Tag: United States News

  • Some dishes stay with you forever. Should I look for them again? | Rachel Cooke

    Some dishes stay with you forever. Should I look for them again? | Rachel Cooke

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    At this time of year, it’s tempting to devote a space like this to the making and breaking of kitchen resolutions (I refuse to say the word diet). But I’m going to be awkward, and save all that for next month. January is bad enough without talk of waistlines. What about some happy news instead, like the fact that the beloved and supremely talented chef Henry Harris quietly opened his new restaurant, Bouchon Racine, shortly before Christmas?

    Look, I can’t be the only person in the world who will forever carry with me the memory of at least half a dozen dishes all of which were so unimpeachably delicious at the time – a combination of circumstances as well as ingredients – they will surely remain unmatched for the rest of my days. Just as I will never eat a crab sandwich as good as the one I devoured at a pub in Seahouses in Northumberland after a long walk in filthy weather, no grilled chicken with rice and tomatoes will ever live up to those that were served to a dripping wet me (I’d been swimming) on an old boat in the middle of a lake in Turkey a whole lifetime ago. I eat knafeh, oozing sugar syrup and soft white cheese, whenever I see it. But I’ve never tasted any so delicious as the slice I hungrily forked up beneath the fluorescent strip lights of a Ramallah sweet shop in 2005, my reward for days of hard work.

    But it is human nature to want to try and replicate perfection, though we know full well this will lead inevitably only to disappointment. When I heard that Harris had opened a dining room above a pub in Clerkenwell, all I could think about was the saffron and garlic mousse with mussels he used to serve at the original Racine in Knightsbridge. Would it be on the menu? And if it was, would it still be as fantastic? I went to Racine only rarely – it was the wrong side of town for me, in more ways than one – but on every occasion, it was this mousse that I ate, urged on by the kind friend who used to take me, who loved it as much as I did. Racine closed its doors eight years ago, a victim of rising rents, but I’ve never forgotten the smoothness and subtlety of that mousse, the effortlessness involved in its rapid disappearance seemingly having no effect whatsoever on one’s ability to eat it any less quickly.

    It was, then, with some trepidation that I booked a table at Bouchon Racine in the peaceful days between Christmas and new year, and perhaps I was secretly relieved when the blackboard on which the menu is written included no mention of this famous mousse. I ate an immaculate salad (escarole with tarragon and shavings of bright orange mimolette), followed by rabbit in mustard sauce and creme caramel, and all was right in the world. But still, I just couldn’t help myself. As our waiter generously splashed some lethal vieille prune into two glasses – I really shouldn’t have drunk it, but I did, so shoot me – I asked if a certain starter might be making a popular comeback in due course.

    I’m not sure that I expected an answer; when he disappeared, I anticipated the bill and a muttered “maybe”. But as things turned out, I did get one – an answer, I mean – from Harris himself, who promptly appeared at our table. From what I can remember (I was slightly tipsy), he said he was still working out which of his old favourites he really had to put on the menu – the rabbit is a keeper, apparently – but that, yes, the mousse probably would reappear at some point. And then he made a self-deprecating joke about how his particular skill is to make dishes that are good for those with no teeth (possibly he knew I’d had the creme caramel).

    For my part, I was a bit embarrassed. I didn’t want him to think that my dinner had been lacking in any way, because it was heavenly and completely un-improvable. But I also had a sudden and rising sense of hope, for all that I was so full I could hardly move. The holy grail! Wobbly and palest yellow, it was again in sight. When I got home, the first thing I did was to book another table.

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    #dishes #stay #Rachel #Cooke
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Jeremy Renner broke more than 30 bones in snowplough accident

    Jeremy Renner broke more than 30 bones in snowplough accident

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    The actor Jeremy Renner has revealed he broke more than 30 bones during his serious snowplough accident.

    Renner, known for playing the bow and arrow-wielding Hawkeye in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, was airlifted to hospital with serious injuries on 1 January after he was accidentally run over by his six-tonne ploughing machine while trying to help a family member.

    On Saturday, Renner, 52, thanked all those who have sent him messages of support as he shared a photo on Instagram of him receiving treatment while lying in a hospital bed.

    He wrote: “Morning workouts, resolutions all changed this particular new years …

    “Spawned from tragedy for my entire family, and quickly focused into uniting actionable love.

    “I want to thank EVERYONE for their messages and thoughtfulness for my family and I. Much love and appreciation to you all.

    “These 30 plus broken bones will mend, grow stronger, just like the love and bond with family and friends deepens. Love and blessings to you all.”

    Renner has continued to share updates of his recovery process online and on Monday posted a picture to his Instagram story showing a high wall of snow, with the top of a house and snow-tipped trees peeking out, writing: “Missing my happy place.”

    In a later post, he urged those living in the area to “be safe out there”.

    He has previously thanked staff at the intensive care unit where he was taken following the incident, for “beginning this journey”.

    The incident took place around the new year, near the Mount Rose Highway, which links Lake Tahoe and south Reno as it straddles the Nevada-California border in the US.

    After the incident, Renner posted a picture of himself from his hospital bed, thanking fans for their support, but saying he was “too messed up to type”.

    Scores of celebrities, including his Marvel co-stars, praised the actor for his bravery and sent well wishes in the aftermath.



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    #Jeremy #Renner #broke #bones #snowplough #accident
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Stranded seal pup rescued after being spotted outside kebab shop in Norfolk

    Stranded seal pup rescued after being spotted outside kebab shop in Norfolk

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    A seal pup has been rescued after it was spotted wandering past an arcade and kebab shop in Norfolk.

    Marine and Wildlife Rescue was called to the scene at 11pm on Friday after the organisation was sent pictures of the grey seal pup outside Istanbul Delight kebab shop in Hemsby, hundreds of metres inland.

    “We spoke to a couple of people that were milling around there and thought it was a wind-up, they were like: ‘No, you won’t find a seal around here mate,,” Dan Goldsmith, chair of the Great Yarmouth-based rescue centre, said.

    “After searching the area for some time, we eventually found the seal shuffling along on a path outside an amusement arcade called the Mirage.

    “The pup must have just been looking for some shelter, but got disoriented and kept heading inland.”

    Goldsmith, 38, said the juvenile marine mammal was in good health and he and a colleague loaded it on to a stretcher to carry it back to the beach.

    The seal pup loaded on to a stretcher by the rescue team, ready to be returned to the beach.
    The seal pup loaded on to a stretcher by the rescue team, ready to be returned to the beach. Photograph: Dan Goldsmith/Marine and Wildlife Rescue

    He added that such sightings of seals inland are becoming more common as a result of surging populations in the UK in recent years.

    “This was more the unusual end of what we do, but this is becoming more of a common occurrence … we responded to one the day before funnily enough, it was out on a road quite a few miles inland,” Goldsmith said.

    “I remember 20 years ago we didn’t get hardly any calls about seals, maybe two a week … I get probably at peak times 15-20 calls for different seals a day at the minute.”

    Grey seal numbers in the UK dropped as low as 500 in the early 20th century, but there are now estimated to be 120,000 – and it is this population boom, coupled with the recent pupping season, that Goldsmith said is behind the rise in sightings.

    Goldsmith, from Gorleston-on-Sea, warned those spotting seal pups inland not to approach them and to call for expert help.

    “We do get people that mean really well, that want to help and they’ve done things in the past but have been injured,” he said.

    “Call a rescue organisation like us to assess because we’re used to working with them.

    “They’re very quick and responsive … and they can look very docile and friendly, but they’re not, they are really quite hostile things.”

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    #Stranded #seal #pup #rescued #spotted #kebab #shop #Norfolk
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Rentokil pilots facial recognition system as way to exterminate rats

    Rentokil pilots facial recognition system as way to exterminate rats

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    The world’s largest pest control group is piloting the use of facial recognition software as a way to exterminate rats in people’s homes.

    Rentokil said it had been developing the technology alongside Vodafone for 18 months.

    The surveillance technology, which is already being tested in real homes, tracks the rodents’ habits and streams real-time analysis using artificial intelligence.

    A central command centre can then help to decide where and how to kill the rats caught on camera.

    Rentokil’s chief executive, Andy Ransom, told the Financial Times: “With facial recognition technology you can see that rat number one behaved differently from rat number three.

    “And the technology will always identify which rat has come back, where are they feeding, where are they sleeping, who’s causing the damage, which part of the building are they coming from, where are they getting into the building from, whether it’s the same rodent that caused the problem last week.”

    In developing the technology, Rentokil watched rats in a controlled environment, with cameras monitoring their behaviour patterns. Machine learning using an AI system allows it to build the recognition capabilities.

    Ransom said the purchase of the Israeli market leader Eitan Amichai in December had given Rentokil access to “significant technology”. The new system is being piloted by customers including food producers and offices.

    Rentokil intends to expand its operation and has acquired 300 businesses since 2016, according to reports.

    The group is targeting “cities of the future” in countries that could soon experience a pest population boom, such as China, India and Indonesia.

    “If you can identify which cities are going to have a massive influx of population, you can pretty much conclude that they’re going to have significant rodent problems,” Ransom said.

    In more positive news for rats, scientists recently discovered that they find rhythmic beats irresistible and instinctively move in time to music. The ability was previously thought to be uniquely human.

    “Rats displayed innate – that is, without any training or prior exposure to music – beat synchronisation,” said Dr Hirokazu Takahashi of the University of Tokyo.

    “Music exerts a strong appeal to the brain and has profound effects on emotion and cognition.”

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    #Rentokil #pilots #facial #recognition #system #exterminate #rats
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘It’s a farce’: the giant Brexit border control site now used to inspect Ukrainian pets

    ‘It’s a farce’: the giant Brexit border control site now used to inspect Ukrainian pets

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    It is built on a vast 230-acre site, with a total cost put at more than £100m, and has space for 1,700 heavy goods vehicles. Security staff are on patrol at several checkpoints around its 12-foot-high perimeter fence. Inside are new state-of-the-art buildings and equipment for inspecting imports from Europe.

    But more than six months after completion, this heavily guarded supposed showpiece of a newly independent Britain lies all but deserted. It is labelled by people who live nearby as the great white elephant of Brexit, spanking new but largely redundant. The only imports being inspected are a few pets from Ukraine.

    Talk to local people about the Sevington inland border facility (IBF) in Kent, and they are beyond despair. No one knows when, or even if, this giant testament to the UK’s increasingly costly and chaotic exit from the EU will ever be used for its intended purpose.

    Locally, the word is that the IBF will soon be turned over for development into warehouses or housing. Rachel Brown, who lives a stone’s throw from the perimeter, said what had happened was “horrendous”: “If they are not using it what is the point? It will be a housing estate in a few years. It is a complete disgrace.” Another Sevington resident, Terry, who did not want to give his surname, added: “It is a farce, a white elephant. It is quite obvious no one knew how Brexit was going to turn out or what to do. The result is we are left with this on the doorstep.” IBFs at Ebbsfleet and Warrington have already been closed.

    Empty lorry parking spaces at the Sevington Inland Border facility
    Empty lorry parking spaces at the Sevington inland border facility, built to accommodate 1,700 HGVs. Photograph: Antonio Olmos

    On Friday the odd lorry trundled in for HMRC customs checks which are now handled in a small section of the site.

    Sevington was built in little over two years mainly to conduct import inspections on goods of plant and animal original from the EU, a responsibility of the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).

    But the regime of rules it was built to administer has never come into force because of U-turns forced on government by the dawning realisation that trade operates better without friction.

    The Kent site, just off the M20 near Ashford, is the biggest of seven such depots constructed across the country away from busy ports – in this case Dover.

    Jacob Rees-Mogg
    Jacob Rees-Mogg, when minister for Brexit opportunities, delayed the start of checks on EU imports. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

    But when building work was nearing completion in 2021, ministers started having doubts about the effect of burdensome checks, as trade with the EU declined. Last spring Jacob Rees-Mogg, then minister for Brexit opportunities, delayed the start of checks for the fourth time, fearing they would be too bureaucratic and costly for businesses, and cause more tailbacks on Kent’s roads.

    An announcement on what regime will now be introduced is scheduled for early this year. A government spokesperson said Sevington would still play a key role in “creating a seamless, digital border”. But it is certain to be a lighter touch one than that previously envisaged, putting Sevington’s suitability for purpose further in doubt.

    Defra told the Observer on Friday that it now had “no current operations” at Sevington “except a small presence” which “was temporarily available for holding pets during the Ukraine response”.

    Richard Ballantyne, chief executive of the British Ports Association, said the Sevington site was a costly mistake caused by the rush to “get Brexit done” and a failure to foresee what it would entail.

    He and other industry experts had been warning about problems of operating a hard border for years before Brexit. “The reason for building these places was that policymakers wanted to leave (the EU) quickly to get something done but the actual arrangements, the nuts and bolts we needed, were not clear. Policymakers have now realised there are some consequences to having a hard border which we don’t like, which are costly inspections and delays, which harm business. I think they have realised we probably don’t need to have these checks because we have very similar standards to the EU. We simply don’t need to do these things. But there is a big cost to the exchequer.”

    He added: “I think it would have been better for us if we had decided what our departure would look like. You have got to understand what the costs and consequences are. There has been a lot of wasted money.”

    Defra says it will announce a new programme of controls and inspections in the next few weeks. But the tune has changed. There is less talk now of hard borders, more of reducing friction – the whole idea of the EU single market.

    Industry experts say the change of mind runs deeper, and suggest ministers are even considering moving back to closer alignment with EU rules for certain traded products, including those of plant and animal origin.

    Sevington is just one piece – albeit probably the biggest – in a post-Brexit jigsaw of new inland and port infrastructure, much of which may never be used. In July 2020, the government announced a £705m funding package for border facilities, jobs and technology. About £200m of this was made available for ports to develop their own facilities, which they did, but many now find they cannot use what they’ve built.

    Loading bays at Portsmouth’s border control post
    Loading bays at Portsmouth’s border control post, built to carry out import checks which are no longer required. Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian

    Next to the container terminal at Portsmouth International Port, is a new hi-tech £25m border control post, the cost of which was met jointly by Portsmouth city council and the taxpayer. Like Sevington, it was supposed to carry out checks on imports of animal and plant products arriving from the EU.

    Ballantyne says places such as Portsmouth now have their own “white elephants”. They had hoped to fund the running and staff costs from charging for inspections which they now cannot do. “They are stuck. Government will not compensate the sector for the operating costs. They will not finance the demolishing of such infrastructure. We are very frustrated by this,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the port of Dover received a £45m investment last week from the government’s levelling up fund (originally envisaged to help deprived parts of the UK) to improve the flow of traffic from the UK to the EU and reduce congestion on local roads post-Brexit. The levelling up secretary, Michael Gove, who, like Rees-Mogg, had insisted that Brexit would be all good news for the UK economy, has found that in reality it comes at a very heavy cost to his own budget as well as to British taxpayers.

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    #farce #giant #Brexit #border #control #site #inspect #Ukrainian #pets
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Delight as dolphins spotted in New York’s Bronx River

    Delight as dolphins spotted in New York’s Bronx River

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    Dolphins have been spotted frolicking in New York City’s Bronx River, an encouraging sign of the improving health of a waterway that was for many years befouled as a sewer for industrial waste.

    A pair of dolphins was seen gliding through the river’s waters on Monday, the New York City parks department confirmed, near a small park in the city’s Bronx borough. The Bronx river rises north of New York City and cuts through the Bronx before terminating in the East River, the estuary that separates the Bronx and Manhattan from the boroughs of Queens and Brooklyn.

    “It’s true – dolphins were spotted in the Bronx River this week!,” the parks department gleefully tweeted. “This is great news – it shows that the decades-long effort to restore the river as a healthy habitat is working. We believe these dolphins naturally found their way to the river in search of fish.”

    Dolphins have not been seen in the river for several years, but there has been an increase in sightings of the marine mammals in the waters around New York as the industrial pollution that blighted the region has eased.

    Scientists previously set up underwater microphones at aquatic locations around New York to listen for the distinctive clicking noises emitted by bottlenose dolphins and found that they are particularly active in the harbor that separates New York and New Jersey. A pair of dolphins were seen in the waters off Brooklyn last year, surprising onlookers.

    The Bronx River suffered for many years as it became a natural dumping ground for waste running from nearby industrial plants. In recent decades, however, industrial activity near the river has declined and municipalities have agreed to not push sewage into the waterway. City authorities stock the Bronx river with fish, too, a lure to dolphins, who eat 20lbs of fish a day.

    “We’ve come a long way across multiple decades of environmental improvement, water quality cleaning, better environmental stewardship, better relations, all of which helps the overall environment and then leads to recovery of these systems,” said Howard Rosenbaum, a dolphin expert at the Wildlife Conservation Society.

    “I think it’s just great that these things are happening and hopefully the overall environmental recovery for these urban waterways continues, and we continue to see marine wildlife – their habitats, their prey – flourish.”



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    #Delight #dolphins #spotted #Yorks #Bronx #River
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Golden Opportunity: 12523 Govt Jobs Announced, Qualification 10th Pass, Notification Out, Check Post Details – Kashmir News

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    SSC MTS Recruitment 2023: The Staff Selection Commission (SSC) has published the official SSC MTS Notification PDF for the recruitment of eligible and qualified candidates in the Group C services. SSC has released the SSC MTS Recruitment 2023 on 18th January 2023 on its official website i.e. @ssc.nic.in.WhatsApp Image 2023 01 21 at 22.05.12

    The SSC MTS Notification PDF contains all the necessary information regarding the SSC MTS 2023 recruitment process. Candidates who want to apply for the SSC MTS 2023 can apply online from 18th January to 17th February 2023 on the official website of SSC. We has provided a direct link here in this article for the candidates to download the SSC MTS Notification 2023 PDF

    JOIN KASHMIR NEWS WHATSAPP GROUP – CLICK HERE

    SSC MTS 2023 Notification – Overview

    Important Dates

    • Dates for submission of online applications 18-01-2023
    • Last date online applications 17-02-2023 (23:00)
    • Last date for online fee payment 19-02-2023 (23:00)
    • Last date for generation of offline Challan 19-02-2023 (23:00)
    • Last date for payment through Challan 20 02-2023
    • Dates of ‘Window for Application Form Correction’ and online payment of Correction Charges 23-02-2023 to 24-02-2023 (23:00)
    • Schedule of Computer Based Examination April, 2023

    Vacancy Details – MTS Recruitment 2023

    Post NameNo. Of
    Vacancy
    MTS11994
    Havaldar529
    Total Post12523

    Qualification for SSC MTS Notification 2023

    • Candidates Must Have Matriculation (10th) Examination Passed or Equivalent from a recognized Board.

    Application Fee for SSC MTS Recruitment Notification 2023

    CategoryFee
    General/OBC/EWS100/-
    SC/ST/PwD/ESM/All Female0/-

    How To Apply For SSC MTS Exam 2023?

    • First of all, candidates have to open the official website – ssc.nic.in
    • After moving to the Home Page, check for the SSC MTS Notification 2023 in the Latest News Section.
    • Download the advertisement of SSC MTS New Vacancy 2023 Notification.
    • Read the entire notification and collect complete information related to Eligibility, Salary, Application Form, and other important details.
    • Verify your eligibility and then fill out the Online SSC MTS 2023 Application Form, if you are interested.
    • And then, applicants must pay the prescribed Application Fee as per the details mentioned in the SSC MTS 2023 Notification.
    • Later, review the credentials given in the Online Application Form.
    • Finally, submit the online SSC MTS 2023 Application Form before the closing date.

    Official Notification: Download Here

    Official Website: Click Here

     

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    #Golden #Opportunity #Govt #Jobs #Announced #Qualification #10th #Pass #Notification #Check #Post #Details #Kashmir #News

    ( With inputs from : kashmirnews.in )

  • Two children from Central Kashmir win gold medals at national Pencak Silat Championship

    Two children from Central Kashmir win gold medals at national Pencak Silat Championship

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    Jahangeer Ganaie

    Srinagar, Jan 21: Two youngsters from Central Kashmir’s Budgam district have shinned in the national Pencak Silat Championship held in Maharashtra after bagging the gold medal.

    Two children, who have won gold medals in the Pencak Silat Championship, are Asgar Ali Dar (07) from Chattergam Malik Gund Budgam and Khateeba Arshid (06) from Eidgah, Srinagar.

    Asgar Ali and Khateeba while talking to news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), said that they are very much happy over winning gold medal at the national level.

    They both claimed that they are interested in martial arts and want to represent India at International level.

    Akhter Hussain Dar, father of Asgar, told KNO that his son is very much interested in martial arts and has been learning different art forms from last two years.

    Asgar is learning different art forms at local stadium where trainer is training them and wants to go to international level besides that his aim is to become a police officer as well.

    Humaira Jan, mother of Khateeba told KNO that her daughter has been getting training at Indoor sports stadium in Elahibagh, Srinagar from last two years.

    She said Khateeba is very much interested in learning different art forms and has been practicing since last two years and her goal is to reach international level and bring laurels for Kashmir.

    She requested that in this era every parent must support their children sports field as if child will be talented, he/she can make future in sports field.

    Notably, the National Championship was held at Indoor Sports Complex, Swami Ramanand Teerth University Nanded Maharashtra, from January 13 to 16. Around 1400 players from 34 States participated in the event.

    J&K teams emerged as overall champions with 29 Gold, 38 Silver and 35 bronze medals while Maharashtra emerged as the runners-up in the championship—(KNO)

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    #children #Central #Kashmir #win #gold #medals #national #Pencak #Silat #Championship

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Iran to rule on release of film-maker Jafar Panahi

    Iran to rule on release of film-maker Jafar Panahi

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    Iran’s judiciary is to rule on whether to release the film-maker Jafar Panahi on bail after his conviction was overturned by the supreme court, his lawyer said.

    Panahi, 62, who has won a number of awards at European film festivals, was arrested on 11 July last year and sent to jail to serve a six-year sentence which had been handed down in 2010 for “propaganda against the system”. He served two months at the time before being granted a conditional release. He was also barred from leaving Iran and making films, and was largely confined to his home until his arrest in July.

    But on 15 October the supreme court quashed the conviction and ordered a retrial.

    “Early this morning, judicial officials told me that they will make a decision about Panahi by the end of the week,” his lawyer, Saleh Nikbakht, said on Saturday.

    “Panahi’s case had remained blocked in the courts since mid-October, but it was finally sent to the court of appeal on Monday to launch the legal proceedings.

    “By law, he should immediately be released on bail and his case reviewed again.”

    Panahi won a Golden Lion at the Venice film festival in 2000 for his film The Circle. In 2015, he won the Golden Bear at Berlin for Taxi Tehran, and in 2018 won the best screenplay prize at Cannes for Three Faces.

    Panahi’s conviction followed his support for mass protests in 2009 against the disputed results of that year’s presidential election, in which the populist leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won a second term.

    As well as the six-year jail term, the court sentenced Panahi to a 20-year ban from directing or writing films, travelling or speaking to the media. However, he has continued to live and work in Iran and the films he has made have tried to find loopholes in these restrictions.

    According to his lawyer, Panahi already had health problems before his arrest, and he contracted a serious skin disease in prison.

    Doctors had said he needed to be treated “outside prison”, the lawyer said.

    Panahi was arrested in July after he attended a court hearing for a fellow film director, Mohammad Rasoulof, who had been detained a few days earlier.

    Rasoulof was released from prison on 7 January after being granted a two-week furlough for health reasons, his lawyer told Agence France-Presse.

    Separately, a court ordered the release on bail of the activist Arash Sadeghi, who was detained in October during mass protests against the death in custody of Masha Amini following her arrest for an alleged breach of Iran’s strict dress code for women, the Etemad newspaper reported.

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    #Iran #rule #release #filmmaker #Jafar #Panahi
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Germany faces backlash over reluctance to send tanks to Ukraine

    Germany faces backlash over reluctance to send tanks to Ukraine

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    Germany is facing a backlash from allies over its reluctance to supply Leopard 2 tanks to bolster Ukraine’s fighting capacity in the nearly year-long war with Russia.

    On Friday, 50 countries agreed to provide Kyiv with billions of dollars’ worth of military hardware, including armoured vehicles and munitions needed to push back Russian forces.

    But the German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, told reporters at the US Ramstein airbase in Germany that despite heightened expectations, “we still cannot say when a decision will be taken, and what the decision will be, when it comes to the Leopard tank”.

    Ukraine on Saturday denounced the “global indecision” of its allies in providing heavy-duty modern tanks, saying “today’s indecision is killing more of our people”.

    “Every day of delay is the death of Ukrainians. Think faster,” tweeted presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak.

    Several allies echoed the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, in saying the tanks were essential to Ukraine’s fight with its much larger neighbour.

    In a joint statement – and a rare public criticism of Europe’s top power – the foreign ministers of the three Baltic states of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania said they “call on Germany to provide Leopard tanks to Ukraine now”.

    “This is needed to stop Russian aggression, help Ukraine and restore peace in Europe quickly. Germany as the leading European power has special responsibility in this regard,” said the statement, tweeted by the Latvian foreign minister, Edgars Rinkēvičs.

    Graphic showing Leopard 2 tank

    Berlin has been hesitant to send the Leopards or allow other countries to transfer them to Kyiv, with reports earlier in the week saying it would agree to do so only if the US provided its tanks as well. Washington has said providing its Abrams tanks to Ukraine is not feasible, citing difficulties in training and maintenance.

    But expectations had grown ahead of Friday’s Ukraine contact group meeting of about 50 US-led countries at Ramstein airbase that Germany would at least agree to let other countries operating Leopards transfer them to Kyiv’s army.

    The US senator Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina who is visiting Kyiv, called on both sides to supply the machines.

    “To the Germans: send tanks to Ukraine because they need them. It is in your own national interest that Putin loses in Ukraine.

    “To the Biden administration: send American tanks so that others will follow our lead,” he tweeted.

    The pleas came as the Russian army said its troops had launched an offensive in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region, where fighting intensified this week after several months of an almost frozen front.

    In its daily report on Saturday, Moscow’s forces said they had carried out “offensive operations” in the region and claimed to have “taken more advantageous lines and positions”.



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    #Germany #faces #backlash #reluctance #send #tanks #Ukraine
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )