Anonymous ID: f4373e March 17, 2020, 12:47 a.m. No.8447168   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7171

Rockets Hit Iraq Base Hosting Foreign Troops - Reports

(07:27 GMT 17.03.2020)

 

The new attack comes on the heels of two rocket strikes against coalition troops near Baghdad, in which two American soldiers and a British servicewoman were killed. This prompted the US-led coalition to carry out massive strikes against local Shia militants.

 

A military base in Iraq hosting foreign troops has come under a rocket attack, AFP reported citing military sources.

 

According to the Iraqi military, a pair of rockets hit the Besmaya base located south of the capital Baghdad late Monday night. The military installation hosts Spanish forces assisting the US-led anti-Daesh* efforts as well as NATO training forces.

 

The number of casualties or damage inflicted by the attack is not immediately available.

 

>>8447101 last bread

AFP News Release

#Breaking Rockets hit Iraq base hosting foreign troops: military

Anonymous ID: f4373e March 17, 2020, 12:59 a.m. No.8447224   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7238

(sputnik selected an interesting title)

 

'Calm Before the Storm': Danish Experts Predict Coronavirus Peak in Late April

(07:16 GMT 17.03.2020)

https://sputniknews.com/europe/202003171078591013-calm-before-the-storm-danish-experts-predict-coronavirus-peak-in-late-april/

 

In the next six weeks, up to 600,000 Danes in a nation of 5.6 million may get infected, the country's National Board of Health predicted.

 

Denmark's leading experts in infectuous diseases have predicted a spike in the number of coronavirus cases in the upcoming six weeks, comparing the current situation, which has already led to a national lockdown, to the calm before a storm.

 

While fewer that than 1,000 people have tested positive for coronavirus so far, the COVID-19 epidemic is expected to reach its peak in late April.

 

“In the middle or the end of April, the maximum spread of infection will occur, according to our expectations. This is where most people will be infected at the same time, and most will need hospitalisation”, Jens Lundgren, a professor of infectious diseases at Rigshospitalet, told Danish Radio.

 

Else Smith, a specialist in community medicine and former director of the National Board of Health, expects the number of the infected to fall around 1 May.

 

“We are a few weeks into the epidemic, and in six weeks or something like that it will peak. If it is a fairly uniform curve, one would imagine that between 200,000 to 300,000 people will have had coronavirus at that time. But the vast majority won't need medical help at all”, Smith said.

The National Board of Health estimated that up to 600,000 could be infected in the first wave of the epidemic this spring.

 

“That's a really large number. Many people won't get seriously ill and will easily manage it at home and get healthy again. But a fraction of those who get infected will need hospital treatment. It is a situation that we can handle very well right now, but we may be very challenged when the outbreak peaks, and there are a whole lot of people who get infected at the same time”, Jens Lundgren mused.

 

According to the National Board of Health estimate, 11,000 of those infected will need hospital treatment, with 2,900 up for intensive care.

 

Denmark became the first Scandinavian nation to introduce drastic measures to curb the spread of the virus. In addition to closing borders, schools and universities, sending non-essential public sector employees on paid leave and cancelling all public events with over 100 people, Copenhagen introduced a $390 million package of relief measures to palliate the brunt of the epidemic.

 

As of today, 914 Danes have tested positive for the coronavirus, including some single cases on the Faroe Islands and in Greenland. However, since only people with severe symptoms have been tested, the real number of infected is expected to be higher.

 

The coronavirus outbreak originated in the Hubei province of China in late 2019 and has since spread to over 100 countries. It was recently proclaimed a pandemic by the World Health Organisation, as the number of infected exceeded 182,000 people, with over 7,100 deaths, and almost 80,000 patients successfully recovered.

Anonymous ID: f4373e March 17, 2020, 1:12 a.m. No.8447273   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7281 >>7284 >>7299 >>7457 >>7461 >>7665

‘I’ve always had big breasts’: Lawmaker’s plunging neckline stirs Brazilian parliament (PHOTOS)

https://www.rt.com/news/450799-paulinha-outfit-brazil-controversy/

 

Politicians are normally judged by what they do rather than on what they wear, but one lawmaker in Brazil has caused a stir over her ‘revealing’ first-day outfit choice and says she’ll sue those abusing her online.

Ana Paula da Silva, known locally as Paulinha, had previously served two stints as a city mayor before being elected to the Brazilian state of Santa Catarina’s Legislative Assembly in October. But she rose to wider public attention in January, after pictures posted from the assembly’s opening day went viral and began to garner some unsavory attention.

 

The striking red outfit with the plunging neckline that the state deputy wore was quick to attract comments online. Some immediately questioned if it was the right place for her to wear it.

 

Others were quick to praise and deem Paulinha’s clothing choice as “appropriate for the place” and pointed out it is the character of the politician that counts. Some joked that “she went clubbing” after the formalities at the Assembly had ended.

 

However, many were scathing in their assessment calling her the “representative of prostitutes” and some even making references to rape.

 

Paulinha struck back at the worst of the trolls on Monday, saying that her team has made copies of the offending comments. They will be filed as part of a lawsuit to bring the most malicious commenters to justice, among them a police officer in the state. Any compensation she receives will be donated to a charity of abused women.

 

“I thought people were going to talk about the red, but they just focused on the cleavage,” she told local network NSC TV, adding that “the way I dress is my problem.”

 

“Women have breasts and I have big breasts, I’ve always been like that,” she said, adding that she won’t “become another woman” after becoming a deputy.

 

“The message has been given,” she said. “Women are in politics and society has to get used to it. There are much more important issues for the Legislative Assembly to discuss.”

 

ThanQ RT news service

ThanQ Baker