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      Three children injured in Finland school shooting

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 April, 2024

    Police say suspect who is a minor has been arrested after incident at Viertola school in Vantaa

    Three children were injured in a shooting at a primary school in Finland early on Tuesday, and a suspect, who was also a minor, was apprehended, Finnish police said.

    The injured were taken to hospital, a police spokesperson told Reuters.

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      Russia-Ukraine war live: drones strike Russian factories more than 1,000km from Ukraine

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 April, 2024

    Factories in Tatarstan attacked overnight

    Ministers and officials from dozens of countries are gathering in the Netherlands on Tuesday for a conference on restoring justice in Ukraine, as the war reaches its third year.

    The Dutch government said in a statement, “The Netherlands believes it is of vital importance that truth and justice be achieved both for Ukraine and for all victims of Russia’s aggression.”

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      Yannick review – Quentin Dupieux goes for laughs in absurdist theatre hijack comedy

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 April, 2024 • 1 minute

    Dupieux’s melancholic comedy sees a disillusioned audience member pull a gun before demanding a word processor to write the actors a better play

    Quentin Dupieux is one of the vanishingly small number of film-makers on the non-Anglo-American distribution circuit who really is interested in – and allowed to make – straight-up comedy, albeit flavoured with melancholy or violent absurdity. For me, only Benoît Delépine and Gustave Kervern are comparable. Aki Kaurismäki, for example, is different; although gently and wonderfully comic, his films don’t try to hit the laugh lines in the same way.

    The prolific Dupieux has now created a 67-minute sketch, a one-act cine-play about a mediocre Paris stage company performing a dinner-theatre comedy called The Cuckold to a bored, half-empty house. Just as they are grinding through their tired old routines, a guy called Yannick (Raphaël Quenard) stands up in the auditorium and announces that this so-called comedy is making him sad and he wants his money back. The dumbfounded actors start mocking this jerk but Yannick pulls a gun, clambers on to the stage and demands a word processor and printer so he can write a better play for them. Is he a radical hero for disrupting mediocre bourgeois culture? If this is a hostage situation, he says, well, so is sitting through a bad play.

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      The EU’s great green retreat benefits the far right. For the rest of us, it’s a looming disaster | Arthur Neslen

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 April, 2024

    Environmental pledges are being shredded to please agribusiness and appease extremists. It’s a terrible mistake

    The EU’s great green deal cave-in has been nothing less than spectacular. As aggressive lobbying and violent farmers protests ramped up in the last year, Brussels has killed plans to cut pesticide use by half, to green farming practices, to ban toxic “forever” chemicals , to rein in livestock emissions and, last week, to restore nature to 20% of Europe’s land and seas.

    The aim may have been to create breathing space. Predictably, that hasn’t worked. The bloc’s anti-deforestation regulation seems likely to be the next green reform for the chop, with 20 agriculture ministers reportedly calling for it to be pared back and suspended on Monday, citing “administrative burdens”.

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      ‘Not even water?’: Ramadan radio show demystifies Dutch Muslim life

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 2 April, 2024

    All-female lineup of presenters hope to break harmful Islamic stereotypes after Geert Wilders’ election victory

    An hour before dawn in a nondescript building in Hilversum, a sleepy town half an hour south of Amsterdam, Nora Akachar grabs the microphone. There is nothing unique about a radio host summoning the nation out of its slumber. But this is, in her own words, “a big deal”.

    The Dutch Moroccan actor turned radio host is live on air presenting Suhoor Stories, a talk radio show presented by seven Dutch Muslim women, inviting Muslim guests to demystify Ramadan for the wider public. The programme is believed to be Europe’s only daily Ramadan radio and television show aired by a national public broadcaster.

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      Avalanche at Zermatt ski resort in Switzerland kills three people

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    Authorities warn there could be more deaths as strong winds and heavy snowfall continues

    An avalanche at the top Swiss ski resort of Zermatt has killed three people and injured one, as authorities warned of the risk of more disasters due to heavy winds and snowfall.

    Video images on social media showed a wall of snow crossing an off-piste sector of the Riffelberg sector of Zermatt, one of the most luxurious ski resorts in the Alps. A major rescue operation was launched despite the bad weather.

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      Five killed by falling trees as winds reach 96mph in southern Poland

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    Deaths, including those of two children, occured in three separate incidents, two in Zakopane and one in Rabka-Zdrój

    Five people have been killed by falling trees as strong winds battered southern Poland on Monday, reaching a speed of 96mph (155km/h) in the highest parts of the Tatra mountains.

    In the town of Rabka-Zdrój, two women and a six-year-old died after a tree crushed them, firefighters said.

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      Opposition wins across Turkey owe much to younger, fresher candidates

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    A new cohort of leaders inflicted an unprecedented wave of defeats on President Erdoğan who seemed to have little to offer the electorate

    A fresh-faced challenger hailed a new dawn for Turkish democracy, as President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan comforted a defeated crowd outside his party’s headquarters, telling them “unfortunately we couldn’t get the result we wanted … everything happens for a reason”.

    Supporters of Istanbul’s mayor celebrated long into the night after Ekrem İmamoğlu secured a second term in office, as Turkey’s main opposition party swept to victory in local elections .

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      EU pumps four times more money into farming animals than growing plants

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 1 April, 2024

    CAP scheme, which pays more to farms that occupy more land, drives ‘perverse outcomes for a food transition’, says study

    The EU has made polluting diets “artificially cheap” by pumping four times more money into farming animals than growing plants, research has found.

    More than 80% of the public money given to farmers through the EU’s common agriculture policy (CAP) went to animal products in 2013 despite the damage they do to society, according to a study in Nature Food . Factoring in animal feed doubled the subsidies that were embodied in a kilogram of beef, the meat with the biggest environmental footprint, from €0.71 to €1.42 (61p to £1.22).

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