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Over 50 dead and 12 injured after clashes at same Ecuadorian prison where a riot left more than 100 dead in September

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Dozens of inmates were killed and injured in clashes early Saturday in Litoral Penitentiary, the same prison in the Guayas Province where more than 100 were killed just over a month ago, Guayas Governor Pablo Arosemena said in an announcement.

Ecuadorian police began activating security protocols Friday night after reports of gunshots and possible confrontations between inmates at the prison, Arosemena said.

The deadly clashes appear to be an instance of gang violence, according to the governor, who said inmates “not only used weapons and detonations, but they tried to suffocate (other prisoners), burned mattresses, and more.”

The Litoral Penitentiary on the outskirts of the coastal city of Guayaquil was also the site of brutal clashes at the end of September that claimed 118 lives and wounded 79. At least five of those killed were beheaded before security forces were able to restore order.
After that incident, Ecuador declared a state of emergency across the prison system for the second time this year amid rising violence. That state of emergency has been in effect since September 30. The state also promised to devote $24 million to the prisons system during the state of emergency.

More than 300 inmates have been killed in prison violence this year, according to figures from Ecuador’s prison service, SNAI.

A serious issue of overcrowding

Following the deadly September riot, Ecuador began working in October on pardoning and commuting thousands of sentences in order to free up space in the country’s chronically overcrowded prisons.
The war inside Ecuador's prisons
In July, Eduardo Moncayo, then-prison chief, told local media that the Litoral Penitentiary was the most overcrowded in the country, with more than 9,000 inmates in a facility planned for 5,000.
Such overcrowding is the primary cause of violence, Douglas Durán, director of the United Nations Latin American Institute for the Prevention of Crime (ILANUD), told CNN.

“According to our databases, in 2019 Ecuador jails were at 140% overcapacity. That is considered a cruel and inhumane treatment for the inmates under UN protocols, and it’s a chronic problem across the region,” Duran said.

Ecuador’s prison inmates are also often stunningly well-armed. In Guayaquil, they deployed automatic weapons and even grenades. At the Ibarra penitentiary, prison guards told CNN they feared being overwhelmed by a growing number of convicts with access to weaponry from machetes to explosives.
During the investigation into the September massacre, authorities seized guns, ammunition, 25 bladed weapons, three explosive devices and various drugs, according to SNAI. A video released by Ecuador Police captured security personnel retrieving some of the items from what appears to be one of the prison cells. The clip showed handguns wrapped in plastic, various knives, cell phones, packages of ammunition, and different packages of drugs.

CNN’s Stefano Pozzebon and Ana Maria Canizares contributed to this report.

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Ovation Global DMC launches four new destinations

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All local teams have been diligently preparing for the launch and are looking forward to welcoming event planners and groups.

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Campaigners make last effort to save man with intellectual disabilities from execution in Singapore

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Nagaenthran K Dharmalingam, a 33-year-old Malaysian man, was arrested in 2009 for bringing 42.7 grams (1.5 ounces) of heroin into Singapore. He is due to be executed by hanging on Wednesday.

The High Court dismissed a last minute constitutional challenge from his lawyer on Monday but granted a stay of execution so the decision could be appealed, lawyer M. Ravi posted on Facebook — a small glimmer of hope for Dharmalingam’s supporters.

During the appeal hearing on Tuesday, the court ordered another stay of execution after announcing Dharmalingam tested positive for Covid-19, according to Ravi. The stay of execution will remain in place until the new appeal is heard.

Dharmalingam’s older sister, Sarmila Dharmalingham, said in a statement the family has been “struggling” but she is “relieved” to hear the execution had been stayed.

“But I’m only a little bit happy, because I know they haven’t actually stopped the execution, only given it a temporary stay,” she said.

“We have been told by the prison that we will not be allowed to visit him anymore, and that we will only be allowed phone calls with him.”

Dharmalingam’s lawyers and rights groups fighting to save him say Singapore is violating international law by executing a person with a mental impairment. They have exhausted all other legal appeals and a petition to the President for clemency was unsuccessful.

Singapore’s Ministry of Home Affairs said in a statement Dharmalingam “was accorded full due process under the law, and was represented by legal counsel throughout the process.”

However, his lawyers argue that Dharmalingam should not have been sentenced to death under Singaporean law because he was incapable of understanding his actions. A psychologist assessed his IQ to be 69, which is internationally recognized as an intellectual disability. At his trial, the defense also argued he had severe attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), borderline intellectual functioning, and severe alcohol use disorder.

Dharmalingam has spent a decade on death row and during that time his condition has further deteriorated, his lawyers said.

“He has not a very good sense of what is happening around him,” said N. Surendran, a Malaysian lawyer who is representing Dharmalingam’s family, and adviser to Malaysian NGO Lawyers for Liberty. “He is disoriented. He’s got no real clue of what is going to happen to him.”

Surendran said executing Dharmalingam “would be tantamount to executing a child.”

An activist holds a placard before submitting a memorandum to parliament in protest at the impending execution of Nagaenthran K. Dharmalingam, in Kuala Lumpur on November 3.

Singapore has some of the strictest drug laws in the world. Trafficking a certain amount of drugs — for example, 15 grams (0.5 ounces) of heroin — results in a mandatory death sentence under the Misuse of Drugs Act. It was only recently — and after Dharmalingam’s case began — the law was amended to allow for a convicted person to escape the death penalty in certain circumstances.

Dharmalingam was convicted of drug trafficking and sentenced to death by Singapore’s High Court in 2010. His first appeal was dismissed a year later. Another appeal after Singapore amended its drug law was again rejected in 2018.

“The Court of Appeal affirmed the High Court’s decision and said that it was satisfied that Nagaenthran clearly understood the nature of his acts,” the Ministry of Home Affairs said in a statement.

The court argued Dharmalingam transported drugs “in order to pay off his debts” and he knew it was unlawful so he “attempted to conceal the bundle by strapping it to his left thigh.” It also said Dharmalingam was “continuously altering his account of his education qualifications, ostensibly to reflect lower educational qualifications each time he was interviewed.”

“This was ‘the working of a criminal mind, weighing the risks and countervailing benefits associated with the criminal conduct in question.’ Nagaenthran considered the risks, balanced it against the reward he had hoped he would get, and decided to take the risk,” the ministry said in its statement, quoting the court’s decision.

Public pressure

Dharmalingam’s case has sparked international condemnation — even British Virgin boss Richard Branson has appealed for clemency.
Malaysian Prime Minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob has written to his Singaporean counterpart Lee Hsein Loong asking for leniency, Malaysian state media Bernama reported.

More than 62,000 people have signed a petition urging Singapore’s President Halimah Yacob to issue a pardon. Last week, dozens of activists protested outside Parliament in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur.

Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Anti-Death Penalty Asia Network (ADPAN) and other rights groups have also called on the Singapore government to halt the execution.

“Executing a man with a disability, who was convicted after an investigation and trial that provided no disability-specific accommodations, violates international law and won’t deter crime,” Emina Ćerimović, senior disability rights researcher at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

“Singapore should commute Nagaenthran Dharmalingam’s sentence and amend its laws to ensure that no one is subjected to the death penalty, certainly not people with intellectual or psychosocial disabilities.”

Surendran, the lawyer, said the execution order was “sickening beyond belief.”

He criticized the court for ordering the appeal hearings on Tuesday, arguing it gave little time prepare submissions overnight.

“These unreasonable court directions and unholy rush to have both hearings heard in less than 24 hours amounts to a blatant denial of due process to Nagaenthran contrary to Article 9 of the Singapore Constitution. No criminal justice system in any country which upholds the rule of law, rushes through criminal appeals in this manner; and all the more so in a death penalty case,” he said.

Family ‘shocked’

Dharmalingam’s family, who live in Ipoh, northwestern Malaysia, were notified of his impending execution only on October 26. His lawyer in Singapore, M. Ravi posted the letter to Facebook, calling the order “state sanctioned murder.”

The letter stipulated only five members of Dharmalingam’s family would be allowed to enter Singapore and would need to contend with a list of Covid regulations.

Four family members — his mother, brother, sister and a cousin — managed to travel to Singapore and meet with Dharmalingam in Changi prison but were “shocked” at his condition, Surendran said.

“They see a completely different person, they’re not able to get through to him,” he said.

Anti-death penalty activist Kirsten Han, launched a crowdfunding campaign that raised more than $19,000 Singapore dollars to pay for the family’s flights and hotels.

“This is not something that the family could have afforded themselves,” she said.

She said the execution order, made worse because it was issued shortly after the important Hindu festival Deepavali, which Dharmalingam’s family celebrates, is “very emblematic of how cold and clinical the entire death penalty regime is.”

“The Singapore government has insisted for a very long time that (the law) protects Singapore. But drug policy experts say there’s no proof that this sort of punitive capital punishment regime deters drug trafficking,” Han said.

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Jon Gruden sues NFL and commissioner Roger Goodell

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The lawsuit was filed Thursday in Clark County, Nevada District Court.

Gruden resigned in October as head coach of the Raiders after reports emerged of him using homophobic, racist and misogynistic language in emails while he worked as an ESPN analyst.

“The complaint alleges that the defendants selectively leaked Gruden’s private correspondence to the Wall Street Journal and New York Times in order to harm Gruden’s reputation and force him out of his job,” Gruden’s attorney Adam Hosmer-Henner said in a statement. “There is no explanation or justification for why Gruden’s emails were the only ones made public out of the 650,000 emails collected in the NFL’s investigation of the Washington Football Team or for why the emails were held for months before being released in the middle of the Raiders’ season.”

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy told CNN in a statement, “The allegations are entirely meritless and the NFL will vigorously defend against these claims.”

The suit claims the NFL’s actions have led to Gruden suffering from “severe financial damages and harm to his career and reputation.”

Though the source of the leaked emails is unknown, the lawsuit claims they were leaked by the NFL and alleges the league deliberately sought to hurt Gruden while other details of the investigation into the Washington football team were kept secret.

“In contrast to the formalities of the Washington Football Team investigation, Defendants’ treatment of Gruden was a Soviet-style character assassination,” the lawsuit says. “There was no warning and no process. Defendants held the emails for months until they were leaked to the national media in the middle of the Raiders’ season in order to cause maximum damage to Gruden.”

The NFL regular season runs from September 9 to January 9. Gruden coached the first five Raiders games.

McCarthy told CNN in October the league had no plans to release more details from the investigation for confidentiality reasons.

“Out of 650,000 emails obtained months earlier in connection with the investigation into workplace misconduct by the Washington Football Team, Defendants weaponized a small subset that were authored by Gruden prior to his hiring by the Raiders. Defendants then purposefully leveraged these emails to cause the termination of Gruden’s coaching contract, endorsements, and sponsorships,” the lawsuit says.

It claims Gruden should be awarded compensatory damages and “exemplary and punitive damages as a result of Defendants’ oppression, fraud, or malice,” but does not specify an amount.

Investigation came after accusations against Washington team management

In July, the NFL announced it fined the Washington organization $10 million after an independent investigation found the club’s work environment was “highly unprofessional,” especially for women.

The fine came after 15 former female employees and two journalists who covered the team accused team staffers of sexual harassment and verbal abuse. The club launched an investigation last July, which the NFL took over in August.

How an investigation of the Washington Football Team led to the resignation of the Las Vegas Raiders' head coach

In October, the Wall Street Journal reported Gruden used racially insensitive language to describe NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith in a 2011 email.

The lawsuit says that after the emails were revealed, “Defendants pressured the Raiders to fire Gruden.”

The Raiders did not and Gruden coached another game.

The suit claims the NFL and Goodell “ratcheted up the pressure by intimating” more documents would be made public.

Then the New York Times reported it reviewed more emails and found Gruden denounced women being employed as on-field officials, a team drafting an openly gay player, and the tolerance for national anthem protesters.

The lawsuit alleges the league and commissioner leaked the emails the Times reported on.

Many of Gruden’s emails, covering a seven-year period, were sent to Bruce Allen, the Washington team’s then-president who was fired in December 2019, according to the Times.

A league source, just before Gruden resigned, confirmed the accuracy of the Times’ story to CNN.

Gruden was one of the NFL’s highest-paid coaches, having signed a 10-year, $100 million contract with the Raiders, according to salary tracking website Spotrac.

He first coached the Raiders from 1998 to 2001, then won a Super Bowl with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2002. At the time, Gruden was 39 and then, the youngest coach to win the Super Bowl.

He left the Bucs in 2008 and became a football analyst for ESPN and his messages were sent while he was working for ESPN as a color analyst during “Monday Night Football,” the Times reported.

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Wait?What?! Divyanka Tripathi And Vivek Dahiya Are Having Black Ice Cream In Dubai

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Divyanka Tripathi seems to be having a great time in Dubai. She regularly updates her Instagram with images and videos of her exploration of the exotic place and the variety of food it offers. From Turkish to English, Dubai is a dreamland for culinary connoisseurs. During her visit to the ongoing Dubai Expo, Divyanka and Vivek tasted some delicious food items. She offered an insight into her food preferences via some images and videos shared on her Instagram Stories, which showed a giant burger, some fingers, chutney and a chocolate ice cream.

Take a look at her post: 

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The black ice cream.

In one of the Stories, Divyanka Tripathi asks her husband, actor  Vivek Dahiya what is he having and he says, “it’s an ice cream by a Lithuanian company named “Dadu”. 

If Divyanka Tripathi’s Instagram Stories made you drool for burgers, here’s how you can have it in the comfort of your home. For those who are looking for non-vegetarian burger options, take a look at this mouth-watering chicken burger recipe.

Divyanka Tripathi’s Dubai trip has been an incredible food adventure for the couple. And, Vivek has confessed that they were “spoiled for choice in Dubai.” Previously, the actress had enjoyed a plate of Turkish cake with milk poured all over it. Then, she showed me a plate of Baklava ice cream and a cup of coffee at a restaurant.

On Vivek’s birthday, they had a sky-view dinner. The spread featured bowls of salad and desserts.

Are you drooling?



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Travel Compositor launches its new cruise engine

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The project has been carried out in collaboration with the IST company, which will allow the inclusion of the largest possible number of shipping companies in a short time.

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Kandolhu Maldives appoints new island hosts

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Amiable and perceptive, the new island hosts complement the dynamic team of Kandolhu. Together they aim to make unwavering connections and continue steering Kandolhu towards greater heights.

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Masaba Guptas Saturday Breakfast Menu Has This Classic Dish

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As a celebrity who wears many creative hats, Masaba has a loyal fan base, who hang on to everything she has to say and her takes on food are a hit with her Instafam. The fashion designer-actress, who is known for her love for simple food, began her Saturday on a healthy note with a bowl of sabudana khichdi. Sharing a photo of the dish, she wrote, “Best breakfast,” and also added a yellow heart emoji. See the image here:

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Sabudana is a popular pick for foodies, who are looking for something healthy and yummy to eat. It is a versatile ingredient that can be consumed in more ways than one. For instance, you can make a fusion dish by adding quinoa and sabudana together to a yummy kesari bath. Or you can have it as an evening snack in the form of a bonda. Don’t forget to pair it with some yummy mint chutney. Else, you can also use sabudana as an accompaniment to your main dish by consuming it in the form of a papad.

Also Read: This Coffee With Anushka Sharma And Virat Kohli’s Faces On It Is “Delicious”

Masaba Gupta swears by healthy, home-cooked food and who better to ask for yummy food from than her mother, actress Neena Gupta. Masaba Gupta recently revealed that she follows her mother’s semolina appe. On her Instagram Stories, Neena Gupta wrote, “If you want to eat healthy, call your mom. It will be yummy, genuinely good for you and inexpensive.” Naming the south Indian breakfast dish, Masaba Gupta added, “Breakfast Semolina appe – courtesy, Neena Gupta.” Read about it here.

And often, Masaba Gupta also allows us to take a look at what she is eating along with the ingredients that go into making the dish.  On one such occasion, Masaba shared a photo of a delicious wrap that she was eating and stated that it is made of spinach, flaxseeds, and chia seeds, stuffed with succulent chicken, crunchy and fresh lettuce. Also, don’t forget a lot of spicy hot sauce.

Even when Masaba Gupta indulges in treats, she keeps it simple. Once Masaba was seen digging into some traditional Kerala sadya, which included dishes such as avial, ragi nool pittu (ragi flour string hoppers), and raw mango vegetable curry served on a banana leaf. “One of the many weekend meals. But this one takes the cake,” she said sharing a photo. Check it out here.

Masaba Gupta’s home menu is the best we have seen so far and we can’t wait to steal recipes from the powerhouse performer.

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US claims vital World Cup qualifying victory against rival Mexico

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In front of a sellout crowd of 26,000 in Cincinnati, Pulisic headed home in the 74th minute soon after coming off the bench.

And Juventus midfielder McKennie wrapped up the three points for the US against its rivals shortly before fulltime, tapping home from close range.

Now halfway through the qualification period, the USMNT moved to the top of the standings with the win. While the US and Mexico are tied on 14 points, the US has a slightly better goal difference.

After the win, Chelsea forward Pulisic paid tribute to the rivalry the US and Mexico have developed over the years.

“They understand what we’re about and we understand what they’re about,” Pulisic said.

“That’s what makes a great rivalry, and I’m just really happy that we could come out on top again tonight. We knew it was always going to be a good game against Mexico, and to get three points just helps us get a lot closer to qualifying for the World Cup.”

The victory is the US’ third over Mexico in CONCACAF competitions in 2021, the first time the USMNT has beaten Mexico three times in a calendar year.

Although the traveling Mexico started the brighter at TQL Stadium, Pulisic’s 17th goal for his country wrestled control of the game to the home team.

And McKinnie doubled the lead with minutes to go, after he dispatched his effort past the despairing Guillermo Ochoa in goal.

A heated rivalry, the game was not without flared tempers, with yellow cards being handed out to players on both teams after a scuffle over a throw in.

Defender Miles Robinson was shown a second yellow card in the 90th minute, meaning he will miss the USMNT’s next match on Tuesday against Jamaica.

Fireworks are seen on display prior to the World Cup qualifying match between Mexico and the US.

After the game, Mexico manager Gerardo Martino said his team remained focused on World Cup qualification.

“We are playing in World Cup qualifying, this isn’t a personal head-to-head against the United States,” he told the media. “I understand the importance of this game and the rivalry and having three consecutive defeats against an opponent that all Mexicans always want to beat.

“We have to focus on finding a way to regain our form in the qualifying.”

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TFWA President calls for unity and stronger working relationships to maintain post-pandemic momentum

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With the return of TFWA World Exhibition & Conference as a physical event, TFWA President Jaya Singh said he hoped the week would create a space in which insightful conversations would be shared and the spirit of co-operation would be strengthened in order to power the duty free and travel retail industry’s recovery.

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Harris’ trip to Paris signals a relationship back on track

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As they clasped arms, the chummy chemistry that had begun to emerge between the pair was on display for all to see — an outward sign of the latest US attempt to mend its relationship with France following a submarine affair that provoked a diplomatic rift between the two old allies.

“It’s important for us to be here,” Harris told Macron as they embraced. “We have a long and shared history — and future.”

The moment was just one of several images that defined Harris’ tightly choreographed five-day trip to the French capital and told the story that Harris — and President Joe Biden, who dispatched her there — intended to tell: that of a French-American relationship back on track.

The trip also served as an opportunity for Harris to emerge onto the European diplomatic stage for the first time as vice president, successfully playing an important foreign policy role for the Biden administration after stumbling during her first foreign trip to Mexico and Guatemala in June.

“I will tell you that it was a very productive and a good trip,” Harris said to reporters on Saturday, “and we have a lot of follow-up stuff. … Our work will continue, and we do it with a sense of optimism but a sense of strong conviction that the partnership between the United States and France remains and will continue to be very strong.”

Unlike in June — which saw Harris’ stumbles in an interview overshadow an otherwise successful trip — Harris managed to avoid controversy and steer clear of diplomatic and political minefields. She left France on Saturday and is set to arrive in Washington later in the day.

Asked by CNN about Macron’s push for a European strategic autonomy and a European army — a nuanced and sensitive issue in the relationship — Harris dodged, simply saying that US-French “support and alignment” would continue. And even as the breach of trust with France over the US-Australia submarine deal propelled Harris to the French capital, Harris and her aides said the issue did not come up with Macron.

“I will tell you that was not the purpose of this trip, and we didn’t discuss it,” Harris said Friday, when speaking to reporters in Paris. The vice president has been asked if she believed she had done the job to repair the relationship, after the scuttled deal.

“What we did discuss is the issues that are challenging us and the issues that are the basis for this relationship and the strength and the endurance of this relationship,” she added.

Harris’ trip produced just two tangible agreements, expanded US-French space cooperation and a US decision to sign onto the Paris Call for Trust and Security in Cyberspace, a French initiative setting rules of the road in cyberspace. But while French officials are still eager to see the US take concrete actions to bolster European defenses, the lack of tangible results on that front during this trip did not cause any distress in Paris.

After largely burying the hatchet with Biden ahead of the G20 in Rome last month, Macron seemed largely content to revel in the gesture of the vice president’s presence in Paris and the gesture of a lengthy trip as the next step in the process.

“I want to thank you for your presence. You’re more than welcome not just in this palace with myself and my ministers, but I can tell you that French people are extremely proud to have you here today,” Macron said as he opened a meeting with Harris at the Elysée, adding in French that he was “extremely grateful” for her visit.

Harris’ visit to the Elysée gave her and Macron an opportunity to spend time one-on-one, without aides present, before sitting down for a bilateral meeting that went over time, prompting French protocol officials to enter the room three times in an effort to wrap up the meeting.

Harris and Macron laughed about those attempts the next morning as they met for the Armistice Day Ceremony.

Beyond their time together, Harris’ solo visits were also powerful diplomatic messaging moments.

Harris’ multi-hour attendance and remarks at the Paris Peace Forum helped lend credibility to a Macron initiative. Her visit to the French biomedical research Pasteur Institute highlighted longstanding French-American cooperation on scientific research — as well as Harris’ own personal connection to that cooperation in the form of her mother’s research at the institute in the 80s. And a final visit to one of the sites of the 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris on the sixth anniversary underscored shared values and a commitment to fighting terrorism.

But it was Harris’ visit to the Suresnes American Cemetery, where Americans who fought and died in France during World Wars I and II are buried, that served as perhaps the most powerful reminder of the shared sacrifice between the two countries and a deeply rooted bond.

“If there is any question about the why or the what, in terms of our relationship as the United States with France, that is one visual and one concrete example of the endurance and the mutual commitment and interdependence between the United States and France,” Harris said on Friday, reflecting on her visit to the cemetery.

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UK risks trade war with EU over Brexit deal on Northern Ireland

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Speaking in Brussels just over a week ago, Frost suggested that if the EU does not give way to its demands, the UK could seek to trigger Article 16 of the Protocol — a kind of emergency brake that allows either side unilaterally to implement measures, or “safeguards,” if the Protocol leads to persistent “serious economic, societal or environmental difficulties” or to “diversion of trade.”

“Article 16 is very much on the table,” he said, according to Reuters. “Time is running out.”

The UK demands include removing Europe’s top court, the European Court of Justice, from any regulatory role in the Protocol and lessening checks and paperwork for goods moving between mainland Britain and Northern Ireland.

But the European Union remains adamant that the UK cannot seek to renegotiate the deal that was agreed by Johnson and Frost just 11 months ago to avert a potentially disastrous “no-deal” trade scenario — and has indicated it’s prepared to play hardball on the issue.

Frost met again Friday with European Commission Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič — their fourth such meeting in the past month. Their comments afterward suggested neither side wants to abandon talks and embark on a trade war just yet.

Speaking at a news conference, Šefčovič welcomed what he called “the change in tone of discussion with David Frost,” saying he hoped this would “lead to tangible results for the people in Northern Ireland,” according to Reuters.

Frost said “significant gaps” remained and that Brussels must address the “full range of issues” raised by the UK. But he agreed that intensified talks would take place in Brussels next week, according to a statement posted to Twitter.

The back-and-forth has created fears of further Brexit-related turmoil, even as the UK’s Conservative government grapples with ongoing supply chain issues exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, amid concern over how far each side is willing to go.

“I think there’s been essentially a scoping exercise going on — or another way of putting it is a game of chicken — and both sides are testing out the seriousness of the other,” Catherine Barnard, professor of European and employment law at the University of Cambridge, told CNN.

The latest tensions come on the heels of a nasty spat between the UK and France over post-Brexit fishing rights. “It may well be that the French were using the fishing dispute partly to get what they want on licenses, but also partly to show that the French are prepared to play dirty,” Barnard said.

“The EU has been briefing out all of the things that the EU would do if the UK triggers Article 16 unlawfully,” Barnard explained. “Triggering Article 16 in and of itself is not an unlawful act. What is unlawful is using it to completely rewrite the Protocol.”

Maros Sefcovic, vice president of the European Commission, addresses a news conference following negotiations over the Northern Ireland Protocol in London on Friday.

Former PM criticizes UK approach

Despite the ongoing talks, Frost’s remarks in Brussels have sparked wide speculation that the UK government may be preparing to trigger Article 16 imminently.

Former Conservative Prime Minister John Major told the BBC last weekend that he suspected such a move could happen within days of the conclusion of the UK-hosted COP26 UN climate conference.
France summons captain of seized British fishing boat to court as UK warns 'two can play that game'

This would be “colossally stupid,” Major said, as he warned that suspending parts of the protocol would “add to destabilization in Northern Ireland” and erode UK relations with both Europe and Washington. The UK was negotiating over the protocol “with all the subtlety of a brick,” he added.

There are already signs of heightened tensions within Northern Ireland. Four men hijacked and set fire to a bus in a pro-British unionist community in a Belfast suburb last Sunday, Reuters reported, days after two masked men torched another bus in an attack local media suggested was tied to discontent over post-Brexit trade issues.

The “safeguards” which could be implemented under Article 16 are not spelled out in the Protocol but could include steps such as either side imposing targeted tariffs, analysts say. There would also be an arbitration process.

However, Johnson and Frost’s dislike for the agreement they themselves signed last December has fueled fears the UK government could seek to use the Article 16 mechanism to achieve a wider aim of rewriting the deal.

Johnson’s government might seek to do this by suspending the provisions in the Protocol that keep Northern Ireland in the EU Customs Union and apply EU rules to goods, Barnard suggested, thereby undermining the entire Protocol. “If the UK were to do that, the EU has made it clear it would retaliate with force… in terms of a trade war,” she said.

There’s even been some suggestion that the EU might suspend the main trade deal, or Trading Cooperation Agreement, with the UK, Emily Lydgate, deputy director of the UK Trade Policy Observatory and senior lecturer in law at the University of Sussex, told CNN.

Frost appeared to soften his language somewhat in the UK House of Lords on Wednesday, saying he would not give up negotiating with the EU “unless and until it is abundantly clear that nothing more can be done. We are certainly not at that point yet.”

But he kept the emergency brake on the table, adding: “If, however, we do in due course reach that point, the Article 16 safeguards will be our only option.”

On the same day, Ireland’s Tánaiste (deputy prime minister) Leo Varadkar warned that triggering Article 16 would not result in a better deal for the UK.

“The message I’d send to Boris Johnson is that we have an agreement in relation to Northern Ireland, we have an agreement in relation to trade with the European Union — don’t jeopardize it,” Varadkar said, according to the Irish Times.

“You were part of negotiating it, you own it, it was hard won, it’s a mistake to think that by escalating tensions or by trying to withdraw from any part of it, that you’ll end up with a better deal: you won’t.”

‘A dangerous game’

The Protocol was agreed between the UK and EU to reflect the special status of Northern Ireland: out of the EU, along with the rest of the UK, but sharing a soft land border with the Republic of Ireland, an EU member state.

Under the Protocol, goods can flow freely between Northern Ireland and the Republic, avoiding the need for a hard border — an essential measure in preventing a return to sectarian violence on the island. The UK agreed that it would in turn protect the EU’s single market by enforcing checks on goods entering Northern Ireland from the British mainland, effectively drawing a customs border down the Irish Sea.

Full implementation of those checks has been delayed under repeatedly extended “grace periods.” Nonetheless, there have been supply chain issues and unionists in Northern Ireland feel let down by the government in Whitehall.

Vehicles wait to board a ferry to Northern Ireland at the Stena Line Cairnryan Terminal on September 9, 2021 in Cairnryan, Scotland.
The UK government called in a paper published in July for a “significant change” to the Protocol and has since been effectively trying to renegotiate key elements, including the role of the European Court of Justice in enforcing the application of its rules.

In October, the EU responded with an offer to streamline regulatory compliance checks within the framework of the deal. It was a “reasonably generous offer,” said Barnard, but was contingent on the UK taking steps which have not yet been implemented.

Carlo Petrucci, lecturer in EU law at the University of Essex, said the UK government’s approach appeared to be motivated by domestic politics and that it was hard to tell how serious it was. Triggering Article 16, which could lead to retaliatory measures such as quotas or tariffs being imposed by the EU, would be a “dangerous game,” he said.

Such a move could also damage the UK’s standing as it seeks to negotiate other trade deals. “Clearly the UK government is aware that there is a loss of international credibility at the moment that it wants to renege on the Protocol,” Petrucci told CNN.

Questioned in the House of Lords on Wednesday, Frost — accused by opponents of “sabre-rattling” over the Protocol — insisted that the UK government wanted to come to a negotiated agreement with the EU. That was, he said, “the best way forward for stability, sustainability and prosperity in Northern Ireland.”

Frost added: “I do not think that the threats that are swirling around of a reaction to Article 16 are in any way helpful, but obviously that is the business of the European Union.”

US pressure

Emerging later Wednesday from talks with US President Joe Biden, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen indicated that the United States was firmly in the EU corner on the issue.

“President Biden and I, we share the assessment that it is important for peace and stability on the island of Ireland to keep the withdrawal agreement and to stick to the Protocol. This Protocol has managed to square the difficult circle that Brexit caused,” she told reporters outside the White House.

“We are willing as a European Union to show the utmost flexibility and we have shown utmost flexibility within the Protocol — but it is important to stick to what we have agreed and signed together, to work with that.”

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen speaks outside the White House on November 10 after meeting with US President Joe Biden.

US pressure may be a factor in the UK toning down its rhetoric after appearing ready to trigger Article 16 once COP26 was out of the way, said Lydgate.

Boris Johnson's government in fresh swirl of murk and sleaze accusations

“Obviously the US has come down against this, and so for the UK to take a policy decision that angers and alienates the EU and angers and alienates the US is a pretty bold move,” she said.

“My sense is that the UK is sensitive to some extent to the reputational damage this could cause and that they aren’t likely to trigger Article 16 imminently, but nor are they likely to back down in the sense of saying that they accept the EU’s reform proposals and bring an end to the dispute.”

Instead, Lydgate said, it seems likely the UK and the EU will enter into another period of discussions, leaving the issue dragging on.

Meanwhile, the EU is keen to show the UK that it is “no pushover,” said Barnard, and to demonstrate to Poland and Hungary, two member states currently challenging the bloc’s legal status quo, as well as to other global trading partners, “that the EU takes the treaties it signs seriously.”

“The stakes are much bigger than just the EU-UK relationship,” she said. “The political question is whether Boris Johnson has got the stomach for a fight of this kind… There’s already quite a lot on his plate.”

CNN’s Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.



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WTTC reveals Saudi Arabia as upcoming host for its 22nd Global Summit

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Global Summit in Riyadh to take place in late 2022.

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New Delhi braces for emergency measures as toxic smog worsens

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A thick haze of toxic smog hung over the Indian capital, exacerbated by a spike in the burning of crop waste in surrounding farmlands.

It reduced visibility and the Air Quality Index (AQI) hit 470 on a scale of 500, according to the federal pollution control board. This level of pollution means the air will affect healthy people and seriously impact those with existing diseases.

According to the pollution board’s “Graded Response Action Plan,” air quality remaining “severe” for 48 hours must prompt states and local bodies to impose emergency measures that include shutting down schools, imposing ‘odd-even’ restrictions on private cars based on their number plates, and stopping all construction.

In a circular late on Friday, the board said the government and private offices should reduce the use of private transport by 30% and advised the city’s residents to limit outdoor exposure.

“Meteorological conditions will be highly unfavorable for dispersion of pollutants till November 18, 2021 in view of low winds with calm conditions during the night,” the board said.

Toxic foam coats sacred river in India as Hindu devotees bathe in its waters

Earlier this week, local authorities had ordered a shutdown of brick kilns, increased the frequency of mechanized cleaning and a crackdown on garbage burning and dust.

The concentration of poisonous PM2.5 particulate matter averaged 329 micrograms per cubic meter of air. The government prescribes a “safe” PM2.5 reading at 60 micrograms per cubic meter of air over a period of 24 hours.

PM2.5 is small enough to travel deep into the lungs, enter the bloodstream and can cause severe respiratory diseases, including lung cancer.

“This is becoming a nightmare,” said Gufran Beig, founder project director of air quality and weather monitor SAFAR that falls under the Ministry of Earth Science.

“Fire counts are in the range of 3,000-5,000 and not declining,” Beig told Reuters, referring to crop stubble fires in the regions around the capital.

India’s efforts to reduce crop-waste burning, a major source of air pollution during winter, by spending billions of rupees over the past four years have done little to avert a sharp deterioration in air quality.

Delhi, often ranked the world’s most polluted capital, faces extremely bad air in winter due to the crop stubble burning, emissions from transport, coal-fired plants outside the city and other industrial emissions, open garbage burning and dust.

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Tiger Woods won’t return ‘if he can’t play well,’ according to major winner Justin Thomas

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Woods had his first brush with fame when he was just 2 years old. The young golfing prodigy appeared on “The Mike Douglas Show” in 1978, winning a putting contest with comedian Bob Hope.

Woods, 6, sizes up a putt in Los Alamitos, California, in 1982. His real name is Eldrick, but his father nicknamed him “Tiger” after a South Vietnamese soldier he fought alongside with during the Vietnam War.

Woods and his father, Earl, celebrate after a 15-year-old Tiger won the US Junior Amateur Championship in 1991. He won the event in 1992 and 1993 as well.

Woods, 16, tees off at the Los Angeles Open in 1992. That was his first taste of PGA Tour competition, albeit as an amateur. He missed the 36-hole cut.

Woods played for the United States during the World Amateur Team Cup, which took place in France in 1994.

Woods hits a tee shot during the 1995 Walker Cup, an international team event.

Woods talks to the media after winning his third-straight US Amateur in 1996. Throughout his life, Woods has worn red on the final day of a big tournament.

Woods played two years of college golf at Stanford University. He won the NCAA individual golf title in 1996.

Woods turned professional in August 1996, and it didn’t take long for him to win his first tournament. Six weeks after he announced he was going pro — with a famous “Hello, world” ad campaign for Nike — Woods won the Las Vegas Invitational. That earned him this big check, a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour and a spot in the following year’s Masters tournament.

Woods made history at the 1997 Masters, blowing away the field by 12 strokes to win his first major. At the time, it was also a record-low Masters score of 18 under par.

Woods hugs his father, Earl, after winning the 1997 Masters. Earl, a former Green Beret, was widely credited with developing his son’s prodigious talent and pushing him to be the ultimate competitor.

Woods arrives at an airport in Hamburg, Germany, in May 2000.

Woods plays a shot from the ninth fairway during the 2000 US Open in Pebble Beach, California. Woods won the tournament by 15 shots, a record for any major. It was Woods’ third major title by this point; he had also won the 1999 PGA Championship.

A month after the US Open, Woods won the 2000 British Open at the Old Course in St. Andrews, Scotland. That gave him the career Grand Slam — a win in each of the four different majors — at the age of 24.

Woods chips out of the rough at the 2000 PGA Championship in Louisville, Kentucky. Throughout his career, Woods has always had the largest galleries, with thousands of people flocking from hole to hole to watch him play. He’s also been credited with bringing in millions of new fans to the sport.

Woods reacts as he sinks a putt during a playoff at the 2000 PGA Championship. Woods defeated Bob May in the playoff to win his third straight major.

Fans watch Woods tee off on the 18th hole at the 2001 Masters. Woods went on to win the event and complete what’s now called the Tiger Slam — four consecutive major titles.

Woods chats with golf legend Jack Nicklaus at the Memorial tournament in June 2001. The two are widely considered to be the two greatest golfers in history, and only Nicklaus has won more major titles than Woods.

Woods arrives in a military vehicle before a golf exhibition in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in 2004. Woods spent the week training with Army troops before hosting a junior golf clinic for his Tiger Woods Foundation. Woods’ father, Earl, was stationed at the base in the 1960s.

Woods and Phil Mickelson line up their putts during the final round of the Ford Championship in March 2005. For much of Woods’ career, Mickelson was considered his biggest rival.

Woods celebrates with his caddie, Steve Williams, after his famous chip-in at the 2005 Masters. Woods went on to win his fourth green jacket.

Woods hugs Williams after winning the British Open in Hoylake, England in 2006. It was Woods’ first major win since the death of his father just a couple of months earlier.

Woods stands with his mother, Kultida, and his daughter, Sam, as a statue of him and his father is unveiled at the Tiger Woods Learning Center in Anaheim, California, in January 2008.

Woods had a fractured tibia and a torn ligament in his knee, but he gutted out a playoff win over Rocco Mediate at the 2008 US Open. It was his third US Open win and his 14th major title.

President Barack Obama hosted Woods in the White House Oval Office in April 2009.

Woods hits a shot during a PGA Championship practice round in August 2009.

Woods holds his daughter, Sam, as he and his wife, Elin, attend a Stanford football game in November 2009. Woods married Elin, a model, in 2004. The couple also have a son, Charlie.

Woods plays virtual golf with talk-show host Jimmy Fallon in 2011.

Woods jokes with golf great Arnold Palmer after winning the Bay Hill Invitational in March 2013 and regaining his spot as the world’s top-ranked golfer.

Woods falls to the ground in pain after hitting a shot at The Barclays in August 2013. A few months later, he would undergo back surgery for a pinched nerve.

From left, Woods, Jason Dufner and Mickelson hang out at the Muirfield Village Golf Club, where the Presidents Cup was taking place in Dublin, Ohio, in October 2013.

Woods kisses his then-girlfriend, skiing superstar Lindsey Vonn, at an event in Beaver Creek, Colorado, in 2015. The two dated for a couple of years.

Woods captained the US team to a Presidents Cup win in December 2019.

Woods putts during the second round of the Masters in November 2020.

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Steph Curry makes NBA history, passing Ray Allen for most three-pointers made

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Earlier this week, he overtook Wilt Chamberlain to become the oldest player to record 50 points and 10 assists in a game.

And on Friday night, the 33-year-old passed basketball great Ray Allen for the most three-pointers scored in all NBA games, including playoffs, in NBA history.

Curry connected with nine of his 17 three-point attempts in the Golden State Warriors’ 119-93 win over the Chicago Bulls, taking his tally in regular season and playoff games to 3,366, surpassing Allen’s total of 3,358.

He had come into the game just one behind two-time NBA champion Allen and equaled his record within the first few minutes of the game.

And he became the all-time lead just minutes later, drilling a long-range effort over Alex Caruso.

Astonishingly, Curry passed Allen’s record in 585 fewer games.

Curry ended the night with 40 points, his third 40-point game of the season, as the Warriors accelerated in the second half to beat the high-flying Bulls.

Curry shoots the ball during the game against the Chicago Bulls.

It is the 52nd time in Curry’s career that he’s scored 40 points or more in a game, as the Warriors continue their blistering start to the season, now with an 11-1 record.

Curry is now chasing Allen’s regular-season record of 2,973 three-pointers. Curry is on 2,896.

The win wraps an eight-game home stand for the Warriors, with the Bay Area team winning seven and losing just once.

“In general, the high point is establishing our home floor, that this is going to be a tough place to come win a game,” head coach Steve Kerr told the media afterwards.

“And a lot of that is the way we’re playing. A lot of that is our fans, the energy in the building. There’s a really good vibe about the team; the fans feel it.

“Great way to start the year but now we’ve got to go out on the road, and it’s going to get a lot tougher. We obviously are very happy to be where we are.”

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World Diabetes Day 2021: 5 Diabetic-Friendly Desserts For A Sweet Indulgence

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World Diabetes Day 2021: The love of desserts is one that every foodie shares! When the sugar craving kicks in, there is no stopping us till we haven’t had a bite of a sweet delight. We all know that for a diabetic, having desserts can be risky, yet sometimes diabetics partake in this ‘sinful’ indulgence. It is because desserts are absolutely delicious! Whether we are stressed or we are feeling low, a sugary treat immediately uplifts our mood and makes us feel better. But for a diabetic, it is important to practice moderation and keep a track of what they are eating. This World Diabetes Day, we have brought you some of the classic desserts we know and love, and all these desserts have a sugar-free twist!

Also Read: World Diabetes Day 2021: When Is World Diabetes Day? Significance And 5 Everyday Foods To Manage Diabetes

World Diabetes Day is annually celebrated on 14th November to increase the awareness of people all around the world about this disease. Diabetes has become a major concern worldwide. According to International Diabetes Federation, 1 in 10 people are suffering from this disease. It is extremely important to be aware of this condition.

World Diabetes Day 2021: 5 Diabetic-Friendly Dessert Recipes:

1. Rabri

We don’t have to give up on the delicious rabri. This recipe uses oats and sugar substitutes to give the same creamy dessert without having to worry about our health.

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Gajar ka halwa is a popular Indian winter dessert

2. Gajar Ka Halwa

Gajar ka halwa is our go-to dessert for special occasions. Especially during winters, when carrots are in season! With few substitutes, we get a delicious halwa that is diabetic-friendly.

3. Phirni

Phirni is one of the most popular rice-based desserts in our cuisine! This recipe has two layers, one filled with pista and the other with rose essence.

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Mousse is creamy and delicious.

4. Chocolate and Coconut Mousse

This sugar-free mouse is made of chocolate, coconut milk and sugar substitute, making it taste exactly like bakery-style mousse.

5. Badam Ki Barfi

One shouldn’t be deprived of delicious mithai, that is why we have this special sugar-free badam ki barfi recipe to satisfy your mithai cravings.

6. Chocolate Brownie

Biting into a fudgy, gooey chocolate brownie sounds like a dream! This dream is about to come true with this sugar-free chocolate brownie recipe.

7. Modak

Lord Ganesh’s favourite mithai, modak, shouldn’t only be eaten during Ganesh Chaturthi. With this sugar-free modak recipe, you can enjoy this sweet delight any time, guilt-free!

Try out these delicious diabetic-friendly desserts and let us know which one is your favourite in the comments section below.

Note: If you are a diabetic, please consult a diabetologist before you add anything new to your diet and always practice moderation along with regular exercise.

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Net Zero Carbon events pledge to be presented at COP26 Global Climate Summit

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On 10 November 2021, leaders from across different parts of the industry will be live at COP26 to introduce the pledge and the broad industry commitment.

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The World’s Top50 Short Term Property Managers 2022 announced by Rentals United

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Dominating the top 10 positions of this prestigious list this year, European companies: Awaze, Interhome, Sykes Holiday Cottages, Homerez, Direct Booker, Feriepartner, The Travel Chapter, and Sol og Strand.

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This Coffee With Anushka Sharma And Virat Kohli’s Faces On It Is “Delicious”

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From pictures of coffee dates with her husband, cricketer Virat Kohli to videos of her Sunday brunches, Anushka Sharma is a true foodie and loves to flaunt it. On Saturday, she began the weekend by sipping on some creamy coffee. And, this was no ordinary coffee but had the faces on Virat and Anushka on it. Clearly thrilled at the prospect of having her face designed on the coffee along with Virat’s, Anushka wrote, “We are so delicious.” She was also seen enjoying a macaron with her drink.

Also Read: Kriti Sanon’s Friday Snack Is A Classic Bun With Butter And Jam. Take A Look

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The coffee has their faces on it!

It is no surprise that Anushka Sharma swears by her coffee. The actor-producer cannot begin her day without a fresh cuppa. And, now, we have proof. Recently, Anushka shared an Instagram Stories in which she opened up about her love for the beverage. She wrote, “When the first of your 2 daily doses of coffee is over,” with a teary-eyed emoji. “Oh and, Morning fellas,” she added. In another post on Instagram, the actress also confessed her love for the drink and said, “Coffee makes me very optimistic. I love coffee. Thank you for listening.” Read about her love for coffee here.

And, sometimes, Anushka Sharma also loves pairing her coffee with some delicious snacks. Once, we saw her dig into not one but two yummy stuffed buns. Of the two, one bun had a white cream filling along with black and white sesame seed topping. The other had a rich chocolate stuffing that looked oh-so-yummy. Sharing the image, the actress joked, “Continuing on my health mission.” Read about it here.

And, when Anushka Sharma was in England along with her husband Virat Kohli and the Indian cricket team, she also followed the English tradition of high-tea. On one such occasion, the actress enjoyed hot tea and some scones. Sharing a picture, she wrote, “Tea and scones on a rainy English Summer Day.” Check it out here. 

We love Anushka Sharma’s candid posts and can’t wait to see what is on her plate next. Can you?

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