A company spokesperson said the data suggested that Electrolux-branded products were being made and exported by unaffiliated firms without permission.
Furthermore, there may be more voters in the second round: Voter turnout for the first round was 67.3 percent. Palade added: “The second round will be decided by young people, but also by those who did not vote in the first round. It is an open question whom they will support.”Children's YouTube star Ms Rachel meets girl from Gaza
Children’s YouTube star Ms Rachel met a three-year-old girl from Gaza who lost her legs in an Israeli attack on her home during the war, to record a video to raise awareness of the suffering of Palestinian children.The decision comes a day after a trade court blocked the majority of Trump tariffs because it circumvented Congress.A federal appeals court has temporarily reinstated (
) US President Donald Trump’s tariffs a day after a trade court ruled that it exceeded the authorities granted to the president.The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington temporarily blocked the lower court’s decision on Thursday, but provided no reasoning for the decision, only giving the plaintiffs until June 5th to respond.
The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit granted an emergency motion from the Trump administration arguing that a halt is “critical for the country’s national security”.
The White House has applauded the move.It will be for prosecutors to decide the guilt or otherwise of soldiers, but legal and human rights experts told Al Jazeera that several of the incidents documented merited investigation by international investigators. They said they may violate international humanitarian law and be war crimes under the
, which established the ICC.Video after video captures soldiers gleefully detonating homes, schools and places of worship - acts that violate both the Geneva Conventions and The Hague Regulations. There is an abundance of footage that shows soldiers laughing while destroying property, turning Palestinian homes into makeshift entertainment venues and even setting buildings on fire.
Bill Van Esveld, associate director at Human Rights Watch, noted that much of the destruction appears to lack any legitimate military justification, making it a clear violation of international law.Abuse and mistreatment of detainees