Who leaves in the 6th Roca

Who leaves in the 6th Roça?

Vote on the A Fazenda 2022 poll and watch the realtime voting and see who else is in the program vying for the R$1.5 million prize.

Farmer survey 2022 The elimination takes place on Thursday Photo: Disclosure

There is a fire in the hay and four workers are in the field of the farm. Bárbara, Pétala, Vini and Pelé find themselves in the hot seat of reality, but three of them have a chance to come back from the hot seat as a pawn. Until then, vote in the A Fazenda 2022 poll and watch the voting in realtime on the DCI.

Voting on the 2022 farm

See who voted for whom in this week’s Roça

Survey A Fazenda 2022 Who is in the country?

Bárbara: The pawn is on the field after being chosen by pawn Lucas. The pawn belongs to group B.

Vinícius: The worker received 7 votes and ended up on the pawn bench. The boy was excluded from the exam.

Petal: The farmer was unlucky and received the power of the Green Lantern from Kerline, who placed a direct participant in the garden.

Pele: The musician was the last one left after Deborah decided to rescue Ruivinha from Mars.

And now who’s left? Vote in the A Fazenda 2022 poll.

See farm plan

Monday: Proof of Fire Screening (taped on Sunday)

On Tuesday: Roça first formation, live, at 23:00 Brasilia time.

Wednesday: Tasting of the Farmer, live, at 23:00 Brasilia time.

Thursday: First elimination of the season at 23:00 GMT.

Friday: The program shows the coexistence between the pedestrians and the beginning of the live broadcast of the party at 10:45 p.m.

Saturday: The program is recorded and shows everything that happened on the night of the party. The attraction starts around 10:45pm.

Sunday: The Farm will air a little later, at 10:10 p.m., and will also show the latest events from the reality show.

Follow A Fazenda’s vote in the A Fazenda 2022 Poll on DCI.

Who leaves in the 6th Roça? Read More »

Theyre worth a fortune e bikes in the crosshairs of thieves

They’re worth a fortune: e-bikes in the crosshairs of thieves

Electrically assisted bicycles, which are becoming increasingly popular among Quebecers, are prime targets for thieves more than ever. The latter even go so far as to arm themselves well to make off with this loot worth thousands of dollars.

“They are well organized and well equipped. It’s not anything. I think they spotted the bike and studied their shot well,” says Saad Elblidi.

The Montreal native had his electric bike stolen in mid-October, which he had lent his son to go to school. Even with a supposedly very strong U-lock, the nearly $3,000 bike was stolen.

“I think they cut it with a saw. It’s a pretty straight cut,” says Mr. Elblidi.

Saad Elblidi is joined by his daughter on his electrically assisted bicycle, which was stolen in Montreal's Ahuntsic-Cartierville district last week.

With kind approval

Saad Elblidi is joined by his daughter on his electrically assisted bicycle, which was stolen in Montreal’s Ahuntsic-Cartierville district last week.

“We’re a target of choice because it’s a very valuable item and it’s as easy to steal as a $100 bike,” agrees Stéphane Friquet, who suffered an attempted robbery in his backyard in the Ahuntsic-Cartierville area.

Last week, a criminal broke part of the staircase to which his electric bike was padlocked before eventually riding off with that of his less well-protected neighbor.

In a few seconds

On social media, Le Journal has found many testimonials from people claiming that their electric bike has been stolen in recent months.

One of these victims, who lives in the Ville-Marie district, even sent a video of the thief being caught red-handed.

We see the latter pull an electric saw out of his coat and use it to cut through the padlock in a matter of seconds.

Although bike theft has long been a scourge in Montreal, the growing popularity of electric bikes offers enticing business opportunities for thieves, as these models, which include a battery, range in price from $2,000 to $20,000.

“With everything we have in Montreal and the number of cars that are on the road, there are more and more electric bikes and the resale value is good,” explains Nicolas Régis Lupien, manager of the E2 Sport store, which specializes in electric bikes.

Twice as many flights

The Longueuil Agglomeration Police Department, which keeps statistics, indicates that in 2022 so far 40 thefts of electric bicycles have been reported, almost double the number in 2021 (24), the year we started counting.

Electric bikes are becoming increasingly popular among Quebecers.

Photo Pierre Paul Poulin

Electric bikes are becoming increasingly popular among Quebecers.

Research on the Garage 529 platform, which aims to deter bike theft, shows that nearly one in five bikes reported stolen is an electric bike within a 16-mile radius of Montreal.

He is now reluctant to use it

Stéphane Friquet, who recently almost had his electric bike stolen, is more reluctant than ever to use it for his trips.

“It’s my main means of transportation. I drive 120 km a week for work. It was really a good buy.”

“[Depuis le vol], I somehow stored it in the basement to be safe for the rest of the season. Next season I will find a better solution to protect him.”

Mr Friquet has been anxious ever since and hopes he doesn’t have to buy a car to get around.

“[Mon vélo] has improved my quality of life because I no longer spend time in traffic and am out in nature. It would bother me to have to buy a car and bear all the associated costs and fees.”

Volley in less than 30 seconds

A few seconds of inattention were enough for Lorraine Thumerelle, a resident of Plateau-Mont-Royal, to have her nearly $3,000 electric bike stolen on October 13.

“I went to a sushi restaurant to pick up my order and 30 seconds later I turned around and my bike was gone,” says Lorraine Thumerelle.

She’s convinced the thief was “well armed” to steal it, because with a bag in hand, he would have been spotted riding a bike a little further.

After spending nearly $3,000 on this purchase, Ms. Thumerelle now believes it’s no longer worth buying new bikes in Montreal because the thieves “seem to be very efficient.”

“I feel like a part of me was taken away in a second. For me it was an alternative to the car and what I used to move my son.

Reduce the risk

E-bike dealers recommend their customers to invest a little more in a good lock, if possible with an alarm system, in addition to being able to locate the bike using their cell phone. It is also advisable to lock your bike in a secure indoor location whenever possible.

For its part, the Vélo Québec organization believes that there is still a long way to go for cyclists in general to have safe places to park their bikes.

“They can be Stellboxen (closed bicycle lockers) like those found elsewhere in certain car parks,” argues program director Magali Bebronne.

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Google search data reveals the most commonly misspelled words in

Google search data reveals the most commonly misspelled words in the US: How many can YOU spell correctly?

The Most Commonly Misspelled Words in the US, REVEALED: “Calendar” and “Niece” Top Misspellings List – So How Many Of These Mistakes Are YOU Guilty?

  • If you’re having trouble spelling words like “calendar” and “niece,” you’re not alone — hundreds of thousands of Americans make misspellings every month
  • Using Google data, Quillbot discovered the most commonly misspelled words in the US and revealed how often people searched them incorrectly
  • Quillbot reported that “calendar” is the word most people struggle with, with 257,000 Americans Googling the word “calendar” every month instead
  • The word “Arctic” came in second, with 87,000 people accidentally dropping the first C from the word and searching for “Arctic” each month
  • Experts blamed the population’s poor spelling on tools like spell check and autocorrect, both of which are prominent in modern life

If you’re struggling to spell words like “calendar,” “arctic,” and “niece,” you’re certainly not alone — as new data from Quillbot has shown hundreds of thousands of Americans make misspellings every month.

Using Google search data, the grammar checker site uncovered what the most commonly misspelled words are in the US – and revealed exactly how many times people searched for the words incorrectly each month.

According to Quillbot, “calendar” is the word most people struggle with, with the company revealing that every month 257,000 Google users search for the word “calendar” instead.

The word “arctic” came in second, with 87,000 Americans accidentally dropping the first C and spelling “artic” each month.

If you're having trouble spelling words like

If you’re having trouble spelling words like “calendar” and “niece,” you’re not alone — as Quillbot revealed thousands of Americans make misspellings every month (stock photo)

Based on the data, it appears that a common mistake people make when it comes to spelling is missing the I and E in words like niece, receive, believe, and besiege confound.

Other commonly misspelled words are “separate,” “rhythm,” “occurred,” “congratulations,” “until,” and “licence.”

It appears that many Americans also struggle to spell some common foods like broccoli and spaghetti — as the words “brocoli” and “spagetti” are searched 13,000 times each month — while the state of Connecticut also makes the list with 20,000 misspellings a month was standing.

Experts blamed the population’s poor spelling on tools like spell check and autocorrect, both of which are prominent in modern life.

“Many Americans struggle with spelling, especially in the digital age of spell checking,” said a spokesperson for QuillBot.

“However, if you sometimes get your letters mixed up, there is something you can do to improve your spelling.

The most frequently misspelled words

“More reading can improve your spelling. That’s because you’re looking at the letters on a page.

“Writing more often can also help with spelling. Try using a dictionary any time you think you’ve misspelled a word, and then highlight the word.

“You’ll start to notice an improvement in your spelling, especially on the words we all struggle with.”

Back in 2009, a study of 2,000 US adults found that one in four admitted to having trouble spelling common words – and it’s only gotten worse since then.

In 2015, a UK survey found that only two-thirds of adults had the level of spelling expected of primary school children.

Participants were asked to spell 35 different words from SAT tests over the past three years.

1,000 adults between the ages of 16 and 77 were tested, and only 67 percent made it to level four, while less than half (44 percent) made it to level five; 15 percent of the participating adults did not even reach level three, which is below the level expected of children as young as 11 years old.

Google search data reveals the most commonly misspelled words in the US: How many can YOU spell correctly? Read More »

Russia-Ukraine War at a Glance: What We Know on Day 245 of the Invasion | world news

  • According to media reports, about 1,000 bodies, including civilians and children, were exhumed in the recently liberated areas of Kharkiv Oblast. These include the 447 bodies found at the Izium mass grave site.

  • Ukraine’s counter-offensive against Russian forces in the southern Kherson region is proving more difficult than in the northeast due to wet weather and terrain, Ukraine’s defense minister said. Kiev’s forces are pressuring Russian forces in the strategically important Kherson region, which Moscow has occupied since the invasion began, and are threatening President Vladimir Putin with another major battlefield setback, Portal reported.

  • Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said Wednesday he does not believe Russian President Vladimir Putin will use nuclear weapons. Putin has repeatedly warned that Russia has the right to defend itself with all the weapons in its arsenal, which includes the largest nuclear arsenal in the world.

  • About 70,000 civilians were relocated from the right bank of the Dnieper River to the left bank in Kherson Oblastthe Russian-appointed governor of the region told Russian media.

  • Ukraine’s government is advising refugees living abroad not to return before spring amid mounting fears over whether the country’s damaged energy infrastructure can handle demand this winter. The energy crisis comes as officials in Kyiv warned that the coming winter could herald the heaviest fighting of the war around the southern city of Kherson, where Russian forces have dug in.

  • Up to 70 Australian forces will be deployed to Britain to train Ukrainian troops in the country’s latest boost in support for Kyiv. The Australian government announced the decision late Wednesday, stressing that the ADF members would not enter Ukrainian territory.

  • The Kremlin also said assets in the four Ukrainian regions Russia allegedly annexed last month could be transferred to Russian companies in the future. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said it was obvious that “abandoned assets” could not be left dormant and the government would look into the issue.

  • Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu held a phone call with his Indian and Chinese counterparts and expressed Russia’s concerns over the possible use of a “dirty bomb” by Ukraine, Shoigu’s ministry said. Since Sunday, Shoigu has had a series of phone calls on the same subject with NATO’s defense ministers.

  • Over the past day, Russian forces have launched five missiles, 30 airstrikes and more than 100 multi-launch missile system attacks according to the Ukrainian General Staff of Armed Forces in more than 40 settlements across Ukraine. Russian forces have continued their sustained offensive against the strategically located cities Bachmut and Avdiivka in Donbass, Ukraine’s industrial heartland, killing a civilian yesterday in Bakhmut. However, Ukrainian authorities believe that Russian forces are digging in for the “heaviest battles” in the strategic southern region Kherson. Russian authorities spent yesterday relocating civilians to the region, blaming the approaching attack by Ukrainian forces as the reason they had to leave the region.

  • Two people have been killed in a Russian missile attack in Dnipro, Ukraine’s fourth-largest city. One of the dead was a pregnant woman. The Prosecutor General’s Office of Ukraine has opened a pre-trial investigation into the attack.

  • Wladimir Putin entered the invasion of Ukraine with the term “denazification” – now its Security Council is turning to the term “desatanization”. Alexei Pavlov, Deputy Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation, now claims that there are “hundreds of sects” in Ukraine whose citizens have abandoned orthodox values. Those living in Ukraine can attest that this statement is patently false.

  • The Armed Forces of Ukraine roughly estimate that 480 Russian soldiers were killed yesterday alone, bringing the total to 68,900 soldiers lost in the invasion of Ukraine so far.

  • The Nobel Foundation has decided not to invite the ambassadors of Russia and Belarus to its famous awards ceremony this year, although the foundation usually invites all ambassadors stationed in Sweden. “In light of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the foundation has decided not to invite the ambassadors of Russia and Belarus to the Nobel Prize ceremony in Stockholm,” the foundation said in a statement. The Foundation jointly presented this year’s Peace Prize to the Center for Civil Liberties, a Ukrainian human rights organization, along with Memorial, a Russian human rights group banned by the Kremlin, and veteran Belarusian activist Ales Bialiatski, who is being held without trial in his home country.

  • Russia is reportedly recruiting members of the Afghan Army’s highly respected national command corps to fight in Ukraine, foreign policy reports. These are the Commandos trained by US Navy Seals and British Forces. About 20,000 to 30,000 of the volunteer commandos were left behind when the US left Afghanistan under Taliban control in August 2021.

  • Russia-Ukraine War at a Glance: What We Know on Day 245 of the Invasion | world news Read More »

    Dont be fooled by a strong GDP report

    Don’t be fooled by a strong GDP report

    A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business’s Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can register right here. You can listen to an audio version of the newsletter by clicking the same link.

    New York CNN store —

    Looming recession is the topic of the day. From Goldman Sachs to the IMF, analysts and economists seem to agree that an economic downturn is imminent for the United States in early 2023. That’s why it’s so surprising that the US economy is expected to show robust growth in Thursday’s third-quarter GDP report.

    However, investors should be wary of positive headlines. Economists warn the report could be a one-hit wonder exaggerates the momentum in an economy that is actually slowing.

    What’s happening: Gross domestic product, a broad measure of economic activity, grew an estimated 2.4% between July and September, according to Refinitiv. That’s huge considering we’ve just had six months of economic contraction.

    This decline, coupled with persistent inflation and rising interest rates, led many to believe the US was headed for a recession. A quarter of growth won’t necessarily change that, say economists, who see it less as a salvation and more as a rebound from the slump.

    “Going forward, fourth-quarter growth could well turn negative and likely be very weak next year,” David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, wrote in a statement Monday.

    Mortgage rates have more than doubled since the beginning of the year. The US dollar is now up almost 20% year-on-year when weighed against a basket of its six closest peers. (Its strength may hurt US exports and US corporate overseas earnings, which could weigh on growth.) The government budget deficit has now been halved, suggesting lower government spending.

    “More braking force is being put on the US economy than is even apparent in the third-quarter GDP report,” Kelly wrote.

    Unless the United States experiences a deep recession and subsequent recovery, or labor force participation and productivity spikes, “there is little reason to expect booming growth anytime for the next few years,” he added.

    In addition, third-quarter GDP is likely to increase on the back of a narrowing gap between exports and imports. But that’s because the United States is importing fewer goods as demand slacks. If you pop the hood and examine the numbers, says Andrew Patterson, a senior economist at Vanguard, you’ll see that American consumers and businesses are actually spending less. That’s a bad sign.

    The numbers are also supported by a surge in inventories from retailers beginning to recover from supply chain issues earlier in the year.

    What the Fed is looking for: Investors will be scouring Thursday’s economic data for clues to the Fed’s interest rate decision at next week’s monetary policy meeting. Fed officials will look at the report’s underlying metrics and likely ignore the headlines, Patterson said.

    The report includes three categories that the Fed will pay particular attention to, Paterson said. The first is whether companies are investing in their future growth by buying things like new machines. Next is housing investment, which measures home construction and remodeling and signals a healthy housing market. The third is household consumption, a measure of how much money Americans spend on goods to meet their daily needs, such as food and clothing.

    Paterson believes inflation-adjusted household consumption figures have fallen. “They can be downright negative,” he said.

    The bottom line: Trade balance rebalancing often erroneously inflates estimates of economic growth ahead of a recession. Inflation-adjusted GDP reflected healthy gains around the start of four of the last six downturns, Joseph LaVorgna, chief economist at SMBC Nikko Securities America and former Trump White House economic adviser, wrote in a note.

    The economy is not out of the woods yet, although Thursday’s GDP data shows a recovery.

    US consumer confidence fell to its lowest level since July in October as high borrowing costs and rising inflation take their toll on household budgets, my colleague Alicia Wallace reports.

    The near-term outlook for consumers remains “bleak,” said Lynn Franco, the Conference Board’s senior director of economic indicators.

    “Remarkably, concerns about inflation – which had been falling since July – rose again, with both gas and food prices serving as the main drivers,” Franco said in a statement. “Looking ahead, inflationary pressures will continue to provide strong headwinds for consumer confidence and spending, which could result in a challenging holiday season for retailers.”

    Consumer optimism dimmed not only for the current economic period, but also for what could come in the coming months.

    This is not a great economic omen.

    The payment: The consumer confidence index fell to 102.5 from a revised 107.8 in September, according to data released Tuesday by the Conference Board. Economists were expecting a reading of 106.5, according to Refinitiv estimates. A reading above 100 signals optimistic consumer attitudes towards the economy. In February 2020, the consumer confidence index was 132.6.

    Don’t expect things to get cheaper any time soon. Major food and beverage CEOs warn of impending price hikes.

    In a recent interview with CNN Business’ Christine Romans, Miguel Patricio, CEO of Kraft Heinz (KHC), said that higher inflation and supply problems are sweeping through the food industry, leading to this his company to raise prices further.

    “We have already increased prices, which we expected this year, but I expect inflation to continue next year and as a result [we] there will be more rounds of price hikes,” said Patricio.

    On Tuesday, James Quincey, CEO of Coca-Cola (KO), made a similar statement. “It will be above normal input costs,” Quincey said on CNBC’s Squawk on the Street. “Therefore we expect prices to be above normal next year on top of what has happened this year. ”

    That’s not bad news for Coke, however. Higher Coke prices helped lift net sales by 10% in the third quarter.

    Don’t be fooled by a strong GDP report Read More »

    Mysterious Chinese police stations in the Netherlands

    Mysterious Chinese police stations in the Netherlands

    NARRATIVE – There are three such structures in France, says the NGO Safeguard Defenders.

    From our correspondent in Brussels

    Chinese police stations in the Netherlands? This case is no joke. And the Dutch government is not taking it lightly. “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is currently investigating the activities of the so-called police centers. When we have more clarity on the matter, appropriate action will be taken,” the ministry spokesman said on Wednesday, claiming to take the file “very seriously.” Two secret Chinese police stations are said to be located in the Netherlands. According to RTL Nieuws, the first post was opened in June 2018 in Amsterdam by police officers from the Lishui region (eastern China) and managed by two former Chinese police officers based in the Netherlands. Apparently they have radios, because according to RTL Nieuws, this structure is still among the top 10 best Chinese police stations abroad. A second Chinese “police station”, this time headed by…

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    So the war is changing Europe

    So the war is changing Europe

    by Paolo Valentino

    From defense projects to negotiations with Beijing to gas supplies, the list of reasons for disagreements keeps growing. And worrying

    Whenever Helmut Kohl met a leader of the Elysée, he bowed twice to the French flag with military honors. It was a gesture of respect and gratitude made by the German Chancellor in agreement with Paris, the cornerstone of Germany’s post-war European redemption. It’s a gesture that Olaf Scholz, who arrives in the French capital to meet Emmanuel Macron, will not repeat this morning. In truth, neither Gerhard Schröder nor Angela Merkel ever made the double bow to the red-white-blue tricolor. But despite the geopolitical landslides triggered by German reunification, which upset the balance of power between the two countries, the alliance between France and Germany continued to function for thirty years, a key driver of all progress in European integration. Maybe not enough, but absolutely necessary.

    No longer. Even if today’s Paris tête-à-tête will end with a ritual commitment to friendship and cooperation, no diplomatic convenience can hide the structural crisis in which Franco-German relations find themselves, a malaise that will upset the balance in the medium term could be in the European Union. Rien ne va plus between Paris and Berlin, even had to cancel the annual government summit in the last few days and postpone it indefinitely due to irreconcilable differences in all dossiers on the agenda.

    The list of disagreements keeps growing. Macron is angry about the European missile shield project launched by Germany together with 14 countries and based on German, American and Israeli technologies, the tombstone for the European “strategic autonomy” dear to him. Still on the subject of defence: initial French enthusiasm for the 100 billion that Germany committed to a large-scale rearmament in February is given Berlin’s decisions that the Franco-German or European projects will instead focus on US-made systems concentrate, starting with the F-35. The Elysée boss still considers Olaf Scholz’s decision to go to Beijing in November (accompanied by a crowd of entrepreneurs) to be impolite and ignores his suggestion that they go there together on a European mission.

    On the German front, there is great disappointment at Paris’ definitive no to the Midcat pipeline, which was supposed to connect the Spanish gas network to France via the Pyrenees to bring more methane to northern Europe. Berlin also laments the lack of French support for EU expansion towards the Western Balkans, because Paris favors the European political community project christened in Prague on October 6th.

    But beyond the individual episodes, the crisis has something deeper and more epochal than what only the French call “le couple,” the couple, while the Germans have forgetfully called Heine and the Romantics “motor.” All company bosses present in September in Evian during the traditional German-French talks were struck by the coldness of Olaf Scholz, not a prime example of empathy and tact, who in his speech did not once speak of an agreement between the two countries and instead emphasized the centrality of Germany , the first power of the new Europe, which also includes Ukraine.

    And here we are at the crucial point. Putin’s war of aggression against Kyiv may have changed priorities and balances in Europe forever, beginning to shift its geopolitical center of gravity east and north. Poland, the Baltics and the Nordic countries are also gaining new moral weight after repeated warnings about the threat posed by Putin. With the not-so-close but certain prospect of Ukraine joining the EU, new alliances or even a new bloc are inevitable.

    The conflict and its ramifications, particularly in the energy arena, have definitively undermined the mercantilist economic model that Germany has followed, not without selfishness, for the past thirty years, based on cheap Russian energy, robust Chinese demand and market, and US-guaranteed defense. It’s a perfect storm for Berlin, forced to live first, also at the expense of the deal with Paris. The 200 billion euros that the federal government has made available to save expensive energy, which was decided without consultation with the European partners, are proof of this. France, for its part, risks being weakened and crushed on the western flank of Europe and NATO, and, as political scientist Gilles Gressani explains, will be tempted to look around, perhaps to look for Latin options, certainly in Spain, perhaps in Italy. The sentence “It’s not good for Europe if Germany isolates itself” expresses Macron’s concern. But it would certainly be a grave mistake for the unstable and somewhat contentious governing coalition in Berlin to turn its back on Paris altogether, as if it no longer needed it. Even if the new focus is no longer on the Rhine, only together can Germany and France advance integration and counteract any sovereign temptation in Europe.

    October 25, 2022 (change October 25, 2022 | 22:03)

    So the war is changing Europe Read More »

    Vice President of Bolivia warns of coup plans

    US mediator in Lebanon to settle the naval dispute

    Beirut, 26.10. (Prensa Latina) US diplomat Amos Hochstein will arrive in Lebanon today to finalize the maritime border demarcation agreement with Israel after more than four months of indirect talks resuming.

    According to the Office of the Presidential Coordinator for Energy Affairs, Hochstein will hold meetings with the President of the Republic, Michel Aoun, in this capital; head of parliament Nabih Berri and prime minister-designate Najib Miqati.

    The mediator will thank the senior figures of the Lebanese state, government and legislature for the spirit of consultation and openness during the negotiations, the foundations of which were laid in the Framework Agreement in 2020 and resumed in June this year.

    After the meetings, Hochstein will visit the United Nations Peacekeeping Headquarters in Naqoura on the southern border to take the final steps towards the entry into force of the Lebanon-Israel agreement.

    By accepting the final version of the document, Lebanon obtained all rights to work in the Qana field without waiting for the hostile entity’s prior approval or any pretense to share wealth or pay compensation to Tel Aviv.

    The Lebanese President, in approving Hochstein’s text, reiterated that the country would not enter into any normalization with Israel; while emphasizing resistance involvement as an element of strength in the national unity position.

    For the vast majority of residents, the country has won a historic victory in the fight against the Zionist enemy that will transform Lebanon into a Mediterranean oil state and fuel economic recovery for years to come.

    In early June, the presence of the Greek-British platform Energean Power in Israel’s service on Lebanon’s southern border fueled the naval dispute between the two nations.

    The indirect meetings began in October 2020 under the auspices of the United Nations and mediated by the United States and took place in five rounds of negotiations through May 2021.

    mv/yma

    US mediator in Lebanon to settle the naval dispute Read More »