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Silhouetted by fire, six-year-old girl survives Israeli attack in Gaza

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Data   来源:Podcasts  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Wiltshire Police said the burglaries took place on 27 March between 04:49 and 06:10 BST in the Gayton Way and Weedon Road areas of Swindon.

Wiltshire Police said the burglaries took place on 27 March between 04:49 and 06:10 BST in the Gayton Way and Weedon Road areas of Swindon.

Paul Foster, chief executive of the Great Run Company, said: "Birmingham has an amazing energy and the support on the streets is always second to none."A new building for a charity that encourages children to play will provide a "safe and creative environment" for local children, its chief executive has said.

Silhouetted by fire, six-year-old girl survives Israeli attack in Gaza

Isle of Play has been awarded a £25,000 grant by the Manx Lottery Trust to build a new facility at its Douglas-based Lester's Yard Adventure Playground.Plans for the new facility include a social room, community kitchen, therapeutic suite, and better accessibility.Chris Gregory said he was "excited about the impact it will have on both the children who use our services and the broader community".

Silhouetted by fire, six-year-old girl survives Israeli attack in Gaza

The current play centre on the site enables children to explore various outdoor activities.The grant was awarded through the Manx Lottery Trust's Thematic Funding programme, which back community projects.

Silhouetted by fire, six-year-old girl survives Israeli attack in Gaza

Trust chairman Stephen Turner said the playground "provides a unique and valuable resource" for children in Douglas, offering them "not only a place to play but a supportive community space".

The new building would "further enhance the services they provide", he added.Contractor Suez said staff sickness combined with the peak summer holiday period had created "exceptional circumstances" which it was "working hard to resolve".

Ms Wilson-Marklew, the Labour cabinet member for public realm, said householders were finding "maggots in their bins [and] they smell".She said there was "frustration" that green bins, for garden and food waste, were being given the lowest priority at a time of "more volume" because of summer gardening.

But this free service that was not a legal requirement and some families "could not store a month's worth" of recycling, if those collections were missed instead, she said.Ms Wilson-Marklew said sickness rates were "significant and unanticipated" but staff who were on shift were "working really hard" and contractor Suez was "responding, listening to us and trying to find ways to minimise the impact on residents".

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