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Cyprus votes for new president in tight run-off

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Cyprus votes for new president in tight run-off

Ex international minister with the ruling right-wing DISY celebration faces off chief negotiator in peace talks with Turkish Cypriots in run-off.

Cyprus has gone to the polls in a presidential run-off that pits two profession diplomats in what might be a cliffhanger vote that has break up the political proper.

Nikos Christodoulides, 49, a former international minister with the ruling right-wing DISY celebration now standing as an impartial, holds a slender lead after the primary spherical of voting on February 5 produced the shock elimination of DISY head Averof Neophytou.

Within the run-off vote on Sunday, he faces Andreas Mavroyiannis, 66, additionally a professed impartial, who was chief negotiator in peace talks with Turkish Cypriots and a former everlasting consultant of Cyprus to the United Nations.

Christodoulides is backed by a smattering of centre and right-of-centre events and Mavroyiannis by the left-wing AKEL.

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Polling stations shut at 6pm (16:00 GMT) within the race to succeed two-term conservative President Nicos Anastasiades as head of state and authorities of the small European Union member nation.

Anastasiades, of DISY, is prevented from searching for a 3rd time period by legislation and has stated he backs the celebration line.

The subsequent president faces issues starting from a impasse in reunification talks with Turkish Cypriots on the ethnically divided island and labour disputes stemming from runaway inflation to fallout from corruption scandals and an increase in migration.

Many disaffected voters will merely go for “the least worse candidate – a attribute in most elections, however extra so on this one”, stated Andreas Theophanous of assume tank the Cyprus Middle for European and Worldwide Affairs.

The winner wants 50 p.c plus one vote to succeed Anastasiades because the republic’s eighth president.

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The outgoing president urged Cypriots to come back out “en masse to take part on this electoral course of”, including that “that is our responsibility. The folks resolve, the bulk decides and the minority respects.”

Cyprus has been divided since 1974, when Turkish forces occupied its northern third in response to a Greek-sponsored coup, however voters appeared break up over whether or not the division was a precedence within the election.

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Outer Range Cancelled at Prime Video

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Outer Range Cancelled at Prime Video


‘Outer Range’ Cancelled at Amazon Prime Video — No Season 3



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Hurricane Beryl: Newlyweds among American tourists stuck in Jamaica as storm hits

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Hurricane Beryl: Newlyweds among American tourists stuck in Jamaica as storm hits

Some American tourists are still stuck in Jamaica as Hurricane Beryl continues to pound the Caribbean Sea en route to Mexico.

Hurricane Beryl, a Category 4 storm, has been making its way through the southeast Caribbean this week. The storm hit Jamaica on Wednesday. 

Newlywed Casey Haley told Fox News Digital that she recently flew into Jamaica to celebrate her honeymoon. She and her husband got married on Saturday, and they arrived in the country on Sunday morning.

“We were originally told not to worry and that everything would be fine. Now they are doing lots of storm prep,” she explained.

HURRICANE SEASON BEARS DOWN AS BIPARTISAN LAWMAKERS PUSH TO DETACH FEMA FROM ‘PARTISAN’ DHS

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American tourists, including newlyweds, are stuck in Jamaica during Hurricane Beryl. (Casey Haley)

The bride noticed people at their resort leaving on Monday evening. When she and her husband inquired about the situation to hotel staff, they were given mixed messages.

“Our room is on the 10th floor, you’re not supposed to stay up that high during [a] hurricane,” Haley said. “So we decided to find a safe place within our building. We found an inner stairwell that is away from all windows and doesn’t have a ton of ceiling above us.”

The couple was then moved to a conference room. Haley noted that the resort “seems a little frantic.”

“It was calm right up until this morning,” she said. “Lots of last minute boarding up and prep.”

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“That’s when the reality of the situation set in, but we took a breath, said a prayer, and did all the prep we could,” she said. “The storm is hitting now, so we will likely be losing all contact soon.”

Casey Haley and husband smiling at table

Casey Haley and her husband were visiting Jamaica for their honeymoon when the storm hit. (Casey Haley)

Despite the uncertainty, Haley affirmed that she still hopes for the best.

MAN AND HIS DOG ELECTROCUTED IN FREAK ACCIDENT DURING THUNDERSTORM

“We feel prepared and we are prayerful,” she said. “Everything else is now out of our control and our goal is to respond to whatever happens with level heads.”

Tourist Kiki Barry, who is vacationing in Jamaica with her friend, told Fox News Digital that she was due to leave on Wednesday before Sangster International Airport (MBJ) closed due to the storm.

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“We are in a safe place, they have converted the movie theater and convention center inside into a shelter,” she explained. “We have plenty [of] food, drinks, some indoor fans and portable air conditioners. We have movies and games the staff have planned.”

Split image of Kiki Barry and friend

Kiki Barry, left, is currently in Jamaica with her friend as they wait out the storm. (Kiki Barry)

Barry added that she felt “calm but anxious,” and commended her hotel for keeping guests “in good spirits.”

“We had a very good trip, just ready to get home to our husbands and children,” she said.

As of Wednesday afternoon, at least six people have been killed amid the storm. AccuWeather chief meteorologist Jon Porter said he was “very concerned about a wide variety of life-threatening impacts in Jamaica.”

Split image of storm and movie theater

Tourist Kiki Barry told Fox News Digital that her hotel is keeping guests in good spirits with its movie theater. (Kiki Barry)

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“[This is] the strongest and most dangerous hurricane threat that Jamaica has faced, probably, in decades,” he said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Bulgaria's parliament votes down centre-right minority government

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Bulgaria's parliament votes down centre-right minority government

The GERB party, which proposed the minority government, finished first in the June elections but has only 68 legislators in the 240-seat National Assembly.

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Bulgaria’s parliament on Wednesday rejected a minority government proposed by the centre-right GERB party, likely bringing the country closer to new elections.

Lawmakers voted 138-98 to reject a proposal designed to make Rosen Zhelyazkov, a 56-year-old lawyer and former speaker of parliament, the next prime minister.

The GERB party, which proposed the minority government, finished first in the June elections but has only 68 legislators in the 240-seat National Assembly.

The party picked Zhelyazkov to head a new government over its leader, Boyko Borissov, who led three governments between 2009 and 2021. His third cabinet resigned following major anti-corruption protests.

The move comes after six elections over the last three years that resulted in shaky coalitions.

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Although Borissov tried to find coalition partners in the fragmented legislature by refusing to become prime minister for a fourth time, his offer could not garner enough support.

The country’s president will now hand the next mandate for forming a government to the runner-up in the elections — the MRF party.

Analysts predict that after the first vote failed, it will be hard to cobble together a viable coalition in this parliament. The likely option is a new election, which will deepen the political crisis in the European Union’s poorest member country.

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