X-Plane 11 | ADDIS ABABA (HAAB) NAIROBI (HKJK) | B738 MAX | ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES | FLIGHT ET302 PART2
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X-Plane 11 | ADDIS ABABA (HAAB) NAIROBI (HKJK) | B738 MAX | ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES | FLIGHT ET302 PART2
Hello captains welcome back to another x-plane 11 video. In this flight we are flying from Addis Ababa airport (HAAB) to Nairobi (HKJK), with ZIBO MOD B738 MAX, We flying this on Vatsim. This is part 2. I hope you enjoying this flight.
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Ethiopia - L.A. transplant Gudina talks Quadrants EP
Please watch: J. Prince Talks Drake & Pusha T Beef, Rap-A-Lot Records, & New Book | Soulful Sundays
--~--
L.A. artist Gudina stops by the DXHQ to talk his recently released EP Quadrants.
Shot & Edited By: Valerie Sakmary (@valeriexrose)
Written By: Ural Garrett (@uralg)
British investigators in Mekele searching for diplomatic staff
SHOTLIST
Mekele - 8 March 2007
1. Medium of British government officials in car
2. Wide shot of convoy leaving Mekele national airport
3. Wide shot of British government official walking with press officer
4. Medium shot of two standing side by side speaking on telephone
5. Shot of the two walking away
6. Officials getting in car and driving away
7. Mid shot of Mekele town
8. Wide shot of town
FILE: Hamedali - 5 March 2007
9. Shot-up British Embassy vehicles abandoned on the side of the road
10. Bullet holes in car with sign reading: Ethiopian Quadrants PLC
11. Various interiors of the car - with clothes, food and cameras
12. Close-up of licence plate on vehicle
13. Various of journalists' convoy vehicles
14. Various of Hamedali villagers with guns
15. Zoom in to villager holding gun
16. Wide of village
17. Military walking through village
18. Group of donkeys walking through village
19. Close-up of donkeys
20. Various of journalists' convoy followed by Ethiopian troops
STORYLINE
One week after a tour group linked to the British Embassy in Ethiopia vanished in a hostile, scorching expanse of desert, there have been few solid clues into the kidnapping besides a sighting of the group's two bullet ridden trucks, abandoned by the side of the road.
The group of five Europeans, along with 13 Ethiopian drivers and translators, went missing last Thursday while travelling in Ethiopia's Afar region, a barren expanse of salt mines and volcanoes 800 kilometres (500 miles) northeast of the capital, Addis Ababa.
Ethiopia is not known for kidnappings - as some African and Latin American countries are - making the March 1 disappearance all the more baffling.
Nobody has taken responsibility for the missing or made any demands.
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said on Thursday she hoped the situation would be resolved soon.
Beckett gave no details about the investigation on Thursday, but said the families of the five missing Europeans received a briefing from the Foreign Office.
She said British Embassy staff abducted in northern Ethiopia were meeting local people and visiting geological sites.
The five are employees of the British Embassy in Addis Ababa or their relatives.
Ethiopia's Afar region, where the group went missing along with 13 Ethiopian drivers and translators, is one of the poorest regions in Ethiopia.
Two bullet-riddled British embassy vehicles were filmed by AP Television on Monday, abandoned at the roadside at Hamedali, the village where the five Britons linked to the embassy in Addis Ababa disappeared.
An AP Television news cameraman came across the two vehicles in Hamedali, a remote village which is the last staging post before the region's famous salt lakes.
The sides of each vehicle were riddled with bullet-holes. An embassy official in Addis Ababa said nobody was believed to have been in the vehicles at the time they were shot up.
The attack did not appear to be a robbery; mobile phones and luggage were still in the cars.
British investigators looking into the disappearance of the group of Britons affiliated with their country's embassy examined the two abandoned, bullet-riddled embassy cars on Monday.
Residents of the regional capital, Mekele, said they had seen and spoken to members of Britain's elite special operations forces in the region, working to secure the Britons' release.
Ethiopian military and officials escorted a convoy of news crews to see the village of Hamedali.
British Embassy officials also travelled with them across the rugged mountainous terrain.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Ethiopia, Day10, The REAL Hot Springs
Ethiopia, Day10, The REAL Hot Springs
Tourists's vehicles, press convoy, village where tourists were staying
Hamedali, Ethiopia
1. Shot-up British Embassy vehicles abandoned on the side of the road
2. Bullet holes in car with sign reading: Ethiopian Quadrants PLC
3. Various interiors of the car - with clothes, food and cameras
4. Close-up of licence plate on vehicle
Hamedali, Ethiopia
5. Various of journalists' convoy vehicles
6. Various of Hamedali villagers with guns
7. SOUNDBITE: (Ethiopian Dialect), Ali, Villager:
I heard people fighting at night so I went out of my house and when I did they caught me and then they started walking with us; the British tourists and some Ethiopian government officials. They took us walking for almost 30 kilometres in the dark and then they set me free because they realised I was nothing to do with them. They went with the British tourists, Ethiopians officials and some guides.
8. Zoom in to villager holding gun
9. Wide of village
10. Military walking through village
11. Group of donkeys walking through village
12. Close-up of donkeys
13. Various of journalists' convoy followed by Ethiopian troops
STORYLINE:
Two bullet-riddled British embassy vehicles were filmed by AP Television News on Monday, abandoned at the roadside at Hamedali, the village where five Britons linked to the embassy in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa disappeared last week.
An AP Television News cameraman came across the two vehicles in Hamedali, a remote village which is the last staging post before the region's famous salt lakes.
The sides of each vehicle were riddled with bullet-holes.
British investigators looking into the disappearance of the group of Britons affiliated with their country's embassy examined the two abandoned, bullet-riddled embassy cars on Monday.
The tour group, which also included 13 Ethiopian drivers and translators, went missing on Thursday while travelling in Ethiopia's Afar region, a barren expanse of dried lakes, salt mines and volcanoes 800 kilometres (500 miles) northeast of the capital.
Residents of the regional capital, Mekele, said they had seen and spoken to members of Britain's elite special operations forces in the region, working to secure the Britons' release.
Ethiopian military and officials escorted a convoy of news crews to see the village of Hamedali.
British Embassy officials also travelled with them across the rugged mountainous terrain.
A villager, Ali, told AP Television News his experience of the night of the incident.
I heard people fighting at night so I went out of my house and when I did they caught me and then they started walking with us; the British tourists and some Ethiopians government officials. They took us walking for almost 30 kilometres in the dark and then they set me free because they realised I was nothing to do with them. They went with the British tourists, Ethiopians officials and some guides, Ali said.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Correcaminosmundo Etiopía Simien Mountains General
Correcaminos mostrando los increíbles paisajes del Parque Nacional de las Montañas Simien en Etiopía
Correcaminos showing the incredible sceneries of Ethiopia Simien Mountains National Park
VOA Daily News 07-29-15 (transcript video)
VOA DAILY WORLD NEWS FOR ENGLISH LEARNERS
July 29, 2015
From Washington, this is VOA news. I'm Molly Johnson in Washington. Wrapping up the first visit to Ethiopia by a sitting U.S. president, President Barack Obama took time to meet personally with Ethiopians who benefit from U.S. development initiatives.
Anita Powell in Addis Ababa reports on how this East African nation has welcomed him.
Ethiopian farmer Gifty Jemal Hussein beamed as she looked up into the face of President Obama and told him how he changed her life.
Through a U.S. development project started by Obama, she had access to better seeds, which vastly improved her corn harvest.
Mr. Obama said his project called Feed the Future is to work more intelligently, not just to pour in more money.
With just a few smart interventions, a little bit of help, they can make huge improvements in their overall yields.
For farmers like Gifty, however, these big ideas have very real consequences. She grinned and offered a one-word response. It means thank you.
Anita Powell, VOA news, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The Turkish military says it launched a new round of airstrikes against Kurdish rebels on Tuesday.
Two F-16 jets hit positions belonging to the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party, the PKK, in southeast Turkey just hours after NATO voiced support for Ankara's response to what it called terrorism in Turkey.
There are no fresh reports of strikes on Islamic State positions in Syria, which began in parallel with the attacks on the PKK last Friday.
A NATO statement released Tuesday after emergency session read in part the security of the alliance is indivisible and we stand in solidarity with Turkey.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his forces are pressing their campaign against the militants in Iraq and Syria.
This is VOA news.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told skeptical lawmakers Tuesday that if the U.S. rejects the internationally brokered Iran nuclear deal there would be no restraints on Tehran developing a nuclear weapon.
It's a good deal for the world, a good deal for America, a good deal for allies and friends, Kerry told the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Congress is beginning a 60-day review of the pact crafted by the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia over months of negotiations.
Tehran agreed to restraints on its nuclear program and international inspections in exchange for lifting U.N. sanctions and Western sanctions that have hobbled its economy.
Lawyers for convicted Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard say U.S. officials have agreed to release him in November after 30 years in prison.
60-year-old Pollard, who was one-time civilian and navy analyst, was arrested in November of 1985 when he unsuccessfully sought asylum at Israel's embassy in Washington.
Pollard was convicted of passing suitcases filled with military secrets to his Israeli handlers and sentenced to life in prison, a rare instance of one ally spying on another that resulted in a criminal prosecution.
His supporters say he was punished excessively. Some U.S. prosecutors and officials still call him a traitor who should not be released.
There is an intense fight [waging] raging in Afghanistan, where Taliban insurgents have made territorial gains in three northern provinces. The rebel advances come just days before a second round of peace talks [before] between the warring sides is to be hosted by neighboring Pakistan. Ayaz Gul reports from Islamabad.
The fall of a district called Kohistanat in the Sur-i-Pul province is the latest in a series of battlefield gains the Taliban has made in the past few days.
Provincial officials say hundreds of security personnel guarding the area had to retreat in the wake of a well-coordinated assault from all directions.
The increase in hostilities comes as Afghan government and Taliban officials prepare to meet Friday in Pakistan for a second round of peace talks aimed at ending the conflict in Afghanistan.
Among other issues, Afghan officials say they intend to demand the Taliban halt its violent campaign.
Ayaz Gul, for VOA news, Islamabad.
South Korea has declared an effective end to the threat from the MERS outbreak, which killed 36 people and hurt Seoul's already slowing economy.
Since its discover in May, the outbreak of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome infected 186 people and forced more than 16,000 others into quarantine.
There have been no new cases reported for the last 23 days.
The outbreak did rattle the country, prompting thousands of schools to shut down and keeping many at home in fear of becoming infected.
The crisis was partly blamed for the performance of South Korea's economy, which in a second quarter grew at its slowest pace in six years.
Good to have that outbreak under control and clamped down and out.
I'm molly Johnson in Washington.
That's the latest world news from VOA.
IGF 2018 - Day 1 - Salle XI