Oslo – In the small Norwegian town of Steinkjer, a man with a car injured several people. The suspect – a man between 30 and 40 – had driven his vehicle onto a sidewalk on the night of Easter Sunday, as the broadcaster NRK reported. According to the police, a man between 20 and 30 died in hospital from his injuries, two other people suffered minor injuries.
Romina’s daughter from Big Brother told what it was like to live without her mother: “It was sorely needed”
Despite Big Brother ended a few weeks ago, there are still things to mend between the ex-participants and their families. Last Friday, Romina Uhrig went to the Georgina Barabarossa show and brought her three daughters for the first time. The eldest of them, Mia, revealed how the return of her mother felt following her passing through the Telefe contest.
“Are you happy to be with your mom once more?” The driver wanted to know. A la Barbarossa. “Yes, it was very necessary. At three months she missed her more. It was a long time for me, we had never been apart for a week, ”said the 12-year-old girl.
Mia said that Romina’s absence was felt more when she needed something from school or when she wanted to go out with her friends. “It was very strange to see her on TV every night (…) Sometimes she gave me a bit of anger, but hey, nobody is perfect,” she added.
The teenager had already expressed some anger with her mother’s attitudes, especially when she argued with her classmates. When she entered her house to visit her, the young woman had asked Romina to stop being so angry in front of her cameras.
For her part, the former deputy acknowledged that when she had her comings and goings with “Alfa” she remembered Mia because she always taught her daughter that she did not have to argue with anyone since it is not the way to fix problems. “I don’t understand it!” Said the ex-sister regarding Mia’s statements.
United Nations expresses concern over tense situation in Sudan
AA / Ankara
The United Nations has expressed its concern at the current tense situation in Sudan, following the delay in signing a final agreement aimed at resolving the political crisis that has been raging for months in the country.
In a statement, the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, called on the various parties to work to overcome the obstacles that hinder the transition to civilian rule.
Volker Turk called on all parties to “put aside their entrenched positions and personal interests, to focus on the common interests of the Sudanese people by redoubled efforts to restore a civilian-led government”.
“A lot of work has been done and many positive steps have been taken towards the signing of a final agreement. All efforts must now be made to put the political transition back on track,” it reads.
The UN official also urged “all parties to work together to overcome obstacles to security sector reform and avoid any further delays in signing the political agreement”.
He called on all parties to defuse tensions and refrain from violence.
“I have witnessed firsthand the fervent and impressive determination of the Sudanese people – especially the youth and women – to stand up for human rights, inclusive and civilian-led government, accountability and justice” , he added.
Last December, Sudan’s military and political forces signed a framework agreement to resolve the months-long crisis.
The signing of the final agreement was scheduled for April 6, but was further delayed. No new date has yet been revealed.
Sudan has not had a functioning government since October 2021, when the military ousted the transitional government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and declared a state of emergency, a decision denounced by political forces as a “coup d ‘military state’.
Sudan’s transition period, which began in August 2019, was due to end with elections in early 2024.
* Translated from English by Alex Sinhan Bogmis
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Picasso’s excesses have been presented as those of a “man of his time”, as if physical and psychological violence were acceptable in the past (remember that domestic violence has been criminally recognized since… the French Revolution). We have also discredited the words of the victims, refusing to believe the allegations of Françoise Gilot or the testimony of Marina Picasso. And certainly, as very often in cases of violence once morest women, it is very difficult to prove these allegations. Some don’t believe it, like Emmanuel Guigon, director of the Picasso Museum in Barcelona.
That Picasso was violent with women, I don’t believe. That he was a man of his time, of the 19th century, Andalusian, no doubt very seductive, goes without saying.
He told AFP.
Should we stop exhibiting Picasso? Everyone will have their own opinion. It is in any case very unlikely that museums will one day decide to this extreme. And so far, no one is asking. What is needed is to talk regarding this dark side of the picture. As Emilie Bouvard points out to AFP, “Beyond his machismo, Picasso is someone who appropriated things, beings, possessed them with paroxysmal feelings of suffering, of pain. He took an interest in the archaic questions of the self and the related violence with a certain courage, but he made those around him drool. Addressing this question is to speak differently but accurately of Picasso.“
Amidst the many tributes that elude the question, certain initiatives will have or have had the courage to tackle the subject head-on, during a series of conferences in Paris, or soon at the Brooklyn Museum in New York which will set up, in June , an exhibition on Picasso and feminism. The commissioner will be the Australian humorist Hannah Gadsby, who denounced the behavior of the painter in one of his shows.