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Spanish authorities try to shutter Catalan referendum websitesThey plan to curtail Catalan referendum information from spreading online.Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInFree article usually reserved for subscribersA protester holds up a banner A banner that reads I just want to vote as people demonstrate in front of the Catalan High Court building on September 21, 2017 in Barcelona | David Ramos/Getty ImagesSeptember 22, 20172:47 pm CETBy Laurens Cerulus andDiego TorresThe fight between the Catalan inde <a href=www.stanley1913.com.es>stanley cup</a> pendence movement and Spanish authorities over an independence vote is expanding into the online wo <a href=www.stanleycup.cz>stanley cup</a> rld.This week, an organization managing how users find websites with the .cat extension was raided by the Civil Guard, a Spanish police force, acc <a href=www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup becher</a> ording to the organization s chief executive officer and the Spanish interior ministry.The .cat Foundation, which manages the register of domains ending in .cat, was forced to block websites with information about the referendum that the Catalan independence movement hopes to hold October 1, but which is considered unlawful by Spanish authorities.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe authorities actions enraged internet activists in Spain and beyond 鈥?not over the independence issue but the right to freedom of information online.The raid came days after a Spanish court聽sent a seizure warrant on September 15 requiring that聽the foundation block websites related to the referendum. The foundation Pklr Bolton leaves Turkey on sour note over Trump s Syria plans
Burnt by the sun, whipped by the rainThe fragility of Africas environment is becoming a more pressing problem for Europe.Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInSeptember 15, 20 <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.ca>stanley canada</a> 109:47 pm CETBy Jennifer RankinThe impoverished, landlocked state of Niger has been hit by a double disaster this year. First the harvest failed, leaving 7.1 million people 鈥?half the population 鈥?hungry, with a further three million people in neighbouring countries Mali, Chad, Burkin <a href=www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley thermobecher</a> a Faso and northern Nigeria also facing what experts call moderate or severe food insecurity . Then came floods, which affected 200,000 people, sweeping away homes and livelihoods.The desperate situation in parts of west Africa underscores how closely the prospects of the worlds poorest people are tied to the fragile natural balance. The bottom billion are far more likely to be dependent on farming, livestock and sm <a href=www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley kaffeebecher</a> all-scale forestry 鈥?three sectors that have been called the GDP of the poor by Pavan Sukhdev, an economist leading a global study on the economics of ecosystems and biodiversity. The GDP of the poor will be under increasing pressure in the future, especially in Africa. By 2020, between 75 million and 250 million people across sub-Saharan Africa are expected to face water shortages, while agricultural output could halve in some countries, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.AdvertisementAdvertisementPolicy coherenceTackling climate change is one of
Spanish authorities try to shutter Catalan referendum websitesThey plan to curtail Catalan referendum information from spreading online.Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInFree article usually reserved for subscribersA protester holds up a banner A banner that reads I just want to vote as people demonstrate in front of the Catalan High Court building on September 21, 2017 in Barcelona | David Ramos/Getty ImagesSeptember 22, 20172:47 pm CETBy Laurens Cerulus andDiego TorresThe fight between the Catalan inde <a href=www.stanley1913.com.es>stanley cup</a> pendence movement and Spanish authorities over an independence vote is expanding into the online wo <a href=www.stanleycup.cz>stanley cup</a> rld.This week, an organization managing how users find websites with the .cat extension was raided by the Civil Guard, a Spanish police force, acc <a href=www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup becher</a> ording to the organization s chief executive officer and the Spanish interior ministry.The .cat Foundation, which manages the register of domains ending in .cat, was forced to block websites with information about the referendum that the Catalan independence movement hopes to hold October 1, but which is considered unlawful by Spanish authorities.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe authorities actions enraged internet activists in Spain and beyond 鈥?not over the independence issue but the right to freedom of information online.The raid came days after a Spanish court聽sent a seizure warrant on September 15 requiring that聽the foundation block websites related to the referendum. The foundation Pklr Bolton leaves Turkey on sour note over Trump s Syria plans
Burnt by the sun, whipped by the rainThe fragility of Africas environment is becoming a more pressing problem for Europe.Copy LinkCopiedShare via emailShare on XShare on WhatsAppShare on LinkedInSeptember 15, 20 <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.ca>stanley canada</a> 109:47 pm CETBy Jennifer RankinThe impoverished, landlocked state of Niger has been hit by a double disaster this year. First the harvest failed, leaving 7.1 million people 鈥?half the population 鈥?hungry, with a further three million people in neighbouring countries Mali, Chad, Burkin <a href=www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley thermobecher</a> a Faso and northern Nigeria also facing what experts call moderate or severe food insecurity . Then came floods, which affected 200,000 people, sweeping away homes and livelihoods.The desperate situation in parts of west Africa underscores how closely the prospects of the worlds poorest people are tied to the fragile natural balance. The bottom billion are far more likely to be dependent on farming, livestock and sm <a href=www.cup-stanley.com.de>stanley kaffeebecher</a> all-scale forestry 鈥?three sectors that have been called the GDP of the poor by Pavan Sukhdev, an economist leading a global study on the economics of ecosystems and biodiversity. The GDP of the poor will be under increasing pressure in the future, especially in Africa. By 2020, between 75 million and 250 million people across sub-Saharan Africa are expected to face water shortages, while agricultural output could halve in some countries, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.AdvertisementAdvertisementPolicy coherenceTackling climate change is one of