- Title: VARIOUS: NEWS Yearender 2010 - Review of the year - Part 2
- Date: 20th December 2010
- Summary: VIENNA, AUSTRIA (JULY 9, 2010) (REUTERS) RUSSIAN AIRCRAFT (LEFT) AND U.S. AIRCRAFT ON TARMAC AT VIENNA AIRPORT PASSENGERS STEPPING ONTO U.S. AIRCRAFT (DIGITALLY ZOOMED)
- Embargoed: 4th January 2011 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: French Polynesia, Pakistan, Congo, The Democratic Republic of the, Russian Federation, China
- City:
- Country: Austria
- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA61ZXQLDLKIPSQ00AZMD4XDJTZ
- Story Text: JULY At least 230 people were killed when a fuel tanker overturned and exploded in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo on July 2, unleashing a fire ball that tore through homes and a cinema packed with people watching World Cup soccer.
United Nations officials described scenes of devastation in the town of Sange, where houses were burned out and bodies littered the streets. Some people died while trying to steal fuel leaking from the tanker.
Many of the bodies were charred beyond recognition, and 196 other people were injured in the incident, In China, a plain-clothed police officer ended a hostage situation single-handedly on July 7 by shooting the male suspect dead, despite his attempt to use his female hostage as a shield in China's industrial hub Guangzhou.
The hostage-taker, armed with a pair of scissors had robbed a man near a local bus station and then held police at bay after taking a young woman hostage.
Television footage showed a plain-clothed policewoman bringing the situation to a close when she distracts him with a bottle of water, then draws her pistol and runs forward, shooting.
In Pakistan on July 9, a suicide bomber on a motorbike killed at least 56 people, including several women and children, in an attack in the volatile Pashtun region by the Afghan border.
The bomber blew himself up as hundreds of people were gathered by the office of a senior government official in Pakistan's north-western Mohmand region, where security forces had recently stepped up attacks on Taliban militants.
Television footage showed bodies being pulled out of the rubble.
Hospital officials said nearly 80 people were wounded in the attack.
The biggest spy swap since the end of the Cold War took place in Austria on July 9, when Russia and the United States exchanged 14 agents, defusing an espionage scandal that threatened warming relations between the two nations.
The dramatic conclusion to the espionage scandal was a carefully choreographed swap on the tarmac at Vienna airport, when 10 Russian agents who had pleaded guilty in New York to spying were exchanged for four Americans inprisoned in Russia for spying and pardoned by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
Darkness fell in French Polynesia on July 11, when tourists, scientists and locals gathered to catch a glimpse of a rare total solar eclipse.
The eclipse was visible over an 11,000-kilometre corridor across the south Pacific, but mostly missed making landfall, it was visible to residents on Chile's Easter Island, parts of the Cook Islands and French Polynesia, as well as the southern-western tip of of South America.
July saw record-setting temperatures across central and eastern Europe. The heat wave, Russia's hottest in decades, saw Muscovites streaming to city fountains to cool off. Some just sat nearby basking in the heat, but many took the plunge into the cool water.
Russia's Emergencies Ministry said that dozens of Russians drowned daily during June and July after swimming to excape the heat. The main causes of death were given as alcohol intoxication and bathing at places where it is officially banned.
Regions across central and southern China were plagued by torrential rains in July, triggering mudslides and flooding that killed over 700 people.
Rescue workers worked around the clock to free stranded residents, travelling through the flooded streets in boats loaded with supplies.
Flooding is common in southern China during the annual rainy season, though 2010 has been the worst for some areas in decades.
Demonstrators in London and Berlin on July 24, showed their support for an Iranian woman sentenced to death by stoning.
Demonstrations were arranged to draw attention to the case of Iranian woman Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani who was sentenced to death by stoning for committing adultery.
Earlier in July, Iran's judiciary said the stoning had been suspended, for the time being. The sentence imposed on Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani caused an international outcry, but Iranian officials said the protests had not influenced the decision and that it might still carry out the sentence later.
Murder, adultery, rape, armed robbery, apostasy and drug trafficking are all punishable by death under Iran's sharia law, enforced since the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Amnesty International lists Iran as the world's second most prolific executioner in 2008 after China, and says it put to death at least 346 people in 2008.
The Iranian authorities routinely dismiss charges of rights abuses, saying they are following Sharia.
At least 15 people were killed and 10 were seriously injured after mass panic broke out at a "Love Parade" music festival in Germany on July 24.
Overcrowding at an entrance tunnel to a former freight rail station where the techno music festival was being held caused a stampede and then a crush in the western city of Duisburg.
The festival, attended by about 1.4 million people, was not immediately cancelled, because authorities feared that could provoke a second panic.
Official police figures put the number of dead at 15 people at 1720 GMT, with another 10 were resuscitated and at least 15 more were injured. Some media reported at least 100 injured.
BP Plc launched a plan to restore its battered image in the United States on July 27, ditching its gaffe-prone chief executive. BP said Tony Hayward would stand down in October, to be replaced by American, Bob Dudley.
BP's leaking well was capped earlier in July after 60,000 barrels of oil per day had spilled into the Gulf, ruining fishing and tourism industries and polluting the shoreline with slimy deposits. Dudley insisted that BP has a long-term commitment to the Gulf region.
AUGUST August saw the debate over the construction of an Islamic centre and mosque near the World Trade Center, scene of the September 11, 2001 attacks, heating up across the U.S.
The 13-story cultural centre and prayer space faced fierce opposition from groups who consider its location insensitive to families of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the 9/11 attacks by al Qaeda militants.
But those in favour of the mosque said it was a matter of religious freedom.
The issue provoked heated debate, with politicians and religious and civic groups across the country weighing in on the subject. U.S. President Barack Obama supports the construction of the centre, while many Republicans, including former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, oppose it.
Polls found at least 60 percent of Americans are against building the centre and many took to the streets of Manhattan to voice their anger at its planned construction.
Heavy monsoon rains in August saw the worst flooding in Pakistan's history, leaving almost 2,000 dead. It is estimated that up to 2 million homes were damaged or destroyed by the flood waters.
Japan marked the 65th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki on August 9, in a solemn ceremony near the site of it's ground zero.
A bell tolled at 11:02 a.m. local time (0202 GMT), the exact time the bomb was dropped, as tens of thousands of children, elderly survivors, dignitaries and representatives from nearly 60 countries in Nagasaki's Peace Park bowed their heads for a minute of silence in memory of the more than 140,000 who died in the attack and from radiation sickness afterwards.
After heavy rains in central and eastern Europe in August, many rivers overflowed their banks, and a dam in Poland burst leading to flooding across the whole region.
Thousands of people were evacuated as rescue services were brought in to rescue villagers and clear the debris once the waters subsided.
Conservation officials in New Zealand discovered a pod of 73 pilot whales stranded on Kaitaia Beach on August 20.
With the rainy weather helping to keep them alive, heavy machinery was brought in to help lift the mammals back to the sea.
Weighing in at up to 1.5 tonnes each, volunteers and conservationists worked around the clock to save them, but almost 60 of them died.
A gunmen holding a tourist bus hostage was shot dead on August 23, after a special action team of police raided the bus in downtown Manila.
Police threw gas canisters into the bus that had been taken hostage by the heavily-armed gunmen, identified as 55-year-old Rolando Mendoza who was armed with an M-16 assault rifle.
Mendoza was shot and his body was seen hanging out from the front door of the bus.
Television footage showed police moving into the bus after the tense and lengthy stakeout, at least four survivors were seen walking out of the bus alive and footage showed police removing some motionless bodies from the bus.
France continued their plans to demolish hundreds of illegal Roma camps in a crime crackdown in August, raiding the camps at dawn to check paperwork, the French centre-right government repatriated over 600 Roma, mostly to Romania.
France called on the European Commission to force Romania to stem the flow of Roma leaving the country, suggesting it could block Bucharest's entry to the Schengen border-free zone if it failed to do so.
France expelled 10,000 Roma last year under a policy begun by the previous conservative government and it insisted it was acting in accordance with EU law by repatriating Roma who had been in France for more than three months without work.
SEPTEMBER Three people were arrested after protesters threw eggs and shoes at former British Prime Minister Tony Blair when he arrived to sign copies of his memoir at a bookshop in Dublin on September 4.
No injuries were reported and the missiles did not hit Blair.
Some of the 200 activists who had gathered outside Eason, a bookstore on Dublin's main thoroughfare O'Connell street, clashed with police over a security barrier.
Security at Blair's first signing of his autobiography had been tight due to opposition by an Irish nationalist group opposed to British control of Northern Ireland and by critics of Blair's decision to join the war in Iraq.
New Zealand authorities declared a state of emergency after a major earthquake hit New Zealand's second biggest city, Christchurch, early on September 4, bringing down power lines, ripping up roads and wrecking building facades, but authorities reported no deaths.
A formal civil defence state of emergency was imposed to coordinate recovery operations in the city of around 350,000 after facades collapsed into streets, crushing cars and blocking roads.
The quake was among the 10 strongest recorded in New Zealand, which sits between the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates, and records around 14,000 earthquakes a year, of which 20 have reached the top magnitude of 5.0.
Pope Benedict arrived in Britain on September 16 hoping to win over one of Europe's most secular countries.
The Pope received a state welcome and was received by Queen Elizabeth and her husband the Duke of Edinburgh at their Scottish residence Holyrood. The Queen had a private audience with the pontiff, before he presided at an open-air Mass in the nearby city of Glasgow.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai went to a polling station in central Kabul amid tight security on September 18, to cast his ballot for the country's parliamentary elections.
Attacking five polling stations before they opened, the Taliban had vowed to disrupt the poll and urged potential voters to stay at home.
Corruption and fraud were serious concerns after a deeply flawed 2009 presidential ballot. A third of votes cast for Karzai were thrown out as fake. Even though he was not standing, September's vote was seen as a test of Karzai's credibility.
Election observers reported thousands of fake voter registration cards across Afghanistan in the lead-up to the poll, although the International Electoral Commission (IEC) maintained it had put measures in place to guard against major fraud.
OCTOBER Eight people were killed and scores injured in two separate car bombs at Nigeria's 50th independence anniversary celebrations on October 1.
Two explosions hit Nigeria's capital Abuja, destroying three cars near a parade attended by President Goodluck Jonathan and other top government officials, along with foreign dignitaries, marking the 50th anniversary of independence.
As firefighters, security officials and paramedics attended the scene of the first blast, they were rocked by a second explosion which sent people running for cover.
The lavish celebrations at the parade venue continued without interruption.
The blasts came an hour after Nigeria's biggest rebel militia, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), issued an email warning saying it had planted several bombs and telling people to evacuate the area.
On October 6, Hungarian crews worked to prevent seepage from a sludge reservoir at an alumina plant in the west of the country, as rescue units searched for missing people in a flooded village.
Hungary declared a state of emergency in three counties after a torrent of toxic red sludge from the plant flooded local villages, killing four people and injuring 120. Three people were reported missing.
The red sludge, a waste product of a bauxite refining process, has a strong caustic effect -- many people have suffered from burns and eye irritations caused by lead and other corrosive elements in the mud.
Gunmen in Pakistan attacked and set fire to 20 trucks transporting supplies to NATO troops in Afghanistan on October 6, one of a series of attacks on the supply chain for the war in Afghanistan.
Pakistani authorities, angered by repeated incursions by NATO helicopters from Afghanistan, had blocked direct supply route for the troops in Afghanistan, leaving the supply trucks more vulnerabe as they have to travel along another route.
NATO incursions and the border closure have raised tensions between the United States and Pakistan, whose long alliance has often been strained.
The bulk of supplies for the foreign forces in Afghanistan moves through Pakistan which is itself battling a deadly homegrown Taliban insurgency.
Analysts say supply routes to Afghanistan give Pakistan leverage over the United States' war efforts in Afghanistan, although Pakistan often cites security concerns as reasons for route closures.
Nearly half a million Bangladeshis were left homeless on October 9, after three days of storms which killed at least 15 people and left 50 missing.
Coastal areas, home to more than 15 million people, many living in huts made of bamboo and straw, were repeatedly battered by at five-foot (1.5-metre) waves, flooding towns and villages.
Secretive North Korea proudly presented its leader-in-waiting, the youngest son of ailing ruler Kim Jong-il, at a massive military parade on October 10.
Kim Jong-un took centre stage, standing near his father, during the parade when the whole country was celebrating the 65 anniversary of the ruling Workers' Party.
The young Kim's prominent role at the parade in Pyongyang's Kim Il-sung Square marked his military debut and showed his standing in one of the world's largest armies.
Until his appointment as a general last month -- along with his naming to a key political post -- little was known about the young Kim other than that he was educated in Switzerland.
Analysts said Kim Jong-il's national debut at the military parade shows the communist state is on the way to cementing a dynastic succession. The young Kim will be the third generation of leaders from the family.
Thirty-three workers trapped for more than two months deep in a Chilean mine finally reached the surface on October 13, in a specially-made rescue capsule.
The miners spent a record 69 days in the hot, humid bowels of the gold and copper mine in Chile's northern Atacama desert since it caved in on August 5.
For the first 17 days of their ordeal, the miners were all believed to be dead, and their story of survival, as well as the extraordinary rescue operation captured the world's attention.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad used his visit to Lebanon on October 13 to assure his hosts that Iran would stand by Beirut in confronting what he called hostilities from neighbouring Israel.
Ahmadinejad, making the first official state visit by an Iranian president to Lebanon, was given a tumultuous welcome by thousands of Shi'ite Muslims who lined the road from the airport, throwing rice and petals at his motorcade, he then attended a massive rally organised by Iran's Shi'ite ally Hezbollah in Beirut.
A wave of protests took place across France in October as French unions protested over austerity measures and economic reforms, including a rise in the retirement age, being introduced by the French government in an attempt to tackle the financial crisis affecting Europe.
Backed by a majority of voters, unions were trying to force President Nicolas Sarkozy -- whose ratings were near record lows 18 months before a presidential election -- to retreat on what is seen as the defining reform of his presidency.
A tsunami pounded several Indonesian islands on October 25, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake.
The tsunami was triggered by a 7.5 magnitude earthquake, which struck 78 km west of South Pagai, one of the Mentawai islands.
With some 80 percent of houses damaged in some areas, thousands of people were displaced from their homes.
The number of dead was estimated at more than 400, as rescue workers searched for hundreds more missing.
Gunmen took more than 100 Iraqi Christians hostage in a Baghdad church on October 31.
The insurgents laid siege to one of Baghdad's biggest churches as parishioners attended Sunday mass in a central district near the heavily fortified Green Zone, home to embassies and the Iraqi government.
Three militants detonated suicide vests as Iraq forces entered the church and ended the stand-off.
The U.S. military who monitored the operation from helicopers overhead, said between seven and 10 hostages and seven members of the Iraqi security forces, as well as five to seven attackers, were killed in the rescue operation.
Al Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate, the Islamic State of Iraq, claimed responsibility for the hostage taking attack.
NOVEMBER Greek police detonated a parcel bomb addressed to the French embassy in Athens on November 4.
Bomb disposal experts arrived on the scene and detonated the package in a controlled explosion. Smoke was seen rising and debris from the package flying as the parcel exploded.
Several parcel bombs were found across Athens, and police suspecting that more explosive packages may have left Greece, suspended overseas shipments of mail and packages for three days.
Two men, both Greek, aged 22 and 24, appeared in court on November 4, after being arrested on November 1 fro being in possession of two parcel bombs including one addressed to French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
The men were charged with committing a terror act, participating in a terror group and illegal possession of explosives and weapons.
A subdued President Barack Obama on November 3 vowed to seek common ground with Republicans who rolled to victory in congressional elections as he took responsibility for a sour economy that led to "humbling" Democratic losses.
Ahead of the mid-term vote, Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin Appeared in West Virginia to campaign on behalf of Republican Senatorial candidate John Raese and criticised the Obama administration for not doing enough to fight the global financial crisis.
"The truth is, with Obama, Pelosi, and Reid at the wheel, the nation's car isn't really just stuck in a ditch. No, it's still moving forward. And we're getting closer and closer to a cliff." she said.
Obama confessed to having suffered a "long night" as Republicans romped to control of the U.S. House of Representatives and made gains in the Senate. He spoke in a White House East Room news conference having suffered the biggest political defeat of his career.
Republicans picked up at least 60 House seats in the biggest shift in power since Democrats gained 75 House seats in 1948. It gave Republicans their largest House margin since 1928.
The election outcome put pressure on Obama to make a mid-course correction in the direction of his administration as he seeks to reduce the 9.6 percent jobless rate and prepares to ask Americans for a new term in 2012.
"Clearly, too many Americans haven't felt that progress yet, and they told us that yesterday. And, as president, I take responsibility for that," he said.
A Qantas Airways passenger plane carrying 459 people was forced to shut down an engine and return to Singapore's Changi airport on November 4.
The Airbus A-380, the world's largest passenger plane, suffered engine trouble shortly after it had left the island state.
As the aircraft sat on the tarmac after returning safely, extensive damage could be seen on one of the its engines.
Indonesia's local television broadcaster RTCI TV showed locals retrieving debris that reportedly fell off of the Qantas flight before it was forced to return to Singapore.
Volcanic ash forced flights to be cancelled in Indonesia on November 5, after Mount Merapi volcano erupted with renewed ferocity killing several people and blanketing the surrounding area with ash.
Ten days of eruptions killed more than 98 people and forced the evacuation of more than 75,000.
A column of ash billowed at least 4 km (2.5 miles) above the crater of Mount Merapi, as worried authorities evacuated villages within a 20 km radius of the volcano.
Security was tightened at the German-French border on November 6, as protesters demonstrated against the transport of nuclear waste to Germany for storage.
Police officers prevented the demonstrators from sitting on the tracks and it was later reported that the train carrying the waste had taken a different route into Germany.
The waste shipment has become a tense political issue due to anger over Chancellor Angela Merkel's decision to extend the lifespan of Germany's 17 nuclear power plants, despite overwhelming public opposition.
The waste originated in Germany and was reprocessed at the French nuclear group Areva's processing plant at La Hague for storage in a site in the northern German town of Gorleben.
The train was held up repeatedly on its way across France and Germany, thousands staged sit-down strikes on tracks and others lowered themselves on ropes from bridges to prevent the train from passing. They were removed by police.
Protesters feared the depot at Gorleben, built as an interim storage site, could become permanent. Greenpeace says the site, in a disused salt mine, would be unsafe over the long term.
Polls opened amid tight security in Myanmar's first election in 20 years on November 7, a scripted vote that assures army-backed parties an easy win but brings a semblance of parliamentary politics to the isolated, oppressive state.
A government-escorted media tour of polling stations around Yangon showed voters queuing up to cast their ballots and placing them inside boxes.
The carefully choreographed end of direct army rule, marred by complex rules that stifled major pro-democracy forces, entered its final stage in a race largely between two powerful military-backed parties running virtually unopposed.
The vote will not bring an end to Western sanctions but could reduce Myanmar's isolation in Asia at a time when neighbouring China has dramatically increased investments in natural gas and other resources in the former British colony also known as Burma.
Protesters burned placards and smashed windows at Britain's Conservative party headquarters in central London on November 10, as thousands of students took to the streets to protest against proposed rises in university fees.
Eight people were taken to hospital with injuries after the violence flared at Millbank Tower, where the Conservative Party headquarters is located.
A number of police officers were injured after they came under attack from youths, some wearing scarves to hide their faces, amid scenes of chaos.
About 50 protesters got on to the roof of the building where they let off fire extinguishers and threw eggs.
The student protesters marched past the Houses of Parliament where, in the weeks ahead, MPs were to vote on proposals to triple maximum tuition fees to 9,000 pounds a year.
A massive explosion ripped through a security compound on a busy commercial street in Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, on November 11, killing at least 15 people and injuring more than 30.
The blast left a crater about 40 feet (12 metres) across and 12 feet (four metres) deep in front of the building, which was gutted. Some parts of nearby buildings also collapsed.
A Chinese vase discovered during a routine house clearance in a London suburb sold for 43 million pounds ($69 million) on November 11, 40 times its estimate and an auction record for any work of art from Asia.
According to the auctioneer, the vase which dates from the 1740s from the Qianlong period, would have resided "no doubt" in the Chinese Royal Palace and was fired in the imperial kilns.
Military-ruled Myanmar freed Nobel Peace Prize-winner Aung San Suu Kyi on November 13, after her latest period of house arrest expired, giving the country a powerful pro-democracy voice just days after a widely criticised election.
Suu Kyi waved to thousands of cheering supporters at the gates of her lakeside compound.
She then retreated back inside her home for the first meeting with her National League for Democracy party in seven years, as world leaders applauded her release, expressed relief and urged the military junta in the former Burma to free more of its estimated 2,100 political prisoners.
Suu Kyi had been in detention for most of the past 21 years because of her opposition to 48 years of military rule in Myanmar.
Prince William and Kate Middleton appeared in public together on November 16, the first time since announcing they would marry in 2011.
Amid a barrage of flash photography the beaming young couple showed off the engagement ring, a blue sapphire surrounded with diamonds which once belonged to William's mother Diana, and which she wore on her wedding day.
The marriage of William and Middleton, both 28, will take place on April 29, 2011.
Bulgaria and Russia signed a pipeline deal on November 13, which aims to deliver gas to central and south Europe and is expected to cement Moscow's hold on European energy supplies.
Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin and his Bulgarian counterpart Boiko Borisov attended the signing of the accords to set up a joint venture for the Bulgarian section of the project aimed at shipping Russian gas under the Black Sea to Europe.
Russia, the world's largest energy exporter, supplies Europe with a quarter of its gas needs. Analysts estimate European demand for Russian gas could rise to 30 percent by 2030.
Cambodian police and onlookers struggled to help dozens of people on November 22, who were trapped beneath each other following a stampede at Bon Om Touk water festival.
Three-hundred-and forty-five people were killed and another 300 injured in the crush.
Witnesses said the stampede began after several people were electrocuted on a small bridge lined with lights connecting Phnom Penh to nearby Diamond Island. Most drowned or suffocated, or were trampled to death trying to flee.
Shortly after the stampede, victims could be seen piled on top of each other at the end of the bridge, unable to move. Police and those who managed to escape tried to pull survivors out of the human gridlock.
Amateur video filmed on November 23, showed smoke rising on the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong, after North Korea fired dozens of artillery shells, setting buildings on fire and prompting a return of fire by the South.
A witness said residents of the island of Yeonpyeong, off the west coast of the peninsula near a disputed maritime border, had been evacuated during the shelling.
The exchange, which lasted for about an hour and then stopped abruptly, was the most serious between the two Koreas in years.
South Korea's military said two soldiers had been killed and 17 wounded in the shelling, the biggest attack in years. Three civilians were also wounded.
The island is about 3 km (1.8 miles) south of the sea border and 120 km (75 miles) west of Seoul.
DECEMBER WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was placed on Interpol's wanted list over rape allegations made against him in Sweden, Interpol said on December 1.
Assange is wanted by Swedish prosecutors on suspicion of alleged rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion. He denies the allegations.
The 39-year-old is under intense scrutiny after whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks began releasing a selection of more than 250,000 classified U.S. diplomatic cables.
The allegations against Assange surfaced in August when two women in Sweden went to police with complaints they had been sexually assaulted.
He has not been charged over the release of the U.S. diplomatic cables, but is suspected to be the source of the latest leaks.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on December 2 that several countries had agreed to help fight a forest fire raging for hours, that killed up to 40 people.
Cyprus, Greece and Spain were all sending aircraft to help with the fire fighting effort, and the Israeli foreign ministry said that, despite strained ties over the deadly Gaza aid flotilla in May, Turkey was also sending help to fight the flames.
Israeli firefighters said it was the biggest forest fire in the country's history, with some 7,000 acres (2,800 hectares) of land destroyed.
Some 500 inmates from the local Damon prison were moved to safety in the early afternoon as the blaze spread.
The fire started around midday, possibly in an illegal dumping ground in the Carmel Hills south of Haifa, Israeli media said.
Israel has experienced unseasonably hot weather for months and it was the driest November in 60 years, allowing the flames to spread quickly through the tinder-dry countryside. - Copyright Holder: FILE REUTERS (CAN SELL)
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