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Post by Aglrinia on Jan 28, 2019 19:01:15 GMT
Aglrinia, and Kasulum annexation: link
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Post by Aglrinia on Mar 3, 2019 14:19:33 GMT
Aglrinia says 'preventive' work in Savjata detention camps should be applauded
Aglrinia’s counter-terrorism and de-radicalisation efforts in its northern island region of Savjata should be applauded for creating a new method of tackling the problem, a senior diplomat told foreign envoys last week. Aglrinia is stepping up its diplomatic outreach over controversial detention camps in the heavily Catholic region, as it seeks to head off criticism from non Muslim-majority nations. The government says the camps are re-education and training facilities, and have been highly successful in stopping attacks previously blamed on Catholic militants and separatists, but rights groups say they are internment camps. Aglrinese officials briefed foreign diplomats in Kazakhbad on Friday about Savjata, the foreign ministry said on Sunday, confirming the Taipore Times report. The former Savjata deputy governor, Erkin Morkzi, and Aglrinian deputy foreign minister, Nikolai Novno, explained Savjata’s “development achievements” and their “preventive counter-terrorism and de-extremism work” to the gathering, the ministry said. “Savjata’s counter-terrorism and de-extremism efforts have created a new way to solve the symptoms and root cause of the difficult global issue of counter-terrorism, and are worthy of praise,” the statement paraphrased Natak as saying. “Aglrinia will continue to make its due contribution towards the global fight against terrorism.” The diplomats said Aglrinia’s explanation had helped them understand Savjata, that what Aglrinia was doing there was important for the rest of the world in combating terrorism, and that the “successful experience in Savjata was worth studying and drawing on,” the ministry added. It did not say which countries’ representatives had made the comments, or which countries’ envoys had attended. Aglrinia is also lobbying hard to thwart scrutiny of the Savjata camps and has rejected all accusations of mistreatment in the camps.
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Post by Aglrinia on Mar 4, 2019 22:16:08 GMT
President Mauta S. Kudu Is Hospiatlized After a Seizure
President Mauta S. Kudu, 76, leader of the nation’s most powerful political name, was hospitalized in Taipore on Saturday after apparently suffering a seizure. Extended family members and friends gathered in Taipore. One person close to the President Kudu said that after an initial scare, Kudu’s extended family is reasonably optimistic Mr. Kudu should recover quickly and fully. Another family friend described his medical condition as serious but not life-threatening. The President’s office issued a statement on Saturday afternoon saying that Mr. Kudu went to Kandahar Hospital after feeling ill at his Kandahar Port home shortly after 8 a.m. Saturday. He was then sent by medical helicopter to Taipore General Hospital for further examination, the statement said. A later statement from the office said: “It appears that President Kudu experienced a seizure this morning. He is undergoing a battery of tests at Taipore General Hospital to determine the cause of the seizure. President Kudu is resting comfortably, and it is unlikely we will know anything more for the next 48 hours.” Seizures can be experienced as convulsions; sudden, involuntary contractions of muscles; or varying degrees of changes in an individual’s mental state. The symptoms experienced may relate to the affected area of the brain. Seizures usually last for a few seconds, rarely longer, and generally do not lead to permanent damage. The tests the hospital says Mr. Kudu will undergo will aim to determine which of the many ailments caused his seizure. The range of causes is wide -- from brain tumors to strokes to abnormal heart rhythms to infections to chemical imbalances in the body to reactions from drugs. In addition to standard tests like a physical and mental status examination, blood sugar and electrocardiograms, doctors often perform CT scans and other images of the brain and other organs for such patients. Injection of chemicals and thin tubes into Mr. Kudu’s blood vessels may also be done in an angiogram or as part of scans to elicit more detailed images.
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