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2020年05月22日のつぶやき 2020/05/23 [twitter]


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DavidVes

Dog attacks highlight desperate situation for vulnerable people

The attack comes more than a month after police were called to a rural area in New Brighton at 10.30am as a male cyclist tried to cross a bridge carrying a woman's body into the ocean.

She was pronounced dead a short time later and had her torso covered in mud. The death has been condemned by the family of the woman, who was 20.

A spokesman said police were investigating reports the victim "appeared to be distressed and distressed, appearing to have a knife under her clothing".

A neighbour said: "She said, 'What's wrong with you?' I think she was getting quite agitated because she could see I wouldn't leave it to her. She said to us, 'I need help to get my friend back, she's got a knife.' She said she wanted to be taken to hospital.

"The next thing I knew we had this guy with a knife attacking me.

"I heard three knocks at a door and he said, 'She's dead, she's dead'."

A neighbour had seen the same man and said the young woman was carrying a "very bloody knife".

A second neighbour said they saw the woman getting out of the car. "We went down to meet her and as soon as we got into the back, they came in," he said. "Then he started kicking her over and over and over."

Police said they had received a number of calls about the alleged attack and had arrested the man after receiving information.

A spokesman said: "The circumstances leading to the victim's death and the subsequent recovery have yet to be established and police were working with other colleagues."

He said they believed the woman had been attacked at the flat next to her property and that a man in her family was believed to be involved.

The local authority said: "We are appealing for the public's help in identifying an offender."

A local carer who asked not to be named described the woman as "beautiful" and said her family were "devastated".
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Duchess of sussex meets moroccan chef

The queen met him by chance and took him out for breakfast in the palace. He showed her pictures of the latest and greatest dining restaurants in Spain — such as the new one that opened on Sunday — as well as one of her favourite pieces of modern art: a painting by the Dutch master Pieter Abbeel, or Boulanger, a 16th-century portrait of Louis XIV, called The Great Saint.

Queen Isabella's favourite food has to be Moroccan fare, according to Prince Andrew. Photograph: Felicity Cloake for the Guardian

"She has a fondness for things that are French … and she knows how to get people talking about what they're eating," says Prince Andrew, who works on the royal family's business development initiative The Poultry Partnership. "She would be very pleased by this food festival."

The Queen has already been to the French Riviera, which had an entirely different atmosphere for her. "I am sure there is something different about the French climate compared to the one here," says Andrew.

The first phase of this year's event will start on September 9, when a special show at Buckingham Palace will be followed by a public dinner at the Royal Albert Hall. The Queen will then return to London to join her mother, Princess Eugenie, for dinner with a group of distinguished royals and their wives. It is only expected to take place every other year, after which it will return to New York to celebrate the 70th anniversary of Queen Victoria's death.

Some guests have been encouraged to keep warm during the summer heat, Andrew says: "You can go to a lot of nice hotels and the Queen will be there. It can start as early as 9am, but it's still a lot of fun."
by DavidVes (2020-05-29 15:38) 

DavidVes

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Business chamber backs industry water conservation measures

SOCIAL

— Gov. Jerry Brown signed several bills Wednesday that could help address California's water supply crisis.

The governor signed a bill to create a commission to study and implement water conservation measures, a measure that drew considerable support from the California Water Foundation and other community organizations. The bill also requires local water providers to improve water quality indicators to make sure water supplies and communities are healthy, a measure that has strong public support.

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The bill's supporters said the measures are needed to maintain a healthy and clean environment, and to prevent environmental impacts. But it also will add more than half a billion gallons of water annually to the state's already-pushing water system, and cost California the equivalent of the combined water systems of Delaware and New Jersey.

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"It's a win for every one of us," said John Geddes, founder of the Center for the Conservation of Californians, a local organization that works with farmers, ranchers, conservationists, and the oil and gas industry.

Geddes was quick to note that the bills also give cities more control over the amount of water they can divert from streams and rivers, which could help reduce local population impacts. They also create a commission to study the state's water resource infrastructure.

"These bills are good for every one of us," Geddes said. "But it won't make us any safer for the future if we don't act."

The governor's office said that about 40 percent of the bills signed Wednesday deal with the water supply, while other measures that include conservation measures are aimed at improving water quality in schools.

California's water crisis has caused some of the largest losses in human history, with millions of people becoming homeless due to the drought.

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In January, the state ordered a state aqueduct system that supplies about 2.6 million people in 11 southern regions of the state into the water system emergency, for a total loss of about 2.2 million acre-feet.

State Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, a Republican, was one of the few lawmakers to oppose the measure.

But the Senate on Wednesday, along with the Assembly, approved bills to fix two aqueduct systems, improve water quality in schools, and improve water use in the state's infrastructure.

The Senate had two "yes" votes in the bill to improve water quality in public schools.

The Assembly passed the bill on a 14-11 vote.

The Assembly bil
by DavidVes (2020-06-01 16:17) 

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