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‘I realised I was alive’: Sole survivor of Air India crash recounts tragedy

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Middle East   来源:Technology  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:So, to mix things up, we asked for their other leading players of the campaign - but only allowed them to pick one more player from Liverpool.

So, to mix things up, we asked for their other leading players of the campaign - but only allowed them to pick one more player from Liverpool.

They will serve 750,000 passengers per week on 37 services.About

‘I realised I was alive’: Sole survivor of Air India crash recounts tragedy

."Last month there was a real buzz among our teams, customers and stakeholders when we officially unveiled our electrified depot at Weston-super-Mare and passengers took their first journeys on our electric buses, and I cannot wait for even more of our region to go electric," Mr Claringbold said."To be more than doubling the number of electric vehicles, transforming four out of five of our depots and ensuring three quarters of a million customers a week can travel electric shows a real commitment to making bus travel smoother, quieter and greener for our region."

‘I realised I was alive’: Sole survivor of Air India crash recounts tragedy

First Bus invested nearly £70m in the project, with a further £20m government funding from the latest round of the Department for Transport's Zero Emission Bus Regional Area scheme.We asked our readers to send in their best pictures on the theme of "my best photo". Here is a selection of the photographs we received from around the world.

‘I realised I was alive’: Sole survivor of Air India crash recounts tragedy

All photographs subject to copyright.

We asked our readers to send in their best pictures on the theme of "monochrome". Here is a selection of the photographs we received from around the world.During the more than 14 years he spent in prison during the 1970s and 1980s, he was tortured and spent most of that time in harsh conditions and isolation, until he was freed in 1985 when Uruguay returned to democracy.

He used to say that during his time in prison, he experienced madness first hand, suffering from delusions and even talking to ants.The day he was freed was his happiest memory, he says: "Becoming president was insignificant compared to that."

A few years after his release, he served as a lawmaker, both in the Chamber of Representatives and in the Senate, the country's lower and upper houses respectively.In 2005, he became minister in the first government of the Frente Amplio, the Uruguayan leftist coalition, before becoming Uruguay's president in 2010.

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