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#les Republicains
vincentreproches · 2 months
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Le candidat, c’est le petit bonhomme en bas à gauche
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channeledhistory · 3 months
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Ein Gericht in Frankreich hat den Rauswurf von Éric Ciotti, dem Chef der konservativen Partei Les Républicains (LR), vorerst für ungültig erklärt. Das zuständige Pariser Gericht erklärte, es habe "die Aussetzung der Auswirkungen der beiden Entscheidungen über den endgültigen Ausschluss angeordnet, die am 12. und 14. Juni gegen Éric Ciotti ausgesprochen wurden". Die Aussetzung gelte nur "bis zur Verkündung einer endgültigen Entscheidung in der Hauptsache". Binnen acht Tagen müsse Ciotti in der Streitfrage ein Hauptsacheverfahren anstrengen, so lange bleibe er Chef der Partei.
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"Die Justiz hat gesprochen, ich bin Vorsitzender der Republikaner", sagte Ciotti in einer ersten Reaktion gegenüber der Nachrichtenagentur AFP. Für ihn sei diese Entscheidung "eine juristische Selbstverständlichkeit". Der Versuch, ihn zu entmachten, habe "auf keiner Rechtsgrundlage beruht". Zudem bekräftigte er gegenüber AFP, dass er an dem von ihm eingeschlagenen Wahlkampf-Weg festhalten und einer rechten Allianz zum Sieg verhelfen wolle, "um die extreme Linke zu verhindern, die eine große Gefahr für unser Land darstellt".
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Ein Bündnis der Partei der bürgerlichen Rechten mit dem RN wäre ein Bruch mit der Position, eine Brandmauer gegen die extreme Rechte aufrechtzuerhalten. Der parteiinterne Streit geht nun außer um die Zukunft Ciottis darum, ob die einstige Volkspartei und die Rechtsnationalen bei der Kandidatenaufstellung in den Wahlkreisen kooperieren, oder ob die Républicains eigenständig auftreten, so wie der gemäßigte Flügel der Partei es will. Bis zur Aufstellung der Kandidaten bleibt nicht mehr viel Zeit. Spätestens bis Sonntagabend müssen die Parteien ihre Kandidaten benannt haben. [...]
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tanadrin · 3 months
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This Week in French Politics
As I understand it:
Macron loses big to the RN in the EU elections
Calls legislative election for the 30th of June
Parties have only a week to strategize, form coalitions, and present canddiates; they begin to scramble to do so, with the left pretty quickly forming a Popular Front consisting of just about everybody to the left of Macron's liberal coalition
On the right, the head of Les Republicains (the party of Chirac and Sarkozy) announces an alliance with the RN
Immediately his own party says "uh, what the fuck, no we're not," and start demanding the head, Ciotti, resign
Ciotti locks himself in the party headquarters; MPs say they'll get emergency services to break down the door; French politics Twitter starts posting Scarface memes
They eventually get the general secretary of the party to come down and unlock the doors
Les Republicains announce they have met and are expelling Ciotti; Ciotti says, "no, the meeting you had didn't conform with party rules, I'm still in charge."
No one knows what is going on with Les Republicains at the moment, but Ciotti still has their Twitter account apparently?
The even-further-right party Reconquete has a meltdown over whether to join with RN or not (since RN seems to want to oust its leader, Zemmour, as a precondition of alliance); Marion Marechal, granddaughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen, and member of Zemmour's party, says people should vote for the subset of Reconquete candidates that are willing to side with RN, and not with Zemmour.
So, uh, I think the French elections are gonna be pretty wild.
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dykeravengard · 3 months
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cannot stop thinking about french right wing party les republicains' twitter account getting suspended
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fatehbaz · 2 years
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Almost four years after the French Algerian city of Orleansville was devastated by an earthquake in September 1954, the Franco-Algerian playwright Henri Krea published a play that presented the seismic disaster as a harbinger of [...] decolonization. [...] [T]he struggle was still underway when Krea wrote Le seisme: Tragedie. [...] [T]he play’s portrayal of natural disasters is intertwined with its portrayal of Roman/French colonialism in North Africa. [...] For the average historian, “Algeria 1954″ is shorthand for one thing: the beginning of the Algerian Revolution [...]. For the survivors of Orleansville, [...] “Algeria 1954″ invokes not only the revolution but also the earthquake.
For those who experienced environmental disasters in Morocco, Algeria, and France between 1954 and 1960, the consequent horrors were major events, not mere footnotes [...]. The inseparability [...] of disaster and decolonization, was inscribed across a range of historical texts [...]. These disasters occurred in the period of French Africa’s transition to independence [...]. 
Two of the disasters [...] were earthquakes: the September 9, 1954 earthquake and its seismic aftershocks in Algeria’s Chelif Valley, and the February 28, 1960 earthquake in Agadir, Morocco. The other two are of overtly anthropogenic origins: the flooding of Frejus, France, due to the collapse of the Malpasset Dam in 1959, and a mass outbreak of paralysis in 1959 Morocco, caused by a contamination of the food supply with jet engine lubricant from an American airbase.
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These four disasters were interrelated in multiple ways. Refugees from the Orleansville earthquake found themselves in Frejus when the Malpasset Dam collapsed, and Orleansville became a model for state responses to disaster in both Frejus and Agadir. The experience of the 1959 poisoning altered the political calculus of both the US State Department and the Moroccan political opposition following the 1960 earthquake. [...]. 
Steinberg has argued that the modern idea of a “natural” disaster is a technology of power, allowing elites to obscure the processes that produce disproportionate suffering among the disempowered. [...]
Scholars Gregory Mann and Emmanuelle Saada, among others, have urged their colleagues to integrate the study of particular localities into our understanding of imperialism in both metropole and colony [...], to see beyond the colonial cultures and discourses of the imperial administrative centers (Paris, Dakar) [...].
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The historiographic turn toward locality parallels efforts by Algerian scholars and memoirists to explore and remember local pasts [...]. Ait Saada’s examination of the Chelif Valley details an enduring discourse about the violence of the environment in Algeria that has persisted from the time of French conquest [...].
Ait Saada explains that the association of natural disaster with the uprising of the Algerian people appeared not only in the work of Henri Krea but also in that of other Algerian writers such as Habib Tengour and Belgacem Ait Ouyahia [...], as well as Jean Millecam and Mohamed Magani. Ait Saada could also have included the leftist dissidents Boualem Khalfa, Henri Alleg, and Abdelhamid Benzin, who echoed Krea in the memoir of the dissident newspaper Alger Republicain: “The autumn of 1954 opened with cataclysm. As if nature wanted to be the herald of the hurricane that, for more than seven years, would tear apart and convulse the country.” [...]
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The intersections of colonialism and decolonization with environmental calamity are equally evident in writings about the disasters in Frejus, Agadir, and Meknes. In Morocco, there has been much interest in distinct histories of localities long neglected in nationalist historiographeis [...]. This interest is due both to the widespread perception [...] that the 1960 earthquake had a deleterious and disorienting effect on Agadir’s relation to Moroccan heritage and identity and to the countervailing narrative of the Berber cultural movement that posits Agadir as the “capital” of Morocco’s Berber culture. [...]
[I]n these localities, the experience of catastrophe was inseparable from the upheavals of decolonization, and the shape of decolonization was crafted by catastrophe.
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Text by: Spencer Segalla. “Chapter One: Introduction.” Empire and Catastrophe: Decolonization and Environmental Disaster in North Africa and Mediterranean France since 1954. 2021. [Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks added by me.]
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flying-person · 3 months
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Allez Attal qui va parler, j'attends de lui un petit sursaut de dignité humaine pour clarifier le message tordu de son parti.
Ensemble a publié un message indiquant qu'ils se retiront si ils sont troisième face au fn ET si le 2eme partage leurs valeurs republicaines.
Je vais leur foutre leur valeurs republicaines au cul à coup de 49.3, non mais?-?-?
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ribstongrowback · 3 months
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hey kids! let's have some FUN with french electoral politics today, YAY!
so france has a party that went through many names, but is today known as "Les Républicains" (the republicans). Politically, they're Serious Conservative Liberals, meaning they tend to not be as openly fascistic as the burgerland republicans. They're Reasonable, is the vibe, and they're mainly allied with president Macron's governing party Renaissance.
Of course, they're just as cut throat as any other political party, but historically they've been quite effective in pitching themselves as the adults in the room when it comes to running the government.
They're not, they're just as bad at the economy as everyone else because capitalism is a nonsense self-defeating ideology, but they have good PR so it worked
until this week
see, our president has announced that he was going to disolve the assemblée nationale. this is a power our president has, which is basically him ending everyone's term in our main lawmaking body (sort of your house of commons / parliement equivalent) at will and calling for a new election. he can just do that, think of it as a mulligan.
seeing this, Republicain Eric Ciotti (air-ik see-oh-tee), made a "bold" (stupid) move by announcing they were going to form an alliance with the Rassemblement National, which is our Nazi party.
without consulting anyone within his party
and pretty much everyone in the Républicains was completely opposed to this move. Sure, they're nazis, but they're stealth nazis.
This has led to what i can only described as a circus parade of gaffes and kerfuffles as the party suffered a major breakdown. one of the main figures of the party tweeted something to the effect of "we're not here for 'breaking faggots' with the far right or breaking bus stops with the far left" which i'm sure you can appreciate as a turn of phrase.
but the real funny part is that the leaders of the party voted to kick him out, except that because of how their own bylaws work only his vice-president can do that, and so they can't fire him!
our boy Eric is now in a situation where only a few grunts in the low rungs (you know, the kind of peeps that make calls and distribute tracts on the street) are still loyal to him, and the Liberal Right All Stars are all fucking mad at him and want him gone, so he can't lead his party but they can't legally kick him out.
in that situation, what would you do? well, if you're called Eric Ciotti, you decide to straight up lock everyone out of HQ until they prommy to stop being mad at him.
after a lot of what it must be like to try and get a cat in a silly suit down a tree, another figurehead of the right (but not from quite his party, it's complicated) Valérie Pécresse (Valery Peck-ress) convinced him to let people back in (it helped that she had a spare key to the building
this then went to court, which immediately posed a problem because the lawyers of each side claimed to represent "Les Républicains" and so the court was like "hey please find a less confusing way to refer to each other" and neither side was budging, like fucking children, so they had to call for an outside arbitration.
although it would have been very funny, this court found his expulsion from the party to be void, and so he's still the boss. they're keeping quiet for now, likely to make sure that when the actual split happens it doesn't make them look like more of a bunch of toddlers than they already are, but it's unlikely that it'll end with a handshake and a sloppy.
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By: Henry Samuel
Published: Mar 23, 2024
French Senators want to ban gender transition treatments for under-18s, after a report described sex reassignment in minors as potentially “one of the greatest ethical scandals in the history of medicine”.
The report, commissioned by the opposition centre-Right Les Republicains (LR) party, documents various practices by health professionals, which it claims are indoctrinated by a “trans-affirmative” ideology under the sway of experienced trans-activist associations.
The report, which cites a “tense scientific and medical debate”, accuses such associations of encouraging gender transition in minors via intense propaganda campaigns on social media.
Jacqueline Eustache-Brinio, an LR senator who led the working group behind the report, concluded that “fashion plays a big role” in the rise of gender reassignment treatments.
If this factor and the risks involved are underestimated, she added, “the sexual transition of young people will be considered as one of the greatest ethical scandals in the history of medicine”.
LR senators now want to table a Bill by the summer that would effectively ban the medical transition of minors in France by halting the prescription or administration of puberty blockers and hormones to people under the age of 18.
Sex reassignment surgery could also be banned for minors.
Reacting to the report, Ypomoni, a French parents’ group, said: “We welcome this return to reason.”
Maud Vasselle, a mother whose daughter underwent gender transition treatment, told Le Figaro: “A child is not old enough to ask to have her body altered.
“My daughter just needed the certificate of a psychiatrist, which she obtained after a one-hour consultation. But doctors don’t explain the consequences of puberty blockers,” she added.
“My daughter didn’t realise that life wasn’t going to be so easy with all these treatments... She was a brilliant little girl but now she’s failing at school. And she is far from having found the solution to her problems.”
Shocking and ideological
Transgender activists and certain health professionals expressed alarm at the report.
Clément Moreau, the clinical psychologist and coordinator of the mental health unit of the association Espace Santé Trans (Trans Health Space), said the report was “shocking” and called the move “ideological”.
“Using blockers if necessary or hormones before coming of age reduces the rate of suicidality, depression and anxiety,” he added.
The French report comes after the NHS banned children from receiving puberty blockers on prescription earlier this month.
France’s health regulation body, the Haute Autorité de Santé, was already examining a similar move.
The LR senators want to accelerate the process following the report.
Citing British, Swedish and American studies, the report said that the number of children identifying themselves as trans has exploded over the past decade.
One hospital in Paris receives around 40 new requests from minors every year, with 16 per cent of those under the age of 12 and the report points out that many suffer from other issues.
A quarter of the children seen at the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital for gender dysphoria have dropped out of school, 42 per cent have been victims of harassment, and 61 per cent have experienced an episode of depression. One in five has attempted suicide.
Their conclusions are in line with those of British experts called in to investigate London’s Tavistock clinic over its use of mass gender reassignment surgery on minors.
David Bell. a British psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, found that a third of the children consulted at the Tavistock suffered from autistic disorders, and many were victims of family violence or had difficulty in accepting or expressing homosexuality, yet they were rushed into gender transition regardless.
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francepittoresque · 11 months
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21 octobre 1793 : la Convention adopte le calendrier républicain ➽ http://bit.ly/Decret-Calendrier-Republicain Par décret, la Convention adopte ce calendrier, avec le tableau annexé en reproduisant la nomenclature, la dénomination et les dispositions sous le titre de « Annuaire républicain », l’usage en étant instauré le 24 novembre suivant
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Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses II was issued a passport 3,000 years after his death in order for his mummy to fly to Paris.
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Ramesses II (c. 1303 BC – 1213 BC), commonly known as Ramesses the Great, is often regarded as the greatest, most celebrated, and most powerful pharaoh of the New Kingdom.
His successors and later Egyptians called him the “Great Ancestor.”
Ramesses II was originally buried in a grand tomb in the Valley of the Kings.
He was subsequently moved many times by priests who feared looters. He spent as little as three days in some places, and the priests recorded their actions on wrappings on his body.
Despite his resplendent wealth and power in life, his body was later moved to a royal cache.
With the passage of time, his sarcophagus  was lost to history.
It was re-discovered in a deteriorating condition in 1881. It is now on display in the Museum of Egyptian Antiquities.
It was his poor condition that prompted Egyptian authorities to seek help preserving him in the mid-1970s.
They found their experts in France and reluctantly decided to transport the 3,000 year-old mummy to Paris.
In 1975, Maurice Bucaille, a French doctor studying his remains, said that the mummy was threatened by fungus and needed urgent treatment to prevent total decay.
French laws dictated that entry and transportation through the country required a valid passport.
To comply with local laws, the Egyptian government issued a passport to the Pharaoh.
Seemingly, he was the first mummy to receive one. His occupation was listed as "King (deceased)."
The government didn’t want him to get a passport for publicity but believed it would afford them legal protections to ensure his safe return.
As countless artifacts and mummies have been plundered and stolen from Egypt, museums in Europe didn’t always respect Egyptian claims.
In 1976, his remains were issued an Egyptian passport so that he could be transported to Paris for an irradiated treatment to prevent a fungoid growth.
The New York Times reported on 27 September 1976 that the French military aircraft that brought Ramesses' remains from the Cairo Museum was greeted by the Garde Republicaine, France's equivalent of a U.S. Marine honor guard.
“The mummy was greeted by the Secretary of State for Universities, Alice Saunter‐Seite, and an army detachment.
Ramses II, who ruled Egypt for 67 years, received special treatment at Le Bourget Airport.”
It was then taken to the Paris Ethnological Museum for inspection by Professor Pierre-Fernand Ceccaldi, the chief forensic scientist at the Criminal Identification Laboratory of Paris.
During the examination, Cecaldi noted:
“Hair, astonishingly preserved, showed some complementary data, especially about pigmentation.
Ramses II was a ginger-haired ‘cymnotriche leucoderma'” (meaning he was a fair-skinned person with wavy ginger hair).
He is 5 ft '7 inches tall. They found battle wounds, arthritis and tooth abscess.
In ancient Egypt, people with red hair were associated with deity Set, the slayer of Osiris. The name of Ramesses II’s father, Seti I, means “follower of Seth.”
The examination also revealed evidence of previous wounds, fractures and arthritis, which would have left Ramesses with a hunched back in the later years of his life.
In 2007, it was discovered that small tufts of the Pharaoh’s hair were stolen during the 1976 preservation work (published by the BBC).  
A Frenchman named Jean-Michel Diebolt said he had inherited the hair from his late father, a researcher from the team who analysed the mummy.
Deibolt had tried to sell the hair through an online auction for 2000 euros (£1360) but was quickly apprehended by French authorities.
📷 : An artist’s creation of the passport. Image is for representative purposes only. The actual passport is not publicly available.
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Citizen Representatives, our search has not been in vain. When we annonced to you that the scroundel Barbaroux had been taken, we assured you that his accomplices Pétion and Buzot would soon be under our control. We’ve got them now, Citizen Representatives, or rather they are no more. The end which the law prescribes was too good for such traitors; divine justice reserved for them a fate more fitting to their crimes. We found their bodies, hidden and disfigured, half eaten by worms; their scattered limbs had been devoured by dogs, their bloody hearts eaten by ferocious beasts. Such was the horrible end of their still more horible lives. People! Contemplate this awful spectacle, the terrible monument to your vengeance!...      Signed The Sans-Culottes of the Societe populaire et republicain de Castillon.
Letter from the Popular Society of Castillon to the Convention, published in Gazette nationale ou le Moniteur universel, July 8 1794
I wonder if Robespierre read this… If so, it probably did no miracles for his already shaky mental health…
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beardedmrbean · 9 months
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A group of French lawmakers struck a tentative deal on Tuesday on a contested bill that will toughen immigration laws and has highlighted the difficulties President Emmanuel Macron faces in running the country with no majority in parliament.
The government had initially said this would be a carrot-and-stick legislation that would make it easier for migrants working in sectors that lack labor to get a residency permit, but would also make it easier to expel illegal migrants. But, without a majority in the lower house of parliament since the June 2022 elections, and in order to gain support from the right, the government has progressively agreed to water down measures meant to give some migrants residency permits, while tightening access to welfare, among other steps. The deal agreed by a special committee of seven senators and seven deputies is good news for Macron, who had made the migration bill a key plank of his second mandate.
But it could also boost Marine Le Pen, who called the outcome “a great ideological victory” for her right wing party. The conservative Les Republicains, who have over the years hardened their discourse closer to that of the far-right, also claimed victory. The left wing of Macron’s own majority has expressed unease over some of the bill’s more right-wing aspects and some may abstain or vote against the text when it goes through the two houses of parliament later on Tuesday. But Le Pen said her party would now back the text, which should ensure it will go through, barring surprises. Coming just six months before the European Parliament elections, the successful passage of the bill in parliament would be a welcome boost for Macron. “This bill will make our system more efficient because it will drastically simplify our procedures for processing asylum applications and because it will make it possible to expel criminals or radicalised foreigners more quickly,” Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne told parliament.
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motsimages · 1 year
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J'ai enfin pu lire un peu d'Arsène Lupin donc voici mes pensées pour les dernières nouvelles de notre héros :
Pour l'email 15, j'ai été très surprise par la lanterne électrique. Je m'y attendais pas et j'ai un peu cherché pour voir quand est-ce qu'on a inventé la lanterne électrique mais je n'ai pas trouvé. Dommage. Très sympa de mettre des dialogues avec soi même pour ajouter de la tension.
Pour l'email 16, j'ai adoré le rythme et l'intrigue. Et comme toujours chez Lupin, les dialogues sont magnifiques, mais celui-ci est venu avec force. D'abord on nous fait sympathiser avec le pauvre Dufour et puis... Le Doute !
Pour l'email 17, magnifique le fanfiction non officiel de Sherlock Holmes, pourquoi pas. Sympa la mention du calendrier republicain qui me fait penser qu'il y a eu vraiment des gens à l'époque de l'auteur qui sont bien nés, grandis ou morts pendant les 12 ans du calendrier et qui connaissent les dates de ces 12 ans en "républicain" et pas en "grégorien". Intéressant et curieux.
Puis, c'est vrai que cela fait longtemps que je ne lis pas de suite les épisodes, mais je me demande, vu que l'auteur suit l'actualité du moment et des quelques décennies avant, si Miss Nelly ne fait pas référence à Nelly Bly, la fameuse écrivaine et journaliste.
Je trouve que j'aime mieux les châpitres avec dialogues que ceux là où on parle moins, même s'il y a toujours des dialogues.
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Rioters in France ram car into mayor's house, injuring wife and child
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         France's interior minister says police arrested more than 700 people on the fifth night of unrest across the country. The family and friends of the 17-year old who was killed by police conducted a private funeral. The teenager, who was of north African heritage, was shot dead by police during a traffic stop. The shooting has sparked nationwide protests and reignited issues about police racism. During last night's riots, the home of a Paris suburb mayor was rammed by a car and set alight. Vincent Jeanbrun, mayor of the southern suburb of L'Hay-Les-Roses, said in a statement that his wife and one of his children were injured. Jeanbrun, from the conservative Les Republicains party, was not at home but at the town hall during the incident. The regional prosecutor has opened an investigation for "attempted murder."
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Alors qu'aux USA les Republicains ont renversé la vapeur et s'apprêtent à remporter les élections de mi-mandats, voila que Paul Pelosi se fait agresser par un conspi. Vous vous ferez votre propre avis, mais moi je trouve que cette attaque arrive à point nommé 28 octobre 2022
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tche-rien · 7 days
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Bêêêhhhhhh ! Tu ne vas quand même pas insinuer que les produits sûrs et efficaces... Môôôhhhh non ....
Var-Matin
Une femme évacuée par les airs après un malaise cardiaque à bord d’un navire de croisière en Méditerranée
Le centre régional opérationnel de surveillance et de sauvetage en Méditerranée (Cross-Méd) a coordonné l’évacuation médicale d’une femme victime d’un…
Le Republicain Lorrain
Lorraine. Malaise cardiaque mortel pour un maire de Haute-Marne : une prostituée chinoise devant le tribunal
Une prostituée de 56 ans a été jugée, lundi, à Nancy, pour non-assistance à personne en danger. La justice lui reproche d’avoir laissé mourir un …
Linfo.re
Seine-et-Marne : décès d’un rugbyman après un malaise cardiaque durant un entraînement
Linfo.re – Un rugbyman amateur de 31 ans est décédé après avoir subi un malaise cardiaque en plein entraînement à Ozoir-la-Ferrière, en Seine-et-Marne.
L’Indépendant
Un homme succombe d’un malaise cardiaque après une baignade à Gruissan
Malgré l’intervention des secours et de l’hélicoptère du Samu de l’Aude qui s’est posé sur la plage, un homme de 69 ans n’a pas survécu après avoir été…
Corse Matin
Propriano: un vacancier septuagénaire décède après un malaise cardiaque en pleine baignade
Cet après-midi du vendredi 6 septembre, à 14 heures, plage du Robinson à Propriano, un vacancier de 72 ans, qui se baignait en compagnie de son épouse a été…
La République du Centre
Les pompiers sont intervenus en centre-ville d’Orléans pour secourir un homme, victime d’un malaise cardiaque
Les pompiers du Loiret sont intervenus, vendredi 6 septembre, vers 18 heures, à l’angle de la rue de la République et du boulevard Alexandre-Martin,…
Le Dauphiné Libéré
Savoie. La Giettaz : un cycliste décède après un malaise cardiaque
Ce lundi 2 septembre, vers 13 heures, un cycliste de 64 ans est décédé d’un malaise cardiaque lors d’une sortie à vélo avec des amis dans le col …
ladepeche.fr
Une enseignante de maternelle meurt devant ses élèves le jour de le rentrée scolaire après un malaise en classe
Victime d’un arrêt cardiaque, l’enseignante de 57 ans s’est effondrée en pleine classe dans une école de Marseille ce lundi. Elle est décédée sur place.
Le Progrès
Haute-Loire. Un pèlerin fait un malaise cardiaque sur le Saint-Jacques à Monistrol-d’Allier
Un pèlerin belge de 55 ans a fait un malaise cardiaque à Monistrol-d’Allier, ce samedi 31 août. Il a été découvert par des randonneurs et des …
ladepeche.fr
Alors qu’il travaille dans son entreprise de stockage, un homme meurt soudainement à cause d’un malaise cardiaque
Un chauffeur de 28 ans a perdu la vie ce lundi 26 août sur un site logistique d’Amiens après avoir subi un malaise cardiaque. L’intervention des secours n’a…
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