Thứ Sáu, 30 tháng 3, 2018

Waching daily Mar 30 2018

LIVERPOOL boss Jurgen Klopp insists Crystal Palace are not a one-man team.

The two sides meet at Selhurst Park tomorrow, with both sides desperate for points for different

reasons.

The Reds face a fight for a place in the top four while Roy Hodgson's Palace are still

in a battle against the drop.

The Eagles have been hit with a host of injury problems in recent months, including talisman

Wilfried Zaha,

but the Ivorian's return to the starting line up coincided with Palace's return to

winning ways in their last game against Huddersfield.

And Klopp has highlighted a number of threats in south London, as his side look to do a

Premier League double over Palace for the first time in 20 years.

"Only Arsenal were quite comfortable against Palace, but that's not really likely,"

he said.

"They have big injury blows over the years.

Zaha is a fantastic player, but Sakho and Loftus-Cheek were also injured.

"They've had key players out - if they'd constantly been together on the pitch they'd

be in another position in the table.

"They're not a typical team.

They're in good shape.

Roy is doing a fantastic job.

It was the most difficult job to take."

Liverpool are currently third in the Premier League and could temporarily leapfrog Manchester

United into second with a win.

Victory for 16th-placed Palace could fire them to within three points of the top half.

For more infomation >> Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp reveals the three Crystal Palace players he fears ● News Now ● #LFC - Duration: 1:58.

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Deadline: White House 3/30/18 | Breaking News Today March 30, 2018 - Duration: 47:28.

For more infomation >> Deadline: White House 3/30/18 | Breaking News Today March 30, 2018 - Duration: 47:28.

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배우 김민경이!... 8억 소문의 진실?-Tistory News - Duration: 10:10.

For more infomation >> 배우 김민경이!... 8억 소문의 진실?-Tistory News - Duration: 10:10.

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☀ 한지민 조카 나이 키 성형 No 자연미인☀ | News world Korea - Duration: 4:28.

For more infomation >> ☀ 한지민 조카 나이 키 성형 No 자연미인☀ | News world Korea - Duration: 4:28.

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( US News ) Israel Wants To Build 'Trump Station' Near The Western Wall - Duration: 4:06.

Israel Wants To Build 'Trump Station' Near The Western Wall

4k   40.

JERUSALEM, Dec 27 (Reuters) - Israel wants to name a train station after Donald Trump to thank him for recognizing Jerusalem as its capital, but the site of the planned building could be as divisive as the U.S.

president's declaration.

Transport Minister Israel Katz said on Wednesday he had chosen a proposed subway stop near the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City - right in the middle of the area that the Palestinians want as their own future capital.

"I have decided to name the Western Wall station.

after U.S.

President Donald Trump for his courageous and historic decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of the Jewish people and the State of Israel," Katz said in a statement.

The envisaged underground extension of a high-speed rail link between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem is still on the drawing board and a transport ministry spokeswoman said other departments still needed to approve it.

The announcement was quickly condemned by Palestinian leaders already angered by Trump's Dec.

6 decision to overturn decades of U.S.

policy on the city.

"The Israeli extremist government is trying to race against time to impose facts on the ground in the city of Jerusalem," Wasel Abu Youssef, a member of the Palestine Liberation Organization's Executive Committee, told Reuters.

Trump has said he was simply acknowledged the reality on the ground by recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital - but the Palestinians and most world powers have said he undermined the long-held position that Jerusalem's status must be settled by future negotiations.

A ministry spokeswoman said the proposed station and underground extension still required the approval of various governmental planning committees, and gave no date for when a final go-ahead might be given.

She said she did not know where funds for the estimated $700-million rail add-on would come from.

Israel considers all of Jerusalem its capital.

Palestinians want East Jerusalem - among whose shrines is Islam's third-holiest mosque, Al-Aqsa - as the capital of a state they seek in the occupied West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.

(Additional reporting by Steven Scheer in Jerusalem and Ali Sawafta in Ramallah; Editing by Andrew Heavens) Jonathan Ernst / Reuters    .

For more infomation >> ( US News ) Israel Wants To Build 'Trump Station' Near The Western Wall - Duration: 4:06.

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( US News ) 'Dotard' vs. 'Rocketman': The Nuclear Standoff That Rattled 2017 - Duration: 11:32.

'Dotard' vs. 'Rocketman': The Nuclear Standoff That Rattled 2017

Reuters. 680   72.

Days after Donald Trump was elected president of the United States, he received a stark warning from America's outgoing leader.

In their first and only meeting, Barack Obama told his successor that North Korea ― a volatile nation hellbent on nuclear proliferation ― would pose the biggest foreign challenge his administration would face.

Trump, who has dedicated much of his presidency to erasing Obama's legacy, seemed to heed this advice, briefly.

After rarely mentioning North Korea during his election campaign, he swiftly elevated the issue to his primary foreign policy concern (and later declared an end to Obama's "era of strategic patience" with the rogue state).

But under Trump's leadership, the past year has seen brewing tensions between Washington and Pyongyang soar to unprecedented levels with a specter of nuclear war.

Economic sanctions in response to a series of North Korean missile launches escalated into a direct exchange of heated insults and threats between Trump and Kim Jong Un, the hermit kingdom's hostile dictator.

KCNA KCNA / Reuters Kim Jong Un in an undated photo released by North Koreas news agency on Sept.

16, 2017.  North Korea's Nuclear Strides The Pentagon's efforts to stave off conflict with North Korea have been marred by a string of "decisive failures" this year, according to new analysis published this month from the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think tank.

"The United States and [North Korea] have engaged in bellicose rhetorical brinksmanship, making war between the two states seem increasingly likely," wrote Katy Collin, a post-doctoral fellow at the Brookings Foreign Policy program.

"Public acceptance of the possibility of conflict within the United States has ballooned. Mechanisms to head off escalation caused by misunderstandings do not exist." North Korea made remarkable technological advances to its internationally condemned nuclear program throughout 2017.

It conducted its sixth and most powerful nuclear test on Sept.

3, which the regime claimed was a hydrogen bomb loaded onto an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

Subsequent analysis of seismic data revealed the test was approximately 17 times stronger than the blast that decimated the Japanese city of Hiroshima during World War II.

Pyongyang has also expanded the reach of its missiles this year: The entire continental U.S.

is now believed to be within ICBM striking range.

Experts have expressed concern at North Korea's alarming progress, and worry that it is on track to outpace America's abilities to defend itself and its allies in the region.

The regime's most recent missile launch in late November exceeded 8,100 miles in range.

As tested, such a rocket would be able to travel more than enough distance to reach Washington, D.C., or New York City, although it is unclear if it could transport a warhead that far.

"North Korea knows what they're doing," David Wright, a physicist and the co-director of the global security program at the Union of Concerned Scientists, told HuffPost at the time.

"It's hard to say if it's six months or two years before they can deliver a nuclear warhead, but it's heading in that direction." Jonathan Ernst / Reuters President Donald Trump has traded insults with North Koreas leader, rather than focusing on a more careful diplomatic approach to the hermit kingdom.

Donald Trump's Fire And Fury Yet Trump, undermining diplomatic efforts by his own Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, has repeatedly confronted North Korea's provocations with aggravations of his own.

He infamously vowed in August to meet the defiant country with "fire and fury," prompting Pyongyang's threat to launch a missile at the U.S.

island territory of Guam.  Months later, Trump said the U.S.

would "totally destroy" North Korea, which is home to an estimated 25 million people, if provoked. "Rocketman is on a suicide mission for himself and for his regime," Trump said in his first speech before the United Nations General Assembly, referring to Kim.

In an extremely rare personal address, Kim responded by pledging to "tame the mentally deranged U.S.

dotard with fire." Soon after, North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho said the regime might detonate an H-bomb in the Pacific Ocean.

As hostilities boiled over, experts urged the "America First" leader to "stick to the script" and avoid making incendiary comments about North Korea during his 12-day trip through Asia last month.

But Trump couldn't help himself: Why would Kim Jong-un insult me by calling me old, when I would NEVER call him short and fat? Oh well, I try so hard to be his friend - and maybe someday that will happen! — Donald J.

Trump (@realDonaldTrump) November 12, 2017 The president's taunts "create an incentive for the North Koreans to stage provocations to show him up," Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear weapons expert at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, told HuffPost in November.

If the situation deteriorates into an acute crisis, such remarks from Trump could give North Korea the impression a military strike is imminent, Lewis added.

"If that happens, my belief is the North Koreans would use their nuclear weapons first, in order to try to repel an invasion." A turbulent 2017 has stirred fears and uncertainty for the year ahead.

"Trump has been impatient with multilateral, diplomatic containment of nuclear proliferation," Collin said.

"While diplomacy, sanctions, and targeted engagement have been successful in preventing conflict on the Korean peninsula for decades, 2017 marks decisive failures in terms of North Korea's nuclear capacities."    .

Chip Somodevilla via Getty Images Trump Threatens North Korea Donald Trump Threatens North Korea With Fire And Fury By Marina Fang "North Korea best not make any more threats to the United States. Jonathan Ernst / Reuters The Reaction Trumps Warning To North Korea Called Exactly Wrong And Reckless By Matt Ferner That is about the stupidest and most dangerous statement I have ever heard an American president make. MANAN VATSYAYANA via Getty Images Rex Tillersons Response Tillerson Scrambles To Defuse North Korea Tension As Trump Brags About U.S.

Nuclear Power By Hayley Miller The secretary of state said he doesnt believe theres any imminent threat. STR New / Reuters Nuclear Near-Misses 8 Times The World Narrowly Avoided A Potential Nuclear Disaster By Jesselyn Cook Weve survived a disturbingly long list of close calls.

Reuters Fast Facts Fast Facts About North Koreas Secret Nuclear Program By Nick Visser and Jesselyn Cook Heres what you need to know as tensions escalate between Washington and Pyongyang.

Bloomberg via Getty Images Inside The Tweet Trump Probably Made Up That Fire And Fury Quote On His Own By Paige Lavender Dont read too much into it. STR via Getty Images Are We Ready? Are We Ready For A Nuclear Attack From North Korea? Experts Have Doubts.

By Jesselyn Cook North Korea can build missiles faster than we can build defenses, one analyst warns.

KCNA KCNA / Reuters North Koreas Nuclear Program North Korea Produces Miniaturized Nuclear Warhead, Report Says By Nick Robins-Early U.S.

intelligence officials believe the country has passed a dangerous milestone in its nuclear program.

KCNA KCNA / Reuters Prisoner Release North Korea Releases Jailed Canadian Pastor Amid Standoff With U.S.

By Kimberly Yam Hyeon Soo Lim, who had been accused of attempting to overthrow the regime, was released on sick bail..

For more infomation >> ( US News ) 'Dotard' vs. 'Rocketman': The Nuclear Standoff That Rattled 2017 - Duration: 11:32.

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News 4 Cooks: Grain-Mustard Rosemary Glaze - Duration: 2:49.

For more infomation >> News 4 Cooks: Grain-Mustard Rosemary Glaze - Duration: 2:49.

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( US News ) Putin Critic Navalny Steps Up The Pressure After Kremlin Crackdown - Duration: 5:22.

Putin Critic Navalny Steps Up The Pressure After Kremlin Crackdown

550   37.

MOSCOW, Dec 27 (Reuters) - Opposition leader Alexei Navalny announced on Wednesday a series of rallies across Russia in January to press home his call for a boycott of next year's presidential election, a move likely to draw a sharp response from the Kremlin and police.

Navalny unveiled his plan hours after President Vladimir Putin, who polls suggest is a shoo-in for re-election, registered his candidacy at the central election commission ahead of the March 18 vote.

The commission ruled on Monday that Navalny was not eligible to run against Putin due to a suspended prison sentence.

A furious Navalny, who says the sentence was part of a fabricated case designed to thwart his political ambitions, responded by calling for an election boycott.

That prompted the Kremlin to demand an investigation to determine whether his statement broke the law.

On Wednesday, Navalny upped the ante, saying he and his supporters would organize nationwide rallies on Jan.

28 in 85 towns and cities, including Moscow and St Petersburg, to support his call for an election boycott.

"We refuse to call the reappointment of Putin an election," Navalny said in a statement on his website.

"We are not going to vote and will convince everyone around us not to vote.

We are going to campaign (for a boycott) with all our might." TURNOUT A boycott could pose a problem for the Kremlin which is keen to ensure a high turnout in the election to help confer legitimacy on Putin's expected victory amid some signs of apathy among voters.

Under Russian law, the time and place of rallies must be agreed with the authorities who have often declined to authorize them in the past, citing conflicting events or security concerns.

When the opposition has gone ahead anyway, the police have broken up rallies by force and detained attendees.

Polls show that Putin, who has led Russia for 18 years as either president or prime minister, is on course to comfortably win another six-year term, allowing him to rule until 2024, when he'll turn 72.

The former KGB officer is running as an independent, a move seen as a way of strengthening his image as a "father of the nation" rather than as a party political figure.

The ruling United Russia party, which he once led and which controls three quarters of seats in the lower house of parliament, has said it will support him, as will Just Russia, a pro-government center-left group.

Allies laud Putin for restoring national pride and expanding Moscow's global clout with interventions in Syria and Ukraine.

But Navalny says Putin has been in power too long and that his support is artificially maintained by a biased state media and an unfair system which excludes genuine opponents.

Navalny has made a name for himself by successfully leveraging social media and conducting high profile corruption investigations into senior officials.

He has also organized some of the biggest anti-government protests in years.

Opinion polls, whose accuracy Navalny dismisses, put his support in single digits while giving Putin an approval rating of around 80 percent.

(Additional reporting by Katya Golubkova and Polina Nikolskaya) Tatyana Makeyeva / Reuters Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in Moscow on Dec.

24, 2017.     .

For more infomation >> ( US News ) Putin Critic Navalny Steps Up The Pressure After Kremlin Crackdown - Duration: 5:22.

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Is The Weeknd's 'My Dear Melancholy,' About Selena Gomez? | Genius News - Duration: 2:10.

MAN: Hey man, I gotta ask you man, real quick, wait.

MAN: Can you listen to a Weeknd song if it comes on?

JUSTIN: Hell, nah, I can't listen to a Weeknd song.

MAN: You can't?

MAN: Why not?

JUSTIN: That shit's wack.

For more infomation >> Is The Weeknd's 'My Dear Melancholy,' About Selena Gomez? | Genius News - Duration: 2:10.

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( US News ) Kremlin Will Scrutinize Navalny's Call To Boycott Elections - Duration: 6:25.

Kremlin Will Scrutinize Navalny's Call To Boycott Elections

MOSCOW, Dec 26 (Reuters) - Hundreds of Russian celebrities, sportspeople and politicians nominated President Vladimir Putin for re-election on Tuesday, hours after the Kremlin said it wanted opposition leader Alexei Navalny investigated for calling for a boycott of the vote.

Navalny called for the boycott of the March 18 election on Monday after Russia's central election commission ruled he was not eligible to run for president due to a suspended prison sentence hanging over him.

The 41-year-old lawyer, who says he's being excluded on false grounds because the Kremlin is running scared, said he would use his campaign headquarters across the country to call the election's legitimacy into question and organize protests.

The Kremlin, which points to polls that show Putin is the runaway favorite with Navalny trailing far behind, on Tuesday set the scene for possible police action against Navalny and his supporters whose protests have been broken up before.

"The calls for a boycott will require scrupulous study, to see whether or not they comply with the law," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call.

Declining to comment on the election commission's decision to bar Navalny, Peskov shrugged off allegations that the presidential poll would be a farce without the opposition leader who has made a name for himself by leveraging social media and conducting corruption investigations into senior officials.

"The fact that one of the would-be candidates is not taking part has no bearing on the election's legitimacy," said Peskov.

Hours later, Putin, 65, was feted by his supporters, almost 700 of whom pledged to back him for re-election ― above the minimum 500 required to initiate a presidential bid.

Putin's own schedule was too busy for him to attend the Moscow nomination event, the Kremlin said, though he is expected to personally submit the necessary paperwork to the central election commission in the coming days.

FATHER OF THE NATION The former KGB officer is running as an independent, a move seen as a way of strengthening his image as a "father of the nation" rather than as a party political figure.

The ruling United Russia party and the Just Russia party have both said they will support him.

"I have worked under the leadership of the president for quite a long time so I know that everything will be alright for us with President Putin," Sergei Kislyak, Russia's former ambassador to the United States, now a senator, told Reuters at Tuesday's nomination meeting.

The commander of a nuclear submarine, Sergei Novokhatsky, told the same meeting that Putin had helped revive the Russian Navy, which he described as mired in apathy at the end of the 1990s with many of its ships stuck in ports.

Now, he said, wages were up and Russian ships served throughout the world.

"The course the motherland is on is the right one," Novokhatsky told the meeting.

If, as expected, he wins re-election, Putin, who has dominated Russia's political landscape for the last 17 years, will be eligible to serve another six years until 2024, when he turns 72.

Allies laud him for restoring national pride and expanding Moscow's global clout with interventions in Syria and Ukraine.

But Navalny, the opposition leader, says Putin's support is exaggerated and artificially maintained by a biased state media and an unfair system which excludes genuine opponents.

Navalny, who says he could defeat Putin in a fair election, has been jailed three times this year and charged with breaking the law for organizing public meetings and rallies designed to bolster his presidential campaign.

He has said millions of voters will be disenfranchised unless the authorities relent and allow him to run.

The European Union has also questioned the decision to bar Navalny.

″(It) casts a serious doubt on political pluralism in Russia and the prospect of democratic elections next year," the EU's External Action Service said in a statement on Tuesday.

"Politically motivated charges should not be used against political participation," it said, urging Moscow to ensure a "level playing field" for all Russian elections.

(Additional reporting by Denis Pinchuk in Moscow and Robin Emmott in Brussels; Writing by Andrew Osborn; Editing by Peter Graff)    .

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