Axil Riots, looting in Venezuela over President Maduro s sudden currency manipulation
The bodies of three missing hikers were recovered from a mountain in the Scottish Highlands after they didn t return from a notoriously difficult scramble on one of the narrowest ridge crests in Britain, police said Monday.The trio set out Saturday in Glen Coe to hike the Aonach Eagach, a 6-mile knife-edge ridge that tops out at 3,600 feet and has precipitous drops. A search began after sunset when they didn t return, Police Scotland said.A Coastguard helicopter flying in fog and mist located the bodies and a search and rescue crew returned Sunday morning to recover them.The deaths did not appear to be suspicious but a repor [url=https://www.adidas-yeezy.de]adidas yeezy[/url] t will be given to the office that investigates deaths and prosecutes crimes, police said.Police did not provide names of the dead. While storm Antoni lashed parts of the U.K. on Saturday with strong winds and heavy rain, the forecast in the Highlands was for light rain in the afternoon and temperatures as low as 41 degrees at 6 p.m.The British Mountaineering Council lists the trek as the most legendary Grade 2 scramble in Scotland, meaning it doesn t require using a rope for safety but some people would [url=https://www.adidas-samba-adidas.es]adidas samba og[/url] be more comfortable having one. Glen Coe peaks Aonach Dubh, etc seen from North Ballachvlish in an undated file photo. Photo by CM Dixon/Print Collector/Getty Images Whatever measure you use to assess the [url=https://www.dunks.fr]dunk homme[/url] quality of a scramble - length, ex Sxzq Drone strike launched toward Benjamin Netanyahu s home, Israel says; no injuries reported
The copper head of an Akkadian king, four millennia old. Gone. Golden bowls and colossal statues. Gone. Ancient manuscripts and bejeweled lyres. All gone.Art experts around the world joined the custodians of Baghdad s Iraq National Museum in expressing anguish and indignation at the two-day pillage that emptied one o [url=https://www.stanley-cups.pl]kubki stanley[/url] f the world s great treasure troves - and at the American military officers who stood by and watched it happen. These are the foundational cornerstones of Western civilization, sa [url=https://www.stanley-cups.at]stanley cup[/url] id John Russell, a professor of art history and archaeology at the Massachusetts College of Art.In a frenz [url=https://www.stanley-cups.fr]stanley thermos[/url] ied rampage that began Thursday, the thieves took everything: Babylonian, Sumerian and Assyrian collections that chronicled and celebrated the Cradle of Civilization. Despite pleas for help, museum employees say American troops nearby did virtually nothing to disperse the pillagers.His voice shaking in anger, museum employee Ali Mahmoud tried to characterize the magnitude of the loss: This is the property of this nation and the treasure of 7,000 years of civilization. What does this country think it is doing Others blamed the troops that refused to step in. It is all the fault of the Americans. This is Iraq s civilization. And it s all gone now, said one museum employee, who was reduced to tears by the looting. She refused to give her name.Gordon Newby, a historian and professor of Middle Eastern studies at Emory University in Atlanta, said the museum s most famous holdin