Paris is the unique bib city that I have visited in Europe. I went there this year with "frantseseko proiektua". I went with my friends so we enjoy the trip. In my opinión Pris is one of the most beautiful citis on the World because ther are loads of interés places like Louvre museum or The Tour Eiffel.
PARIS
LOUVRE
TOUR EIFFEL
miércoles, 27 de noviembre de 2013
ERASMUS
When i am in the university I want to go on a Erasmus and there are somo cities that I would like to visit if i went on a Erasmus.
LONDRES
ROMA
AMSTERDAM
MALTA
LONDRES
ROMA
AMSTERDAM
MALTA
Shakhtar Donetsk-Real Sociedad Preview: Basques in last-chance saloon
My favourite football team has a important match today night, if they don´t win they are going to be out of Europa Leage.
Jagoba Arrasate's men need to pick up all three points at the Donbass Arena to keep their qualification hopes alive, but their hosts are also desperate for a victory
Jagoba Arrasate's men need to pick up all three points at the Donbass Arena to keep their qualification hopes alive, but their hosts are also desperate for a victory
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Real Sociedad need a win at Shakhtar Donetsk on Wednesday night to have any chance of prolonging their Champions League adventure.
The Spanish side are bottom of Group A with two games remaining and they must secure all three points at the Donbass Arena and hope Manchester United beat Bayer Leverkusen to avoid crashing out of Europe's premier club competition.
The Spanish side are bottom of Group A with two games remaining and they must secure all three points at the Donbass Arena and hope Manchester United beat Bayer Leverkusen to avoid crashing out of Europe's premier club competition.
lunes, 25 de noviembre de 2013
Spain releases Eta convict after European court ruling
A
convicted Basque militant has been freed after the Spanish authorities
upheld a European Court of Human Rights ruling against her continued
detention.
Ines Del Rio, of the separatist group Eta, had been serving a 30-year sentence for bomb attacks in the 1980s.Spain's High Court had earlier backed the Strasbourg court's ruling against Spanish laws that denied her right to earn remission through prison work.
Spain says dozens of Eta prisoners could now be eligible for release.
Ines del Rio left the Teixeiro prison in A Coruna in north-west Spain at 16:25 local time (14:25 GMT).
Monday's ruling by the European
Court of Human Rights "gives us no choice", concluded a prosecutors'
report at the High Court requesting Del Rio's immediate release,
reported El Pais newspaper.
The penal chamber subsequently ordered her immediate release. Groups representing victims of Eta's bloody four-decade campaign for independence for regions of northern Spain and south-west France denounced the Strasbourg ruling in protests on Monday, while supporters of the prisoners held marches in favour.
Eta declared an end to its armed campaign in 2011.
PAROT DOCTRINE
Del Rio was arrested in 1987 for her part in 23 murders and car bombings carried out by Eta.
She was later sentenced to more than 3,800 years in jail, but the criminal code in force at the time reduced this to a maximum stay of 30 years.
Del Rio earned sentence reductions through prison work, making her eligible for release in July 2008 - but two years earlier the High Court applied what is known as the "Parot doctrine" to extend her detention.
Under this doctrine, sentence reductions are applied to the sentences for individual crimes - collectively amounting to 3,828 years - rather than the overall 30-year maximum stay.
It meant Del Rio's release would be postponed until 2017.
But on Monday the European Court of Human Rights, upholding a July 2012 ruling in favour of Del Rio, condemned Spain for this practice and ordered Spain to ensure her immediate release and to pay her 30,000 euros (£25,400; $41,000) in compensation.
Although the Strasbourg court's ruling only applies to Del Rio, the Spanish government says dozens of other convicted Eta members could be eligible for release.
Ukraine president firm over EU 'U-turn' amid protests
Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych has defended his move to put on hold a
historic deal with the EU, amid continuing mass protest rallies.
He said he was forced by economic necessity and the desire to protect those "most vulnerable".The EU has accused Russia of exerting heavy economic pressure on Ukraine.
Clashes between protesters and police continued on Monday. Meanwhile, jailed opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko announced an indefinite hunger strike.
'No alternative' Mr Yanukovych was speaking publicly for the first time since the announcement on Thursday that his government was halting preparations to sign the association and free trade agreements with the EU.
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