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‘She’s the queen’: Sri Lanka bids farewell to film legend Malini Fonseka

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Transportation   来源:Editorial  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The century-old canal, linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, relies on formerly abundant rainfall stored in two artificial lakes that also provide drinking water.

The century-old canal, linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, relies on formerly abundant rainfall stored in two artificial lakes that also provide drinking water.

Traditional dress, expressions and gestures reflect a culture rich in diversity. Muslims, Christians, Jews, and Bedouins appear side by side, revealing a land defined not by division, but by coexistence.Individual portraits

‘She’s the queen’: Sri Lanka bids farewell to film legend Malini Fonseka

Each face carries its own story of life, labour, joy, or longing.Drag the slider or click on an image to see it in more detail.Families, neighbours and friends gathered for the camera to record their moments together.

‘She’s the queen’: Sri Lanka bids farewell to film legend Malini Fonseka

Streets, stones and sacred grounds.Palestine’s landscape is a tapestry of rolling hills, ancient olive groves, and vibrant cities, where history and nature intertwine.

‘She’s the queen’: Sri Lanka bids farewell to film legend Malini Fonseka

From the old stone quarters of Jerusalem to the hills of the Galilee, each image in this chapter grounds us in lived-in spaces carrying memory and meaning.

From the bustling port of Jaffa to the stone alleys of Hebron, towns in Palestine bear layers of history.Beekeepers often transport millions of bees from one location to another because leaving them in one location for too long can deplete resources for other pollinators, The Seattle Times newspaper reported.

In 2015, 14 million bees escaped a truck north of Seattle on Interstate 5 and started stinging people, the newspaper reported at the time.General Anil Chauhan appears to confirm India lost at least one aircraft during the brief conflict with Pakistan earlier this month.

India’s chief of defence staff says the country suffered initial losses in the air during a recent military conflict with neighbouring Pakistan, but declined to give details.“What was important is, why did these losses occur, and what we will do after that,” General Anil Chauhan told the Reuters news agency on Saturday on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue security forum in Singapore.

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