Kibra

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  1. Two-year-old Ardi Rizal who smoked 40 cigarettes a day | Lion Net News LIONNETNEWS.COM Advertisements Jakarta. The world-famous little Indonesian chain smoker Ardi Rizal (2) smoked 40 cigarettes a...
  2. Apple is worth $2 trillion dollars | Lion Net News LIONNETNEWS.COM Advertisements Apple is writing Wall Street history again: In just two years, the tech company’s stock market value has...
  3. https://lionnetnews.com/bayern-after-3-0-over-lyon-in-the-champions-league-final/
  4. The Russian corona vaccine was not approved, but only registered, claims the broadcaster “RT Deutsch”. German media reported incorrectly here. The reality is different. The outcry in the German mainstream was great, according to the Russian state broadcaster “RT Deutsch”. The ARD wrote “high-risk experiment”, the “Süddeutsche Zeitung” “foamed” against the vaccine propaganda. Russian President Vladimir Putin would not have spoken of approval when it was announced German media had refrained from quoting Putin in full. In the Russian original, it would have said unequivocally: “As far as I know, this morning for the first time a vaccine against the new coronavirus infection was registered worldwide.” Registered – not allowed. Now, the term “registration” in relation to drugs, medicines, and vaccines is not widely used in German. It is misleading: if a drug is allowed to be manufactured, sold, and used on humans, the correct term for it is “approval”. “Registration” means “Admission” They speak of an “approval” Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices and also the European Medicines Agency. In Germany and the EU, these are the competent authorities who, after examining the evidence for the effectiveness, safety, and quality of the drug, decide whether it can be marketed. And should it be the case, the approval is officially and legally binding “Approval”. Legally, the “registration” of drugs in Russia means that they can be released onto the market. Article 13 of the Russian Federal Law on the Circulation of Medicinal Products states: “In the Russian Federation, manufacture, manufacture, storage, transport, import into the Russian Federation, export from the Russian Federation, advertising, dispensing, distribution, delivery, application, and destruction of medicinal products are permitted if they are authorized by an authorized federal body of the Executive branches have been registered. “ decree facilitates admission On April 3, 2020, the Russian government also passed one Decree provides for a somewhat simplified approval procedure for medicinal products. This decree relates, among other things, to emergency situations, but also to the prevention and treatment of diseases that pose a threat to people. “RT Deutsch” also refers to this decree. Among other things, this decree stipulates that a short report on the effectiveness and safety of a drug in the context of clinical research may be sufficient when applying for approval. Admission can also take place if the documents are not submitted in full. For these cases, the decree provides, among other things, for random checks of the approved medicinal product. Both the reprimand and the decree thus prove the legality of the approval – which has not been questioned in the media reporting.”registration” is an important step The fact that the state “registration” of a drug is of great importance in Russia is borne out by the open letter from the Association of Organizations Conducting Clinical Research. Several large pharmaceutical companies and research laboratories from Russia and abroad belong to this non-commercial organization. Read more https://lionnetnews.com/russian-corona-vaccineonly-registered-and-not-approved/
  5. Alawsuit against Trump and DeJoy has been filed in a federal court in Manhattan. It aims to provide adequate funding for the post office and its services prior to the election. Plaintiffs include Mondaire Jones, https://lionnetnews.com/dispute-about-postal-voting-in-the-usa/
  6. Woman in police custody for sending letters laced with dangerous chemicals to high commission Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) detectives apprehended a woman in Utawala, Nairobi county. The woman is in police custody for sending letters laced with dangerous chemicals to a high commission. The sleuths identified the suspect as Tracy Wairimu Ndegwa, 34. Officers from DCI nabbed her on Monday, August 3. The woman is in police custody for sending threatening letters to a diplomatic office in Nairobi last week. Woman in police custody for sending letters laced with dangerous chemicals to high commission. Read also https://lionnetnews.com/edgar-obare-granted-bail-for-releasing-information-about-natalie-tewa/ https://lionnetnews.com/betty-kyallo-steps-out-with-alinur-for-fa-final/ DCI indicated in their social media pages that, one of the letters was sprayed with hay fever pesticides and the other with an industrial chemical. The police did not, however, publish the high commission the culprit sent the letters to. This is not the first time that the woman has been involved in a terrorism hoax. She was out on bail after she was apprehended and indicted in court for a previous terrorism hoax. “Tracy Ndegwa had previously on June 23, 2020, been accused and charged with a terrorism hoax. She targeted the Kenya Prisons Commissioner-General. She was released on cash bail, recently” said DCI. In one of the letters seen by Lion Net News, she threatened the embassy boss to facilitate residence and travel documentation to an unnamed individual failure to which there would be dire consequences. “We will break your nones and assault you. we will put explosives where you think you are safest and rape you in turns” shared the DCI. The woman is currently in police custody and will be arraigned at the Kibera Law Courts once investigations are complete.