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Hilda Chiche Gonzalez Duhalde’s wife begins her own campaign in the same region today

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Hilda “Chiche” Gonzalez, Duhalde’s wife, begins her own campaign in the same region today.
“This is about more than just one province, it’s about Argentina,” Ms Fernandez, a senator for the Santa Cruz province, told an audience in La Plata, south-east of Buenos Aires. “This is about more than one political party, it’s about the nation,”Mr Kirchner came to power in 2003 with Mr Duhalde’s backing, but the two Peronist leaders have fallen out over the handling of Argentina’s ongoing economic crisis. Argentinians are preparing themselves for a highly unusual political contest between the wife of the President Nestor Kirchner, and a former first lady who plans to fight the same Senate seat in October elections. People I knew well just looked into space when I passed them in the street. But now some people behave normally, not tough like they used to before.

They explain that many of them were pushed into the war, pushed into the front line They tell me they had no choice in the matter And I believe them.”. As the world’s wealthiest women prepared to fly out of Paris on the final day of haute couture week yesterday, Jean Paul Gaultier staged a lavish show that elevated the rich hippie look to, well, the extremely rich hippie look. His was a far more refined interpretation of the ethnic trends that have been dominating street fashion. After all, his clients are able to pay tens of thousands of pounds for an outfit tailored to fit their every curve.
In a collection dedicated to the exuberance of traditional Eastern European dress, Gaultier’s models strode out in conker-brown velvet pantaloons tucked into fur-edged suede boots, billowing Gypsy blouses and short gilets. The gilet – an haute hippie staple – meanwhile came in rich-bitch sable fur.. This being haute couture, however, where every garment is painstakingly hand-sewn and decorative effects are second-to-none, the blouses were smothered with sparkling bugle beads and re-embroidered with flowers.

The friends and family of one missing woman were given some hope last night when she was found in a hospital. But the new law could also be used to prosecute the authors of messages published on websites which praise the kinds of acts of terrorism that took place in London this week.Counter-terrorism officials are taking seriously a claim by a little-known group calling itself The Secret Organization of al-Qa’ida’s Jihad in Europe, that it staged the deadly attacks. They hoped for the best but feared the worst. For many relatives and friends of those still missing since the London bombs exploded on Thursday morning, yesterday turned into a desperate and anguished journey from hospital to hospital, seeking news of their loved ones. The official death toll from the bombings has reached 49, but the figure is expected to rise.

Twenty-one bodies recovered from the Piccadilly line train outside Russell Squareare included in the toll, but an unknown number of bodies remain in the train. Srpska was built out of our blood – they expelled us from our houses and land – and now they call everything ‘Serb’ this and ‘Serb’ that.”Nevertheless, the bitterness is slowly receding “Relationships with the Serbs are better than before When I first came, nobody wanted to work for me.

If I want to go to hospital in Sarajevo, I have to pay because it’s in a different canton. “They recognised and rewarded the fascist state of Republica Srpska and now nothing works properly: police, social security, education, nothing.”For example, if Bosniac children want to move back here, they have to take 15 different exams before the school will accept them because the systems are different. “The people who brokered Bosnia’s peace in the Dayton peace accords made a monster state that is divided 1,000 different ways,” he said. To push their policy of ethnic cleansing, the Republica Srpska – the Bosnian Serb entity within which the town falls – has filled many of the empty houses with Serb families.Only a handful of Muslim families have returned. The Muslim mayor is officially a resident, but he actually lives with his family in the Bosniac-run city of Tuzla, two hours’ away.One who has returned is Abdulah Purkovic, 58, who has opened a small restaurant in the town where he used to own three.


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