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작성자 Zeki
댓글 0건 조회 37회 작성일 25-01-16 16:44

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安寧 temu south korea 하십니까? 2024年 3月 9日, 土, 새벽 3時 54分입니다.(4:46) 글과 아침을 마칩니다. (4:58) 배터리가 28分이 지나야 充電이 끝납니다.​Sarah Schmeizel and Narin An atop leaderboard after 2nd round of LPGA event in ChinaNarin An, right, gets a shoulder rub before teeing off on the first hole during the first round of the LPGA Drive On Championship at Bradenton CC, Thursday, Jan. 25, 2024, in Bradenton, Fla. Sarah Schmeizel and Narin An were atop the leaderboard after two rounds of the Blue Bay LPGA on China’s southern island of Hainan, both at 9-under and one shot clear of Hye-Jin Choi Friday, March 8, 2024.Sarah Schmelzel tees off on the sixth hole during the first round in the Women’s PGA Championship at Congressional CC, Thursday, June 23, 2022, in Bethesda, Md. Schmeizel and Narin An were atop the leaderboard after two rounds of the Blue Bay LPGA on China’s southern island of Hainan, both at 9-under and one shot clear of Hye-Jin Choi, Friday, March 8, 2024.​SANYA, China (AP) — Narin An shot a 7-under 65 on Friday to join Sarah Schmeizel in the lead after the second round of the Blue Bay LPGA on China’s southern island of Hainan.Both golfers had a 9-under total of 135 to sit one shot clear of Hye-Jin Choi as they each look for a first victory on the LPGA Tour.Schmeizel and Choi both carded a 69.First-round leader Minjee Lee shot an even-par 72 and was two shots back along with Ruixin Liu, who finished with a 71. Four other players were three strokes off the pace.“My caddie and I are just really trying to manage the golf course well,” Schmeizel said. “Trying to not put us in places where if we miss the greens we’re going to make bogey for sure because the greens are really undulating and really difficult.”​Manassero shoots career-low 61 for European tour to lead in South Africa​EDENVALE, South Africa (AP) — Matteo Manassero shot a career-low round for the European tour of 11-under 61 to take a one-shot lead of the Jonsson Workwear Open in South Africa on Friday.The Italian hit a pair of eagles and seven birdies to go 15 under overall heading into the weekend at Glendower GC.Manassero’s previous lowest round of 62 came at the 2010 Hong Kong Open. That same year he became the youngest European tour winner at age 17 at the Castelló Masters Costa Azahar in Spain. But the 2013 USPGA Championship winner has struggled in recent seasons and played in the second-tier European Challenge Tour last year before restoring his playing privileges in the top category.“This is a long road and of course I’m happy with a round like this but it’s today, tomorrow’s tomorrow, and I don’t look behind very much, even if we tend to sometimes,” Manassero said. “So I just look ahead and try to improve the process, get better and see what comes.”Home favorite Oliver Bekker was one shot back. Northern Ireland’s Tom McKibbin and Spaniards Ángel Hidalgo and Iván Cantero were two shots adrift.This is the third consecutive week for the European tour in Africa, and the second week of a co-sanctioned event with the Sunshine Tour.​Manassero's 'best-ever round'sees him into Glendower lead​Britain Golf - BMW PGA Championship - temu south korea Wentworth Club, Virginia Water, Surrey, England - 26/5/17 Italy's Matteo Manassero plays from a bunker on the 18th during the second roundMarch 8 (Reuters) - Italy's Matteo Manassero blitzed the course as he hit an 11-under-par 61 on Friday for a one stroke lead after the second round of the DP World Tour's Jonsson Workwear Open at the Glendower GC.A career low round for the 30-year-old over the Johannesburg course included two eagles and seven birdies and took him to a 15-under-par two round total of 129.]He is one shot ahead of South Africa's Oliver Bekker and two up Tom McKibbin from Northern Ireland, Angel Hidalgo of Spain and his compatriot Ivan Cantero, the joint first round leader.I never even came close (previously) to touching 11-under so it's the best round I’ve had in my life. I couldn't be happier,&quotManassero said.It's a target golf course and if you put yourself in position and hit some good irons then (low) scoring is really possible,&quothe added.Manassero, who won his first European Tour event aged 17 and still holds the record for the youngest victor, is back on the tour after a five year absence having qualified again through last year's Challenge Tour.Bekker hit a second successive 65, which included 10 birdies and three bogeys.Hidalgo and McKibbin both carded eight-under 64s while Cantero hit two eagles in his 67, but bogeyed the second last hole.​Ancer and Burmester shoot 63 to take first-round lead at LIV Golf in Hong KongCaptain Joaquín Niemann of Torque GC hits his shot from the 15th tee during the first round of LIV Golf Jeddah at the Royal Greens G&CC on Friday, March 1, 2024, in King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia. HONG KONG (AP) — Abraham Ancer and Dean Burmester shot 7-under 63s Friday to share the first-round lead at the inaugural LIV Golf in Hong Kong.Both players had strings of five consecutive birdies on the relatively short 6,710-yard Hong Kong GC course.They led by one stroke over a group that included Martin Kaymer and Louis Oosthuizen.Burmester didn’t practice earlier in the week because of an illness. The same thing happened in December and he ended up winning the South African Open Championship.“Seems to be every time I get ill, I seem to play OK, so that’s great news,” Burmester said.Ancer was one of seven players who had a bogey-free round.“I didn’t think there was going to be that many low numbers, but I don’t know, I guess it’s just playing perfect,” he said. “The greens are really good. There’s just a lot of guys that are playing really good at this time.”Joaquin Niemann, who won the Jeddah tournament in Saudi Arabia last week for his second LIV victory in three starts, shot 67, as did Jon Rahm.Anthony Kim, who is making his second straight start after a 12-year layoff and finished 33 shots behind Niemann last week in Saudi Arabia, shot 76.The Hong Kong tournament is the second of three LIV Golf events that are part of the Asian swing, with the third in early May in Singapore. The week before Singapore, the LIV series will be in the Pacific region with a second consecutive tournament at The Grange in Adelaide, Australia from April 26-28.The temu south korea next LIV tournament will be in Miami from April 5-7.​South Korea regulator may sanction Meta over marketplace, say media reports​People walk behind Meta Platforms logo during a conference in Mumbai, India, September 20, 2023. SEOUL, March 8 (Reuters) - South Korea's antitrust agency will consider imposing sanctions on Meta Platforms (META.O), opens new tab for allegedly failing to protect some users of online marketplaces operated by Facebook and Instagram against fraudulent transactions, news reports said on Friday.The Korea Fair Trade Commission (FTC) had investigated possible violations of the country's e-commerce law and had sent an examination report to Meta late last year, Yonhap news and the Dong-a Ilbo newspaper reported, citing unnamed sources.The report is a step before the agency's commissioners meet to consider the findings and formally decide on measures.The agency alleged Meta has failed to implement adequate measures to protect and provide a remedy to users of Facebook and Instagram marketplaces when disputes arose over sales transactions, as required for e-commerce outlets, Yonhap said.The FTC declined to confirm the report citing its policy of not commenting on an ongoing investigation.Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment.While Facebook and Instagram are social media platforms and are not registered as e-commerce businesses, the marketplaces they operate effectively require them to comply with the law, Yonhap said.The news reports came after a South Korean consumer protection watchdog said it was reviewing the practices of major overseas shopping platforms, including Alibaba's (9988.HK), opens new tab AliExpress and Temu.​South Korea to improve young doctors'pay, denies healthcare is in crisis​SEOUL, March 8 (Reuters) - South Korea plans quick measures to improve pay and working conditions for young doctors, the government said on Friday, addressing a key demand by medical trainees who have walked off the job, but denying there was a full-scale healthcare crisis.Prime Minister Han Duck-soo said the current practice of forcing young doctors to work 36 hours at a stretch was partly responsible for their protest walkout and must be changed.We will start the trial as soon as possible,&quothe said, adding that the government would consider limiting to 24 hours the period that resident doctors and interns must work continuously.More than 10,000 medical interns and resident doctors are protesting against a government plan to increase medical school admissions by 2,000 a year to tackle a shortage of doctors. The country has one of the world's fastest-ageing populations.The striking doctors argue that simply adding medical students will not address pay and work conditions, and could possibly exacerbate the problems.While not backing off the government's plans for more medical students, the proposals outlined by Han appeared aimed at finding common ground with the protesters.The striking doctors and medical associations that have been critical of the government did not immediately publicly comment on the proposals.Medical workers walk at Severance Hospital in Seoul, South Korea, February 21, 2024. From this month, trainee doctors in paediatrics will receive an additional allowance of 1 million won ($757), and the government plans similar payments for other trainee doctors, Han said.It will start with those in essential specialisations such as emergency medicine and general surgery and will allocate additional government funds, he said.President Yoon Suk Yeol has taken a hard line against the protesters, taking temu south korea steps toward suspending their medical licences for defying return-to-work orders.The president said on Wednesday their action had created chaos&quotin major hospitals that employ trainee doctors as a key share of their staff. However, officials said on Friday the situation has stabilised, partly because other doctors and nurses took on extra work.To suggest, as some have done, that we have a healthcare crisis, is an exaggeration,&quotsaid Vice Health Minister Park Min-soo.On Friday the government began allowing nurses to perform some procedures restricted previously to doctors, such as CPR and giving some medicines.($1=1,319.5400 won)​South Korea says waiting for Montenegro to extradite Terraform Labs founder Kwon​Do Kwon, the cryptocurrency entrepreneur, who created the failed Terra (UST) stablecoin, is taken to court in handcuffs, to face charges of forging official documents, in Podgorica, Montenegro, March 24, 2023.SEOUL, March 8 (Reuters) - South Korea is waiting for Montenegro to extradite Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon, the justice minister said on Friday, after reports that a court in the Balkan nation had overturned a decision to hand over the jailed crypto entrepreneur to the United States.Justice Minister Park Sung-jae said Montenegro had yet to contact his country but his ministry would take the necessary measures once they received an official notice.I understand there's not a lot left in Kwon Do-hyung's detention period so whatever measures need to be taken swiftly,&quotPark said, referring to Kwon by his full Korean name.Montenegro news service Vijesti reported that the Court of Appeals had overturned a High Court decision to extradite Kwon to the United States. Kwon has said that he would prefer to be extradited to South Korea.A civil trial on U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission fraud charges against Kwon was scheduled to start on March 25 although he was expected to miss at least the start of the proceedings because of the delay in extraditing him from Montenegro.Kwon and his company Terraform Labs were sued by the SEC last February over the May 2022 collapse of the TerraUSD and Luna cryptocurrencies, which authorities have said caused about $40 billion of losses in crypto markets.The SEC said Terraform and Kwon deceived investors about the stability of TerraUSD, a stablecoin&quotdesigned to maintain a constant $1 price, and how a popular Korean mobile payment app used the Terraform blockchain to settle transactions.Kwon has denied wrongdoing. He also faces related U.S. criminal charges, and has been held in Montenegro since his arrest last March.Kwon is separately under indictment in South Korea which has also sought his arrest.Kwon had appealed a ruling by a court in Montenegro's capital of Podgorica that he should be extradited to the United States instead of his native South Korea, which he preferred.Legal analysts have said Kwon would face a relatively lighter sentence if convicted in South Korea where the longest prison term sentence for financial crimes is 40 years.​The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra will tour Asia for the first time in JuneMetropolitan Opera’s new music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin, center, debut as conductor of the New York Philharmonic, performing Leonard Bernstein’s music from Bradley Cooper’s movie “Maestro,” Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2024, in New York.Metropolitan Opera’s new music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin, right, listens during an interview, Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2024, in New York.​NEW YORK (AP) — The Metropolitan Opera temu south korea Orchestra will tour Asia for the first time with nine performances in South Korea, Japan and Taiwan from June 19-30.Music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin will conduct concerts featuring soprano Lisette Oropesa, mezzo-soprano Elīna Garanča and bass-baritone Christian Van Horn. Venues include Seoul’s Lotte Concert Hall, Nishinomiya’s’ Hyogo Performing Arts Center, Tokyo’s Suntory Hall and Taipei’s National Concert Hall, the company said Thursday.The full Metropolitan Opera presented staged performances in Japan in 1975, 1988, 1993, 1997, 2001, 2006 and 2011.​MH370: What we know about Malaysia Airlines plane, 10 years on​A family member of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 holds a flower during a remembrance event marking the 10th anniversary of its disappearance, in Subang Jaya, Malaysia March 3, 2024.​March 8 (Reuters) - The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 ten years ago with 239 people on board remains one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries.The Boeing 777 went missing on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014.Satellite data analysis showed the plane likely crashed somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean, off the coast of western Australia. However, two major searches failed to come up with any significant findings.Here are some details of the search for MH370 and the unresolved mystery of what happened:WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED?The last transmission from the Malaysia Airlines plane was about 40 minutes after it took off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing.Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah signed off with Good night, Malaysian three seven zero, as the plane entered Vietnamese air space.Shortly thereafter, its transponder was turned off, which meant it could not be easily tracked.Military radar showed the plane left its flight path to fly back over northern Malaysia and Penang island, and then out into the Andaman Sea towards the tip of the Indonesian island of Sumatra. It then turned south and all contact was lost.UNDERWATER SEARCHESMalaysia, Australia and China launched an underwater search in a 120,000 sq km (46,332 sq miles) area in the southern Indian Ocean, based on data of automatic connections between an Inmarsat satellite and the plane.The search, which cost about A$200 million ($143 million), was called off after two years in January 2017 with no traces of the plane found.In 2018, Malaysia accepted a no-cure, no-fee&quotoffer from U.S. exploration firm Ocean Infinity for a three-month search, meaning the company would only get paid if it found the plane.That search covered 112,000 sq km (43,243 square miles) north of the original target area and also proved fruitless, ending in May 2018.Map of the searches for MH370WHAT DEBRIS HAS BEEN FOUND?More than 30 pieces of suspected aircraft debris have been collected along the along the coast of Africa and on islands in the Indian Ocean, but only three wing fragments were confirmed to be from MH370.Most of the debris were used in drift pattern analysis in the hopes of narrowing down the aircraft's possible location.INVESTIGATION REPORTA 495-page report into MH370's disappearance, published in July 2018, said the Boeing 777's controls were likely deliberately manipulated to take it off course, but investigators could not determine who was responsible.The report also highlighted mistakes made by the Kuala Lumpur and Ho Chi Minh City air traffic control centres and issued recommendations to avoid a repeat incident.Investigators stopped temu south korea short of offering any conclusions about what happened to MH370, saying that depended on finding the plane's wreckage.CONSPIRACY THEORIESThe inability to locate MH370's crash site has fuelled numerous conspiracy theories, ranging from mechanical error or a remote-controlled crash, to more bizarre explanations like alien abduction and a Russian plot.In recent years, some aviation experts have said the most likely explanation was that the plane was deliberately taken off course by an experienced pilot. Investigators, however, have said there was nothing suspicious in the background, financial affairs, training and mental health of both the captain and co-pilot.WILL THERE BE A NEW SEARCH?Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said this week the government is willing to re-open an investigation into the disappearance of MH370, if there was a compelling case to do so.Transport Minister Anthony Loke said U.S. seabed exploration firm Ocean Infinity had been invited to discuss a new search proposal. Loke said Malaysia would talk to Australia about cooperation in resuming the search once Ocean Infinity's proposal is approved by Malaysia's cabinet.​Son of Flight MH370 passenger conflicted over honouring the deadBy Mandy Leong​KUALA LUMPUR, March 8 (Reuters) - Every spring, China observes the Qingming tomb-sweeping festival, where families visit and clean the graves of their ancestors, making ritual offerings and paying respects.But for Chinese national Jiang Hui, 50, Qingming presents a dilemma: how to honour his mother, Jiang Cui Yun, who vanished 10 years ago aboard missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.It feels wrong to go and pay respects to my mother because she hasn't been declared dead. But if I don't pay respects, I miss her terribly and feel unable to do anything else in her memory,&quotJiang told Reuters in the Malaysian capital.There doesn't seem to be any alternative method available. Therefore, on that day, it's like being in an unbearable situation where neither doing nor not doing feels right.Jiang's mother, who was 71 when she went missing, was among 239 passengers and crew, including 153 Chinese citizens, aboard Flight MH370, a Boeing 777 which disappeared on March 8, 2014, en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in one of the world's greatest aviation mysteries.Two underwater searches conducted between 2015 and 2018 in the southern Indian Ocean, where the plane was believed to have crashed, have proved fruitless.Police officers form lines near the Malaysian embassy as family members of passengers aboard the Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 demand the search for the missing plane be resumed on the 10th anniversary of the aircraft's disappearance, in Beijing, China, March 8, 2024.​Jiang said he has struggled to explain his mother's whereabouts to his young son and often breaks down emotionally.He and loved ones of other passengers have consistently pushed for authorities in Australia, China and Malaysia to reopen investigations.On Friday, he and three other Chinese nationals visited the office of Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim to submit a letter pleading for the government to mount a fresh search.Anwar said this week Malaysia was willing to reopen a probe if there was compelling new evidence.Ten years have passed, but the goal of the family members, their original intention, remains unchanged: to find their loved ones, to find the plane. It's as simple as that,&quotJiang said.Bring them back to us, whether they are dead temu south korea or alive.​10 years on, parents of Chinese passengers on MH370 are still asking: What happened to my child?Li Shuce, bottom right, whose son was onboard the missing Malaysian Airline MH370, speaks to journalists near the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024. Ten years on, families of Chinese passengers who were on a vanished Malaysian Airline flight still are searching for answers. Friday marks the 10th anniversary of the disappearance of flight MH370. The Boeing 777 left Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing with 239 people on board on March 8, 2014, but took a sharp turn south and fell off the radar. It never made it to Beijing. A man hugs a woman as family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 arrive for a meeting with the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.Li Shuce, center, whose son was onboard the missing Malaysian Airline MH370, waves to journalists near the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.Family members of passengers onboard the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 plane leave after a meeting with officials from the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024. ​A woman whose son and granddaughter were on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370, cries as she greets others near the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024. ​A woman cries as she meets other relatives of passengers on board the missing Malaysia Airline MH370 plane at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​Family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 cry as they meet each other at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​Family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 shout slogans demanding the return of their relatives at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024. ​Family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 shout slogans demanding the return of their relatives at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024. ​Family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 hand in their demands to the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​Family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 shout slogans demanding the return of their relatives at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​A family member of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 passes near Chinese police officers at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​A Chinese paramilitary policeman stands guard outside the Malaysian Embassy where family members of passengers onboard the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 plane gathered in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​Family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 gather outside a court in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​Chinese police officers prepare to cordon journalists away from the entrance to the court where family members of passengers on board the missing Malaysian Airline MH370 have gathered in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024.​A woman whose son and granddaughter were on board the missing Malaysian Airline temu south korea MH370 gestures towards journalists at a security cordon near the Malaysian embassy in Beijing, Friday, March 8, 2024. Ten years on, families of Chinese passengers who were on a vanished Malaysian Airline flight still are searching for answers. Friday marks the 10th anniversary of the disappearance of flight MH370. The Boeing 777 left Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing with 239 people on board on March 8, 2014, but took a sharp turn south and fell off the radar. It never made it to Beijing. ​BY HUIZHONG WU​BEIJING (AP) — Ten years on, the families of Chinese passengers who disappeared on board a lost Malaysia Airlines flight still are searching for answers.On Friday, a few dozen relatives of the passengers met officials at China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing as part of their long journey for answers. They also visited the Malaysian Embassy to present their demands. Even after such a long time, the wound remains raw for many of the families.Friday is the 10th anniversary of the disappearance of flight MH370. The Boeing 777 left Kuala Lumpur bound for Beijing with 239 people on board on March 8, 2014, but took a sharp turn south and fell off the radar. It never made it to Beijing.The plane’s disappearance drew attention from around the world and has generated countless conspiracy theories. Only debris from the aircraft has been found.The majority of the plane’s passengers, 154, were Chinese.Among the families were elderly parents who lost adult children.“Where did the plane go? Where is the person?” said Li Shuce, who lost his son on the flight. “If he’s alive I want to see himif he’s dead, I want to see his body.”Li was surrounded by police, who were managing the crowd in front of the building where the families met government officials. They corralled journalists behind a barrier made of ropes and a whiteboard.Later, the families went to the Malaysian embassy in Beijing where they chanted in front of the building, “Malaysia, return my loved one! Without seeing them, we won’t give up.”Another woman who gave only her last name, Gao, because she was concerned about police harassment, said she believed her husband’s death last year was precipitated by not knowing the circumstances of their son’s death: He was returning from a vacation with his wife and 3-year-old daughter in Malaysia when the flight vanished.Gao and her husband belonged to a generation that could only have one child because of China’s one-child policy, which has since been relaxed.“My only request, I just want to know what happened to him. We need this,” said Gao, a Beijing resident. “I don’t have any other requests.” She said she didn’t care about possible compensation from the airline, which a Chinese court is holding hearings on.The families are still holding out hope for answers. Last week, Malaysian officials said they would consider restarting the effort to find the aircraft, after a U.S. company that conducted a previous search proposed another attempt.Gao said she has forced herself to carry on living for her family.“How could I give up? If I don’t stand up, how can I face them? When you meet these type of situations, you have to act for yourself, you have to be temu south korea strong.”​

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