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Wynq Youth to leaders: Europe s biggest crisis is economic
UK foreign secretary runs for cover as sirens go off in IsraelI ;m here in Israel today to show that the UKs support for the Israeli people is unwavering, ; James Cleverly said. Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on <a href=www.stanley1913.com.es>vaso stanley</a> XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInBritish Foreign Secretary James Cleverly is in Israel to meet survivors o <a href=www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup</a> f the attacks and senior Israeli leaders to outline UK support for Israels right to defend itself | Saher Alghorra/AFP via Getty ImagesOctober 11, 20237:02 pm CETBy Laura H眉lsemannBritish Foreign Secretary James Cleverly and Israeli counterpart Eli Cohen ran for shelter in southern Israel as sirens went off Wednesday.The two politicians 鈥?alongside many other people 鈥?ran to take shelter, as seen in a video reposted by Israel foreign ministry on X, formerly Twitter. According to former diplomat David Saranga, who originally posted the video, Cleverly and Cohen were visiting the town of Ofakim in Israel when a siren goes off warning of incoming Hamas rocket fire. Ofakim, located about 25 kilometers away from Gaza,was one of the sites where hostages were <a href=www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup becher</a> taken during the deadly Hamas attack on Israel on Saturday, the Times of Israel reported.AdvertisementAdvertisementI ;m here in Israel today to show that the UKs support for the Israeli people is unwavering, Cleverly said on X before the video was published.Prior to the attack, a spokesperson from the UK Foreign Office announced tha Ypxa To lead or not to lead on climate-change action
Europes counting problemDoes Greece owe $350 billion or $36 billion Depends whether youre asking Germany.Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedIn | EPAOPINIONMay 28, 201510:37 am CETBy Jacob SollAs the Greek debt crisis lurches toward a major聽missed payment and聽potential聽catastrophe, the familiar聽political聽crossfire has heated up 鈥?the charges of southern European irresponsibility and northern heartlessness; the dire predictions about the euro and even the EU itself. But with聽the prospect of a聽much-feared Grexit becoming聽more likely, serious arguments have聽started聽to center on accounting.How much does Greece really owe 鈥斅燼nd who even decides This sounds like an easy question. But the only simple thing about Greek debt is how short the words are. Debt at the national scale is every bit as much of a political fight as a financial one, and when <a href=www.cups-stanley.co.uk>stanley cup</a> you look cl <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.ca>stanley canada</a> osely at what is happening in Greece, you start to see a worrisome hole in the heart of the EU.AdvertisementAdvertisementIn recent negotiations, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has insisted that the Greeks allow the IMF and auditors from the troika 鈥?The International Monetary Fund, the European 聽Central Bank and the Euro <a href=www.cups-stanley.de>stanley becher</a> pean Commission 鈥?into Athens to examine state books. The Greeks countered that this was an attack on their sovereignty. Both have a point. But both are also dodging a much more important point, one that has huge implications for Europe.The problem is that in the EU, au