This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
GRAPHIC: A Canadian father was slaughtered in front of his family by a man police describe as “Indo-Candian”
All in broad daylight
No one rendered aid, man sips his coffee unbothered. People film him bleed out. This is the world we live in
All in broad daylight
No one rendered aid, man sips his coffee unbothered. People film him bleed out. This is the world we live in
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Dutch Police not messing about. Gave it the big one and still screamed like a girl…..
Forwarded from 🇦🇺AussieCossack🇷🇺
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
26-year-old Ukrainian soldier.
👊Respect to the subdeacon for fighting back.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Fifteen EU countries have joined the European Commission's lawsuit against Hungary over the LGBT law.
Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Austria, Ireland, Denmark, Malta, Spain, Sweden, Finland, Slovenia, France, Germany and Greece, as well as the European Parliament, will appear as third parties in the action launched by the European Commission last year, he informed Euronews server.
The deadline to join the lawsuit expired on April 6.
A Hungarian law passed in June 2021 contains provisions that prohibit or significantly restrict the depiction of homosexuality and gender reassignment in media and educational materials intended for audiences under 18 years of age.
The law caused a strong reaction in the political environment of the European Union. Many prime ministers have openly expressed their disapproval of their Hungarian counterpart, Viktor Orbán.
In July 2022, the European Commission filed a lawsuit against Hungary over the new law, which it
Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Austria, Ireland, Denmark, Malta, Spain, Sweden, Finland, Slovenia, France, Germany and Greece, as well as the European Parliament, will appear as third parties in the action launched by the European Commission last year, he informed Euronews server.
The deadline to join the lawsuit expired on April 6.
A Hungarian law passed in June 2021 contains provisions that prohibit or significantly restrict the depiction of homosexuality and gender reassignment in media and educational materials intended for audiences under 18 years of age.
The law caused a strong reaction in the political environment of the European Union. Many prime ministers have openly expressed their disapproval of their Hungarian counterpart, Viktor Orbán.
In July 2022, the European Commission filed a lawsuit against Hungary over the new law, which it