Olympics

Pro-Trump media figures split over the U.S. role in the Israel-Iran conflict

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Technology   来源:Banking  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The confession in the office, he argued, would not be related to the postal worker's official duties.

The confession in the office, he argued, would not be related to the postal worker's official duties.

"Is it just 'Kyra was unlawfully killed' and then the next child who comes along, she'll be unlawfully killed as well, and these places can still operate?"He said: "Parents should not be having to go and look at their child laying on a slab in a morgue, laying stiff and freezing cold, all because they wanted to have a fun day out."

Pro-Trump media figures split over the U.S. role in the Israel-Iran conflict

He said Kyra had "a very big heart" and would not want other children to suffer in the way she did."Kyra would always protect people so right now I'm sure, wherever she is, she definitely would not want anybody else to experience what she had to experience," he said."She would definitely be pressing to get these things changed... we don't want our children dying.

Pro-Trump media figures split over the U.S. role in the Israel-Iran conflict

"We don't want parents to bury their children and it needs to change."The BBC has approached Liquid Leisure and the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG) for comment.

Pro-Trump media figures split over the U.S. role in the Israel-Iran conflict

The MHCLG previously said it was important that lessons were learnt from Kyra's inquest, and that aqua park operators must adhere to the health and safety regulations under the Health and Safety at Work Act.

Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro has denied his involvement in an alleged plot to overthrow the country's current president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.India, home to 27% of the world's tuberculosis cases, sees two TB-related deaths every three minutes. India's TB burden has long been tied to poor case detection, underfunding and erratic drug supply.

Despite this grim reality, the country has set an ambitious goal. It aims to eliminate TB by the end of 2025, five years ahead of the global target set by the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations member states.Elimination, as defined by the WHO, means cutting new TB cases by 80% and deaths by 90% compared with 2015 levels.

But visits to TB centres in Delhi and the eastern state of Odisha revealed troubling gaps in the government's TB programme.In Odisha's Khordha district, around 30km (18.6 miles) from state capital Bhubaneshwar, 32-year-old day-labourer Kanhucharan Sahu is struggling to continue his two-year-old daughter's TB treatment, with government medicines unavailable for three months and private ones costing 1,500 rupees a month - an unbearable burden.

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