സംസ്ഥാനത്തെ വൈദ്യുതി വിതരണ സേവനങ്ങളുടെ ഗുണനിലവാരം വർധിപ്പിക്കുന്നതിനും ഉപയോക്താക്കളുടെ അവകാശങ്ങൾ സംരക്ഷിക്കുന്നതിനുമായി സംസ്ഥാന വൈദ്യുതി റഗുലേറ്ററി കമീഷൻ പുറത്തിറക്കിയ കരട് നിയമങ്ങളിൽ 25ന്‌ തെളിവെടുപ്പ്‌ നടക്കും.

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സംസ്ഥാനത്തെ വൈദ്യുതി വിതരണ സേവനങ്ങളുടെ ഗുണനിലവാരം വർധിപ്പിക്കുന്നതിനും ഉപയോക്താക്കളുടെ അവകാശങ്ങൾ സംരക്ഷിക്കുന്നതിനുമായി സംസ്ഥാന വൈദ്യുതി റഗുലേറ്ററി കമീഷൻ പുറത്തിറക്കിയ കരട് നിയമങ്ങളിൽ 25ന്‌ തെളിവെടുപ്പ്‌ നടക്കും.

നാഗർകോവിലിലേക്കും എറണാകുളത്തേക്കുമായി അനുവദിച്ച നാലുട്രെയിനും നിരക്ക്‌ കൂടിയ അൺറിസർവ്‌ഡ്‌ എക്‌സ്‌പ്രസുകളാണ്‌. പാസഞ്ചർ ട്രെയിനിന്‌ 10 ര‍ൂപ ചെലവാകുന്നയിടത്ത്‌ 35 രൂപയാണ്‌ യാത്രക്കാർക്ക്‌ എക്‌സ്‌പ്രസ്‌ ട്രെയിനുകളിൽ മുടക്കേണ്ടിവരിക.

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നാഗർകോവിലിലേക്കും എറണാകുളത്തേക്കുമായി അനുവദിച്ച നാലുട്രെയിനും നിരക്ക്‌ കൂടിയ അൺറിസർവ്‌ഡ്‌ എക്‌സ്‌പ്രസുകളാണ്‌. പാസഞ്ചർ ട്രെയിനിന്‌ 10 ര‍ൂപ ചെലവാകുന്നയിടത്ത്‌ 35 രൂപയാണ്‌ യാത്രക്കാർക്ക്‌ എക്‌സ്‌പ്രസ്‌ ട്രെയിനുകളിൽ മുടക്കേണ്ടിവരിക.

കലഞ്ഞൂരിൽ അഞ്ചുവയസുള്ള മകളെ കനാലിൽ എറിഞ്ഞ് കൊല്ലാൻ ശ്രമിച്ച യുവാവ്‌ അറസ്റ്റിൽ. കൂടൽ പാലമല ആഞ്ഞിലിമൂട്ടിൽ വീട്ടിൽ ഷിജു (41)വിനെയാണ് കൂടൽ പൊലീസ് അറസ്റ്റ്‌ ചെയ്തത്.

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കലഞ്ഞൂരിൽ അഞ്ചുവയസുള്ള മകളെ കനാലിൽ എറിഞ്ഞ് കൊല്ലാൻ ശ്രമിച്ച യുവാവ്‌ അറസ്റ്റിൽ. കൂടൽ പാലമല ആഞ്ഞിലിമൂട്ടിൽ വീട്ടിൽ ഷിജു (41)വിനെയാണ് കൂടൽ പൊലീസ് അറസ്റ്റ്‌ ചെയ്തത്.

ക്രമസമാധാനവും സ്വൈരജീവിതവും ഉറപ്പാക്കുന്നതിൻ്റെ ഭാഗമായി സംസ്ഥാന വ്യാപകമായി നടത്തിയ സ്പെഷ്യൽ ഡ്രൈവിൽ ഗുരുതര കുറ്റകൃത്യങ്ങളിൽ ഉൾപ്പെട്ട 691 പേരേയും വിവിധ കേസുകളിൽ ഉൾപ്പെട്ട് ഒളിവിൽ കഴിയുകയായിരുന്ന 972 പേരേയും അറസ്റ്റ് ചെയ്തു.

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ക്രമസമാധാനവും സ്വൈരജീവിതവും ഉറപ്പാക്കുന്നതിൻ്റെ ഭാഗമായി സംസ്ഥാന വ്യാപകമായി നടത്തിയ സ്പെഷ്യൽ ഡ്രൈവിൽ ഗുരുതര കുറ്റകൃത്യങ്ങളിൽ ഉൾപ്പെട്ട 691 പേരേയും വിവിധ കേസുകളിൽ ഉൾപ്പെട്ട് ഒളിവിൽ കഴിയുകയായിരുന്ന 972 പേരേയും അറസ്റ്റ് ചെയ്തു.

പ്രമുഖ മധുരപലഹാര വിപണന ശൃംഖലയായ ഹൽദിറാംസിനെതിരെ ഭക്ഷ്യസുരക്ഷാ നിയമപ്രകാരം കേസെടുത്തു.

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പ്രമുഖ മധുരപലഹാര വിപണന ശൃംഖലയായ ഹൽദിറാംസിനെതിരെ ഭക്ഷ്യസുരക്ഷാ നിയമപ്രകാരം കേസെടുത്തു.

വിവാഹബന്ധം വേർപിരിഞ്ഞ് കഴിയുന്ന ഭാര്യയ്ക്കും കുട്ടികൾക്കും ഭർത്താവ് നൽകേണ്ട അറ്റകുറ്റച്ചെലവ് ഔദാര്യമല്ലെന്നും അവകാശമാണെന്നും ആന്ധ്രപ്രദേശ് ഹൈക്കോടതി

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വിവാഹബന്ധം വേർപിരിഞ്ഞ് കഴിയുന്ന ഭാര്യയ്ക്കും കുട്ടികൾക്കും ഭർത്താവ് നൽകേണ്ട അറ്റകുറ്റച്ചെലവ് ഔദാര്യമല്ലെന്നും അവകാശമാണെന്നും ആന്ധ്രപ്രദേശ് ഹൈക്കോടതി

Two contradictory bills met different fates on Tuesday at the Capitol in Pierre as South Dakota lawmakers continued to wrestle with the best way to provide tax relief. A bill that would keep South Dakota’s sales tax at its temporarily reduced rate stalled in the Senate with a 17-17 tie vote that the lieutenant governor […]

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Two contradictory bills met different fates on Tuesday at the Capitol in Pierre as South Dakota lawmakers continued to wrestle with the best way to provide tax relief. A bill that would keep South Dakota’s sales tax at its temporarily reduced rate stalled in the Senate with a 17-17 tie vote that the lieutenant governor […]

Bukan memperkuat birokrasi sipil, pelibatan 4.000 ASN menjadi Komponen Cadangan berisiko menormalisasi militerisme dalam pemerintahan sehari-hari.

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Bukan memperkuat birokrasi sipil, pelibatan 4.000 ASN menjadi Komponen Cadangan berisiko menormalisasi militerisme dalam pemerintahan sehari-hari.

La exduquesa de York vuelve al centro de la polémica después de que nuevos documentos del caso Jeffrey Epstein la vincularan nuevamente con el financiero estadounidense.

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La exduquesa de York vuelve al centro de la polémica después de que nuevos documentos del caso Jeffrey Epstein la vincularan nuevamente con el financiero estadounidense.

The divisive 4-3 vote approves the issue of preliminary layoff notices to more than 3,000 employees.

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The divisive 4-3 vote approves the issue of preliminary layoff notices to more than 3,000 employees.

WASHINGTON — Tributes poured in across the country for the revered civil rights figure the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., who died Tuesday morning at 84. The two-time Democratic presidential hopeful and Greenville, South Carolina, native died peacefully, surrounded by his kin, according to his family.  Jackson, who was active in the civil rights movement […]

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WASHINGTON — Tributes poured in across the country for the revered civil rights figure the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., who died Tuesday morning at 84. The two-time Democratic presidential hopeful and Greenville, South Carolina, native died peacefully, surrounded by his kin, according to his family.  Jackson, who was active in the civil rights movement […]

South Dakota state senators revived and approved a bill Tuesday that was described by its sponsor as strengthening parental rights, but was criticized by opponents for its potential to undercut protections against abuse and neglect, delay urgent health care decisions and encourage lawsuits. The bill had failed last week in the Senate on a vote […]

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South Dakota state senators revived and approved a bill Tuesday that was described by its sponsor as strengthening parental rights, but was criticized by opponents for its potential to undercut protections against abuse and neglect, delay urgent health care decisions and encourage lawsuits. The bill had failed last week in the Senate on a vote […]

34 minutes

Missouri Independent
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WASHINGTON — Tributes poured in across the country for the revered civil rights figure the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., who died Tuesday morning at 84. The two-time Democratic presidential hopeful and Greenville, South Carolina, native died peacefully, surrounded by his kin, according to his family.  Jackson, who was active in the civil rights movement […]

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Missouri Independent
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WASHINGTON — Tributes poured in across the country for the revered civil rights figure the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., who died Tuesday morning at 84. The two-time Democratic presidential hopeful and Greenville, South Carolina, native died peacefully, surrounded by his kin, according to his family.  Jackson, who was active in the civil rights movement […]

(The Center Square) – Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers wants the public to concentrate on the bills and times that he had reached agreements with the Legislature as he is set to continue an interesting week of negotiations on a tax-cut proposal from legislative Republicans. Evers announced he would call a special session this spring to ban partisan gerrymandering of legislative maps. Earlier in his speech, Evers said that a plan for property tax relief and education spending must balance the two "a heck of a lot better" than the plan Republicans sent to him this week. "I'm going to ask lawmakers to stick around until our work here is finished," Evers said. Tony Evers just said no to the Republican plan that puts this surplus back in your hands and addresses the ridiculous property tax increase he did via his veto plan. So much for bipartisanship.— Senator Julian Bradley (@SenBradley) February 18, 2026 "Tony Evers just said no to the Republican plan that puts this surplus back in your hands and addresses the ridiculous property tax increase he did via his veto plan," Sen. Julian Bradley, R-New Berlin, wrote during the speech. "So much for bipartisanship." In his rebuttal to the State of the State, Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said that the state should not be sitting on $2.5 billion of projected surplus while Wisconsin families struggle to pay bills. "We want to give that money back to you," LeMahieu said. Evers highlighted everything from justice system reform, adding circuit court branches, workers’ compensation for firefighters and law enforcement and paying down state debt. “I’ve signed over 800 bills as governor, and more than 97% of the bills I’ve signed passed with bipartisan support,” Evers boasted in his State of the State speech. He then pointed out that he is often criticized for his use of the veto, particularly when he used a partial veto and erased numbers and a hyphen to change “2024-25” to “2425” in the budget bill, locking in a $325 per student per year funding increase for 400 years. Evers justified the action, saying he was using his veto pen to benefit kids. He said that average wages went up 26% in the state in his first six years in office and that median income has reached an all-time high. Evers announced that a new film tax credit and office would start this week.

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(The Center Square) – Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers wants the public to concentrate on the bills and times that he had reached agreements with the Legislature as he is set to continue an interesting week of negotiations on a tax-cut proposal from legislative Republicans. Evers announced he would call a special session this spring to ban partisan gerrymandering of legislative maps. Earlier in his speech, Evers said that a plan for property tax relief and education spending must balance the two "a heck of a lot better" than the plan Republicans sent to him this week. "I'm going to ask lawmakers to stick around until our work here is finished," Evers said. Tony Evers just said no to the Republican plan that puts this surplus back in your hands and addresses the ridiculous property tax increase he did via his veto plan. So much for bipartisanship.— Senator Julian Bradley (@SenBradley) February 18, 2026 "Tony Evers just said no to the Republican plan that puts this surplus back in your hands and addresses the ridiculous property tax increase he did via his veto plan," Sen. Julian Bradley, R-New Berlin, wrote during the speech. "So much for bipartisanship." In his rebuttal to the State of the State, Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said that the state should not be sitting on $2.5 billion of projected surplus while Wisconsin families struggle to pay bills. "We want to give that money back to you," LeMahieu said. Evers highlighted everything from justice system reform, adding circuit court branches, workers’ compensation for firefighters and law enforcement and paying down state debt. “I’ve signed over 800 bills as governor, and more than 97% of the bills I’ve signed passed with bipartisan support,” Evers boasted in his State of the State speech. He then pointed out that he is often criticized for his use of the veto, particularly when he used a partial veto and erased numbers and a hyphen to change “2024-25” to “2425” in the budget bill, locking in a $325 per student per year funding increase for 400 years. Evers justified the action, saying he was using his veto pen to benefit kids. He said that average wages went up 26% in the state in his first six years in office and that median income has reached an all-time high. Evers announced that a new film tax credit and office would start this week.

(The Center Square) - A bill that will end the ability of the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to raise fees for animal market licenses, animal dealer licenses, animal trucker licenses and animal transport vehicle registrations is now headed to Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers. Senate Bill 622 passed the Assembly with a 57-42 vote after the bill was passed 22-11 by the Senate a week earlier, both on partisan votes. The bill came after DATCP had proposed increasing a livestock market fee from $420 to $7,430, trucker license fees from $60 to $370 and animal dealer fees from $220 to $670 last year before receiving significant pushback and later proposing smaller increases. Those changes came after a Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling that blocked legislators from oversight on rulemaking with Evers telling agencies to bypass having rules heard in committee and instead simply enact them. That leaves in question if Evers will sign or veto the bill. The Wisconsin Farm Bureau and Americans for Prosperity–Wisconsin collected public feedback, sending it to DATCP after the rules were proposed. DATCP said in a fiscal estimate that the bill would force the agency to operate with a negative cash balance unless the fees or a funding source are changed. “This bill would remove DATCP’s ability to propose fee adjustments through the statutorily set administrative rulemaking process,” the fiscal estimate said. “Without revenue adjustments, the appropriation will operate in a negative cash balance until additional funding sources are identified.” DATCP Secretary Randy Romanski said in testimony that the programs had a negative cash balance of $267,000 at the end of last fiscal year, which is expected to grow to more than $1.1 million by the end of this fiscal year and said that Evers’ last budget proposal asked for seven new full time positions while four were ultimately granted.

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(The Center Square) - A bill that will end the ability of the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to raise fees for animal market licenses, animal dealer licenses, animal trucker licenses and animal transport vehicle registrations is now headed to Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers. Senate Bill 622 passed the Assembly with a 57-42 vote after the bill was passed 22-11 by the Senate a week earlier, both on partisan votes. The bill came after DATCP had proposed increasing a livestock market fee from $420 to $7,430, trucker license fees from $60 to $370 and animal dealer fees from $220 to $670 last year before receiving significant pushback and later proposing smaller increases. Those changes came after a Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling that blocked legislators from oversight on rulemaking with Evers telling agencies to bypass having rules heard in committee and instead simply enact them. That leaves in question if Evers will sign or veto the bill. The Wisconsin Farm Bureau and Americans for Prosperity–Wisconsin collected public feedback, sending it to DATCP after the rules were proposed. DATCP said in a fiscal estimate that the bill would force the agency to operate with a negative cash balance unless the fees or a funding source are changed. “This bill would remove DATCP’s ability to propose fee adjustments through the statutorily set administrative rulemaking process,” the fiscal estimate said. “Without revenue adjustments, the appropriation will operate in a negative cash balance until additional funding sources are identified.” DATCP Secretary Randy Romanski said in testimony that the programs had a negative cash balance of $267,000 at the end of last fiscal year, which is expected to grow to more than $1.1 million by the end of this fiscal year and said that Evers’ last budget proposal asked for seven new full time positions while four were ultimately granted.

El Ministerio de Seguridad pretende regular el trabajo del periodismo en la calle. En respuesta, un grupo de 36 fotorreporteros autoconvocados recoge el guante para poner sobre aviso la amenaza explícita dirigida contra la libertad de prensa, y el derecho que la sociedad tiene de ser informada. Al pie del comunicado, dejamos  enlaces a las […]

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El Ministerio de Seguridad pretende regular el trabajo del periodismo en la calle. En respuesta, un grupo de 36 fotorreporteros autoconvocados recoge el guante para poner sobre aviso la amenaza explícita dirigida contra la libertad de prensa, y el derecho que la sociedad tiene de ser informada. Al pie del comunicado, dejamos  enlaces a las […]

43 minutes

GroundUp
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Project to widen R510 in Limpopo has been at a standstill since 2024

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Project to widen R510 in Limpopo has been at a standstill since 2024

El giro de EE UU en Caracas marca un punto de inflexión en la relación bilateral tras años de aislamiento financiero y comercial, pero no implica una liberalización plena.

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El giro de EE UU en Caracas marca un punto de inflexión en la relación bilateral tras años de aislamiento financiero y comercial, pero no implica una liberalización plena.

(The Center Square) – New antitrust legislation introduced in the California Assembly seeks to curtail corporate activity that some lawmakers characterize as anti-competitive. “The Compete Act is about providing competition and opportunity in markets, and it’s about creating a prosperous, equitable and transparent economy,” Assembly Majority Leader Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, D-Winters and author of the bill, said during a press conference on Tuesday afternoon. “It’s about choices for consumers, power for workers, growth for small business, and it’s about markets built on merit, not power.” Assembly Bill 1776 updates California law by building on the rules established by the Cartwright Act of 1907, Aguiar-Curry told reporters at the Capitol in Sacramento. The Cartwright Act was passed long before the modern economy emerged, advocates for the Compete Act said Tuesday. “Markets have changed,” Aguiar-Curry said during the press conference. “Industries have consolidated. When competition dries up, our families pay more; our small businesses struggle to compete. Our workers have fewer options and innovation slows down.” A trust would be redefined under the Compete Act as a combination of capital, skill or acts by one person or more, thus expanding what is able to be prosecuted as a crime, according to the bill's text. Currently state law defines antitrust activities as a combination of capital, skill or acts by two or more people. Ultimately, the Compete Act could have the effect of allowing more workers to unionize, as well as allowing for conditions that keep large corporations from overpowering the market and crowding out small businesses, supporters of the bill said. Under current law, consolidation in various industries, like the grocery industry, create conditions that suppress competition, as well as undermine workers’ bargaining power and keep wages low, advocates said. “Workers deserve to see their paychecks grow,” said Mark Ramos, president of United Food and Commercial Workers Western States Council and UFCW Local 1428, a union in Fairmont. “They deserve to prosper, just as their employers have prospered," said Ramos, who stood with Aguiar-Curry during the news conference. Examples of what some lawmakers called anti-competitive behavior in California include the proposed Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery merger, which the Golden State’s lawmakers questioned company officials about earlier this month, according to previous reporting by The Center Square. Netflix sought to buy Warner Bros. Discovery for $83 billion, combining their resources and streaming services. Congressional Republicans warned against what they characterized as anti-competitive behavior in recent months, saying that the merger would “raise serious competition questions” and that lawmakers should look at any corporate deal that would result in concentration in the streaming and entertainment market. During Tuesday’s press conference, small business owners talked about large internet shopping platforms “scraping” their business websites, a practice that uses bots to visit websites and extract large amounts of data about products, price points and other information. That information, small business owners said, was used to recreate product listings to sell their own products on large e-retailer sites they weren’t listing their products on.

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – New antitrust legislation introduced in the California Assembly seeks to curtail corporate activity that some lawmakers characterize as anti-competitive. “The Compete Act is about providing competition and opportunity in markets, and it’s about creating a prosperous, equitable and transparent economy,” Assembly Majority Leader Cecilia Aguiar-Curry, D-Winters and author of the bill, said during a press conference on Tuesday afternoon. “It’s about choices for consumers, power for workers, growth for small business, and it’s about markets built on merit, not power.” Assembly Bill 1776 updates California law by building on the rules established by the Cartwright Act of 1907, Aguiar-Curry told reporters at the Capitol in Sacramento. The Cartwright Act was passed long before the modern economy emerged, advocates for the Compete Act said Tuesday. “Markets have changed,” Aguiar-Curry said during the press conference. “Industries have consolidated. When competition dries up, our families pay more; our small businesses struggle to compete. Our workers have fewer options and innovation slows down.” A trust would be redefined under the Compete Act as a combination of capital, skill or acts by one person or more, thus expanding what is able to be prosecuted as a crime, according to the bill's text. Currently state law defines antitrust activities as a combination of capital, skill or acts by two or more people. Ultimately, the Compete Act could have the effect of allowing more workers to unionize, as well as allowing for conditions that keep large corporations from overpowering the market and crowding out small businesses, supporters of the bill said. Under current law, consolidation in various industries, like the grocery industry, create conditions that suppress competition, as well as undermine workers’ bargaining power and keep wages low, advocates said. “Workers deserve to see their paychecks grow,” said Mark Ramos, president of United Food and Commercial Workers Western States Council and UFCW Local 1428, a union in Fairmont. “They deserve to prosper, just as their employers have prospered," said Ramos, who stood with Aguiar-Curry during the news conference. Examples of what some lawmakers called anti-competitive behavior in California include the proposed Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery merger, which the Golden State’s lawmakers questioned company officials about earlier this month, according to previous reporting by The Center Square. Netflix sought to buy Warner Bros. Discovery for $83 billion, combining their resources and streaming services. Congressional Republicans warned against what they characterized as anti-competitive behavior in recent months, saying that the merger would “raise serious competition questions” and that lawmakers should look at any corporate deal that would result in concentration in the streaming and entertainment market. During Tuesday’s press conference, small business owners talked about large internet shopping platforms “scraping” their business websites, a practice that uses bots to visit websites and extract large amounts of data about products, price points and other information. That information, small business owners said, was used to recreate product listings to sell their own products on large e-retailer sites they weren’t listing their products on.

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47 minutes

Azat Ýewropa we Azatlyk Radiosy
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Dünýäniň dürli regionlarynda we Türkmenistanda şu günki bolan we bolup duran soňky wakalar barada gysgaça habarlar.

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Azat Ýewropa we Azatlyk Radiosy
Attribution+

47 minutes

Dünýäniň dürli regionlarynda we Türkmenistanda şu günki bolan we bolup duran soňky wakalar barada gysgaça habarlar.