2024-01-21 09:09:05
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#Thailand #number #foreign #tourists #decreased #million…Considering #Muay #Thai #visa #revived.The #length #stay #condition #learning #Muay #Thai #increased #days #TBS #NEWS #DIG #TBS #NEWS #DIG #Powered #JNN
2024-01-21 09:09:05
1705861033
#Thailand #number #foreign #tourists #decreased #million…Considering #Muay #Thai #visa #revived.The #length #stay #condition #learning #Muay #Thai #increased #days #TBS #NEWS #DIG #TBS #NEWS #DIG #Powered #JNN
2024-01-21 18:02:52
Kurt Wiebach was the first managing director at Red Bull Salzburg.
Kurt Wiebach died in his home town of Schönau am Königssee at the age of 78 following a long illness. The Berlin native was an influential figure in Salzburg football for over three decades. In Berlin, the trained police officer was a member of the amateur team at Hertha BSC before he settled in Schönau in 1973 and ended his career at Berchtesgaden following tearing his Achilles tendon. In 1980 he began his work in Salzburg in Anif, three years later he moved to SAK, which he led to the title in the 2nd division in 1985. In 1986 it dropped out of the top league. In April 1988, Austria Salzburg boss Rudi Quehenberger brought him to the Lehen coaching bench as the successor to the hapless Hannes Winklbauer. With the overnight signing of Hans Krankl, the coup towards the middle play-off and subsequent promotion was achieved in the autumn of 1988. The involvement of Weber, Willfurth, Lainer and Bierhoff was closely linked to Wiebach’s work. When Otto Baric came as coach in 1991, Wiebach moved to the position of sports director. After a long “abstinence” from football and increased work in his insurance agency, Wiebach was brought in in 2005 by Red Bull owner Dietrich Mateschitz as managing director of Austria’s successor club. After a year he left there to devote himself once more to his business in Schönau. As a hobby, he then coached the team in his hometown.
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#Salzburg #football #veteran #dead
2024-01-21 13:07:49
The Kay Alé Viré was inaugurated this Saturday on rue Clairière, in Fort-de-France. This site will be a one-stop shop for reception, orientation and information for anyone who plans to return to the country. More details in our next edition.
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#Kay #Alé #Viré #inaugurated #Saturday
2024-01-21 17:58:02
BERLIN (AP) — An anti-far-right protest in the German city of Munich on Sunday followingnoon ended early due to security concerns following around 100,000 people showed up, police said. The rally was one of dozens across the country over the weekend that drew hundreds of thousands of people in total.
The protests followed a report that revealed that right-wing extremists recently met to discuss the deportation of millions of immigrants, including some with German citizenship. Some members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party were present at the meeting.
In the western city of Cologne, police confirmed that “tens of thousands” of people turned out to protest on Sunday, with organizers speaking of around 70,000 people. A protest Sunday followingnoon in Berlin attracted at least 60,000 people and potentially as many as 100,000, police said, according to the German news agency dpa.
A similar protest on Friday in Hamburg, Germany’s second-largest city, drew what police said was a crowd of 50,000 people and had to end early for safety reasons. And Saturday’s protests in other German cities such as Stuttgart, Nuremberg and Hannover attracted tens of thousands of people.
While Germany has seen other anti-far-right protests in recent years, the size and scope of the protests that took place over the weekend — not only in major cities, but also in dozens of smaller towns in the entire country—are remarkable. The mass participation in Germany showed how these protests are galvanizing popular opposition to the AfD in a new way.
The AfD ranks high in opinion polls: Recent polls put it in second place nationally with around 23%, well above the 10.3% it obtained during the last federal election in 2021.
The catalyst for the protests was a report by media outlet Correctiv published last week regarding an alleged meeting in November that it said was attended by figures from the extremist Identitarian Movement and the AfD. A leading member of the Identitarian Movement, Austrian citizen Martin Sellner, presented his “remigration” vision for deportations, according to the report.
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#Protest #farright #attracts #people #Munich
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