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Police arrest more than 3,000 people as protests grow across Russia.

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Police arrest more than 3,000 people as protests grow across Russia.

Regardless of the specter of yearslong jail phrases, 1000’s of Russians joined antiwar rallies throughout the nation on Sunday in a putting present of the pent-up anger in Russian society about President Vladimir V. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

The police reported greater than 3,000 arrests throughout the nation — the very best nationwide whole formally reported in any single day of protest in latest reminiscence. An activist group that tracks arrests, OVD-Information, reported detentions in 49 completely different Russian cities.

Video from unbiased Russian information retailers masking the protests confirmed throngs of individuals chanting “No to warfare!” on St. Petersburg’s central avenue, Nevsky Prospekt, and on Moscow’s Manezhnaya Sq., simply outdoors the Kremlin partitions. Different clips confirmed protesters being crushed and kicked by the police, including subsequent to a stand of balloons and present containers inside Moscow’s storied youngsters’s division retailer, Detsky Mir — subsequent door to the headquarters of the home intelligence company, the F.S.B.

Within the metropolis of Kaliningrad close to the Baltic Sea, a lady protesting the warfare was recorded in a video posted on Twitter telling a police officer that she had survived the Nazi siege of Leningrad.

“Are you right here to help the fascists?” the officer responded, repeating the Kremlin narrative concerning the warfare in Ukraine, earlier than calling over different policemen and telling them: “Arrest all of them.”

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The 1000’s of Russians who protested on Sunday represented solely a slice of these livid over the invasion. Hundreds extra fled the nation within the final 10 days, as their financial savings evaporated amid the collapse of the ruble and the West’s crushing sanctions.

“There is no such thing as a extra Russia,” Anton Dolin, one in every of Russia’s best-known movie critics, wrote on Sunday, saying his departure. “We’re struggling a disaster — no, not an financial or political one. This can be a ethical disaster.”

In a cellphone interview from Latvia, Mr. Dolin, 46, described how he spent 4 hours within the chilly ready to cross the border on foot Saturday along with his spouse, two youngsters, their canine and some suitcases.

“We have now realized we’re most likely departing for a very long time,” he stated. “We by no means ready for this departure and by no means in our lives even thought we might ever depart Russia.”

Mr. Putin remained defiant, regardless of cellphone calls with the presidents of France and Turkey on Sunday by which each leaders urged Russia to think about a cease-fire.

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“An finish to the particular operation is simply potential if Kyiv stops its army motion and fulfills Russia’s well-known calls for,” the Kremlin stated.

By Sunday, the Russian authorities had blocked entry contained in the nation to the web sites of just about all well-liked unbiased media retailers reporting on the warfare. Mr. Putin on Friday signed a legislation punishing “false information” concerning the warfare with jail sentences of as much as 15 years.

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Continued rain postpones skateboarding, delays tennis at Paris Olympics

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Continued rain postpones skateboarding, delays tennis at Paris Olympics

PARIS (AP) — Rain that fell throughout the opening ceremony continued on Saturday, leading to postponements and delays at the Paris Olympics.

The first event of the skateboarding competition, men’s street skateboarding, was postponed from Saturday until Monday because of the showers. The women’s event is scheduled for Sunday.

Skateboarding is held at the outdoor venue of La Concorde Urban Park in Paris. World Skate, the sport’s governing body, cited adverse weather conditions for the move.

Rain has been one of the big stories early in the Games after constant showers and occasional downpours served as the backdrop for the opening ceremony. As of 10 a.m. CEST (4 a.m. ET), much of the rain had cleared from the area.

The start of play in the scheduled tennis matches on the 10 smaller courts at Roland Garros was delayed because of rain, but action was able to get going in the two main stadiums, which both have retractable roofs. That included the match at Court Philippe Chatrier between No. 1 Iga Swiatek of Poland – who has won four of the past five French Open titles at the same site being used for the Olympics – and Irina-Camelia Begu of Romania.

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Sunny skies are expected to return to the area Sunday, but the rain could have a lasting impact on the Paris Games.

The rain could threaten the water quality for swimming in the Seine when the triathlon begins Tuesday. Tony Estanguet, head of the Paris 2024 organizers, addressed the situation at the daily press briefing.

“We are still looking at the forecast for the coming days,” Estanguet said. “They expect that it will rain till 5 p.m. today and then it should be fine.

“The team is very confident that it will be possible to have the (triathlon) swimming part in the Seine.”

The triathlon begins with the men’s event Tuesday, swimming from 8 a.m. CEST (2 a.m. ET) at the Alexander III bridge next to Grand Palais.

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AP Sports Writers Graham Dunbar and Steve Whyno and AP Tennis Writer Howard Fendrich contributed to this story.

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AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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Australian surfer saved by off-duty police officer after shark ripped off leg, doctors hope to reattach it

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Australian surfer saved by off-duty police officer after shark ripped off leg, doctors hope to reattach it

Kai McKenzie, 23, was surfing off New South Wales in Australia when he was attacked by a shark, New South Wales police said. 

“Clinging to life, he was able to catch a wave back to the beach,” a fundraising site set up for McKenzie said. “A retired police officer used his dog’s lead as a tourniquet to stem the bleeding before the victim could be airlifted to hospital.”

Amazingly, McKenzie’s leg washed up on the beach after the attack and doctors are hoping to be able to reattach it. 

McKenzie has undergone surgery and remains in critical but stable condition, according to ABC News Australia and the fundraising site. 

MASSIVE BULL SHARK WEIGHING NEARLY 500 POUNDS CAUGHT AT ALABAMA FISHING TOURNAMENT

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Kai McKenzie, 23, was surfing off New South Wales in Australia when he was attacked by a shark, New South Wales police said.  (NSW Police)

Luke Short, who makes McKenzie’s surfboards, told ABC they had all hoped “we heard it wrong.”

“It’s amazing that he’s survived,” he added. 

His surf team RAGE called McKenzie the “toughest person we know.”

“Sending love to @kai_mckenzie the youngest RAGE boy on the team and the toughest person that we know,” the team wrote on Instagram this week. “Yesterday he was attacked by a shark and has lost his leg while surfing in Port Macquarie. He has been through a lot breaking his back last year, he never once complained always just got on with doing what he loved as soon as possible. He is an inspiring person. The whole rage gang loves you man and we will see you soon.”

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SHARK BITE REPORTED AT HILTON HEAD ISLAND RESORT IS FIRST REPORTED SHARK BI OF YEAR ON ISLAND

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“Clinging to life, he was able to catch a wave back to the beach,” a fundraising site set up for McKenzie said. “A retired police officer used his dog’s lead as a tourniquet to stem the bleeding before the victim could be airlifted to hospital.” (Reinhard Dirscherl/ullstein bild via Getty Images)

Kirran Mowbray of NSW Ambulance called McKenzie “courageous” during a 7News Sydney on-air broadcast. “He turned around, caught a wave into shore.”

She added that the off-duty officer “used the lead off a dog as a tourniquet to wrap around the young man’s leg and essentially saved his life.”

Kevin Young, vice president of Bite Club, a shark attack survivors club, told the broadcast: “And I know he lost a leg and they packed it with ice and they’re going down to try to reattach it. That just blows my brain that that might be possible.” 

Mid North Coast Police Chief Insp. Stuart Campbell said they would be working to try to find out what type of shark bit McKenzie. 

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Port Macquarie Hastings Lifeguards later reported the beach had reopened after the attack. 

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Italy's Via Appia enters the Unesco World Heritage List

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Italy's Via Appia enters the Unesco World Heritage List
This article was originally published in Italian

With sixty recognised sites, Italy is the country with the highest number of UNESCO heritage sites.

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Italy is at the top of the Unesco World Heritage list. The World Heritage Committee, meeting in New Delhi at its 46th session, has decided to add the ‘Via Appia Regina Viarum’ on the World Heritage List- becoming the 60th Italian site to be recognised.

The list also includes the Ensemble Schwerin residence in Germany, the Niah National Park in Malaysia, the archaeological area of Al-Faw in Saudi Arabia, Constantin Brâncuși’s sculptural ensemble in Târgu Jiu and the Frontiers of the Roman Empire in Dacia, both in Romania.

Candidature of the Via Appia promoted by the Ministry of Culture

The candidature was promoted for the first time directly by the Ministry of Culture, which coordinated all the stages of the process and prepared the necessary documentation for the application.

The history of the Via Appia

About 650 kilometres long, the ancient Via Appia goes through central and southern Italy. It was the first of Rome ‘s great roads built using innovative techniques; true masterpieces of civil engineering that complemented the natural roads and are the most enduring monuments of Roman civilisation.

The route was inaugurated in 312 B.C. by the censor Appius Claudius Blind to connect Rome to Capua. It was later extended to Benevento, Venosa, Taranto and Brindisi.

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Conceived for military needs, the Via Appia immediately became the road of great commercial communications and primary cultural transmissions. Over time, it became the model for all subsequent Roman public roads.

“UNESCO has grasped the exceptional universal value of an extraordinary engineering work that over the centuries has been essential for trade, social and cultural exchanges with the Mediterranean and the East,” said Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano.

“This recognition adds to the extraordinary success achieved less than a year ago by Italian opera,” commented Undersecretary for Culture with responsibility for UNESCO, Gianmarco Mazzi.

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