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Pope admits clerical abuse of nuns including sexual slaveryPope Francis has admitted that clerics have sexually abused nuns, and in one case they were kept as sex slaves.He said in that case his predecessor, Pope Benedict, was forced to shut down an entire congregation of nuns who were being abused by priests.It is thought to be the first time that Pope Francis has acknowledged the sexual abuse of nuns by the clergy.He said the Church was attempting to address the problem but said it was "still going on".
Driverless cars to be on Britain's roads by the end of the year, government reveals Fully driverless cars are expected to be on Britain's roads by the end of the year, it has been revealed, as the government plans to scrap the requirement for a dedicated safety driver.The change will allow the first advanced trials on any public road of self-driving vehicles without a steering wheel or human in control, in a move which the Department for Transport said will place Britain at the forefront of the technology.Until now only limited trials of self-driving vehicles without a human driver have taken place in America, and none elsewhere in Europe.
Bit of a garbled message but gather there's to be a meeting tomorrow at 12;00 in the Municipal Theatre regarding road works and cutting down palm trees on 21 May and Rizospaston.
Quote from: Maik on Monday, 04 February, 2019 @ 16:01:53Bit of a garbled message but gather there's to be a meeting tomorrow at 12;00 in the Municipal Theatre regarding road works and cutting down palm trees on 21 May and Rizospaston.Seems it was recommended by a competent specialist that thirty palm trees along Rizospaston and 21 May be removed, along with oleander and other vegetation on 21 May due to infestation by red palm weevil.
Greek satellite Hellas Sat 4 successfully launched from French GuianaThe Greek satellite Hellas Sat 4 was successfully launched from French Guiana at 23:01, in order to take up the orbital position of Greece and Cyprus.
Donald Trump to visit UK in December for Nato summitMr Trump's controversial first official trip to the UK took place in July 2018, amid a backdrop of angry protests.The US president met the Queen at Windsor Castle and held talks with the prime minister at Chequers, while thousands of people marched through central London in protest at his visit.The police operation for the visit cost an estimated £18m, according to the National Police Chiefs' Council.
Hotel booking sites to end 'misleading' salesExpedia, Booking.com, Agoda, Hotels.com, ebookers and trivago have been investigated over pressure selling and misleading discount claims, the competition watchdog says.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) was concerned the sites were making rooms seem more popular than they were.The sites will now say if commissions they receive affect the results.They also agreed to be clearer with discount claims and hidden charges.
Child abuser Rolf Harris investigated after he walked onto primary school groundsOfficials are investigating a report that disgraced entertainer Rolf Harris walked onto the grounds of a primary school and waved at pupils.
Seems to be a big disagreement going on between noted local earthquake expert, Akis Tselentis, and the Seismic Risk Assessment Committee. Seems back in late January Mr Tselentis sent an email warning that Greece would experience a powerful earthquake. From what I can make out, the SRAC are saying the warning isn't much use without an idea of when and where.
Crash driver 'swerved to avoid octopus'A driver who swerved "to avoid an octopus" before crashing has been arrested on suspicion of drug-driving.Officers, who tweeted about the incident, said they found no evidence of an octopus on the road.Octopuses are not unheard of in the seas off the south coast of England, but this particular cephalopod would have had to crawl more than 5km over hills and fields to find itself in the path of a car on the A381.
Donald Tusk: Special place in hell for BrexiteersEuropean Council President Donald Tusk has said there is a "special place in hell" for "those who promoted Brexit without even a sketch of a plan of how to carry it safely",He was speaking after talks with Irish premier Leo Varadkar in Brussels.He said the EU would "insist" on the Irish backstop in any UK withdrawal deal to preserve peace.But he and Mr Varadkar were preparing for the "possible fiasco" of a no-deal Brexit.
Google launches extension to find if someone has stolen your passwordGoogle is trying to warn people that their passwords are being stolen and used across a wide variety of sites.The company has released a new Password Checkup tool, which can be added to the Chrome browser and will alert people if their account details have been caught up in a cyber attack or a data breach.If a login is stolen and made available on the internet, a pop-up will show up making clear the details are no longer safe and that they should change their password.
Major tobacco companies pay almost no UK corporation tax despite massive profits, study findsImperial Brands, British American Tobacco, Philip Morris and Japan Tobacco shift profits overseas, leaving UK taxpayers to pick up the tab, according to new studyBig tobacco companies are paying a “pitiful” amount of corporation tax on billions of pounds of profits, leaving taxpayers to pick up the tab for the enormous cost smoking has on the NHS and the economy, according to new research.
BBC Film Portrays Ten Years of Financial Turmoil in GreeceThe nail-biting weeks leading up to the first Greek bailout in 2010 are the subject of a new BBC documentary which aired on February 4.The spellbinding film, titled Inside Europe — Ten Years of Turmoil” takes viewers inside the room at crucial summits where leaders and their finance ministers battled to avert a looming European financial catastrophe.At the heart of the film is the clash between the cautious Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel and the feisty French prime minister Nicolas Sarkozy over how to deal with the near-bankruptcy of Greece.It is a gripping story which sees billions of Euros being pumped into the economy, riots in the streets against austerity measures, and the election of Europe’s first populist government.The real-life “cast” of the documentary includes some of Europe’s most powerful figures, such as Germany’s finance minister Wolfgang Schauble and UK chancellor George Osborne. The radical Greek finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, as well as top leaders Donald Tusk, Francois Hollande and Matteo Renzi also feature prominently in the story of the Greek crisis.As the EU’s most ambitious project, the Euro itself, teeters on the brink of collapse, Greece narrowly escapes being forced out of the Union.
QuoteGoogle launches extension to find if someone has stolen your passwordGoogle is trying to warn people that their passwords are being stolen and used across a wide variety of sites.The company has released a new Password Checkup tool, which can be added to the Chrome browser and will alert people if their account details have been caught up in a cyber attack or a data breach.If a login is stolen and made available on the internet, a pop-up will show up making clear the details are no longer safe and that they should change their password.https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/google-password-safety-extension-chrome-security-privacy-search-a8765756.htmlOr there's https://haveibeenpwned.com/
Looks like from these photos in link below that the palms have already been taken down http://www.inkefalonia.gr/koinonia/68641-mas-epiase-i-psyxi-mas-me-tous-pesmenous-foinikes-stin-rizospaston-eikones
Prosecutor calls for school cleaner to be exoneratedA Supreme Court prosecutor on Wednesday proposed the exoneration of a school cleaner who was given a 10-year prison sentence for falsifying her elementary school certificate.Meanwhile, it emerged that the Supreme Court has already revoked a sentence against another cleaner from Chios who was given a six-month suspended prison sentence for a similar case of forgery that cost her her job.
First Cannabis Vending Machine Installed in AthensAthenians and tourists can now buy cannabis products from a vending machine which was installed earlier this week in the center of the Greek capital.The machine, which is seen by some industry watchers as a potentially important part of the future of marijuana retail – is much like the machines which dispense soft drinks and food. The new vending machine, the first of its kind, is located along Panepistimou Avenue.Cannabidiol is a cannabis compound which producers claim offers significant medical benefits, but which does not make its users feel “stoned.”
Son's 200-mile London-Devon journey beats ambulanceA man who travelled nearly 200 miles to reach his injured mother arrived before an ambulance reached her.Mark Clements caught a bus, tube and two trains from London to Exmouth, Devon on Saturday after his 77-year-old mother fell and broke her hip.The initial 999 call was made at 09:00 GMT but paramedics did not arrive until seven hours later.Mr Clements said he and his family - some of whom were waiting with his mother - were "appalled" by what happened.
Climate change: World heading for warmest decade, says Met OfficeThe world is in the middle of what is likely to be the warmest 10 years since records began in 1850, says the Met Office.
One, two, bee: honeybees grasp maths and can do basic mental arithmetic exercises, study finds Bees understand mathematics and can navigate a series of puzzles using basic mental arithmetic, experiments have shown.In a study which has stunned the scientific world, 14 honeybees developed a conceptual grasp of addition and subtraction, then proved they could put it to practical use.