capture the Jebel Aulia Dam.
15 November –
Fighting continues in Jabal Awliya, south of Khartoum, with local sources claiming that the RSF took control of the Al Najumi air base and a road connecting the city to White Nile State.
Violence between rival tribes in South Darfur kills at least 30 people over three days of clashes.
16 November – The Sudan Liberation Movement, the Justice and Equality Movement and other smaller rebel factions declare war on the RSF, having previously remained neutral in the conflict.
18 November – The Jebel Aulia Bridge, part of the Jebel Aulia Dam complex, is destroyed amid heavy fighting in Jabal Awliya. A Sudanese official says the dam itself remains intact. It is the second bridge in
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days. The Laoag International Airport, situated in northern Luzon, cancelled all its flights for July 25 and 26. Various sea ports in Calabarzon, Mimaropa, and the Bicol Region suspended operations due to strong waves. The earlier transport strike—supposed to last three days—was suspended. Local governments across Luzon and parts of Visayas also suspended classes for the 25th and 26th. Large waves forced Boracay to suspend water sports activities. By July 27, most TCWS signals were lowered by the PAGASA as the storm left the Philippine Area of Responsibility. Signals remained up, however, for areas in northern Luzon which were still within the extent of Doksuri's gale-force winds.
=== Taiwan ===
As the typhoon passed south of Taiwan, sea and land warnings were raised in the southern counties of Pingtung and Taitung and in the cities of Tainan and Kaohsiung. Annual military drills in the country were cancelled in preparation. Taiwan also issued a land warning for Doksuri at 06:00
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that sending such weapons could result in an escalation in the conflict. This could lead to the country being drawn into the war as a hostile party, particularly because the Taurus has a range that extends deep into Russian territory (including Moscow) and can only be limited with Bundeswehr soldiers on site. Like the Chancellor, many members of the SPD reject its delivery; politicians from the Greens and the FDP as well as other sections of the SPD have called for its delivery. Among the opposition, the AfD and The Left party reject the delivery, while politicians from the Union parties agree. In mid-2023, the Ministry of Defense carried out a review to determine whether a range limitation was technically possible. In March 2024, former Federal President Joachim Gauck approved the delivery.
=== German positions ===
==== Positions against Taurus delivery ====
In the Bundestag, the government factions (SPD, FDP, Greens) voted against the delivery on January 17, 2024, although the
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decision.
An armed 34-year-old man is shot dead by police after a two-hour siege outside a medical centre in Nowra, New South Wales.
Prime minister Anthony Albanese announces financial support for flood victims in Victoria as Murchison experiences moderate flooding with the Goulburn River peaking at 10.47 metres, with an expected peak of 10.4 metres at Shepparton on 13 January.
Transport for NSW confirms a park built above the Sydney's Rozelle Interchange has been closed to the public just three weeks after it opened due to the discovery of asbestos in mulch around a children's playground. The discovery prompts an urgent audit to determine the number of other sites which could be affected.
14 January – Mary Donaldson becomes the first Australian-born queen consort of a European monarchy when she is proclaimed Queen of Denmark when her husband Frederik X ascends the throne following the abdication of his mother Margrethe II. The decision to mark the occasion by temporarily replacing
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trial, sentences German national Rico Krieger to death over alleged crimes including terrorism and mercenary activity. He is pardoned on 30 July by President Alexander Lukashenko.
20 July – Demonstrators carrying Afghan flags storm the Pakistani consulate in Frankfurt.
21 July – A climber is killed after being struck by lightning on the Zugspitze.
22 July – The Constitutional Court of North Rhine-Westphalia rules that there is no longer a general danger to civilians fleeing from the Syrian Civil War in its rejection of an asylum application.
24 July – The Federal Interior Ministry orders the banning of the Islamic Centre Hamburg for being an "Islamist extremist organisation" with links to Hezbollah and Iran.
=== August ===
2 August – Twenty-two people are injured in an explosion believed to have been caused by a compressed air canister at the Nürburgring race track.
6 August –
At least two people are killed after a hotel collapses in Kröv.
A court in Berlin convicts a woman and
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the gold medal.
Colombia defeated Brazil, 6–1, to win the bronze medal.
== Deaths ==
=== January ===
Connie Madigan, 89, Canadian defenceman (St. Louis Blues, Portland Buckaroos)
Paul Theriault, 73, Canadian coach (Oshawa Generals, Flint Spirits, Buffalo Sabres)
Jaroslav Pavlů, 87, Czech-born Italian forward (TJ Rudá Hvězda Brno, Spartak Plzeň, HC Bolzano) and coach (HC Bolzano)
Glen Cochrane, 65, Canadian defenceman (Philadelphia Flyers, Vancouver Canucks, Chicago Blackhawks) and scout (Colorado Avalanche, Anaheim Ducks)
János Beszteri-Balogh, 85, Hungarian forward (Ferencvárosi TC) and Olympian (1964)
Gus Hendrickson, 83, American defenceman (Michigan State Spartans) and coach (Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs)
Petri Koivisto, 37, Finnish goaltender (Kärpät, Espoo Blues)
Henryk Pytel, 68, Polish left wing (Zaglebie Sosnowiec) and Olympian (1976, 1980, 1984)
Blaine Lacher, 53, Canadian goaltender (Boston Bruins)
=== February ===
Pentti Koskela, 78, Finnish goaltender (Ilves) and
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Colombia recovered a little bit of intensity in the final minutes of the first half of extra-time and made attacking efforts with runs from Quintero and Jhon Arias or crosses from Johan Mojica but were contained by Cristian Romero, Lisandro Martínez and Paredes. One minute was added and the first half of extra-time ended.
Before the start of the second half, Lorenzo used his last window and Miguel Borja, Jorge Carrascal and Mateus Uribe entered the pitch, subbing Luís Díaz, Jhon Arias and Jefferson Lerma off. In the 107th minute Di María advanced from the right and crossed the ball into the box, Lautaro Martínez nearly touched it, but couldn't reach. One minute after this action, Miguel Borja received a through ball while being onside and alone into the box and shot at the left post of Emiliano Martinez, but Lisandro Martinez appeared from behind and blocked the shot for a corner. In the 112th minute, the three substitutions made early in the extra-time by Scaloni paid off, when a
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of Fez in November that year.
Possibly the first bid to solve the conflict following the Egypt–Israel Peace Treaty in 1979, the plan was designed to resolve the Arab–Israeli conflict and establish lasting peace in the region.
Made by eight-point proposal, the plan has suggested that "all states in the region should be able to live in peace in the region." Within its provisions, it was included Israeli withdrawal from "all Arab territory occupied in 1967", including Arab Jerusalem, dismantling of Israeli settlements built on "Arab land" after 1967, a "guarantee of freedom of worship for all religions in Holy Places", an "affirmation of the right of the Palestinian Arab people to return to their homes and compensation for those who do not wish to return", and the creation of an "independent Palestinian State" with Jerusalem as its capital and putting the West Bank and the Gaza Strip under the "auspices of the United Nations for a period not exceeding several months".
== Eight Point
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structures and strongpoints was highly appreciated by the command of the Russian Armed Forces."
== Raid ==
=== Initial Russian reports ===
On 2 March 2023, at around 11:30 MSK, Bogomaz reported that a Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance group made an incursion into Russian territory, entering the village of Lyubechane, Klimovsky District. According to him, the saboteurs fired at a moving car, killing one adult and injuring a child. It was reported that the passenger car was transporting children to a class. Subsequent to this initial report, TASS reported, citing a law enforcement source, that the group had penetrated into two villages, Lubechane and Sushany, and took several residents hostage. According to RFE/RL, a Russian Telegram channel posting local news reported that residents in the area heard explosions and gunfire.
According to TASS, "members of the Rosgvardia entered into a clash with the militants". At 14:30, TASS, citing eyewitnesses, wrote that the "Ukrainian
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by issuing Ordinance 544 in which they raised the age limit of presidential candidates to 40 years old compared to the age limit of 35 years old currently enacted by the electoral law as well as adding other constraining requirements exceeding the electoral law requirements. The ordinances were contested by multiple political parties such as the Third Republic Party and Attayar Party. Both parties filed lawsuits against the electoral committee for the annulment of Ordinance 544. A total of 17 candidates applied to run in the presidential election.
On 19 July 2024 a court barred Lotfi Mraïhi, the president of the Republican People's Union, from standing in elections for life after convicting him of vote-buying involving the 2019 presidential election. He was also sentenced to eight months' imprisonment. Several candidates and campaign workers were also arrested and sentenced to prison during the candidate registration process, including Abir Moussi, who received a two-year sentence
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thunderstorm development, and surface-based convective available potential energy in the 1000-1500 J/kg values were also in place across a small portion of the region. Matthew Belk, a National Weather Service meteorologist, stated that the flood was a "200-year event".
== Impact ==
Severe storms on September 8 alone led to 190,000 power outages.
=== Massachusetts ===
On September 10, the Sagamore Bridge was closed due to flash flooding.
On September 11, streets and numerous homes were flooded in the city of Leominster, and the downtown area there was also flooded, where buildings were flooded and a few partially collapsed. A sinkhole also opened near a Cadillac car dealership, damaging vehicles there. Massachusetts governor Maura Healey described the flooding "catastrophic", and a flash flood emergency was issued for Leominster and Fitchburg. Residential areas in neighborhoods near Leominster were asked to immediately evacuated as concerns were raised over the Barrett Park Pond
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humiliation of Russia." A collective of service members noted the irony of Biden setting foot in Kyiv before Putin.
Analysts as well as Polish President Andrzej Duda saw the trip as an important morale boost for the Ukrainian soldiers. After news of the visit broke, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced $5.5 billion in new financial and humanitarian aid to Ukraine.
== Gallery ==
President Biden during his 2023 trip to Ukraine
== See also ==
2022 Joe Biden speech in Warsaw
2022 visit by Volodymyr Zelenskyy to the United States
2023 visit by Volodymyr Zelenskyy to the United Kingdom
2023 visit by Xi Jinping to Russia
Iron diplomacy
List of international presidential trips made by Joe Biden
List of serving heads of state and government that have visited Ukraine during the Russian invasion of Ukraine
== References ==
== External links ==
Media related to Joe Biden visit to Ukraine, February 2023 at
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after a truck veered off the road and plowed into a market in Londiani, Kericho County.
7 July – Anti-government protests across the country. Opposition leader Raila Odinga led protests to oppose tax increases. Several people were injured, and one man was shot dead.
12 July – Anti-government protests continue. At least six were killed and dozens injured, including children.
5 October – Government reshuffle in which Musalia Mudavadi replaces Alfred Mutua as Foreign Minister following controversy over the country's involvement in the crisis in Haiti.
9 October – A court in Kenya blocks the government from deploying police personnel to Haiti.
6 November – 15 people in Kenya are killed during floods caused by significant rainfall. Approximately 241 acres of farmland have been destroyed and 1,067 livestock killed.
16 November – The Parliament of Kenya approves the deployment of its police officers to Haiti as part of a United Nations-backed multinational security mission to combat the
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Nukufetau electorate. Former foreign minister Simon Kofe retained his seat in the Funafuti electorate.
No candidates contested the sitting MPs Seve Paeniu, who was the finance minister, and Namoliki Sualiki in the electorate of Nukulaelae, so they were automatically returned to parliament.
== Aftermath ==
After the results are released, ships were sent to pick up winning candidates in order for them to assemble in the capital Funafuti, although dangerous sea conditions delayed their travel. Election commissioner Tufoua Panapa said that the members of the new parliament would convene to vote for a prime minister, at a time notified by the governor general.
There are three groups of MPs in the new parliament: six newly elected members; six members of the last government; and four from the previous opposition group.
On 26 February 2024, Feleti Teo was appointed as prime minister, after he was elected unopposed by the parliament, and on 27 February 2024 Teo appointed the members of
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Democratic reaction ===
Biden responded to the impeachment inquiry by stating, "Well, I tell you what, I don't know quite why, but they just knew they wanted to impeach me. And now, the best I can tell, they want to impeach me because they want to shut down the government". He then stated that he was not focused on impeachment and said, "I've got to deal with the issues that affect the American people every single solitary day". The White House also sent a memo to U.S. news organizations, calling on them to "scrutinize House Republicans' demonstrably false claims" and disputing allegations of misconduct.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries vowed to defend Biden "until the very end" and compared the impeachment inquiry to a kangaroo court.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer criticized McCarthy for bowing to conservative pressure and labeled the impeachment inquiry as a witch hunt.
=== Reaction from academics ===
At the launch of the impeachment inquiry, both University of
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pop singer and musical theater actor
16
Charles Blackwell, 84, English pop arranger, record producer, film composer and songwriter (death announced on this date)
Bobby Hicks, 91, American bluegrass fiddler
Luther Kent, 76, American blues singer
Rajko Maksimović, 89, Serbian classical composer
Tore Ylwizaker, 54, Norwegian experimental rock keyboardist (Ulver)
17
Johnny "Dandy" Rodríguez, 78, American Afro-Cuban jazz and salsa bongo player (Típica 73).
Bert Susanka, 62, American surf rock and cowpunk singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Ziggens)
20
Erik Barrett, 48, American metalcore bassist (100 Demons) (death announced on this date)
Maryvonne Le Dizès, 84, French classical violinist (death announced on this date)
Manju Mehta, 79, Indian classical sitar player.
Charin Nantanakorn, 91, Thai pop singer
21
Diana, 76, Brazilian pop singer
Russell Stone, 77–78, English singer (R&J Stone)
22 – Justin Chearno, 54, American indie rock guitarist (Pitchblende, Turing Machine, Unrest,
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military in Iraqi Kurdistan.
29 August –
Iraq shoots down a Turkish TAI Aksungur drone over Kirkuk Governorate.
2024 Anbar raid. The US says it had killed 15 operatives of Islamic State in a joint operation with Iraqi security forces in western Iraq that also injured seven American soldiers.
=== September ===
5 September – A Turkish drone strike kills three people, including a child, in Iraqi Kurdistan one day after a similar attack on a car in the region killed three people from the same family.
11–13 September –
Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian visits Iraq, meeting with federal authorities in Baghdad as well as leaders of Iraqi Kurdistan in Erbil.
Abu Ali Al-Tunisi, an Islamic State commander for whom the US Treasury Department had offered $5 million for information, is killed during a joint United States–Iraq operation in Al Anbar Governorate. Ahmad Hamed Zwein, an Islamic State deputy commander in Iraq, is also killed in the operation.
25 September – Twenty-one people are
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of Antakya, Hatay Province. Limited observations were made in high-elevation areas due to snow cover and lack of satellite observations. Liquefaction was also observed in Samandağ. At Lake Gölbaşı, Adıyaman Province, lateral spreading occurred along the northern, eastern and southern coast. Parts of the lakeshore were also submerged. Gölbaşı was also damaged by liquefaction and lateral spreading.
Subsidence due to lateral spreading caused extensive damage in İskenderun. Liquefaction produced sand ejecta that buried Atatürk Boulevard in Çay District. Regular flooding in the city was observed after the earthquakes. Earlier flooding may be attributed to liquefaction while subsequent occurrences may be due to damage to the coast and water infrastructure. The sea inundated parts of the city by as much as 200 m (660 ft). Large areas of the coast and sections of piers were flooded due to lateral spreading. Large waves from bad weather and a tsunami may have contributed to the effects
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Western commentators analyzed the events as signalling a larger trend of cracking down on far-right criticism.
On 23 August 2023, exactly two months after the rebellion, Prigozhin was killed along with nine other people when a business jet crashed in Tver Oblast, north of Moscow. The Wall Street Journal cited sources within the US government as saying that the crash was likely caused by a bomb on board or "some other form of sabotage". International relations expert Sam Ramani said that "in the short term, [the death of the Wagner Group leadership] clamps down on any kind of ultranationalist unrest", but predicted that ultranationalist opposition may consolidate again in the future, particularly at the time of the 2024 Russian presidential election.
In November 2023, Igor Girkin announced his intention to run as a candidate in the 2024 elections, describing elections in Russia as a "sham" in which "the only winner [referring to Putin] is known in advance". On 24 December 2023,
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and former 2020 Democratic presidential primary candidate Andrew Yang were the first notable Democrats to make those calls. On July 2, U.S. Congressman Lloyd Doggett of Texas became the first Democrat in Congress to publicly call for Biden to step aside as the party's nominee. He was joined by various Congressmembers in the following days. On July 7, four more House Democrats called for Biden to exit the race during a private call, including Adam Smith, Jerry Nadler, Mark Takano, and Joe Morelle. Smith went on the record the following day and called for Biden to withdraw.
Biden stated in an ABC News interview with George Stephanopoulos on July 5 that he would not end his candidacy. The president again refused to drop out on July 8. That day Biden appeared on Morning Joe on MSNBC by telephone, advising the "elites in the party" against his nomination to "run against me. Announce for president. Challenge me at the convention". He sent a letter to Congressional Democrats before Morning
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risk that it will increase inflation. Some columnists have described it as fascist or authoritarian. In September 2024, Trump's campaign launched a tour called "Team Trump Agenda 47 Policy Tour" to promote Agenda 47.
== Overview ==
Agenda 47 is Donald Trump's 2024 presidential campaign formal policy plans. According to the Trump campaign, it is "the only official comprehensive and detailed look at what President Trump will do if he returns to the White House". It is presented on the campaign's website in a series of videos with Trump outlining each proposal. According to Philip Bump, some Agenda 47 videos appeared scattershot and responsive to current events around early 2023. The proposals appeared to be aimed towards Republican primary voters and slowed down once his primary lead grew in April 2023, to the point where Philip Bump wrote in the Washington Post in June 2024 that neither Trump nor his campaign regularly brings up the plan, although, according to Phil Mattingly from
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the law. The same day law was also published in Holos Ukrainy, the law came into force on the day following this publication.
== Reaction ==
=== States and international organizations ===
United States: On April 9, 2024, an official letter was sent to Ukraine from the US Commission on International Religious Freedom expressing concern about the situation caused by the consideration of draft law No. 8371 in the Verkhovna Rada. At the end of April 2024, Ukraine sent a response emphasizing the role that national security played in monitoring religious activities. On 7 October 2024, U.S. Ambassador Michael G. Kozak, Head of the United States Delegation at the Warsaw Human Dimension Conference (WHDC), stated that the U.S. is "concerned by the law’s potential to collectively punish entire religious communities."
Vatican City: Pope Francis stated "No Christian church may be abolished directly or indirectly. The churches must not be touched"
Russia: On 27 August 2024, Kremlin
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33% of the vote. She faced businessman and former Assembly member Daniel Noboa of the National Democratic Action. She lost the run-off election to Noboa on 15 October, after winning 47% of the vote. Had she been elected, she could have been the first woman elected to the presidency in Ecuador's history, and the second female president after Rosalía Arteaga, who briefly served as president for two days in February 1997.
=== 2025 presidential campaign ===
In February 2024, González registered a pre-candidate for a second presidential campaign for the upcoming 2025 general election. She is running for the Citizen Revolution Movement (RC) nomination. In June 2024, Pichincha Province Prefect Paola Pabón announced she would also be running for the RC nomination, challenging González. The following month, a poll was conducted with González in the lead with 40.1% against President Daniel Noboa's 34.6%. In August 2024, Pabón ended her campaign, making González the sole presidential
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by Sadyr Japarov), with voters asked whether they would prefer a presidential system, a parliamentary system, or opposed both. Just over 84% voted in favour of a presidential system.
Work began on drafting a new constitution, which was debated in the Supreme Council in February 2021. The draft new constitution replaces the parliamentary system with a presidential one, with presidents limited to two five years terms instead of a single six-year term. It also reduces the number of seats in the Supreme Council from 120 to 90 and establishes a constitutional court.
In March 2021 members of the Supreme Council passed a bill, scheduling a referendum on the new constitution for 11 April, the same day as local elections. The result was 79.31% in favour.
=== Lebanon ===
=== Malaysia ===
In early 2020, officials from the Malaysia's Prime Minister's Office (PMO) said that Malaysia has recovered US$322 million stolen from the sovereign wealth fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal, a
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20 May
Kevin Burns, cricketer (Southland, Otago) (born 1960).
David Penny, evolutionary biologist (Massey University), Marsden Medal (2000), Rutherford Medal (2004), Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand (since 1990) (born 1938).
22 May – Jane Coughlan, politician, member of the Ashburton Hospital Board (1974–1989), Timaru District Councillor (1992–2013) (born 1939).
27 May – Rodger Fox, trombonist, band leader (Rodger Fox Big Band), and jazz educator (New Zealand School of Music), Aotearoa Music Award for jazz recording of the year (1983, 2001, 2004, 2012) (born 1953).
=== June ===
1 June – June, Lady Hillary, trekking guide, and advocate for the Nepalese community (born 1931).
2 June – Barbara Stewart, politician, New Zealand First list MP (2002–2008, 2011–2017) (born 1952).
4 June – Rex Kirton, local politician, Mayor of Upper Hutt (1977–2001), Wellington Regional Councillor
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excitement for the final. The U.S. general manager Tony Reagins credited Mike Trout, a three-time major league MVP, for committing to the team early (in July 2022) which made it easier to convince others to join.
The championship game was one of the most watched games in baseball history with the game attracting an average television viewership of 5.2 million people in the U.S. and a reported 62 million television viewers in Japan representing a total of 42.4% of households in the country despite the game taking place at 8 am JST. The game was widely praised as an instant classic, with the ending duel between team captains Mike Trout and Shohei Ohtani being considered as one of the greatest moments in the history of the sport.
== Road to the championship ==
The United States was the victor of the previous edition of the WBC, in 2017 defeating Japan in the semi-final round. Japan won the 2006 and 2009 editions of the WBC.
In 2023, Japan won all four games in Pool B, which it
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This is based on the "clear meaning of the 14th Amendment, that U.S. Citizenship extends only to those both born in AND 'subject to the jurisdiction' of the United States". Therefore, children of illegal aliens "should not be issued passports, Social Security numbers, or be eligible for certain taxpayer funded welfare benefits", nor have the right to vote. This follows the "historical slate of hundreds of executive actions, proclamations, and presidential memorandums on border security and immigration that President Trump implemented while in office."
Ending "welfare for illegal immigrants and shut down Joe Biden’s abuse of parole authority". This includes reinstating the "action making illegals ineligible for public housing" and terminating "all work permits for illegal aliens". Also, demanding Congress to send a bill "blocking any future President from abusing his power to distribute welfare benefits in this manner".
CNN commented, "[s]hould Congress refuse to fund the operation,
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He reached out to Iran in his book, saying they should feel free to assassinate Trump for the United States withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, as well as Routh himself for supporting Trump in the past. Routh condemned the January 6 Capitol attack as being "perpetrated by Donald Trump and his undemocratic posse".
After his disillusionment with Trump, Routh announced his support for various presidential opponents of Trump, including both Democratic and Republican presidential candidates. Additionally, Routh donated $140 to Democratic causes since 2019. He registered in North Carolina as an independent voter in 2012. He voted in North Carolina's Democratic primary elections in 2024.
Routh had multiple prior criminal charges, including a 2002 conviction for "possessing a weapon of mass death and destruction" after barricading himself in a building with a fully automatic weapon. As part of a plea deal, he agreed to undergo a mental health evaluation and accept
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in the late 2000s.
=== March ===
Finnish nu metal band Blind Channel releases their fifth studio album, Exit Emotions. It debuts at the top of the Finnish national album charts.
English heavy metal band Iron Maiden's frontman, Bruce Dickinson, releases his seventh solo studio album, The Mandrake Project. It's his first solo studio album in almost 20 years, since Tyranny of Souls (2005). It debuts in the top 5 of 10 separate national album charts.
English rock musicians Liam Gallagher, and John Squire, release a collaborative studio album, titled Liam Gallagher John Squire. It debuts in the top 10 of 7 separate national album charts.
Swedish rock singer Erik Grönwall leaves US band Skid Row to prioritise his recovery from acute lymphoblastic leukemia. He is replaced on immediately proceeding tour dates by Lzzy Hale of the band Halestorm. The arrangement is temporarily, but well-received, to the point of Jon Bon Jovi leaving a statement that he hopes she will continue with the band.
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Commission of Namibia (ECN) until 28 November. The IPC accused the ECN of "deliberately suppressing voters and deliberately trying to frustrate voters from casting their vote". Following complaints from opposition parties, the ECN announced a further extension of voting hours for 29 and 30 November at 36 selected polling locations in Windhoek as well as in the Kunene, Oshana and Oshikoto regions. Representatives of the IPC, PDM and AR expressed dissatisfaction with the limited selection of polling locations for the voting extension. Legal experts and the IPC have called into question the legality of the voting extension. African Union (AU) election observers criticised the ECN's decision to extend voting for causing confusion. The IPC accused the ECN of "deliberately trying to dissuade voters from voting". The AU observer mission gave the ECN a transparency score of just 50%.
On 29 November, the ECN extended voting until the night of 30 November. The IPC alleged that this extension
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to commit a crime, persecution, intimidation, damage to private property, qualified damage such as damage to public property, historical and artistic heritage and protected buildings, or offenses to the bodily integrity or health of others. People who were not present but participated in organizing, financing, instigating or collaborating in other ways would also be framed for the same crimes. If convicted of more than one crime, consecutive sentences could add reach 30 years in prison.
On 10 January, Moraes issued arrest warrants for the former public security secretary of Brasília Anderson Torres and the Federal District Military Police chief, Fabio Augusto Vieira. The Justice Ministry stated that the police had found a draft presidential decree authorizing Bolsonaro to overturn the elections by implementing a "state of defense" on the Superior Electoral Court while searching the home of Torres. His lawyer claimed that the draft was a proposal by civilians and was never submitted
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declared she did not wish to be a candidate. The incumbent caretaker prime minister, Dimitar Glavchev, however confirmed that he was ready to stay in office if President Radev offered to reappoint him for a second term. Radev held consultations on forming an interim government with all parliamentary groups on 8 August.
On 9 August Radev appointed Goritsa Grancharova-Kozhareva, Vice President of the Bulgarian National Audit Office, as the next caretaker prime minister. Grancharova-Kozhareva was granted ten days to form a proposal for the next caretaker government to be appointed on 20 August 2024, which would put the date of the next election as 20 October 2024. On 19 August, Radev refused to appoint the government, as he opposed the proposal to allow the controversial figure Kalin Stoyanov to continue as interior minister. As such, the Glavchev government is continuing its duties and the election is postponed until a caretaker government is approved. This has been reported to be a
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Gurung is awarded the Nansen Refugee Award by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, citing her work in helping amend the country's citizenship laws after her daughters were designated as stateless persons.
18 October – Former deputy prime minister Rabi Lamichhane is arrested on suspicion of fraud and organised crime involving the alleged embezzlement of funds from a financial cooperative.
=== November ===
15 November – A van falls off a mountain road near Shaileshikar, killing eight people and injuring four others.
== Arts and entertainment ==
List of Nepalese films
List of highest-grossing films in Nepal
List of Nepalese films of 2024
Cinema of Nepal
== Holidays ==
Source:
11 January – Prithvi Jayanti
15 January – Maghe Sankranti
10 February – Sonam Lhosar
10 February – Gyalpo Lhosar
19 February – Prajatantra Diwas
8 March – International Women's Day
8 March – Maha Shivaratri
8 April – Ghode Jatra
10 April – Eid al-Fitr
13 April – Nepali New Year
16 April – Rama
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The effects from the flooding on July 9 caused more than 12,000 power outages and small business losses of at least $100,000.
On July 15, a thunderstorm produced heavy rainfall in Upper Makefield Township in Bucks County, causing flash flooding. A bridge was washed out there as a result of an overflow of the Delaware River, leaving several vehicles submerged in floodwaters, killing seven people. Pennsylvania Route 532, the road where the accident occurred, was shut down for two weeks following the flooding. Additionally, up to 7 in (180 mm) of rain fell in 45 minutes in the surrounding area. More heavy rains fell on July 16, prompting an MLB game between the Philadelphia Phillies and San Diego Padres to be delayed. Portions of the state also was impacted by flooding on the same day, especially in Northampton County, where severe flash floods occurred and flood damages totaled at $7.55 million. Overall, on all three days, severe weather damages, including some caused by floods,
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Group B for 2025.
March 17 – 23: Division II – Group B in Puigcerdà
Final Round Robin placements: 1. China, 2. Spain, 3. Bulgaria, 4. Australia, 5. Chinese Taipei, 6. Israel
China was promoted to Division II – Group A for 2025.
Israel was relegated to Division III – Group A for 2025.
April 14 – 20: Division I – Group A in Frederikshavn
Final Round Robin placements: 1. Germany, 2. Ukraine, 3. Austria, 4. Hungary, 5. Denmark, 6. Japan
Germany was promoted to the Top Division for 2025.
Japan was relegated to Division I – Group B for 2025.
April 14 – 20: Division I – Group B in Tallinn
Final Round Robin placements: 1. Slovenia, 2. Lithuania, 3. Estonia, 4. France, 5. South Korea, 6. Italy
Slovenia was promoted to Division I – Group A for 2025.
Italy was relegated to Division II – Group A for 2025.
April 17 – 23: Division II – Group A in Sosnowiec
Final Round Robin placements: 1. Poland, 2. Great Britain, 3. Netherlands, 4. Romania, 5. Croatia, 6. Serbia
Poland
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not to immediately allow refugees into villages near the border. The IDF said this was for their own safety. The IDF fired warning shots at vehicles approaching Kafr Kila, shot several people in Mais al-Jabal, and detained four Lebanese citizens it said were Hezbollah members. Despite the warnings, thousands of displaced Lebanese families began to return to their homes in southern Lebanon.
=== Attacks on civilians and infrastructure ===
The IDF has been accused of several instances of civilian targeting and/or civilian infrastructure destruction since the ceasefire. No such instances have been attributed to Hezbollah as of December 1.
On November 27, the IDF shot at returning Lebanese civilians in Kafr Kila and shot several people in Mais al-Jabal.
From November 27-28, the IDF shot at returning civilians in Khiam and flew drones in the area, allegedly killing several and wounding more. That same day, the IDF allegedly shelled several Lebanese villages. Additionally, IDF tanks
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Great Britain was directly involved in the operation of deploying and target selection of Storm Shadow missiles, claiming that it was "the matter of the Ukrainian armed forces."
Security expert Gustav Gressel from the European Council on Foreign Relations found the Chancellor's argument that the Bundeswehr must be directly involved with operations in Ukraine to be inconclusive. The manufacturer, not the Bundeswehr, would be responsible for introducing the weapon system, which is what occurred with an export to South Korea.
Political scientist Thomas Jäger suspected that Scholz was aware of the invalidity and refutation of his argument, and that he held his position due to him possibly knowing something that he could not or would not explain to the public. Christian Mölling, deputy director of the German Council on Foreign Relations, suspected that the Chancellor's refusal was due to a lack of trust in Ukraine in its adherence to agreements on target selection. At the end of March
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on 3 August. Demonstrations were held in other cities throughout Venezuela and abroad in Madrid, Miami, Bogotá, and Buenos Aires.
On the same date, international hacker group Anonymous declared cyberwarfare against the Venezuelan government. It was reported that the group had hacked 325 government sites in one day as well as launching a doxing campaign against Chavista officials. Among the hacked websites, Anonymous infiltrated the website of the presidency and Cuerpo de Investigaciones Científicas, Penales y Criminalísticas (CICPC) along with a database that belonged to the PSUV.
The Unitary Platform called for a candlelight vigil at the Plaza Los Palos Grandes in Chacao, Miranda on 8 August to demand the release of political prisoners who have been detained since 28 July.
=== 17 August: Great World Protest for the Truth ===
Within Venezuela and in cities across the world, Venezuelans demonstrated on 17 August in support of the opposition's claim to González's election win.
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representation in a nationwide constituency. Six are elected by overseas voters (two each from Canada/United States, Latin America and Asia/Europe/Oceania). The remaining 116 members are elected from multi-member constituencies by closed list proportional representation, with all seats allocated using the Webster method. Members of the National Assembly are limited to two four-year terms, regardless if they are consecutive or not. There are gender quotas for the party lists, meaning there is alternation between men and women. There are no quotas for minority representation.
== Presidential candidates ==
=== Candidates ===
The following candidates have officially submitted their candidacy through the National Electoral Council:
==== Minor pre-candidates ====
The following pre-candidates have been also selected in the primaries of the national parties and are eligible for inscription but haven't been notable enough due to lack of coverage or not being present in a national
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Yevgeny Alexeyevich Fyodorov submitted a bill to repeal Russia's recognition of Lithuania's independence. He thought that in this way the other two Baltic states might have their independence reversed too." Towards the end of June, Lithuania announced that it would block the transport of Russian goods through their territory. Russia criticised Lithuania for this.
In September 2022, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia decided to end entry for Russian citizens with Schengen visas, including those issued by third countries. In 2022, around 4,000 Russian citizens applied for a residence permit in Lithuania, while 38 had their permanent residence permit revoked over security concerns.
In December 2022, diplomatic relations between Lithuania and Russia were downgraded to the level of acting chargé d'affaires after the Russian ambassador was expelled and the Lithuanian ambassador recalled.
In August 2023, following a survey, Lithuania announced that 254 Russian and 910 Belarusian
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depth of the waters but also by the lack of naval assets in the region. By the night (EDT) of 15 March 2023, unnamed U.S. officials told ABC News that Russian ships had arrived at the crash site and may have likely picked up pieces of the wreckage. John Kirby did not confirm this, but said that the U.S. had "made it impossible for them to be able to glean anything of intelligence value off the remnants of that drone".
According to US officials, the order to harass the drone was given by the Russian Ministry of Defense, and the pilots were not taking rogue action.
== Reactions ==
=== U.S. ===
According to National Security Council communications coordinator John Kirby, President Joe Biden was briefed on the incident by National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan on the morning of March 14. US Army General Christopher Cavoli, NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Europe, briefed NATO allies on the incident. The downing of the drone was strongly condemned by the White House and the Pentagon,
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Labour, or Liberal Democrat parties. 167 ballots were rejected, or 0.5% of the total votes cast.
== Previous result ==
== Reactions ==
The Israel–Hamas war dominated the campaign. In his election victory speech, Galloway said: "Keir Starmer, this is for Gaza. You will pay a high price for the role that you have played in enabling, encouraging and covering for the catastrophe presently going on in occupied Gaza, in the Gaza Strip". Alluding to the size of his win, over the Labour and Conservative candidates, he said, "Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak are two cheeks of the same backside and they both got well and truly spanked tonight here in Rochdale."
During Galloway's victory speech a heckler accused him of being a climate change denier. The heckler stated that Galloway said at a hustings that he wanted to "extract oil and gas from the North Sea".
The largest Jewish community organisation in the UK, the Board of Deputies of British Jews, claimed that Galloway's victory marked "a
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On 10 August, the junta appointed a new cabinet headed by a civilian prime minister, Ali Lamine Zeine.
=== Leadership ===
On 28 July, presidential guards' Commander General Abdourahamane Tchiani proclaimed himself as the president of the council in an address on Télé Sahel. He said the coup was undertaken to avoid "the gradual and inevitable demise" of the country and said that Bazoum had tried to hide "the harsh reality" of the country, which he called "a pile of dead, displaced, humiliation and frustration". He also criticized the government's security strategy for its purported ineffectiveness but did not give a timeline for a return to civilian rule.
== Identified members ==
Brigade General Abdourahamane Tchiani – president, and former commander of Niger presidential guard.
Divisional General Salifou Modi – vice president, former ambassador to the United Arab Emirates and former chief of staff of the Niger Armed Forces.
Divisional General Abdou Sidikou Issa – former chief
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that the U.S. government has "serious concerns" that the Venezuelan election results do not reflect "the will nor the votes of the Venezuelan people" and demands that Venezuelan electoral authorities publish fair and transparent election results, adding that the United States and the international community will "respond accordingly"
Venezuela recalls its diplomats in Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Panama, Peru, and Uruguay after those countries oppose the election results.
Panama suspends diplomatic relations with Venezuela and withdraws its diplomatic personnel from the country until a full review of the presidential election results is concluded.
The 2024 Venezuelan protests break out.
30 July – Freddy Superlano, a leading figure in Venezuela's opposition coalition, is arrested amid the 2024 Venezuelan protests.
=== August ===
2 August – Argentina recognizes Edmundo González as President-elect of Venezuela, becoming the third country to do so after the United
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so it would not fail. Although the anti-hegemonic sentiment and realpolitik analysis contained in this is supported, it is also accused of being ultra-nationalistic and reminiscent of Ichisada Miyazaki's militaristic sentiment. Debate persists as to whether or not it is an imperialist discourse, with it being said to be still in the "open" stage, still focused only on China's challenge to the American order, without considering what might happen if that challenge becomes successful.
=== COVID-19 ===
COVID-19 brought about accusations against China, but Chinese netizens believe that China did a good job of controlling the outbreak and therefore the outbreak elsewhere is not their responsibility. Shangaoxian himself accused Wuhan Diary of smearing China and criticized the U.S. for its confusion in dealing with the pandemic.
=== Culture ===
Despite being regarded as a "barbarian" nation, it is perceived more as a desire to gain a cognitive discourse of its own and to change its
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bowl from her house.
The Ukrainian news published recordings of "interceptions" of telephone conversations between Russian soldiers and their families, in which thefts from shops and abandoned apartments are discussed. From one of the recordings, the soldier says that his colleagues “draged bags” of the loot, on the other recording, he receives a list of things that he is asked to bring. The media noted that it is impossible to establish the authenticity of the recordings in wartime, but territoriality, they coincide with the zones that were under Russian occupation.
According to the Minister of Defense of Ukraine, a market was opened in the Belarusian city of Narovlya selling items stolen in Ukraine, these include: motorcycles, bicycles, household appliances, toys, furniture, carpets, etc. were sold there. Columns of trucks in the direction of Narovlya were moving from Buryn. Data on the movement of devices lead to robberies - this is available for most Apple gadgets and
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embedded in the largely stratiform rains grew during the morning. The combination of the morning rainfall and rain from preceding days saturated the soils in Broward and Miami-Dade counties to the point that only 1.5–2.0 in (38–51 mm) of rain would need to fall in an hour to produce flash flooding according to flash flood guidance.
The moist conditions persisted into the afternoon and evening, enabling the highly efficient production of rainfall in the storms as the warm front progressed north of Key Largo and into the Miami area. By around 5:30 p.m. EDT, 2–6 in (51–152 mm) of rain had fallen across the Miami metropolitan area. During the evening hours, stationary thunderstorms caused torrential rainfall over Fort Lauderdale, fueled by the locally moist atmosphere and a persistent inflow drawing moisture from the Atlantic towards the Florida coast. National Weather Service Miami, Florida, issued a flash flood emergency at 7:58 p.m. EDT for Fort Lauderdale and Hollywood highlighting
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enterprise value and winning European and international titles, continues to produce world-class talent and is home to Paris Saint-Germain, a club with significant international influence.
In women's football, these leagues have been pivotal in increasing the sport's visibility and professional standards. The Women's Super League in England and Frauen-Bundesliga in Germany are among the top destinations for elite female footballers, contributing significantly to the growth of the sport. Spain's Liga F, Italy's Serie A, and France's Division 1 Feminine have made substantial strides in professionalizing women's football and drawing in larger audiences and sponsorships.
== Market ==
In men's football, the combined resources and revenues of the Big Five domestic leagues dominate world football; according to Statista, they have a combined revenue of €15.6 billion. Within the Big Five, England's Premier League is considerably larger than the other four in terms of both popularity and
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State member Bilal al-Sudani and ten other insurgents. No U.S. military casualties are reported in the operation, which was ordered by U.S. President Joe Biden.
=== March ===
21 March – The Somali National Army and pro-government militants kill 30 al-Shabaab jihadists and injure many others while defending a military base in the south of the country.
=== May ===
2 May – Somali forces kill 67 al-Shabaab militants and seize many weapons in a continuation of offensives against the group in the Mudug region.
25 May – Puntland's 2023 municipal elections occurred on Thursday, marking the second instance of one-person, one-vote elections in the autonomous state. A historic victory was achieved, with 30 districts conducting peaceful elections.
26 May – Fifty-four Ugandan soldiers are killed after Al-Shabaab gunmen storm an AMISOM base in Bulomarer.
28 May – Somalia announces that beginning next year, the country will change to a presidential system and elect officials by direct vote,
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were closely related to cVDPV2 that circulated in Egypt throughout the 2nd half of 2023 and was last detected in December 2023. Research into genetic changes present in the samples indicated that the poliovirus could have spread to Gaza as soon as September 2023.
As of 23 July 2024, no tests had yet been conducted for polio cases or symptoms of paralysis in humans. WHO and UNICEF planned to bring fifty human sample kits to the Gaza Strip on 25 July 2024 and investigate them at a lab in Jordan. In late-July, three cases of acute flaccid paralysis were diagnosed in the Gaza Strip with researchers determining that poliovirus was a potential cause, leading them to take samples of the cases and send them to Jordan for analysis.
The WHO reported that Gaza immunization rates were at 99% in 2022, and fell to 89% in 2023 due to decimation of the Gazan health system in addition to "lack of security, access obstruction, constant population displacement, shortages of medical supplies, poor
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81, actress (New Masquerade).
9 May – Ibrahim Babangida, 47, footballer (FC Volendam).
17 May:
Garba Duba, 82, army general and politician, governor of Sokoto State (1984–1985) and Bauchi State (1978–1979).
Tony Ekubia, 64, Nigerian-British boxer.
19 May – Bola Afonja, 81, politician, minister of labour (1993).
24 May – Ayo Banjo, 90, academic administrator, vice-chancellor of the University of Ibadan (1984–1991).
25 May – Ibrahim Lamorde, 61, police officer, chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (2011–2015).
=== June ===
14 June – Tagwai Sambo, 87, traditional ruler, chief of Moroa (since 1966).
17 June – Jonah Ogunniyi Otunla, 69, financial accountant, Accountant-General of the Federation (2011–2015).
16 June – Ekene Abubakar Adams, 39, member of parliament.
=== July ===
30 July – Onyeka Onwenu, 72, singer-songwriter and actress (Half of a Yellow Sun, Lionheart).
=== November ===
5 November – Taoreed Lagbaja, 56, chief of army staff (since 2023).
==
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Shapiro: Out of the Blue at Pace Gallery in New York City.
September 14 until October 18 – The Found Art of Thom Corn at Wall Works in The Bronx, New York (curated by Nancy August).
October 9 until January 20, 2025 – Arte Povera (curated by Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev with works by Giovanni Anselmo, Alighiero Boetti, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Luciano Fabro, Jannis Kounellis, Mario Merz, Marisa Merz, Giulio Paolini, Pino Pascali, Giuseppe Penone, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Emilio Prini, and Gilberto Zorio). at the Bourse de Commerce in Paris, France.
October 24 until December 7 – Cecily Brown: The Five Senses at the Paula Cooper Gallery in New York City.
November 7 until December 21 – James Little: Affirmed/Actions at Petzel in New York City.
November 8 until March 9, 2025 - Harmony and Dissonance: Orphism in Paris, 1910–1930 at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City.
== Awards ==
Turner Prize: Jasleen Kaur.
== Works ==
Omri Amrany and Oscar León – Statue of Dwyane Wade at the
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or nephew, showcasing heartfelt stories about life, masculinity, love, culture and racism. The book addresses the stereotypes and prejudices that disempower Indigenous men, and in turn their families and communities, leading to the social issues that many of them face.
His book, The Voice to Parliament Handbook, co-authored with Kerry O'Brien and with cartoons by Cathy Wilcox, was awarded Australian Book Industry Awards Book of the Year, Non-Fiction Book of the Year, and Social Impact Book of the Year in 2024.
The book Our Flag, Our Story: The Torres Strait Islander Flag, co-authored by Thomas Mayo and Bernard Namok Jr in 2024, won the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children’s Book Award at the 2024 Speech Pathology Australia Book of the Year Awards.
Thomas Mayo's book Always Was, Always Will Be – The Campaign for Justice and Recognition Continues was published in early September 2024 by Hardie Grant Books.
== Personal life ==
Mayo changed his surname from Mayor to Mayo in
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of social media sites as a result of the leak. According to Emma Best, the Department of Defense asked Distributed Denial of Secrets to remove the Pentagon document leaks, but DDoSecrets "basically just ignored them".
=== Ukraine ===
Ukrainian presidential advisor and peace negotiator Mykhailo Podolyak said that the leak contained a "very large amount of fictitious information" which appeared to be "standard elements of operational games by Russian intelligence and nothing more." Ukrainian defense intelligence spokesman Andriy Yusov said "in recent decades, the Russian special services' most successful operations have been taking place in Photoshop... we see false, distorted figures on losses on both sides, with part of the information collected from open sources." On the same day Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy released a statement about a meeting with military staff in part "focused on measures to prevent the leakage of information."
Quoted by The New York Times, Ukrainian
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they opened a hotline regarding complaints of voter fraud or any vote-buying. On 28 May the Ministry announced that they arrested a network of brokers that helped two candidates to buy votes in the 2023 election. The network involved ten brokers led by a Pakistani immigrant. The brokers bought 600 votes in the Fifth constituency. On 4 June, two days before the election, authorities arrested four candidates and eight voters that sold their votes.
== Results ==
The trend of reducing turnout continued, with the turnout of 59% being four points lower than the previous elections. Opposition reformist lawmakers not tied to the ruling family won a majority of seats. Only one woman, Jenan Boushehri, was elected. Seven Shias were elected compared to nine in 2022. Shiite alliance Taalof kept their 2 seats, while the Shirazi group Justice and Peace Alliance lost all of their seats.
Sunni Islamists took a gain in seats with the Islamic Salafi Alliance getting a third seat. Also unaffiliated
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errors ===
Translations of the audio quoted in English news reports featured a number of errors, some of which were backtranslated into German and entered reports by German news providers such as Tagesschau. The reference to mission planning by "reachback", for example, meaning consultation of British personnel stationed in Britain, turned into a missile transport using "armoured Ridgeback vehicles". The reference to QC, short for quality control, turned into reports that the French were transporting missiles in Audi Q7 SUV vehicles.
== Responses ==
=== Germany ===
Germany confirmed the recording was authentic but said it couldn't rule out that it might have been edited; Chancellor Olaf Scholz described the leak as "very serious" and promised a swift investigation. The German government sought to portray the officials' exchanges as a sort of war-gaming that is an integral part of military officers' jobs, saying the real scandal was Putin's "information war".
August Hanning, a
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citing frustrations with the record label and signs with Universal Music.
April 27 – The 4th Annual Premios Odeón take place in Madrid to celebrate the best in Spanish music.
Motomami by Rosalía wins Album of the Year.
"Quevedo: Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 52", by Bizarrap and Quevedo wins Song of the Year.
"Quevedo: Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 52", by Bizarrap and Quevedo wins Video of the Year.
Álvaro de Luna wins Best New Artist.
May 7 – Shakira is awarded Woman of the Year at the inaugural edition of the Billboard Latin Women in Music. Other winners include Ana Gabriel, Emilia, María Becerra, Evaluna, Goyo, and Thalía.
May 13 – Spain places seventeenth at the 67th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest with the song "Eaea", performed by Blanca Paloma. Portugal ends twenty-third.
May 16 – The 25th Annual Premios Gardel take place at the Movistar Arena in Buenos Aires to celebrate the best in Argentinian music.
Bien o Mal by Trueno wins Album of the Year.
"La Triple T" by Tini wins
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acknowledgment of country prior to speaking at an official event.
Speaking one year after the referendum, Megan Davis and Yes23 campaign director Dean Parkin argued that the referendum debate had been unduly captured by politicians, with Indigenous voices shut out. Davis also stated that the Albanese government and the Commonwealth has subsequently endorsed leaving Indigenous policy to the states and territories who "aren't committed". Key figures in the No voice campaign Jacinta Nampijinpa Price and Nyunggai Warren Mundine stated that Australians want the best for "the vulnerable and needy in our country (but) the voice failed to realise this" and "they didn’t want racial separation and race-based rights in the constitution and that they want all Australians to be treated equally".
== See also ==
List of Indigenous Australian politicians
List of Indigenous Australians in politics and public service
Referendums in Australia
== Notes ==
== References ==
== External links ==
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as raising the minimum wage.
By 2024, the political landscape had shifted dramatically. The Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), a far-right party, gained significant traction in eastern Germany. In the regional elections of Saxony, Thuringia, and Brandenburg, the AfD emerged as a leading contender, with polls indicating a possibility of winning state elections for the first time. Support for the ruling coalition was polled at only 34% in early 2024.
Concurrently, a new political force emerged: the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), self-described as "left-conservative" party that campaigned on platforms that included abandoning climate goals, halting military aid for Ukraine, and reducing immigration levels. The BSW's rise coincided with a decline in support for the more traditional Left party.
=== Europe ===
The German DAX index underperformed compared to other major eurozone indices, resulting in associated European companies such as MTU Aero Engines, Qiagen NV, and Siemens Energy,
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