Friday, 6 May 2016

Russia says ceasefire reached out for 72 hours in Aleppo, Latakia - Syrian state news organization SANA



Russia's resistance service said an "administration of quiet" détente in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo and parts of Latakia region had been stretched out "for 72 hours starting at 1 a.m. on Saturday" (2200 GMT on Friday), Syrian state news office SANA reported.

A delicate nearby détente had been set up for Aleppo city since right off the bat Wednesday. In northern Latakia territory, it first took impact on April 29, after a more extensive détente bargain in western Syria expedited by Washington and Moscow separated.

Sueddeutsche Zeitung said on Friday that the wellspring of a large number of records spilled to the German daily paper from Panamanian law office Mossack Fonseca had senthttp://www.bookcrossing.com/mybookshelf/arfplayer/ them a statement, saying his inspiration was the "size of shameful acts" the papers uncovered.

The source had at no other time freely expressed why he released the reports, now known as the Panama Papers, said Sueddeutsche Zeitung (SZ), one of Germany's most respectable daily papers.

In a 1,800 word proclamation distributed on the SZ site on Friday, the source, calling himself "John Doe", commended other people who have released mystery and touchy records, for example, Edward Snowden, who uncovered points of interest of the U.S. government's mass reconnaissance program.

"For his disclosures about the National Security Agency (NSA), he merits a saint's welcome and a significant prize, not expulsion," the source composed.

He likewise said he would co-work with law requirement offices.

He approached the European Commission, Britain, the United States and different countries to find a way to secure individuals who uncover private data about such delicate issues instead of rebuffing them.

"Real informants who uncover undeniable wrongdoing, whether insiders or untouchables, merit invulnerability from government requital, full stop," he said.

The source, who reached the paper a year prior with an offer of scrambled inside records from Mossack Fonseca, denied being a spy yet said he had perceived the "size of shameful acts" depicted in their substance.

The archives cover a period over just about 40 years, from 1977 until last December, and imply to demonstrate that some organizations domiciled in assessment safe houses were being utilized for suspected government evasion, arms and medication arrangements and expense avoidance.

Reuters couldn't autonomously check whether the source was the same individual who released the first archives. The source's character and sex is not known.

Sueddeutsche Zeitung spent over a year, alongside other media outlets and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, examining the immense store of reports.

On Friday, Sueddeutsche Zeitung presented the proclamation by saying: "Now 'John Doe', the mysterious source, has sent the SZ a statement, which can be perused as a clarification of his activities – and as a suggestion to take action."

The source respected the way that the break had set off a verbal confrontation on "wrongdoing by the first class" however said insufficient move had been made.

"For the record, I don't work for any legislature or insight organization, straightforwardly or as a temporary worker, and I never have," he said.

The source was disparaging of banks, money related controllers, charge powers, the courts, and the lawful calling, and the media, saying he had offered the archives to a few noteworthy media outlets that had picked not to cover them.

"The aggregate effect of these disappointments has been a finished disintegration of moral gauges, at last prompting a novel framework despite everything we call Capitalism, however which is commensurate to monetary subjection."

The source finished the statement by saying "reasonable, boundless advanced stockpiling and quick web associations" ought to digitize the upheaval against wage disparity.

Caravans of evacuees stranded by a fierce blaze seething unchecked in and around the Canadian oil town of Fort McMurray advanced on Friday through the heart of the obliteration on the main interstate out of the district, going through the city's roasted remnants.

Wind-whipped flares thundering through overwhelming timber and brush dried by a spring heat wave have immersed about 250,000 sections of land (101,000 hectares) in western Canada's vitality heartland since emitting on Sunday.

The burst, the biggest of 40 rapidly spreading fires copying over the territory of Alberta, has constrained somewhere in the range of 88,000 occupants, practically the whole populace of Fort McMurray, to escape for security, and has undermined two oil sands generation locales south of the city.

The full degree of property misfortunes in Fort McMurray, situated around 270 miles (430 km) north of the common capital Edmonton, has yet to be resolved, yet powers said https://foursquare.com/user/177759770somewhere in the range of 1,600 structures were accepted to have been demolished. One examiner evaluated protection misfortunes could surpass C$9 billion ($7 billion).

Prior in the week most evacuees traveled south via auto on Alberta Highway 63, the main area course out of the region, in a moderate moving mass migration that left numerous briefly stranded on the roadside as they came up short on fuel.

Yet, different occupants who at first looked for safe house in oil camps and settlements north of the city got themselves cut off in packed conditions. They were constrained on Friday to backtrack their course back through Fort McMurray on Highway 63 as blazes kept on spreading.

Evacuees in somewhere in the range of 1,500 vehicles started making the 30-mile (50-km) trip at 4 a.m. in gatherings of 50 autos.

"It helped us to remember a battle area," said Marisa Heath, who burned through 36 hours in her truck in favor of the parkway with her better half, two puppies, a feline and seven little cats. "Ghostly. Whatever you could see was bond establishments of houses."

Helicopters drifted overhead looking for blazes, and police set up crisis fuel stations along the roadway to keep the line of autos moving. They headed towards wellbeing south of Fort McMurray in towns including Lac La Biche, 180 miles (290 km) away, and Edmonton more distant on.

The caravans were stopped quickly around noontime because of overwhelming smoke, yet authorities said the larger part of vehicles had as of now gone through town by then.

Powers wanted to carrier around 8,000 of the 25,000 evacuees who were at first pursued north of Fort McMurray.

The emergency brought a message of sensitivity from Pope Francis, who communicated bitterness and said he was appealing to God for the dislodged, particularly kids, and for those engaging the flames.

OIL PRODUCTION CUT

Around 33% of Canada's oil generation has been closed by the fire, as per a Reuters gauge.

South of Fort McMurray, CNOOC Nexen's Long Lake oil sands office and Athabasca Oil's (ATH.TO) Hangingstone task were in risk of being invade by blazes, crisis authorities reported. Both offices have been cleared.

BP Plc's (BP.L) Canadian unit has proclaimed a power majeure bringing about the lessening of accessible Western Canadian Select rough, among other Canadian evaluations, as per two exchanging sources acquainted with the matter.

There have been no known losses from the flame itself, however fatalities were accounted for not long ago in no less than one fender bender among the evacuees.

Winds were pushing the main edge of the primary flame toward the upper east into forested ranges, and far from town on Friday, powers said, however parts of the city were still on fire.

As of Friday, more than 1,200 firefighters were displayed against blasts crosswise over Alberta, supported by more than 100 helicopters and more than two dozen plane tankers prepared to drop water and fire-retardant chemicals on the blazes.

Be that as it may, the sheer greatness and force of the Fort McMurray fire generally opposed all endeavors to contain it.

Cecil Dickason, a Fort McMurray inhabitant who was a piece of the caravan, said the battered city looked "dreadful." Others depicted the city as dull and smoke-filled, pitted with roasted and deserted vehicles and roadside spot fires.

Whole neighborhoods were decreased to ruins, yet most evacuees fled without knowing the destiny of their own homes. The larger part escaped with couple of belonging, some compelled to abandon pets.

Bill Glynn, who participated in the escort, told the Edmonton Journal daily paper that he went through smoke so thick he dismissed the auto before him as they crawled through the city.

"It was unnerving," evacuee Sarah Babstock told the daily paper. "We came through with garments over our mouths so we could relax."

In a press preparation on Friday, Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said harm to Fort McMurray was broad.

"The city of Fort McMurray is not sheltered to come back to, and this will be valid for a critical timeframe," she said, including that officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police would secure and ensure what was left of the town.

The Alberta government has endorsed crisis financing for rapidly spreading fire evacuees and will give out C$1,250 ($966) per grown-up and C$500 ($387) per subordinate.

Paul Ryan and Donald Trump, the top Republicans in the United States, plan to meet one week from now to attempt to join their gathering, with both men focussed on the Nov. 8 presidential decision, however the Wisconsin congressman additionally maybe looking further ahead.

Speaker of the House of Representatives Ryan has welcomed Trump, the current year's feasible Republican presidential chosen one, to meet on Thursday with Ryan and other congressional pioneers on Capitol Hill, Ryan's office said in an announcement on Friday.

A key part of the discussion is certain to be Trump's contentious, in-your-face crusade persona and Republican pioneers' solicitations for him to tone it down, however political experts said Ryan will have different contemplations at the top of the priority list, too.

One issue is liable to be his own future, said Larry Sabato, executive of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics.

Ryan, 46, lost his 2012 crusade for VP as Mitt Romney's running mate. Like Romney, Ryan presumably has genuine questions that Trump, 69, can win this year, Sabato said.

The trial for a man blamed for acquiring the ambush style rifles utilized by a wedded couple to slaughter 14 individuals in San Bernardino, California a year ago has been put off until March, a judge ruled Friday.

Enrique Martinez was a youth companion of shooter Syed Rizwan Farook and supposedly arranged an assault with him in 2012 that was never done. Refering to the multifaceted nature of the body of evidence against Martinez, U.S. Locale Judge Jesus Bernal in Riverside, California, moved Martinez' trial date from July 19 to March 21, 2017, court papers appear.

Marquez was captured in December for his part in professedly buying the firearms utilized by Farook, 28, and his better half, Tashfeen Malik, 29, in their December 2 assault on an occasion party went to by Farook's collaborators.

Their ambush, which came a couple of weeks after Islamic State shooters and suicide aircraft executed 130 individuals in a progression of facilitated assaults around https://www.scribd.com/user/315042511/arf-playerParis, has raised tension about viciousness all through the United States and changed the tone of the race for the White House to incorporate an accentuation on national security issues.

Farook and Malik passed on in a shootout with police the day of the assault. Marquez, then 24, was captured two weeks after the fact, and was prosecuted for scheme and giving false data when acquiring guns. He was additionally accused of disregarding movement laws by going into a sham marriage with a relative of Farook.

In court, his open safeguards have contended that Marquez was just 19 when he purchased explosives and rifles later utilized by Malik and Farook and had not took an interest in their Islamic State-motivated assault at a gathering of San Bernardino province general wellbeing specialists.

Equitable leader Hillary Clinton has a higher likelihood than her imaginable Republican opponent Donald Trump of turning into the following U.S. president, however the crevice between the pair limited for the current week, as per the online political securities exchange PredictIt.

Clinton's likelihood on Friday was 61 percent, down from 65 percent seven days prior, as indicated by the site, which permits clients to wager little measures of cash on "yes" or "no" forecasts of future occasions. The likelihood that Trump will win the Nov. 8 decision was 40 percent, up from 34 percent.

Trump's clearing triumph in the current week's Indiana essential provoked his remaining Republicans rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich to drop out of the race, solidifying the businessperson's status as the gathering's possible chosen one.

He is presently trying out topics to use against Clinton to influence displeased Republicans to get behind his battle. On Friday, he scrutinized her utilization of a private email server while she was U.S. secretary of state.

PredictIt is mutually keep running by Washington political consultancy Aristotle and Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand. The majority of its clients are enlisted U.S. voters.

Likewise with surveys, expectations markets like PredictIt don't generally precisely estimate result. Ninety days back, its clients gave Trump a 20 percent likelihood of winning the administration, outlining how the big name agent's energy was disparaged.

Clinton is in a battle with U.S. Congressperson Bernie Sanders for the Democratic assignment and holds an unmistakable lead in agents.

Two conspicuous Turkish columnists were sentenced to no less than five years in prison for uncovering state insider facts on Friday, hours after a shooter attempted to shoot one of them outside the courthouse in Istanbul.

Can Dundar, editorial manager in-head of the restriction Cumhuriyet daily paper, who was unscathed in the shooting, was given five years and 10 months. Erdem Gul, the daily paper's Ankara authority boss, was sentenced to five years. They were absolved of some different charges, including attempting to topple the legislature.

The case, in which President Tayyip Erdogan was named as a complainant, has brought boundless judgment from worldwide rights assembles and expanded fears about opportunity of the press in Turkey, a NATO part and EU hopeful nation.

Hours before the decision was passed on, an attacker endeavored to shoot Dundar. In full general visibility, before a courthouse, the assault denoted a disturbing advancement in a nation as of now pondering bombings by Kurdish extremists and overflow of brutality from neighboring Syria.

The man yelled "trickster" before shooting no less than two shots with hardly a pause in between. A correspondent covering the trial seemed to have been injured.

A Reuters witness said the aggressor was kept by police. Prior to the shooting, he had drawn nearer correspondents, saying he had been holding up subsequent to early morning and trusted Dundar would be discovered liable. His intentions and foundation were not quickly clear.

"We encountered two death endeavors in two hours: one by guns, the other by law," Dundar told journalists taking after the trial. "There will dependably be worries that the requests of the most astounding office assumed a part in this decision."

The two writers are free pending claim. The court additionally chose to delay a hearing on isolated charges of connections to a terrorist bunch until the result of a related case.

In Washington, the U.S. State Department in an announcement voiced worry about the verdicts and approached Turkish powers to "backing an autonomous and free media, which is a crucial component of any majority rule, open society."

Nobody was instantly accessible for input at Erdogan's office after the decision.

Dundar and Gul had confronted up to life in prison on surveillance and different charges for distributed footage indicating to demonstrate the state knowledge organization taking weapons into Syria in 2014.

'Substantial PRICE'

Erdogan has recognized that the trucks, which were ceased by gendarmerie and cops on the way to the Syrian fringe in January 2014, had a place with the National Intelligence Organization and said they were conveying help to Turkmen doing combating both Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Islamic State.

He has blamed the writers for undermining Turkey's global notoriety and pledged Dundar would "pay an overwhelming value", raising resistance worries about the reasonableness of any trial.

"We say the occurrence we secured was a wrongdoing, not our scope," Dundar said. "What's more, for that we were stood up to by the president. He acted like the prosecutor of this case. He undermined us and made us targets."

Under the decision AK Party, which was established by Erdogan, Turkey has seized control of restriction daily papers and supporters and cut the satellite food of an ace Kurdish station, blaming them for terrorism-related exercises.

"This case isn't founded on law, it's political," said Mahmut Tanal, an official from the resistance Republican People's Party.

"Framework" ON TRIAL

The Committee to Protect Journalists denounced the decision.

"What was truly on trial was the Turkish criminal framework, which is blameworthy of gross wrongdoing," said the New York-based gathering's official executive, Joel Simon, in an announcement.

Writers have been focused previously. A month ago senior Turkish security authorities were among 34 respondents put on trial blamed for connections to the homicide of a conspicuous Armenian writer, Hrant Dink, 10 years back.

Dink, who ran a daily paper serving Turkey's 60,000 Christian Armenians, was gunned down without trying to hide on a bustling Istanbul road in 2007.

Gul and Dundar burned through 92 days in prison, half of it in isolation, under the watchful eye of the established court decided in February that pre-trial detainment washttp://www.coucoucircus.org/forum/profile.php?id=1282142 unwarranted in light of the fact that the charges originated from their reporting.

Europe's transient emergency is at a "defining moment" because of an arrangement with Turkey to stem the quantity of fresh introductions which is demonstrating its first victories, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said in remarks distributed on Saturday.

Under an understanding hit with the European Union, Turkey has consented to stop illicit transients achieving the mainland consequently for quickened EU increase talks, visa liberalization, and money related guide.

Juncker told the Funke Media Group that the arrangement, which came into power a month ago, was at that point empowering Europe to better deal with the stream of vagrants.

"We at a defining moment," he said.

"The arrangement with Turkey is having an impact and the quantity of vagrants is sinking essentially."

He added there still should have been an economical drop in the numbers before the "all-reasonable" could be sounded, yet said the arrangement had given the 28-part coalition space for move to make a reasonable and productive shelter framework in the medium term.

Europe is thinking about its biggest movement wave since World War Two, as a conventional stream of vagrants from Africa is intensified by displaced people escaping wars and destitution in the Middle East and South Asia.

The arrangement fixed off the primary course by which a million vagrants crossed the Aegean into Greece a year ago, however some accept new courses will create through Bulgaria or Albania as Mediterranean intersections to Italy from Libya resume.

Juncker censured the choice to assemble a wall amongst Greece and Macedonia.

"I don't share the perspective of some that this wall - or building wall in Europe when all is said in done - can contribute anything to the long haul arrangement of the exile emergency," he said.

"Wall may avert evacuees structure proceeding onward, yet no wall and no divider is sufficiently high to hinder these individuals from coming to Europe when they are escaping war and viciousness in their nations of origin."

The State Department's most senior human rights ambassador, Tom Malinowski, will visit Vietnam one week from now to urge it to gain more ground on human rights, the division said on Friday.

Gatherings by Malinowski, partner secretary of state for majority rule government, human rights and work, on May 9 and 10 will make ready for a visit to Vietnam by President Barack Obama in the not so distant future, the third U.S. president to go toward the southeast Asian country since Bill Clinton in 2000.

"In addition to other things, he will ask Vietnam to discharge political detainees without condition and support further changes that will make Vietnam's laws reliable with its worldwide human rights commitments," the State Department said in reporting Malinowski's visit.

The U.S. facilitated an arms ban against its previous foe in 2014 in the midst of a warming of relations saying human rights conditions had enhanced to some degree. In any case, concerns stay over the socialist government's gracelessness towards political rivals and treatment of specialists.

The nation has imprisoned dissenters, bloggers and religious pioneers lately, holding them for long stretches without access to family or lawful advice and regularly subject to torment or other abuse, as per Human Rights Watch.

Relations, in any case, have enhanced over oceanic security and Vietnam is an individual from the 12-country Trans-Pacific Partnership exchange agreement that incorporates nations, for example, Japan and Australia.

An indoor security camera gave the world an eerie five-minute look at one of the most exceedingly terrible fierce blazes in Canadian history as it thundered through a lounge room in Fort McMurray and the mortgage holder watched it copy on his cell telephone.

The video from a settled camera in James O'Reilly's home started with an apparently quiet shot of red dividers, a chestnut love seat and a sparkling fish tank before the perspective swung to substantial smoke, fiery debris and blazes outside the window, the moderate breaking of glass and smoke filling the room.

Movement and climate cameras and security webcams have permitted the individuals who fled to remotely check whether their homes have been lost to the flame that has expended no less than 1,600 structures and constrained 88,000 to clear the city.

O'Reilly, 51, and his better half hauled out on Tuesday, driving through flares and fiery remains to put separation amongst themselves and the inferno. He pulled more than 20 minutes outside Fort McMurray, his telephone humming with an alert from his in-home security framework. He looked as the house was devoured by blazes, live on the screen in his grasp.

"My better half couldn't watch it, however by then I thought we were dead getting through the flares as we did," said O'Reilly. "I was euphoric, so it didn't trouble me. I knew the house was gone as of now, I knew we were alive, and I was so cheerful we were alive, the rest would all say all was - who cares, right?"

O'Reilly said he had introduced the camera, a home security framework known as a Canary, just a month prior to more since he is an innovation nerd than out of security concerns.

Whole neighborhoods have been copied to the ground in Fort McMurray. Nobody has kicked the bucket in the flames, yet two individuals passed on in a pile up amid the departure.

O'Reilly said he and his better half lamented abandoning their two clownfish, which were so manageable they would eat from his significant other's hand.

Sound going with O'Reilly's video recorded the crackling out of control fire, breaking glass, a beeping smoke locator and a mechanized voice cautioning that there was "smoke in the passage" before the recording cut out.

Canary representative John Carter said it was not the first run through the organization's cameras, which encourage live video and sound to the cell phones of mortgage holders, had caught annihilation.

"The more these sorts of gadgets get out there, the more you see individuals catching some really amazing things, of all nature, in their homes," Carter said.

Leslie Booker was more fortunate than the O'Reillys. By taking a gander at an online security camera video, the tyke improvement specialist saw that her house was all the while standing. An air observing camera in another area demonstrated that many different homes had likewise endured.

Canada's legislature and armed force have to a great extent been undetectable as immense flames tear through the monetarily basic oil sands locale of Alberta, an impression of a constitution that controls Ottawa's energy.

The national government has so far given four Griffin helicopters, one Hercules transport plane and 7,000 beds to help Alberta adapt to a flame that constrained the departure of around 90,000 individuals from Fort McMurray.

This constrained reaction mirrors the constraints of Canada's sacred make-up. The 10 areas have wide jurisdictional forces, which implies Ottawa can just intercede if formally requested that do as such.

"Crisis administration is a mutual obligation between all levels of government in Canada," said Dan Brien, boss representative for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, who is planning the elected exertion.

On the off chance that a group needs assistance it first swings to the commonplace government, he said. In the event that that legislature can't adapt, it then methodologies Ottawa.

"No one works in disconnection. There is engagement at all levels amid an emergency," Brien said by phone.

Alberta Premier Rachel Notley told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. on Friday that it was too soon to say what sort of an exertion would be expected to manage the emergency. "We haven't had an opportunity to get into do an intensive appraisal ... For the most part talking there's a lengthy, difficult experience ahead," she said

The central government is putting forth different sorts of help, for example, satellite data, coordinating assets gave to the Red Cross and in addition promising crisis support for the casualties and long haul help to help Alberta recuperate.

Be that as it may, valuable few of the 70,000-in number military are anyplace close to the calamity area. A gathering of 350 warriors are on standby in the territory to go about as crisis firefighters.

Ottawa has in the past conveyed critical quantities of troops to manage common calamities, most remarkably in January 1998, when an ice storm disabled parts of Quebec, Ontario and Quebec.

After the three areas requested help, Ottawa gave more than 15,000 troops.

The areas protect their forces deliberately and Ned Franks, a political educator at Queen's University in Kingston, said Ottawa would sit tight for a solicitation before acting.

"Without the backing of the commonplace government it would absolutely bring about much more shock than helpful results," he said in a telephone meeting.

Paul Ryan and Donald Trump, the top Republicans in the United States, plan to meet one week from now to attempt to join their gathering, with both men focussed on the Nov. 8 presidential decision, yet the Wisconsin congressman likewise maybe looking further ahead.

Speaker of the House of Representatives Ryan has welcomed Trump, the current year's conceivable Republican presidential candidate, to meet on Thursday with Ryan and other congressional pioneers on Capitol Hill, Ryan's office said in an announcement on Friday.

A key part of the discussion is certain to be Trump's aggressive, in-your-face battle persona and Republican pioneers' solicitations for him to tone it down, yet political examiners said Ryan will have different contemplations as a top priority, also.

One issue is prone to be his own future, said Larry Sabato, chief of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics.

Ryan, 46, lost his 2012 battle for VP as Mitt Romney's running mate. Like Romney, Ryan most likely has genuine questions that Trump, 69, can win this year, Sabato said.

Provided that this is true, Ryan will need to discover a harmony between tolerating Trump as the candidate and keeping some separation from him, just on the off chance that the land big shot's battle closes in a fiasco.

"Assume Trump loses overwhelmingly. Would you need to have been agreeing with the chief of the Titanic, or perhaps seen as somebody who was asking the commander to keep an eye out for chunks of ice?" Sabato said, including that a Trump annihilation could push the gathering in an alternate heading in 2020, possibly towards Ryan as the chosen one.

Strolling A TIGHTROPE

As administrator of the Republican Party tradition in Cleveland in July, Ryan's political tightrope will be particularly dangerous.

One of his targets will be to give political spread to his 246 House Republicans so they can grasp or flee from Trump, contingent upon their house areas' governmental issues, with the objective of safeguarding control of the House, experts said.

Ryan dropped a stunner on Thursday when he said he was not prepared to underwrite Trump until he demonstrates he can bring together the gathering, as yet reeling from a sharp essential battle that left numerous foundation Republicans paralyzed at Trump's triumph.

One moderate Pennsylvania congressman,http://filesharingtalk.com/members/331699-arfplayer Representative Charlie Dent, said he thought most about his kindred House Republicans will be alright with what Ryan said, on the grounds that they are "clashed" themselves about whether to bolster Trump.

Some Republican legislators stress that Trump is not sufficiently moderate; others are more annoyed by Trump's "divisive, flammable comments and absence of substance," said Dent, who place himself in the last class.

As speaker, Ryan has battled with his profoundly partitioned associates over spending plan issues, subsidizing the fight against the Zika infection, saving Puerto Rico from an obligation emergency, and helping Flint, Michigan, manage their polluted water framework.

Ryan is "attempting to jawbone Trump into changing his positions" to line up better with the gathering foundation, said Norm Ornstein, an occupant researcher and political expert at the preservationist American Enterprise Institute.

The "extraordinary" move by a congressional pioneer to separation himself from his gathering's normal chosen one, Ornstein included, indicated Ryan attempting to form a "less angry and divisive way to deal with minorities and a less independent and contentious way to deal with our associates."

In a swipe at Trump on Friday, President Barack Obama cautioned that possessing the Oval Office "is.

No comments:

Post a Comment