Looking for a competitor to Arnaud Souquet on the right side of the defense, weakened by the departure of Junior Sambia, Montpellier have found the solution. According Foot Market, Falaye Sacko (27) arrives on loan with a mandatory purchase option. According to our information, the latter would be around 2 million euros. The Malian international defender (28 caps) belongs to Vitoria Guimarães, who sold him at the end of last season to Saint-Étienne (9 Ligue 1 matches and 2 play-offs once morest Auxerre).
June 2022
“Ranchediosa”: Carolina Molina shared uncovered bikinazo and unleashed praise
A couple of weeks agoCarolina “La Rancherita” Molina presented her boyfriend on social networksand dedicated a powerful message to him.
“To think that they had convinced me that there was no hard-working and successful man who, at the same time, might be affectionate, attentive and detailed,” he launched.
Now the singer and entrepreneur in the field of mattresses He made news once more on his social networks, but this time for an uncovered capture.
The musical artist shared a photo in selfie mode wearing a yellow bikini by a pool. “You have to give it more color, they told me, hahaha, and well…”, she wrote next to the postcard.
Then, he let his followers know that on Saturday (July 2) he will perform at La Ruta Pub Discoteca with his band.
Before the photo, some of the laudatory comments she received were: “Beautiful!”, “Nice stupendous”, “I died of love!” and “Ranchediosa”.
Check the photo here
Pia Imbs: “This rapprochement can be done with us”
“My reaction is a reaction of incomprehension and anger, and of solidarity with the employees who today learned of the social plan which concerns them.
You know Adidas has its roots deep in the land. First in Landersheim, then later in the business district of Strasbourg. And the four communities – Region, City Eurometropolis and CEA – have already expressed themselves to underline this lack of transparency and consultation with the communities, and of the rapid, brutal decision to leave announced, even though the social plan is for 2024. We We disapprove of this approach.
[…] We feel betrayed somewhere. The Eurometropolis, in particular, had arranged the arrival of Adidas in Strasbourg. With the other communities as well, everything was ready for Adidas to remain permanently in the territory.
We see them here terminating a lease and regrouping two teams at the head office in Paris. However, it is in Strasbourg, on our Alsatian territory, that Adidas has, in my opinion, its relevance to be present, on a territory, in a business district near the European Parliament. It is also this European capital of Strasbourg that we want to highlight and that Adidas is leaving.
[…] Yes, of course [c’est un coup dur pour le quartier Archipel], and we hope that the Groupama group, which owns its premises, will be able to attract other companies. I take this opportunity to say that in the Eurometropolis, many other companies are setting up and developing today. And so fortunately, we have many other economic activity zones and other local businesses that persist and even seek to expand. But it is indeed a blow and we do not approve. We said it.
You should know that the municipal council of Strasbourg, the council of the Eurometropolis, all the councillors, elected officials, voted unanimously for a motion to wish, to express the wish that Adidas remain on our territory – in the occurrence in Strasbourg.
Also tell you that tomorrow morning I am going to call on the Minister for Foreign Trade Franck Riester, who is also Minister for France’s attractiveness, on this subject. And of course also Bruno Lemaire [ministre de l’économie, ndlr] who is informed. And obviously the general manager of the Adidas group.
[…] We are waiting for support [de l’État sur ce sujet] so that Adidas reconsiders its decision and can consolidate its head office here, repatriate if necessary the Parisian employees to us, here, in our city, which is the capital, the city center of the Eurometropolis, which has an economic dynamism completely proven.
[…] It is a purely economic decision to bring together 140 employees and 110 in one place to create a common corporate culture. We also believe that this rapprochement of the two teams of employees can also be done at home and allow and offer a quality of life, of life at work, which is nevertheless recognized here, on our territory.
[Aux salariés d’Adidas], this is obviously a message of support. We proposed to the management of Adidas that they might keep offices here, in Strasbourg. They rejected it, since they are going more on a teleworking proposal, as you know, in the Paris region, and obviously the employees will work from home. Again, that’s a shame. But we are always ready to explore all avenues to keep Adidas in our territory.
[…] We work with the Adira (Agence de développement d’Alsace), we ourselves have a large economic development department, we work with other local authorities to continue to attract businesses. And I have no doubt that a number of companies will continue to settle. But there, for once, Adidas is still a completely emblematic company, Alsatian, which, in its time already, a few years ago, was already knowing whether it wanted to keep its headquarters in Alsace or in Paris. She still settled permanently in the business center And now the company is going to break its lease, which was still for 9 years, and decides, following two years of Covid, which are not indicative of reality, also economic activity and the way in which employees can be present at the head office, to go to Paris. So we continue to disagree with that decision, and we say that very, very strongly. »
J.R.
Arizona’s attorney general says the state outright bans abortion under a 1901 law, and Louisiana’s attorney general has warned doctors not to perform abortions, though a judge prevented the state from banning the procedure. For his part, a judge in Kentucky cleared the way for such proceedings to resume.
This comes as states grapple with old, unused laws following the US Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the constitutional right to termination of pregnancy in the ruling known as Roe v. Wades from 1973.
The high court’s decision less than a week ago has sparked legal battles in several states as lawmakers seek to ban or restrict abortion.
In the Kentucky case, a judge ruled in favor of two abortion clinics in the state that asked him to issue a temporary restraining order to block a state law that took effect following the Supreme Court ruling. Lawyers for the Louisville clinic argued that the Kentucky constitution allows abortion, adding that the EMW Women’s Surgical Center clinic has turned away regarding 200 potential patients since Friday’s ruling.
Louisiana and Kentucky are among the states that had “trigger” laws designed to ban abortion, with few exceptions, in anticipation of a repeal of Roe v. Wade.
Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron has not commented on the ruling. Cameron, who is a Republican, defends the state’s abortion laws.
The Kentucky case mirrors court battles across the country over whether pregnancies can be legally terminated.
In Arizona, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey said a law he signed in March banning abortions following 15 weeks took precedence over an outright ban in place since at least 1901, 11 years before Arizona became a state. But Attorney General Mark Brnovich, also a Republican, said he was revising the 1901 law in the wake of Roe v. Wade and that the providers immediately stopped performing the procedure for fear of prosecution.
Meanwhile, this week Louisiana’s attorney general issued a warning to doctors once morest performing abortions, despite a judge’s order preventing the state from banning the procedure.
In a letter to the Louisiana State Medical Society, Attorney General Jeff Landry said the state judge’s order preventing the bans “is limited in scope” and that abortion is a crime following the high court’s decision.
“Any medical provider who performs or has performed an elective abortion following the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs is jeopardizing their liberty and medical license,” Landry wrote.
The three abortion clinics in the state have said they will continue to operate while the judge’s order is in effect.
In Ohio, abortion lawyers on Wednesday asked the state Supreme Court to use its powers to overturn the ban on abortions once heart activity is detectable.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) announced Wednesday an appeal to West Virginia’s abortion ban. The ACLU says the state ban dates back to the 1800s.
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Bob Christie in Phoenix, Julie Smyth in Columbus, Ohio, and Dylan Lovan in Louisville contributed to this report.