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Gaza warehouse broken into by 'hordes of hungry people', says WFP

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Health   来源:Cybersecurity  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Probierz, 52, took over as coach in September 2023 but his side finished bottom of their group at Euro 2024 and were the first country to be knocked out of the tournament.

Probierz, 52, took over as coach in September 2023 but his side finished bottom of their group at Euro 2024 and were the first country to be knocked out of the tournament.

They posted about it on social media in the hope of learning more.On closer inspection, the letters "es" could also be made out before Addison Runcie, as well as the number 115 before the address.

Gaza warehouse broken into by 'hordes of hungry people', says WFP

BBC Scotland News then established that James Addison Runcie had lived at that Seatown address in Cullen at the time - the "es" was the end of James - and started to investigate more.Jane Worby, 78, who now lives at the house, described it as "nice to have a little bit of history" when told of the story."It does catch the imagination," she said of the message in a bottle. "It almost makes me want to do it myself."

Gaza warehouse broken into by 'hordes of hungry people', says WFP

Jim Runcie - who was known locally as Peem - died in 1995 at the age of 67.The story took an unexpected twist when we spoke to Gavin Geddes, one of Jim's former crewmates on the Buckie-registered Loraley, which sailed out of Peterhead.

Gaza warehouse broken into by 'hordes of hungry people', says WFP

"As soon as I saw the letter I thought that is definitely my writing," Gavin, 69, said.

Gavin, who lives a few miles from Cullen in Rathven, said he remembered writing it, and even compared his own hand-writing to confirm it.Services from Troon, about 15 miles further south on the Ayrshire coast, will be provided by the new ferry MV Glen Sannox and the chartered catamaran Alfred.

In the 20 months since the war in Gaza began, Amit Hevrony has been spat at, screamed at, and pelted with rocks and eggs in Israel's streets, all because she was calling for peace."We would sit in silence, just a bunch of women dressed in white, holding signs in Hebrew, Arabic and English saying: 'compassion', 'peace', 'nutritional security'," she told me.

"We thought: who argues with peace? But these demonstrations would get the same hatred as when we called to Stop the Occupation or Free Gaza. One guy screamed at us during a peace sit-in in Tel Aviv that he wished we would all be raped in Gaza, while we sat in silence holding signs saying 'love'".I first met Amit in the early months of the war. The grandchild of Holocaust survivors, she described to me then how family discussions about what was happening in Gaza left her feeling angry and frustrated. She is convinced that Israel's actions amounted to "Nazification".

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