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ujao Brian Thompson murder suspect Luigi Mangione: Witness who was at McDonald s duri
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Eejj Turkey heads to landmark presidential, parliamentary vote
Russian mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin appeared to suggest he had sent an armed convoy on a 1,200-km 750-mile charge towards Moscow on Saturday in an unlikely attempt to stanley cup topple the military leadership. Hours earlier, the Russian authorities had accused Prigozhin of staging an armed mutiny AP Follow Russia coup LIVE Updates Russian local officials said a military convoy was on the main motorway linking the southern part of European Russia, bordering Ukraine, with Moscow, and warned residents to avoid it. Hours earlier, the Russian authorities had accused Prigozhin o stanley cup f staging an armed mutiny after he alleged, without providing evidence, that the military leadership had killed a huge number of his fighters in an air strike, and vowed to punish them. The FSB domestic security service said it had opened a criminal case against Prigozhin for armed mutiny, a crime punishable with a jail term of up to 20 years. The dramatic turn of events, with many details unclear, looked like the biggest domestic crisis President Vladimir Putin has faced since he ordered a full-scale invasion of vaso stanley Ukraine - something he called a special military operation - in February last year. Prigozhin, whose Wagner militia spearheaded the capture of the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut last month, has for months been openly accusing Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and Russia s top general, Valery Gerasimov, of rank incompetence and of denying Wagner ammunition and support in its battles in Ukraine. A Tkhu Taliban used whips against Afghan women protesting new regime: Report
With three children under the age of five and a husband who could neither read nor write, 25-year-old Jahantap Ahmadi dreamed of going to college. Her high school degree stanley isolierkanne was enough to become a teacher at the only elementary school in her village in central Afghanistan in an open field 鈥?but she wanted more. Jahantab Ahmadi, 25, seen sitting cross-legged on a classroom floor with her two-month-old baby asleep on her lap as she takes her university entrance exam in Daikundi in central Afghanistan on March 16. AP Photo On March 15, cheered on by her husband, Jahantap set out for the Daikundi provincial capital of Nili to take the university entrance exam. She walked until her feet were blistered and bruised and then sat for 10 hours with her infant daughter, Khezran, cradled on her lap in a rickety bus over rugged rock stanley usa y roads. Once in Nili, she took the exam and scored a respect stanley cup able 152 out of a possible 200. But it was a picture of Jahantap posted on Facebook, sitting cross-legged on the classroom floor, her two-month-old baby asleep on her lap as she took the exam, that made the dream of going to college come true. A teacher in Nili who was moved by Jahantaps determination to get an education posted pictures on Facebook. In Afghanistan, where women still struggle for even the most basic of rights, it went viral. My brother who was working in Kabul called me and said I saw your picture in Facebook, she said in an interview in Kabul where she is now enrolled at a
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