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What not to miss at Radio 1's Big Weekend 2025

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Americas   来源:Australia  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations’ humanitarian chief has defended using the term “genocide” to describe

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The United Nations’ humanitarian chief has defended using the term “genocide” to describe

all its helicopter flights in the area after this incident. It was a Black Hawk priority air transport from the same unit known as the PAT25 that collided with the passenger jet in midair in January.— In April, on the same day as the fatal New York helicopter crash, a wing tip of an American Airlines plane

What not to miss at Radio 1's Big Weekend 2025

from the same airline on a taxiway of the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. There were no reported injuries. Multiple members of Congress were aboard one of the flights.— A FedEx cargo plane made an emergency landing at a busy New Jersey airport in March after a bird strikethat could be seen in the morning sky. The plane landed at Newark Liberty International Airport. There were no reported injuries.

What not to miss at Radio 1's Big Weekend 2025

— Pilots on a Southwest Airlines flight about to land at Chicago’s Midway Airport were forced to climb back into the skycrossing the runway in late February. Video showed the plane approaching the runway before it abruptly pulled up as a business jet taxied onto the runway without authorization, federal officials said.

What not to miss at Radio 1's Big Weekend 2025

— In early February, a Japan Airlines plane was taxiing on the tarmac of Seattle-Tacoma International Airport

of a parked Delta plane. There were no injuries reported.Sonam Kunkhen, left, her husband Konchok Dorjey, center, daughters Jigmet Dolma, right, and Rigzen Angmo pose for a picture inside their home in Kharnakling near Leh town in the cold desert region of Ladakh, India, Friday, Sept. 16, 2022. (AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)

Sonam Kunkhen, left, her husband Konchok Dorjey, center, daughters Jigmet Dolma, right, and Rigzen Angmo pose for a picture inside their home in Kharnakling near Leh town in the cold desert region of Ladakh, India, Friday, Sept. 16, 2022. (AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)As this region in Asia is particularly vulnerable to climate change, shifting weather patterns have already altered people’s lives through floods, landslides and droughts in Ladakh, an inhospitable yet pristine landscape of high mountain passes and vast river valleys that in the past was an important part of the famed Silk Road trade route.

Frequent loss of livestock due to diseases, lack of health care, border conflict and shrinking grazing land — worsened by extreme climatic changes — has forced hundreds to migrate from sparsely populated villages to mainly urban clusters in the region known for its sublime mountain landscape and the expensive wool.In the remote Himalayan region, glaciers are melting fast while still villagers largely depend on glacial runoff for water.

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