Sulla base delle prove raccolte, si ritiene che non ci saranno “danni alla concorrenza o ai consumatori”
A woman in her 30s has been transported to hospital with arm and leg injuries after the attack at the popular Sydney beach Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast A woman in her 30s is in a critical condition after being bitten by a shark at Coogee beach on Saturday. A spokesperson for NSW Ambulance said the woman suffered arm and leg injuries and had been taken by road to St Vincent’s hospital. Continue reading...
Equipment stolen during transportation from Florida FA will liaise with police in bid to retrieve match boots England have been the victims of a security breakdown after the team’s match boots were stolen before their first World Cup training session in Kansas City. The theft is understood to have taken place while equipment was being transported from the squad’s pre-tournament base in Florida to their training camp at Swope Soccer Village in Missouri. Boots belonging to England’s star players were understood to be among the stolen items, along with official tournament balls and training equipment. Continue reading...
President says Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores killed in ‘swift and lethal’ military strike with help from Venezuela The US military has killed a leader in the Venezuelan street gang Tren de Aragua, Hector Rusthenford Guerrero Flores, with the help of Venezuela, Donald Trump announced on Friday. “At my direction, the United States Southern Command delivered a swift and lethal kinetic strike to successfully execute Niño Guerrero, the infamous leader of Tren De Aragua, one of the most bloodthirsty Terrorist Organizations on Planet Earth,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. Continue reading...
Frontline soldiers to get better salaries and revised fixed-term contracts; Putin reacts to Ukraine’s increasing drone strikes. What we know on day 1,571 Ukraine will hike military wages and seek to recruit more fighters abroad, Volodymyr Zelenskyy has confirmed, as the army faces a manpower shortage after four years of war with Russia. Zelenskyy’s government said in May it would study possible measures to boost military personnel numbers after talks on how to end the war with Russia stalled. “We agreed on how to increase the financial resilience of our defence and further transformation of the Ukrainian army,” Ukraine’s president said on Friday after meeting key cabinet ministers. “The cabinet of ministers will approve a specific mechanism, and the government should start the first new payments as early as June,” he added. Ukraine has secured a €90bn ($104bn) loan from the EU allowing the government to increase defence spending to a record 4.4tn hryvnias ($97bn) this year. The funds are due to start flowing this month. Zelenskyy said his government would raise the basic military wage by one-third to 30,000 hryvnias ($700). The step was aimed at matching the country’s average monthly salary, which has steadily risen during the war due to staff shortages, military analysts and economists said. Infantry soldiers fighting on the frontline will receive an average monthly salary of 300,000 hryvnias (about $7,000), up from about 100,000 to 150,000 hryvnias at present. They will also be offered a new type of fixed-term contract for 10, 14 or 24 months for combat duties. Kyiv also wants to recruit more foreign fighters. “I have instructed to create significantly more opportunities to recruit foreign volunteers into the Ukrainian army, and there will be more recruitment channels in this regard,” Zelenskyy said. About 10,000 foreign volunteers have joined the Ukrainian army from more than 70 countries since the war began, according to estimates by Ukrainian military publications. Ambassadors from the EU’s 27 countries agreed on Friday to advance membership talks with Ukraine and Moldova, with the first phase of negotiations to begin on Monday. Zelenskyy has made EU membership a key strategic goal. Writing on Telegram, he thanked the EU and its leaders “for this strong step for Europe”. He added: “Ukraine is carrying out what is necessary and it is important that the EU is also keeping its word.” Vladimir Putin said Ukraine’s increasing drone strikes on Russia aimed to “sow confusion” and damage the country’s economy. Ukraine has hit ever deeper into Russia in recent months, regularly striking oil refineries and export hubs. “Their goal is to create a split in Russian society, sow confusion and inflict economic damage,” the Russian president told soldiers in a meeting at the Kremlin on Friday. “But they will not succeed.” The comments came hours after Kyiv said it hit a major oil refinery more than 1,000km (about 620 miles) from the frontline. Putin admitted that Ukrainian strikes had caused “economic damage” but claimed that “everything is quickly restored”. The governor of Russia’s border Bryansk region said one person was killed and another injured in a drone strike on Friday, while the defence ministry said Russian air defence units had downed 185 Ukrainian drones over a 12-hour period. The region’s general headquarters, quoted by Russian news agencies, said air defence units had destroyed 62 drones, but gave no time frame for the action. Russia’s defence ministry reported 185 drones intercepted between 8am and 8pm (0500-1700 GMT) over about a dozen regions, most in central Russia. Britain on Friday said a full ban on diesel and jet fuel made in Russia would happen by 2027 as it set out its timeline to end a temporary licence for Russian oil products. Britain last month said it would continue to allow imports of diesel and jet fuel refined from Russian crude in third countries, deferring a previously announced ban, citing supply issues caused by the Iran war. The government said existing sanctions were not being lifted but new sanctions were being phased in. On Friday the business and trade ministry said the temporary licence for phasing in the ban would expire by 1 January. Continue reading...
Real Madrid also among midfielder’s potential suitors Castellanos an option for Everton amid likely exits Manchester United are leading the race to sign Mateus Fernandes from West Ham. The midfielder also has interest from Arsenal, Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain, but the strongest early moves have come from United as they look to boost Michael Carrick’s squad. West Ham hope to receive £80m for Fernandes, although they may face financial pressure to drop their asking price after their relegation from the Premier League. The club lost £104.2m last year and need to raise more than £100m in transfer sales this summer. Continue reading...
Civitanova Marche, parla il primo cittadino: “Mi ha convinto la chiarezza con la quale affronta alcuni temi importanti. Il generale ha le idee chiare”
Dramma per il padrone dell’animale mentre esce di casa: colpa della fotocellula? Presentata una querela
Il consulente che svolse accertamenti nelle prime fasi dell’inchiesta torna sul caso dopo il verdetto della Corte d’Assise: “Nessuna prova concreta. Il movente passionale non mi ha mai convinto. Un’aggressione con 29 coltellate rivela un risentimento profondo”
Il rocker sul caos campovolo: “Non voglio accostarmi alla vicenda, ma com’è stato possibile?” Intanto Massari rivendica: “Non è stato scandaloso ospitare la presentazione in municipio”
Gli avvocati Riario Fabbri e Andrea Guidi sono però stati netti: “È una situazione che, adesso, non prendiamo nemmeno in considerazione. Le nostre priorità, adesso, sono altre”
Il sindaco Luca Serfilippi annuncia le novità: “Questa scoperta ha rappresentato il momento più importante degli ultimi anni”
Il cantautore bolognese sul Santerno per la penultima tappa del megatour: “Inauguro uno spazio nuovo”. In scaletta ’Alaska Baby’ e le hit di 25 anni di carriera. In attesa del prossimo album
Gli azzurri si riscattano e piegano lo Sporting Sala Consilina: domenica al PalaVesuvio la bella tutta campana
Svolta politica. Bondeno: il sindaco spiega la decisione con l’obiettivo di portare a termine grandi progetti. Balboni: “Avrà più ascolto a livello istituzionale”
Petizione di un gruppo di residenti per la possibilità che la struttura, uno dei simboli della città, venga venduta a privati: “Dentro c’è l’inestimabile lavoro dello scienziato ascolano”
Ogni fine turno i mezzi rientrano alla base con interni o vetri sfasciati. Gli autisti guidano tra mille rischi: l’altra sera l’ennesima aggressione. Molti giovani trovati ubriachi a dormire sui sedili tra vomito e urina
Per la morte di una 83enne ci sono due indagati dell’epoca: dirigente scolastico e comunale. Ecco la relazione dell’Ausl agli atti e le testimonianze di chi aveva usato il nastro isolante
Beloved movie critic and arts reporter was known for bushy hair and mustache and affection for groan-inducing puns Gene Shalit, a movie critic and arts reporter for the Today show over four decades who was known for his puffy hair, oversized handlebar mustache and affection for groan-inducing puns, has died. He was 100. Shalit’s family announced the death Friday to NBC News, saying in a statement that he “passed away peacefully today after 100 years of an amazing life”. Continue reading...
Dopo l’ondata di odio social, Natascia Maesi il 20 giugno sarà in città per dare voce ai diritti Lgbtqia+. “Le destre giocano sulla paura. Noi vigiliamo e non molliamo”
L'ex commissario invoca una sveglia e racconta: “Quando conobbi il tycoon aveva già in antipatia l'Unione”. E sull'Ucraina: “Inaccettabile il no all'ingresso”
La conduttrice è stata Direttrice per un giorno al Carlino e si è raccontata al vodcast il Resto di Bologna. I sogni e la carriera: “L’ospite più difficile? Avril Lavigne”
L’offerta dell’uomo d’affari australiano scade in queste ore. Se non ci saranno contatti tutto decadrà automaticamente. Il vice del patron dei galletti spinge però per l’altra soluzione: un gruppo, per ora ignoto, di imprenditori locali
L’Ufficio scolastico regionale vuole chiarimenti sul 6 in condotta. Nel mirino anche la tesina ’rieducativa’ con focus sulle leggi razziali. Valditara: “Non si capisce il nesso con lo slogan Italia agli italiani”
Gli inquirenti avrebbero individuato l’abitazione indicata dal poliziotto testimone, sarebbe a un chilometro circa dal palazzo dove aveva gli uffici il Sisde fino al ’93. Le indagini tese a identificare l’uomo con cui l’agente si era incontrato