Missiles, bombings and a cacophony of small-arms fire suddenly erupted outside Isela Ventura’s apartment in Khartoum, Sudan. Incoming attacks sounded like an airliner taking off right next to her building, she said. Electricity off, running...
prepared to pay more but the move is moving forward. ♪ ♪ >> russia is accusing ukraine of trying to assassinate president vladimir putin and a drone attack on the kremlin. >> i would take anything coming out of the kremlin with a very large shaker of salt. ♪ ♪ >> norah: the immigration crisis at the southern border. why it is only expected to get worse. >> this is really not an impossible issue, it is an international, migration issue. ♪ ♪ >> u.s. citizens getting out of war-torn sudan. cbs news went aboard a saudi arabian navy ships sent to the african nation to evacuate refugees from the latest fighting. >> we are going back to america, and going to a safer place. ♪ ♪ ♪ baby ♪ >> norah: at the rock & roll hall of fame. is your favorite on the list of inductees? ♪ and if you want me then come on get me now ♪ ♪ ♪
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The first Britons who were evacuated from Sudan have now landed in the UK after enduring a nightmarish journey to reach an airbase in the capital of Khartoum.
The first RAF plane carrying British civilians is said to have left Sudan and landed in Cyprus as part of the UK government's 'large-scale' mission to evacuate thousands of Britons.
EXCLUSIVE: Esra Osman said her mother, Haram Osman, 58, had been visiting relatives in the city of Kosti, just south of the Sudanese capital of Khartoum, when the fighting erupted last week.
Rishi Sunak said 'many more' flights carrying British nationals will leave Sudan into tomorrow, after the first plane took off from the conflict-torn nation earlier today.
Hi Pat. I think that ChCh is a bad example. Since the earthquake the city has spread out hugely to the west, north west and south west. In the east of course, which has historically been lower cost housing, its just one huge barren landscape in many areas. The whole market is totally distorted.
The new dwellings are all of a certain type. Flashy, expensive and not really good rental material. So, I would strongly disagree that supply has increased
in the rental market.
Agree with you re excess liquidity, along with interest rates sub 3% and the wrong incentives (lack of Capital Gains Tax).
Bloody annoying behaviour from Vector yesterday. Caused the site to be off for most of the day and evening.
We'd been informed earlier in the month of a power shutdown from 8am to 10 am. That is on the limits of my UPS. I just organised to be home during the morning. The UPS ran until about 1013.
By which time, I was asking about why it was taking so long. The workers then told me that the power would be off until sometime around 4pm.
Unfortunately the system shutdown hard, because of problem in the UPS configuration. I had to repair the partition tables of the two drives that are the current TS system.
And if the new owner wants to live in it ….
aj …
Essentially over the past 20yrs we've actually had to put money
into the business to keep it afloat, and our tenants in their homes. We're now in the position of having shitloads of equity, but
crap cash flow, and because I'm close to retiring that isn't something I can sustain anymore.
The trouble with this is that I've heard this description from not only landlords but farmers as well, except farmers don't like to flaunt their equity in public.
The total values of assets that can be realised is the figure that most people will focus on. If you have $10M in equity but moan your a**e off about pitiful cashflow, then you generally won't get a lot of sympathy.