Anonymous ID: 241b44 Feb. 17, 2020, 6:03 p.m. No.8168517   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8168500

tyb

 

you want to see alot of parts or pieces coming off a car when it crashes like that-this dissipates the energy created by it. That did not look very good. thoughts with driver and family.

Anonymous ID: 241b44 Feb. 17, 2020, 6:10 p.m. No.8168580   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8168534

Jr. crashed a vette at Sears point and it was pretty bad too. caught fire and everything. Both of them were supposed to do LeMans in the factory vette's in '02 or '03. This habbened right in front of me. Got concussed badly and started his health issues.

Anonymous ID: 241b44 Feb. 17, 2020, 6:19 p.m. No.8168641   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8168612

that and you watch the medical people attending the crash- they also give hand signals to the surrounding personnel so they can communicate to each other by sight.

Anonymous ID: 241b44 Feb. 17, 2020, 6:32 p.m. No.8168811   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Airlines refuse to take passengers from cruise ship in Cambodia

 

PHNOM PENH (Kyodo) – Passengers and crew of a luxury cruise ship that had been turned away from at least five ports in Asia over coronavirus fears are now stranded in Cambodia after all airlines have refused to carry them, according to government sources. The situation arose after Malaysia announced that a U.S. woman who flew to Malaysia on Friday after disembarking from the Westerdam ship in the southwestern port of Sihanoukville earlier that day tested positive for the virus.

 

The Cambodian government allowed the ship to dock on Thursday on humanitarian grounds, after it had been turned away by Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, Guam and Thailand.

 

To date, less than 1,000 of its 2,257 passengers and crew have left Cambodia, with 1,255 of them having disembarked from the ship beginning Friday morning.

 

Cambodia and stakeholders including the United States have approached some airlines to fly them out including commercial flights and tried unsuccessfully to charter ones with different destinations including Japan and Dubai, according to the sources.

 

Prime Minister Hun Sen posted on his Facebook page on Monday that "a total of 500 multinational tourists, after having medical check-ups, found no positive signs of COVID-19 and are currently given temporary accommodation at Sokha Hotel in Phnom Penh."

 

"Clearly, if their countries do not care about their citizens, Cambodia will be responsible because they have now come to a safe place in our country."

 

Mean Chanyada, spokesman of Phnom Penh Municipality, told Kyodo News that he had joined in leading a tour in Phnom Penh for about 100 passengers out of those staying at Sokha Hotel late Monday.

 

When the Westerdam docked at Sihanoukville, its passengers and crew were warmly welcomed by Hun Sen who, without wearing a mask, also presented them with rose flowers and traditional scarves.

https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20200218/p2g/00m/0in/018000c