POUR NOS AMIS TOUS NOUVEAUX, TOUS ÉMERVEILLÉ DE LA GRANDEUR D'AMÉRICA, LA RUSSIE ÉTAIT LA PROTECTRICE DES PEUPLES DU TIERS MONDE QUI COMBATTAIENT AMERICA LA GRANDE GOSIÈRE!!

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Serge Pierre-Pierre

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Jul 27, 2025, 10:47:38 AMJul 27
to Willy Pompilus, William Savary, Echo Dhaiti, Kawonabo1500 via Tout-Haiti, vin...@yahoogroupes.fr, Forum Culturel, haiti...@ymail.com, Reseau Citadelle - Cyrus Sibert, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Dorismond Max, Dorismond Max, Edwin D'Haïti, Edwin M. Paraison, Haiti-nation, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Ilio Durandis, Dr Lesly Kernisant, Kerlens Tilus, Kerlens Tilus, Joe_Alfred, Joe N Pierre, Joel Leon, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Herve Gilbert, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Hans Roy, Daniel Ulysse, PIERRE PEAN, PIERRE PEAN, Jacques Bingue, bobj...@yahoo.com, Serge Renaud, Serge Bellegarde, Serge H. Moïse
LE 27 juillet 2025

POUR NOS AMIS TOUS NOUVEAUX, TOUS ÉMERVEILLÉS PAR LA GRANDEUR D'AMÉRICA, LA RUSSIE D'AUJOURD'HUI (L'UNION SOVIÉTIQUE D'ANTANT/AVANT) ÉTAIT LA PROTECTRICE DES PEUPLES DU TIERS MONDE QUI COMBATTAIENT L'OUEST (AMERICA 90% ET LE RESTE DU MONDE 10%) LA GRANDE GOSIÈRE, L'EXPLOITRICE, LA PRÉDATRICE DES PETITS PAYS DE LA TERRE ET LA VOLEUSE DE LEURS RESSOURCES DIVERSES!! 

LA CHINE D'AUJOURD'HUI, CUBA, LA CORÉE DU NORD, LE VIETNAM ET AUTRES PAYS SOCIALISTES ET COMMUNISTES SONT CE QU'ILS SONT AUJOURD'HUI GRÂCE ­Á LA PROTECTION THERMO-NUCLÉAIRE MUSCLÉE DE L'UNION SOVIÉTIQUE DIRIGÉE PAR UN POLITBUREAU SOLIDE ET PAS PAR UN "AUTOCRATE SOLO COMME PUTIN" L'ÉQUIVALENT DE CELUI D'AMÉRICA D'AUJOURD'HUI!

VOUS SOUVENEZ-VOUS DE NIKITA KRUSCHEV QUI AVAIT ENLEVÉ UN DE SES SOULIERS AUX NATIONS UNIES POUR MARTELER LE PUPITRE EN DISANT EN COLÈRE Á AMÉRICA "WE WILL BURY YOU"?

FEU M. NIKITA KRUSCHEV FUT VITE DÉMIS DE SES FONCTIONS POUR "COMPORTEMENT INDIGNE DU POLITBORO SOVIÉTIQUE!!

Á QUEL PAYS CES NATIONS SOCIALISTES DEVRAIENT-ILS L'ALLÉGIANCE?

NE RÉPONDEZ PAS!  CELA N'EST PAS NÉCESSAIRE!  RETROUVEZ VOTRE BON-SENS DANS CE CAFOUILLAGE, CE BROUILLARD CRÉÉS DE TOUTES PIÈCES PAR CE MÊME OUEST.

DI PLIS, ESYE KONSANTRE SOU SA KI REGADE PAYN KI ANBA GRIF SAN ZAVE, ASSEN, TEWORIS, SAN MANMAN, ENSANDYÈ,KADE, KADEJAKÈ, VÒLÒ TÈ, VÒLÒ ZA FÈ POPILASYON AYITI SAN DEFANS NOU AN.

SERGE
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Reuters
Russia starts first Moscow-Pyongyang passenger flights in decades
Reuters
Sat, July 26, 2025 at 11:37 PM EDT·1 min read

FILE PHOTO: Moscow Sheremetyevo Airport

(Reuters) -Russia will launch direct passenger flights from Moscow to North Korea's capital Pyongyang on Sunday, Russian authorities said, as the two former communist bloc allies move to improve ties following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The start of regular flights between the capitals for the first time since the mid-1990s, according to Russian aviation blogs, follows the resumption of Moscow-Pyongyang passenger rail service, a 10-day journey, in June.

The first flight will leave Sheremetyevo airport at 7 p.m. (1600 GMT), according to the airport's timetable.

The eight-hour flight will be operated by a Boeing 777-200ER with a capacity of 440 passengers, Russia's RIA state news agency said on Sunday. It said tickets started at 44,700 roubles ($563), and the first flight quickly sold out.

Russia's civil aviation authority Rosaviatsia has granted Nordwind Airlines permission to operate flights between Moscow and Pyongyang twice a week. The transport ministry said in a statement that for now flights would operate once a month, "to help build stable demand".

The only direct air route between Russia and North Korea has been flights by North Korean carrier Air Koryo to Vladivostok in Russia's Far East three times a week.

Ukrai

ne and its Western allies have accused North Korea of supplying Russia with artillery and ballistic missiles. Moscow and Pyongyang deny the allegations.

Pyongyang has deployed more than 10,000 troops and arms to Russia to back Moscow's military campaign in Ukraine. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said this month his country was ready to "unconditionally support" Moscow's efforts to resolve the conflict in Ukraine.

($1 = 79.4000 roubles)

(Reporting by Lidia Kelly in Melbourne; Editing by William Mallard)



HAITIAN INTERNATIONAL GROUP
"UNE PUISSANCE ÉCONOMIQUE POUR UNE HAITI MODERNE, LIBRE ET PROSPÈRE ". au service des citoyennes et citoyens Haïtiens  concernés du globe.  Visitez-nous en cliquant sur ce lien :https://higvision.org/


Serge Pierre-Pierre

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Jul 29, 2025, 8:10:31 AMJul 29
to Willy Pompilus, William Savary, Echo Dhaiti, Kawonabo1500 via Tout-Haiti, vin...@yahoogroupes.fr, Forum Culturel, haiti...@ymail.com, Reseau Citadelle - Cyrus Sibert, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Dorismond Max, Dorismond Max, Edwin D'Haïti, Edwin M. Paraison, Haiti-nation, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Ilio Durandis, Dr Lesly Kernisant, Kerlens Tilus, Kerlens Tilus, Joe_Alfred, Joe N Pierre, Joel Leon, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Herve Gilbert, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, yahoogroups, Hans Roy, Daniel Ulysse, PIERRE PEAN, PIERRE PEAN, Jacques Bingue, bobj...@yahoo.com, Serge Renaud, Serge Bellegarde, Serge H. Moïse

Pour tous ceux, toutes celles qui sont émerveillés par les richesses d’AMERICA, ALL IS NOT WELL AT ALL IN AMERICA, FOR AMERICA AND AMERICANS.

LA NATURE TOUCHE FORTEMEMENT LEURS MEMBRES ET PERSONNE N’EST LÁ POUR SOULAGER LES SOUFFRANCES ÉCONOMIQUES ÉNORMES DE LA POPULATION.

HAITIANS, TIME TO SERIOUSLY THINK ABOUT MAKING HAITI A LIVABLE LAND AGAIN AND TO CONSIDER GOING BACK TO HAITI OR RETURNING HOME OR AS "SNOW BIRDS" OR WHATEVER YOUR DESIRES ARE!

NBC News

Billion-dollar disasters: The economic toll of wildfires, severe storms and earthquakes is soaring

Denise Chow

Tue, July 29, 2025 at 2:00 AM EDT·4 min 4

Firefighters in the growing Palisades Fire in Los Angeles County, Calif. on Jan. 11.  (Ali Matin / Middle East Images/AFP via Getty)

Firefighters in the growing Palisades Fire in Los Angeles County, Calif. on Jan. 11. (Ali Matin / Middle East Images/AFP via Getty)

Weather disasters in the first half of this year have cost the United States $93 billion in damage, according to a report released Tuesday by a German multinational insurance company.

The analysis by Munich Re, the world’s largest reinsurer, found that more than 70% of all damage globally from weather disasters so far this year occurred in the U.S., with uninsured Americans and their local governments experiencing a whopping $22 billion in damage.

The report shows the soaring economic toll that wildfires, severe storms and other extreme events are exacting in the U.S. and globally. The findings also highlight the growing insurance crisis playing out in parts of the country that are prone to frequent weather disasters.

“We have seen some 90% of all losses for the insurance industry — so 72 out of 80 billion U.S. dollars — have happened in the U.S.,” said Tobias Grimm, Munich Re’s chief climate scientist. “That’s extraordinary.”

The devastating wildfires in Southern California in January topped the list of the country’s costliest disasters in the first half of 2025. The two largest fires, which killed at least 30 people and displaced thousands more, ripped through the communities in Pacific Palisades and Altadena, fanned by strong Santa Ana winds.

Munich Re estimated that the wildfires caused $53 billion in losses, including about $13 billion in damages for residents without insurance. The reinsurer said the Los Angeles-area blazes resulted in the “highest wildfire losses of all time.”

The wildfires’ huge economic and societal toll was due in part to increased development in fire-prone areas.

“Losses are on the rise because often properties are in harm’s way,” Grimm said. “People still live in high-risk areas.”

Urban development in hazard-prone areas can similarly drive up the cost of other weather-related disasters, such as hurricanes and flooding, which are becoming more frequent and severe due to climate change.

Studies have shown that climate change is making wildfires more frequent because of warmer temperatures and worsening drought conditions. Blazes are also becoming more intense, as a result.

A report released in late January from the World Weather Attribution group found that the hot, dry and windy conditions that helped the fires consume large swaths of Southern California were about 35% more likely because of human-caused global warming.

Lesly Karen Cornett stands among the debris of her house outside London, Ky., on May 18.  (Michael Swensen / Getty Images)

Lesly Karen Cornett stands among the debris of her house outside London, Ky., on May 18. (Michael Swensen / Getty Images)

Munich Re’s own earnings have been affected by the L.A. wildfires, as was reported by CNBC. Profits were down a total of $1.9 billion for Munich Re and Hannover Re (another German reinsurer), according to their first-quarter earnings reports.

Other major disasters in the U.S. so far included severe storms in March that caused $6.7 billion in damage, a series of tornadoes in May that caused about $5 billion in losses, and severe storms and flooding in April that caused $4 billion in damage.

Overall, “severe convective storms” — ones that produce excessive rainfall, strong winds, tornadoes or large hail — caused $34 billion in damage in the U.S. from January through June, according to Munich Re. Of that, $8 billion were uninsured losses, the company found, which included damage to roads and public schools.

Outside of the U.S., a tropical cyclone that hit Australia in late February dumped heavy rain over parts of Queensland and New South Wales, causing an estimated $3.5 billion in damage.

TOPSHOT-MYANMAR-THAILAND-EARTHQUAKE (Sai Aung Main  / AFP via Getty Images)

Debris in the damaged Me Nu Brick monastery on the outskirts of Mandalay, Myanmar, following the devastating March 28 earthquake. (Sai Aung Main / AFP via Getty Images)

Internationally, the costliest disaster so far this year wasn’t climate-related: A 7.7-magnitude earthquake struck Myanmar in late March. An estimated 4,500 people died after the quake rattled the cities of Sagaing and Mandalay and surrounding areas.

And a magnitude-6 earthquake that struck Taiwan in January caused $1.3 billion in losses, according to Munich Re.

The insurance company’s report comes months after the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said it would stop tracking the economic toll of the United States’ costliest extreme weather events. The elimination of NOAA’s “Billion Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters” yearly reports was seen by critics

okesperson previously told NBC News that the decision to discontinue the database was made “in alignment with evolving priorities and staffing changes.”

Grimm said it’s “vital” to collaborate with NOAA and other government agencies to ensure that these types of reports contain accurate data. The resulting analyses can, for instance, be used by insurance companies and government officials to shape policies, and they are particularly important as billion-dollar disasters become more frequent.

“The probability of extreme weather is changing,” Grimm said, “so we need to adapt and, of course, to mitigate fu

ews.com








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