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Will Trump’s Israel-Iran ceasefire really hold?

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Audio   来源:Arts  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:"I think we played really great tennis. Drops, coming to the net, big shots, and we stayed there the whole match.

"I think we played really great tennis. Drops, coming to the net, big shots, and we stayed there the whole match.

A full-page image of Elon Musk is featured on the front of the Observer after the world's richest man left his role as President Donald Trump's efficiency tsar. Noting his black eye - said to be the result of a punch from his five-year-old son - the paper says Musk departed Washington with his reputation bruised after leading a "maniacal assault on American foreign aid and public service that cost tens of thousands of livelihoods in the US".and get BBC News in your inbox.

Will Trump’s Israel-Iran ceasefire really hold?

Tough choices are "unavoidable" as the government finalises spending plans for areas ranging from the NHS and defence, to schools and the criminal justice system, a think tank has warned.The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said the level of spending on health would dictate whether cuts were made to "unprotected" areas – those outside the NHS, defence and schools.While funding increased sharply in 2024 for transport, net zero, hospitals, schools and prisons, it would no longer increase year on year, given the government's commitments, the IFS said.

Will Trump’s Israel-Iran ceasefire really hold?

The government said the Spending Review on 11 June would "scrutinise every single pound the government spends".The review will outline day-to-day departmental budgets over the next three years and investment budgets over the next four.

Will Trump’s Israel-Iran ceasefire really hold?

they expect it will be "ugly", and that ministers have been fighting over winning small amounts of cash for their respective departments.

There are concerns that plans such as increasing police numbers in a bid to halve violence against women and girls may not be allocated enough cash. There are also discussions over continued funding for capping bus fares.Project leader, Ben Knight, said their final performance would take place at the Bristol Beacon on 5 June.

Project Zulu arranges for choirs from South African townships to tour the UK every two years.Mr Knight said UWE students studying professions such as teaching, engineering and occupational therapy were sent out to the township in South Africa annually to "spend a few weeks making valuable contributions to the educational life of schools in the township".

Then every two years a choir, made up of children from two partnership schools, are brought over to Bristol to spend three weeks performing and sharing their talent and culture."They've been busking, they've put on concerts," he said.

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