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A heatwave is sweeping across parts of southern Europe and north-west Africa, with potential record-breaking temperatures in the coming days.

Temperatures are expected to surpass 40C (104F) in parts of Spain, France, Greece, Croatia and Turkey.

In Italy, temperatures could reach as high as 48.8C (119.8F). A red alert warning has been issued for 10 cities, including Rome, Bologna and Florence.

On Tuesday, a man in his forties died after collapsing in northern Italy.

Italian media reported that the 44-year-old worker was painting zebra crossing lines in the town of Lodi, near Milan, before he collapsed from the heat. He was taken to hospital where he later died.

Several visitors to the country have collapsed from heatstroke, including a British man outside the Colosseum in Rome.

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General Community / The epic quest to build a permanent Moon base
« เมื่อ: 13/07/23, 10:32:29 »
Whatever the final specification for the Artemis III lander, during subsequent missions, astronauts are going to live on the Moon for extended periods and explore further. This is likely to involve them using their spaceship as a base and travelling around in pressurised lunar rovers – mobile habitats trundling across the surface.

"To get the range on the Moon, you need mobility systems, the crew can't go very far on foot," says Merancy. "The science we want to do is in a lot of locations around the Moon, the goal is to build systems that would be capable of month-long or better excursions."

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Kalvin Phillips and Pep Guardiola
Kalvin Phillips made four appearances for Manchester City before the Qatar World Cup and 17 after returning from England duty in December
Manchester City midfielder Kalvin Phillips says criticism from manager Pep Guardiola that he was "overweight" was "a little hard to take".

Guardiola said he dropped Phillips for a Carabao Cup tie against Liverpool in December because he returned from World Cup duty "in no condition to play".

"For me, I wasn't overweight, but obviously the manager has seen it in a very different way," said Phillips.

"I just took it and did my best to get as fit as possible."

Phillips made just four appearances for Manchester City before leaving for Qatar in November to play for England in the World Cup.

He had struggled with injuries in the first few months of the campaign after signing from Leeds in a £45m deal last summer.

Those struggles feature in a documentary, Kalvin Phillips: The Road to City, which will be aired on Amazon Prime from 19 July.

The England midfielder told BBC Radio 5 Live's Breakfast show that while he disagreed with Guardiola's comments at the time, he worked hard and went on to make 21 appearances for City as they won the Treble in his first season at the club.

He said: "It was a little hard to take just because of how much it was oversized and how many people started talking about it.

"I was on the bench for the Leeds game straight after that and I was fit every match since then.

"It was just one of those things, it was a misunderstanding from me and some staff members. You will see a lot more in the documentary."

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General Community / The parents who sever ties with their children
« เมื่อ: 11/07/23, 11:37:51 »
Helen hasn’t spoken with her son in more than a year. The last she heard, he was in prison. Now aged 31, he’s been addicted to opioids for more than a decade.

“He’s tried to call me, probably to ask for money, and I have not been picking up,” explains Helen, who lives in England. “Right now, that’s the right decision for my safety and sanity.” As the primary caregiver for her son’s young daughter, Helen’s focus is providing a loving and secure environment for her to grow up in.

Helen remembers her son as an impulsive and destructive child, but with a wicked sense of humour and a kind heart. So, she was confused when, as a teenager, “his behaviour turned hostile and he started locking himself in the toilet for hours at a time”, she recalls. “When I confronted him, he’d tell me I was the mad one, the one on drugs. Sometimes, I wanted to laugh, it was so ridiculous.”

When Helen found out he was using heroin, she didn’t know where to turn. He would disappear for days, returning with all kinds of injuries. When he was at home, he was difficult to be around. “He never hit me, but would often destroy the flat in anger – there’s still a hole in the corridor where he kneed it,” she explains.

At work, she was paid in cash, which she says her son began taking from her wallet. Not wanting to say anything in case he got violent, she began keeping the money in a belt around her waist. “I said my earnings were going straight into an account so I could get a better credit rating,” she says. She ultimately felt unsafe living with someone deep in an addiction, and cut contact with him.

The relationship between a parent and their child is expected to be lifelong – a fruitful, loving bond that can survive any highs and lows. However, for some parents, maintaining this connection can be difficult. Eventually, a parent might feel they have reached a point of no return, and so choose to step away from their role.

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General Community / Why unemployed workers are so burnt out
« เมื่อ: 9/07/23, 09:52:38 »
Irina Gonzalez, 37, can attest to the struggle. In January, she found herself out of a job as part a wave of layoffs at the digital media property where she was an editor. She received roughly a month’s severance, and luckily found a new role right away. But that opportunity didn’t work out. She was, once again, out of work.

Gonzalez says unemployment put her in a financially tenuous place. Along with the stress of being jobless, she says she felt bitter and upset. And even though she needed to start job searching again, Gonzalez felt too burnt out to dive in. “I got to a place where I was saving dozens of job postings on LinkedIn every day, and just could not fathom applying. I kept trying to get out of bed and do something … but nothing was working. Nothing was making me get up. It was awful.”

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General Community / The white roofs cooling women's homes in Indian slums
« เมื่อ: 7/07/23, 18:47:13 »
The roof in Pinky's home in western India glistens in the bright sunlight. Covered in white solar reflective paint, it helps to limit the oppressive heat – which can reach 47.8C (118F) in June – from infiltrating her home during the hottest months.

Pinky and her four siblings, who are from the Bhil tribe – one of the largest tribes in India – live in a two-room home in Badi Bhil Basti, a slum in Jodhpur, the second largest city in the state of Rajasthan. Both their parents have died.

In March, Pinky and other women from Badi Bhil Basti applied coats of white solar reflective paint to their roofs. They had learned about the paint in the community meetings led by Mahila Housing Trust (MHT), a non-profit that helps poor women in Indian cities build heat resilience.


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