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1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5. Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6.
Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2. Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3.
Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6. Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8.
Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2. Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5.
Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8. David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2.
Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5. Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7.
Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2. Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4.
Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1.
Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4. Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6.
Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3.
Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6. Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8.
Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3. Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5.
Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3. Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5.
Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8. Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2.
Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5. Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7.
Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2. Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3.
Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7. Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8.
Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
Chinese drone maker unveils human-carrying drone
By Associated Press
Published: 23:15, 6 January 2016 | Updated: 23:15, 6 January 2016
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20Chinese%20drone%20maker%20unveils%20human-carrying%20drone&body=Chinese%20drone%20maker%20unveils%20human-carrying%20drone%0A%0ALAS%20VEGAS%20%28AP%29%20%E2%80%94%20Chinese%20drone%20maker%20Ehang%20Inc.%20on%20Wednesday%20unveiled%20what%20it%20calls%20the%20world%27s%20first%20drone%20capable%20of%20carrying%20a%20human%20passenger.%20The%20Guangz...website%20
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Chinese drone maker Ehang Inc.
on Wednesday unveiled what it calls the world's first drone capable of carrying a human passenger.
The Guangzhou, China-based company pulled the cloth off the Ehang 184 at the Las Vegas Convention Center during the CES gadget show.
In a company video showing it flying, it looks like a small helicopter but with four doubled propellers spinning parallel to the ground like other drones.
The electric-powered drone can be fully charged in two hours, carry up to 220 pounds and fly for 23 minutes at sea level, according to Ehang.
The cabin fits one person and a small backpack and even has air conditioning and a reading light. With propellers folded up, it's designed to fit in a single parking spot.
The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
After setting a flight plan, passengers only need to give two commands, "take off" and "land," each controlled by a single click on a Microsoft Surface tablet, the company said.
It is designed to fly about 1,000 to 1,650 feet off the ground with a maximum altitude of 11,500 feet and top speed of 63 miles per hour.
U.S.
authorities are just starting to lay out guidelines for drone use, and a human-passenger drone seems certain to face strict scrutiny.
Federal Aviation Administration administrator Michael Huerta was at CES but could not immediately be reached for comment through a spokesman.
Ehang co-founder and Chief Financial Officer Shang Hsiao said the company hopes to sell the device for $200,000 to $300,000 beginning this year but acknowledged it occupies a legal "grey area."
"The whole world never had something like this before," he said.
A passenger would have no controls as a backup, he said.
In the event of a problem the company plans a remote control center that would take over the vehicle and ensure it lands safely, he said.
Chief Marketing Officer Derrick Xiong said the vehicle has been flown more than 100 times at low altitudes in a forested area in Guangzhou, including several times with a person inside.
One thing that makes quad-copters safer than helicopters are its numerous propellers, Xiong said.
Even if three of the four arms have their six propellers disabled, the final arm's working propellers can ensure a rough landing by spiraling toward the ground, he said.
The company, which also makes smaller drones, said in August it had raised $42 million in capital from various investors including GP Capital, GGV Capital, ZhenFund and others, following $10 million in capital raised the previous year.
___
Online:
Ehang Inc.
website style="font-size:1.2em;">___
Follow AP Business Writer Ryan Nakashima at website . His work can be found at website class="clear">
The EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle is unveiled at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
People crowd around the EHang 184 autonomous aerial vehicle at the EHang booth at CES International, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2016, in Las Vegas.
The drone is large enough to fit a human passenger. (AP Photo/John Locher)
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties
Equatorial Guinea's ruler Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo has been re-elected to a sixth term as president with 94.9 percent of the votes cast, election officials announced on Saturday, putting turnout for the vote at 98 percent.
Obiang, 80, who seized power in a 1979 coup, is the longest-ruling head of state in the world excluding monarchs.
He has never officially been re-elected with less than 93 percent of the vote.
Electoral commission head Faustino Ndong Esono Eyang confirmed that Obiang would serve another seven years in the top job. The commission said the turnout rate for the election was 98 percent.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation, where the political opposition is extremely weak.
Obiang had the backing of a coalition of 15 parties, including his all-powerful ruling Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE).
The PDGE, which was the country's only legal political movement until 1991, also swept all seats in the National Assembly and the Senate.
The percentages won by the opposition candidates, Andres Esono Ondo of the Convergence for Social Democracy and Buenaventura Monsuy Asumu of the Social Democratic Coalition Party, were not announced, with both garnering just a few thousand votes.
"The definitive results of the vote find in our favour once more," Obiang's son, Vice President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, wrote on Twitter.
"We will continue to prove that we are a great political party."
- 'History repeating itself' -
Obiang has ruled Equatorial Guinea for more than 43 years after ousting his uncle, Francisco Macias Nguema, who was then executed by a firing squad.
He has suppressed dissent and seen off a string of attempted coups in the Spanish-speaking nation.
Security forces arrested opposition figures in the weeks before the result, with the regime saying it was thwarting a "conspiracy" to commit attacks in the capital Malabo and economic hub Bata.
The authorities also closed the country's land borders with neighbouring Gabon and Cameroon before campaigning began, saying it was foiling infiltrators from disrupting the vote.
The landslide result was widely expected in the oil-rich and authoritarian Central African nation
Obiang is just the second president in Equatorial Guinea's history since it gained independence in 1968 from Spain, its colonial power for nearly two centuries.
"Equatorial Guinea's history has been repeating itself for 43 years and the political vision established by the government will continue after this election," Justo Bolekia, a professor at Spain's University of Salamanca, told AFP.
"It was predictable, including for the opposition. We were even expecting a score closer to 98 percent," he added.
The discovery of offshore oil in the mid-1990s turned Equatorial Guinea into sub-Saharan Africa's third-richest country in terms of per-capita income in 2021.
But the wealth has remained concentrated in the hands of a few families.
In 2006, when the oil boom was in full swing, more than three quarters of the population lived in extreme poverty, or on less than $1.90 a day, according to the World Bank.
There have been no new figures since.
The country also has a reputation for graft, ranking 172 out of 180 nations on Transparency International's 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index.
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5. Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6.
Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2. Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3.
Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6. Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8.
Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2. Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5.
Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8. David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2.
Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5. Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7.
Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2. Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4.
Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1.
Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4. Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6.
Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3.
Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6. Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8.
Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3. Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5.
Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3. Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5.
Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8. Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2.
Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5. Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7.
Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2. Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3.
Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7. Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8.
Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
April 7 (Reuters) - Short-seller Hindenburg Research said on Tuesday it had taken a short position on Ebang International Holdings Inc, sending the Chinese bitcoin mining machine producer's shares down more than 12%.
"Ebang claims to be a 'leading bitcoin mining machine producer', yet our research indicates this extraordinary claim is backed by no evidence," the short-seller said website
"Ebang released its final miner in May 2019 and has since seen its sales dwindle to near-zero, delivering only 6,000 total miners in 1H20."
Short sellers sell borrowed shares in the hope of buying them back at a cheaper price and pocketing the difference.
In a statement on Wednesday, Ebang said the Hindenburg report contained many errors, unsupported speculations and inaccurate interpretations of events.
It added it intends to further review and examine the allegations and take necessary action to protect the interest of its shareholders.
The recent bitcoin mania has fueled a surge in fundraising by Chinese companies seeking to expand their cryptocurrency operations or move into the red-hot sector.
Ebang debuted on Nasdaq in June last year and had conducted two fundraising rounds in February alone, raking in $170 million, even after a previous offering in November.
Hindenburg, which went short on another Chinese blockchain company Sos Ltd in February, said its research revealed that instead of using capital proceeds to develop its business, Ebang directed much of the cash out of the company through "a series of opaque deals with insiders and questionable counterparties."
Hindenburg had also taken short positions in electric vehicle companies including Lordstown Motors, Nikola Corp and Kandi Technologies Group Inc.
(Reporting by Chavi Mehta and Akanksha Rana in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Akriti Sharma; Editing by Rashmi Aich and Subhranshu Sahu)
Could the Duke of Sussex's bombshell memoir 'Spare' be behind an explosion in beard transplants?
One hair clinic in Turkey certainly thinks so after seeing demand for the procedure double in recent weeks.
Dubbed the 'Prince Harry' effect by EsteNove in Istanbul, it has been inundated with beardless men willing to pay £2,500 to get the royal's iconic 'rugged and masculine' facial fuzz.
And the clinic claimed the cover of 'Spare', which was heavily featured on TV and in book stores across the globe last month, is being brought in by patients wanting the exact look.
EsteNove co-founder Batuhan Kizilcan told MailOnline: 'Interest in beard transplants has been growing steadily over the last few years as more people become aware of the procedure.
This is the look dozens of men are paying £2,500 for according to a hair transplant clinic in Turkey.
The clinics founders said beard transplants are up 100 per cent since Prince Harry launched his bombshell memoir. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex, pictured in 2020
'But in recent weeks, this has exploded.'
'The number of transplants we are carrying out has increased by 100 per cent, and we have christened it the "Prince Harry effect".'
He said while there was nothing unusual about a patient wanting to 'emulate' the hair or bread of a celebrity, one name had now risen to prominence.
'At the moment, the name on everyone's lips is Prince Harry,' he said.
'People are specifically citing the picture on the front of his new book.
EsteNove's founder patients are mentioning the cover of Harry's memoir Spareas the result they would like the clinic to give them
Prince Harry will hold an 'intimate' public conversation with a leftist trauma expert who has previously compared Hamas terrorists to those who rose up from the Warsaw Ghetto.
Gabor Maté, 79, who has previously congratulated people who make the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's top ten anti-Semites of the year list, has a long history of published anti-Israel sentiments.
This weekend, Maté will take part in a livestreamed discussion with the prince about 'living with loss and the importance of personal healing.' Tickets are on sale for $33.09.
It is unclear whether or not Prince Harry is personally aware of how controversial a character Maté is.
But Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre told the , 'whoever made the arrangements to have this individual appear with Prince Harry, did him no favors.'
'If Prince Harry knew this man's record and still chose him for the interview, our Centre would criticize the prince for such an inappropriate choice,' he continued.
Prince Harry is set to have an 'intimate' public conversation with virulent anti-Zionist Gabor Maté about healing and loss
Gabor Maté, 79, who has previously congratulated individuals named to the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's top ten antisemites of the year for making the list, has a long history of published anti-Israel sentiments
Maté is a survivor of the Holocaust and Harry, as detailed in his recently published memoir 'Spare,' went through grief publicly after losing his mother Princess Diana.
Maté was born in Budapest, Hungary in 1944.
When Maté was five months old, his maternal grandparents were killed in Auschwitz. One year later, his mother left him in the care of stranger who subsequently saved his life. She returned five weeks later but Maté claims the trauma of 'abandonment, rage and despair' still influences him today.
Though some of Maté's work is based on his experience in the Holocaust, in the aftermath of his remaining family's immigration to Canada, he became virulently opposed to the Jewish state of Israel.
In a 2014 article for the Toronto Star, Maté wrote, 'The Palestinians use tunnels?
So did my heroes, the poorly armed fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto.'
'Out of impotent defiance, they fire inept rockets, causing terror for innocent Israelis but rarely physical harm,' he wrote, defending Palestinian rocket fire at citizens of Israel.
During the most recent conflict between Israel and Gaza in spring of 2021, Maté said during a livestream that Hamas was 'nothing compared to the terrorism of the Israeli government.'
He also appeared on comedian-turned-public intellectual Russell Brand's podcast to say that Israel is 'the longest ethnic-cleansing operation in the 20th and 21st centuries.
It's still going on.'
He further described Gaza as 'the world's largest outdoor prison.'
In 2019, Maté defended disgraced former British Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn, who has been accused of anti-Semitism.
He called it 'manipulative' to call Corbyn an anti-Semite.
'So, Corbyn goes to this rally where this Jewish person speaks, and Corbyn's accused of being an anti-Semite because he's present when a Jew criticizes or points out similarities between the ghettoisation of Gaza and the ghettoisation of Jews,' he said.
He added that he believed Corbyn had been the victim of a 'witch hunt' and 'Israeli assassination.'
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have been on a worldwide publicity tour pertaining both to Harry's memoir, Spare, and their Netflix documentary
Dr.
Gabor Maté spoke to Russell Brand in 2021 about the 'ethnic-cleansing operation' going on in Israel
Israeli soldiers patrol the streets in the town of Hawara, south of Nablus, in the occupied West Bank in March of 2023
Palestinian elderly man argues with Israeli soldiers while raising the Palestinian flag during a protest on March 2, 2023
Pro-Palestinian activists and supporters let off smoke flares, wave flags and carry placards during a demonstration in support of the Palestinian cause as violence escalates in the ongoing conflict with Israel, outside the Israeli embassy in central London on May 15, 2021
German soldiers fighting against the Polish Home Army (Armia Krajowa), the Polish resistance movement, during the Warsaw Uprising, Poland, August 1944
Also during the recent conflict, Maté praised Grayzone - a far-left, pro-Kremlin news outlet - founder Max Blumenthal's statement that '[Israelis] grow up under a certain ideological framework in which the Arab is less than human.'
Rabbi Cooper said that Maté is a 'Holocaust survivor whose worldview sets him apart from 99 per cent of world Jewry.'
'I am working under the assumption that the Prince did not know this person's political bias, his hatred for the Jewish state, his cavorting with anti-Semites and his covering for Hamas terrorists.'
Prince Harry was cautious and made sure not to attack members of the royal family in his livestreamed interview, a leading royal expert told MailOnline in the wake of the prince's conversation with trauma expert Dr Gabor Maté.
The Duke of Sussex sat down with controversial 'toxic trauma' expert Dr Gabor Maté for a 90-minute conversation just two months before his father's coronation as questions continue about whether he and wife Meghan will attend.
In the £17-per-ticket livestream event that included a free copy of his memoir, Spare, Harry discussed his drug use, his views on the war on Afghanistan, and how he doesn't see himself as a 'victim'.
He told Maté he always felt different from the rest of his family and that Diana felt the same, as he opened up about his upbringing in a 'broken home' and how he had been 'saved' by Meghan.
But amid fears the prince could be left out from his father's coronation ceremony, the conversation was far more subtle than his memoir Spare, which many saw as filled with attacks on other royals such as his father King Charles and brother Prince William.
The Duke of Sussex sat down with controversial 'toxic trauma' expert Dr Gabor Maté for a 90-minute conversation
Royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams said the royal family will be 'relieved' that there were no fresh attacks by Prince Harry during the 90-minute livestream
In a wide-ranging discussion that contained fresh digs at the Royal Family in the run-up to King Charles' coronation in May, the Duke -
Said he was a good candidate for the army because 'they recruit from broken homes';
Added that 'a lot of us...' [his fellow soldiers] 'didn't necessarily agree or disagree' with the West's invasion of Afghanistan;
Described his ongoing emotional turmoil, saying: 'Since age 12 apart from being in a state of shock I was in fight or flight';
Said therapy helped him to 'break free and live' from his 'dysfunctional' family and he felt 'incredibly free' after Megxit;
Was told by Dr Maté that he has Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD), prompting the prince to joke 'a free session, great';
Revealed using cannabis had 'really helped' him mentally but cocaine 'did nothing' for him;
Said using the psychedelic drug ayahuasca 'changed me' and 'helped me deal with the traumas and pains of the past';
Boasted about the favourable Amazon reviews for his book, saying people had been writing 'essays' praising it;
Asked about the concept of service to others, said: 'It's a theme of the book because it's a theme of my life', adding: 'sharing is an act of service';
Told how he had experienced 'burnout' after thinking 'I just need to help everybody';
Said his 'exceptional' wife Meghan had helped him avoid being 'stuck' in the Royal Family.
During the entire conversation, Prince Harry did not mention his brother Prince William, Kate or Camilla once.
Royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliams delivered his verdict on the 90-minute conversation: 'I don't thing this will change things.
'Things are bad, there is a serious rift.
The best that can be said is that this didn't make things worse.'
He highlighted the lack of personal attacks on either the monarchy or individual members of his family such as the Prince of Wales, saying the Duke of Sussex is 'very traumatised' - but added that his stance on him not being a 'victim' did not align with his recent memoir and Netflix series.
'There was no direct attack on the monarch and there was also, although it was all in the background - the past he was escaping from - there was no direct attack at all on any member of the royal family.'
Commenting on what the rest of the royals may have made of the interview, Mr Fitzwilliams said: 'I think there will be a lot of relief and thanks.'
He continued: 'For somebody who stresses with Mate, who stresses that the results of therapy are so positive, how and why would he account for his negativity to the royal family more publicly?
'Why did they launch all of these attacks on the royals?
'One of the problems is he is never asked difficult questions in these interviews.
'In Afghanistan he was asked how he found himself in hostile terrain. But no-one has asked him about revealing the number of Taliban he killed.'
Mr Fitzwilliams described the relationship between Prince Harry and Dr Maté as a student-teacher dynamic: 'Harry is not acting on advice these days, he included very strange details in the book.
'He was rather like a pupil listening to a teacher.
There was a giggle or laughter, and he was admiring Dr Maté's book.
'It was perfectly obvious that he admires Maté but his answers were not that of a sophisticate.'
He added: 'Harry is trying to understand how he is exorcising his demons, but what he doesn't understand is that the toxicity he talked about and not wanting to pass it on - that is what they have been passing on since he and Meghan left the royal family.'
Mr Fitzwilliams said he believes the couple's declining ratings are partly behind the change in tack.
Prince Harry tonight sat down with Dr Gabor Maté for a livestream event about 'trauma and healing'
Harry spoke about the pain he still endures after losing his mother, Princess Diana (right) at the age of 12
The Duke did not mention Prince William, Princess Kate or Queen Consort Camilla once
Since the release of Spare, the couple's popularity ratings in the US have plummeted, not helped recently by an episode of South Park which mocked the pair.
'Ratings are most important.
One poll can be a rogue poll, two polls are a pattern.
'If you declare war you want to know that the home team is supporting you.'
During the 90-minute conversation, Prince Harry revealed he 'feels different' to the rest of his family, that he has been diagnosed with PTSD and he is taking care to make sure no toxic trauma is passed on to his children.
Describing his struggles to find his 'authentic true self' while growing up, he said: 'I felt slightly different to the rest of my family.
I felt strange being in this container, and I know that my mum felt the same so it makes sense to me.'
The royal - who Dr Maté publicly diagnosed with attention deficit disorder (ADD) - said he constantly hugged his children, Archie and Lilibet, to 'shower them with affection' - something he doesn't believe he received from his father, King Charles.
Dr Maté began the conversation by discussing the reaction to the book and how critics had accused him of wallowing in his own sense of victimhood.
'I definitely don't see myself as a victim,' Harry replied.
'To be able to share the things of my life that I think is important feels good - to me it feels like an act of service.
'If we can encourage other people to be vulnerable themselves and be vulnerable to their family the world will be a better place.'
Royal author Robert Johnson described how Harry's brother William might react to his comments in The Sun: 'It will infuriate William how Harry - who attacked those who used his mother - continues to do just that by comparing himself to her.'
He added he 'can't help but feel sorry' for the prince, but his is limited.
Meanwhile author Ingrid Seward told the paper Harry seems 'very much in the Californian lifestyle'.
'He is a very impressionable and vulnerable man and he has been digging so deeply into his own self-analysis that he has found himself in a bottomless pit.
'At this point he just seems confused.'
Harry's ghost-written tell-all autobiography laid bare his frustrations with his family.
He claimed his brother William, now the Prince of Wales, had knocked him to the floor at Harry's then home Nottingham Cottage after calling the Duchess of Sussex 'difficult', 'rude' and 'abrasive'.
INDONESIA PRESS-Elang Mahkota consortium acquires Singapore's PropertyGuru - Investor Daily
By Reuters
Published: 21:49 EDT, 9 June 2015 | Updated: 21:49 EDT, 9 June 2015
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore's%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily&body=INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore%27s%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily%0A%0AA%20consortium%20of%20firms%20including%20technology%20company%20PT%20Elang%20Mahkota%20Teknologi%20Tbk%2C%20TPG%20Capital%20and%20Square%20Peg%20Capital%20bought%20Singapore-based%20online%20property%20...website%20
Elang Mahkota will have an 18.8 percent stake in PropertyGuru after the transaction is completed this month, Hartono added.
PropertyGuru offers property sales in Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia. Transaction within the portal reached S$4 billion a year, the newspaper said.
Note: Reuters has not verified this story and does not vouch for its accuracy. ($1 = 1.3520 Singapore dollars) (Compiled by Gayatri Suroyo; Editing by Sunil Nair)
Could the Duke of Sussex's bombshell memoir 'Spare' be behind an explosion in beard transplants?
One hair clinic in Turkey certainly thinks so after seeing demand for the procedure double in recent weeks.
Dubbed the 'Prince Harry' effect by EsteNove in Istanbul, it has been inundated with beardless men willing to pay £2,500 to get the royal's iconic 'rugged and masculine' facial fuzz.
And the clinic claimed the cover of 'Spare', which was heavily featured on TV and in book stores across the globe last month, is being brought in by patients wanting the exact look.
EsteNove co-founder Batuhan Kizilcan told MailOnline: 'Interest in beard transplants has been growing steadily over the last few years as more people become aware of the procedure.
This is the look dozens of men are paying £2,500 for according to a hair transplant clinic in Turkey.
The clinics founders said beard transplants are up 100 per cent since Prince Harry launched his bombshell memoir. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the Duchess of Sussex, pictured in 2020
'But in recent weeks, this has exploded.'
'The number of transplants we are carrying out has increased by 100 per cent, and we have christened it the "Prince Harry effect".'
He said while there was nothing unusual about a patient wanting to 'emulate' the hair or bread of a celebrity, one name had now risen to prominence.
'At the moment, the name on everyone's lips is Prince Harry,' he said.
'People are specifically citing the picture on the front of his new book.
EsteNove's founder patients are mentioning the cover of Harry's memoir Spareas the result they would like the clinic to give them
NEW YORK, Feb 16 (Reuters) - Shares of drone manufacturer EHang Holdings Ltd plunged on Tuesday after an investment research firm said it had shorted the stock and questioned the accuracy of what the Chinese company has said about its business.
Shares of Guangzhou, China-based EHang closed down 62.7% at $46.30 a share on Nasdaq.
Wolfpack Research, which specializes in short selling, or betting that shares will fall, said EHang is "an elaborate stock promotion" and that the producer of unmanned aerial vehicle technology has lied about its products, manufacturing, revenues and partnerships.
There was no immediate response to an e-mail sent to EHang's U.S.
investor relations representative seeking comment.
EHang's stock soared from around $13 a share in early December to $124.09 on Friday. The stock made its U.S. debut in December 2019 after an initial public offering priced at $12.50 share. (Reporting by Herbert Lash; Editing by Dan Grebler and David Gregorio)
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5.
Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6. Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2.
Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3. Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6.
Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8. Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2.
Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5. Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8.
David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2. Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5.
Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7. Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2.
Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4. Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7.
Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1. Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4.
Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6. Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1.
Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3. Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6.
Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3.
Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5. Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3.
Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5. Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8.
Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2. Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5.
Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7. Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2.
Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7.
Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8. Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
INDONESIA PRESS-Elang Mahkota consortium acquires Singapore's PropertyGuru - Investor Daily
By Reuters
Published: 21:49 EDT, 9 June 2015 | Updated: 21:49 EDT, 9 June 2015
[url=mailto:?subject=Read%20this:%20INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore's%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily&body=INDONESIA%20PRESS-Elang%20Mahkota%20consortium%20acquires%20Singapore%27s%20PropertyGuru%20-%20Investor%20Daily%0A%0AA%20consortium%20of%20firms%20including%20technology%20company%20PT%20Elang%20Mahkota%20Teknologi%20Tbk%2C%20TPG%20Capital%20and%20Square%20Peg%20Capital%20bought%20Singapore-based%20online%20property%20...website%20
Elang Mahkota will have an 18.8 percent stake in PropertyGuru after the transaction is completed this month, Hartono added.
PropertyGuru offers property sales in Singapore, Thailand and Indonesia. Transaction within the portal reached S$4 billion a year, the newspaper said.
Note: Reuters has not verified this story and does not vouch for its accuracy. ($1 = 1.3520 Singapore dollars) (Compiled by Gayatri Suroyo; Editing by Sunil Nair)
Prince Harry is to take part in an 'intimate' livestream chat with author Gabor Maté next week to promote his memoir Spare, as he returns to the stage after another drop in his popularity in the US.
More than a month after the release of the book royal fans can sign up to watch the Duke of Sussex discussing it with Mr Maté, and will also receive a free copy of Spare as well as the opportunity to submit questions to the prince.
The event, organised in collaboration with Harry's publishers Penguin Random House, will take place at 5pm UK time on Saturday March 4.
The pair are expected to talk about 'living with loss and the importance of personal healing', followed by a live Q and A.
It comes at a fragile time for Prince Harry and wife Meghan Markle, who - and now face a decision over whether to attend Charles' coronation.
Prince Harry will sit down for his first public conversation since his media blitz for the launch of his memoir Spare
The livestream costs £17 and comes with a free hardback copy of the Duke's memoir
The livestream comes at a tricky time for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, who have seen their approval ratings plummet since December
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's popularity has slumped to an all-time low in the US, where they are now less popular than the disgraced Prince Andrew, a shock poll has found.
Since December last year, Harry has sunk 48 points and Meghan 40, giving them net approval ratings of -10 and -17 respectively, according to a survey by Redfield & Wilton for Newsweek, conducted on February 19.
While Andrew is still viewed negatively following his New York civil trial against his adult accuser Virginia Roberts - which he settled out of court - his net approval rating sits at -2, with 26 per cent of Americans saying they like him compared to 28 per cent who do not.
The Sussexes' nosediving popularity across the pond comes just days after they were mocked by South Park - a satirical cartoon famed for having its finger on the pulse of American culture.
But the latest survey suggests the increased attention and scrutiny of the Sussexes, brought on by their six-part Netflix docuseries, Harry's memoir Spare and a spate of bombshell interviews, has only turned larger portions of the public against them.
This week's poll shows that 18 per cent of US respondents felt neither favorably nor unfavorably about Harry, while 7 percent replied 'don't know'.
Some 20 percent were on the fence about Meghan and just 8 percent did not have an opinion.
The figures mean that only 25 per cent of respondents expressed no strong feelings either way about the duke, and 28 percent about the duchess.
Respondents were also asked if they felt positively or negatively towards Harry, Meghan and Andrew, with the results likely making sober reading for the couple.
Some 32 per cent felt positively about Harry, compared to 27 per cent about Meghan and 26 per cent about Andrew.
However, 44 per cent held a negative sentiment towards Meghan, compared with 42 per cent for Harry and just 28 per cent for Andrew.
New data from the US shows the drop in the couple's approval ratings over the last three months
Gabor Maté is a Hungarian-Canadian best-selling author and physician who specialises in addiction and childhood development
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5.
Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6. Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2.
Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3. Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6.
Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8. Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2.
Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5. Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8.
David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2. Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5.
Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7. Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2.
Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4. Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7.
Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1. Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4.
Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6. Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1.
Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3. Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6.
Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3.
Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5. Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3.
Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5. Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8.
Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2. Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5.
Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7. Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2.
Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7.
Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8. Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
Prince Harry spoke candidly about his recreational use of illegal drugs during a intimate chat with a toxic trauma expert.
The discussion came in a 'intimate conversation' about 'living with loss and personal healing' between the Duke and Dr Gabor Mate on Saturday evening.
Tickets to the livestream, which cost £19, included a hardback copy of the Prince's recent memoir, Spare.
The second son of King Charles said marijuana had 'really helped' him but that cocaine and alcohol were more 'social'.
The timing of the discussion is particularly awkward for the palace, coming just days after it emerged King Charles is evicting Harry and his wife Meghan Markle from Frogmore Cottage, their grace-and-favour mansion on the Windsor estate.
Asked by Dr Maté if he saw himself as a victim, Harry said: 'I certainly don't'
The livestream costs £17 and comes with a hardback copy of the duke's memoir
Trauma expert Dr Gabor Mate spoke of the way people used drugs to deal with problems in their lives before asking Harry's about his reasons for using drugs including cocaine and cannabis.
'The first one you mentioned, that didn't do anything for me, it was more a social thing.
It gave me a sense of belonging and probably also made me feel different to the way I was feeling,' Harry said.
'Marijuana is different, that actually did really help me.'
The prince said alcohol was also 'more of a social thing' and complained about peer pressure around drinking.
Dr Mate, who has faced numerous controversies in the past, denied accusations he had been threatened with arrest by the Canadian government for using Ayahuasca with his patients.
In 2011, Health Canada threatened to prosecute the trauma expert if he did not stop using the Amazonian plant to treat addiction.
In the two years before receiving the warning, Dr Mate administered the medicine to between 150 and 200 patients.
The family of a young woman who took her own life after using the same psychedelic drug Prince Harry praised this weekend .
The Duke of Sussex has been widely criticised for discussing his drug use in a 90-minute livestream with trauma expert Dr Gabor Mate, with some claiming he is sending a worrying message to young people.
Harry told how using cannabis - a Class B drug - 'really helped' him to deal with mental health issues following the death of his mother.
He also talked about his 'positive' experience of psychedelic drug ayahuasca, saying for a period of time'.
But the family of Jennifer Spencer have described his comments as 'irresponsible' after she died by suicide aged 29 in 2019.
Frank talk: Harry speaks about using drugs in the interview with trauma expert Dr Gabor Mate
Jennifer Spencer, 29, died by suicide after suffering from severe psychosis as a result of taking ayahuasca - a Class A hallucinogenic drug
Ms Spencer travelled to enjoy a yoga retreat in Peru where she took ayahuasca - a hallucinogenic drug which is illegal and a Class A substance in the UK.
She suffered severe psychosis as a result, which led her to taking her own life.
Today her aunt, Fiona Chase, 73, said Prince Harry should not be praising psychedelic drugs as they can affect individuals in dangerously different ways.
She told : 'He should not be speaking positively about this drug.
It's irresponsible because a lot of people look up to him.
'It worked for him, but it certainly didn't work for Jenny. Like every drug, different people react differently.'
After Ms Spencer's death, the coroner issued an urgent warning about the drug to the NHS, saying: 'There is a lack of awareness about shamanic hallucinogenic drugs and their propensity to cause or exacerbate psychosis.
'Action should be taken to prevent future deaths.'
The Duke, 38, was interviewed by therapist Dr Mate, an outspoken supporter of decriminalising drugs who has allegedly used Amazonian plant ayahuasca to treat patients suffering mental illness.
Harry told him: '[Cocaine] didn't do anything for me, it was more a social thing and gave me a sense of belonging for sure, I think it probably also made me feel different to the way I was feeling, which was kind of the point.
'Marijuana is different, that actually really did help me.'
Fiona Spargo-Mabbs, who launched a drugs education charity in her son Daniel's name (pictured) after he died of an accidental MDMA overdose aged 16, described the comments as 'concerning'
Gavin and Stacey actress Alison Steadman has slammed 'disgraceful' Prince Harry and said she 'can't bear to look at' his memoir Spare.
Steadman, 76, who played Gavin's mother Pamela Shipman in the comedy, said today that the Duke of Sussex needs to 'just get on with it' and 'shut up' after his recent controversial heart-to-heart with Gabor Mate.
The 'intimate conversation' about 'living with loss and personal healing' between the Duke and the trauma expert was livestreamed to paid viewers on Saturday evening.
Steadman said that she felt glad the late Queen Elizabeth was not alive to witness Prince Harry's 'disgraceful' actions and recent revelations about life as a royal.
In an interview with she said: 'It was his prerogative to leave the royal family and they let him, so I think he should just get on with it and shut up.'
Alison Steadman (pictured), 76, said today that the Duke of Sussex needs to 'just get on with it' and 'shut up'
The Duke of Sussex pictured during his recently controversial heart-to-heart with Gabor Mate
Steadman (pictured with co-star Larry Lamb) played Gavin's mother Pamela Shipman in the British comedy Gavin and Stacey
The comedy actress added that as an ambassador for cancer charity Marie Curie, she had the opportunity to meet the then Prince Charles back in 2019.
She said: 'He's a very warm and friendly man. You don't feel intimidated in any way.
'He's probably seen me on telly and he just turned around and went, "Oh! Hello, hello," and it was just like meeting a fan.'
In the show, Pamela and husband Mick crudely impersonate King Charles and Camilla, Queen Consort.
Asked about these scenes she said she did not know if they have watched them but hoped they were not offended.
A representative for the Duke of Sussex has been contacted by MailOnline for comment.
By Julia Fioretti
HONG KONG, March 26 (Reuters) - Bitmain Technologies, the world's largest designer of products for mining cryptocurrencies, on Tuesday let its application for a Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO) lapse, becoming the latest cryptocurrency company to shelve plans to go public.
Bitmain's application lapsed on Tuesday, six months after it was filed, the Hong Kong stock exchange's website showed.
"We do recognise that despite the huge potential of the cryptocurrency and blockchain industry, it remains a relatively young industry which is proving its value," the company said on its website.
"We will restart the listing application work at an appropriate time in the future."
Sources had previously told Reuters the company was aiming to raise at least $3 billion in its IPO.
Bitmain designs different microchips specialised for mining cryptocurrencies and for artificial intelligence applications, as well as manufacturing cryptocurrency and AI hardware, and managing crypto mining farms.
Bitmain also named Haichao Wang as CEO of the company while Micree Zhan and Jihan Wu, the co-founders of Bitmain, will continue to be directors.
The reputation of cryptocurrencies, and particularly exchanges, has been hit by fears of price volatility as well as high-profile hacks and infrastructure failures.
Hong Kong officials had raised questions about the sustainability of miners' business models given the falling price of bitcoin, sources have said.
The crypto market peaked in late 2017, when trading volumes surged and bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency, reached a high just above $20,000.
Bitcoin's price has fallen more than 80 percent since then, and trading volumes have slumped.
Bitcoin was worth $3,898.12 on Tuesday.
Smaller cryptocurrency mining equipment maker Canaan Inc, let its own IPO application lapse last year.
This leaves cryptocurrency mining equipment maker Ebang International Holdings as the only one currently in the running for a listing in the financial hub.
Ebang refiled its application in December to avoid its lapsing.
(Reporting by Julia Fioretti; Editing by Shreejay Sinha and Jane Merriman)
1. Kristof Milak, Hungary, 50.31.
2.
Josif Miladinov, Bulgaria, 51.06.
3. Andrei Minakov, ROC, 51.11.
4. Matthew Temple, Australia, 51.12.
5. Mehdy Metella, France, 51.32.
6. Naoki Mizunuma, Japan, 51.46.
7.
Sun Jiajun, China, 51.82.
8. Youssef Ramadan, Egypt, 52.27.
1. Caeleb Dressel, United States, 49.71.
2. Noe Ponti, Switzerland, 50.76.
3. Jakub Majerski, Poland, 51.24.
4.
Luis Carlos Martinez, Guatemala, 51.30.
5. Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 51.50.
6. Nyls Korstanje, Netherlands, 51.80.
7. Szebasztian Szabo, Hungary, 51.89.
8. Tom Shields, United States, 51.99.
1.
Evgeny Rylov, ROC, 1:53.27.
2. Ryan Murphy, United States, 1:54.15.
3. Luke Greenbank, Britain, 1:54.72.
4. Bryce Mefford, United States, 1:55.49.
5. Adam Telegdy, Hungary, 1:56.15.
6.
Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland, 1:56.39.
7. Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:57.32.
8. Nicolas Garcia Saiz, Spain, 1:59.06.
1. Wang Shun, China, 1:55.00.
2. Duncan Scott, Britain, 1:55.28.
3.
Jeremy Desplanches, Switzerland, 1:56.17.
4. Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:56.22.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 1:57.31.
6. Kosuke Hagino, Japan, 1:57.49.
7. Laszlo Cseh, Hungary, 1:57.68.
8.
Lewis Clareburt, New Zealand, 1:57.70.
1. Adam Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 27.66.
2. Jose Joao da Silva Viegas, Timor-Leste, 28.59.
3. Diosdado Miko Eyanga, Equatorial Guinea, 31.03.
1.
Charly Ndjoume, Cameroon, 27.22.
2. Houssein Gaber Ibrahim, Djibouti, 27.41.
3. Ebrima Sorry Buaro, Gambia, 27.44.
4. Shawn Dingilius Wallace, Palau, 27.46.
5.
Fahim Anwari, Afghanistan, 27.67.
6. Phillip Kinono, Marshall Islands, 27.86.
1. Mawupemon Otogbe, Togo, 25.68.
2. Troy Pina, Cape Verde, 25.97.
3. Santisouk Inthavong, Laos, 26.04.
4.
Olimjon Ishanov, Tajikistan, 26.12.
5. Mamadou Bah, Guinea, 26.52.
6. Abdelmalik Muktar, Ethiopia, 26.65.
7. Simanga Dlamini, Eswatini, 26.94.
8. Joshua Wyse, Sierra Leone, 27.90.
1.
Shane Cadogan, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 24.71.
2. Alassane Seydou Lancina, Niger, 24.75.
3. Md Ariful Islam, Bangladesh, 24.81.
4. Puch Hem, Cambodia, 24.91.
5.
Marc Pascal Pierre Dansou, Benin, 24.99.
6. Adama Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 25.22.
7. Eloi Maniraguha, Rwanda, 25.38.
8. Shaquille Moosa, Zambia, 25.54.
1. Luke Gebbie, Philippines, 22.84.
2.
Emir Muratovic, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 22.91.
3. Artur Barseghyan, Armenia, 23.14.
4. Alaa Maso, IOC Refugee Olympic Team, 23.30.
5. Nikolas Antoniou, Cyprus, 23.38.
6.
Ghirmai Efrem, Eritrea, 23.94.
7. Filipe Gomes, Malawi, 24.00.
8. Delgerkhuu Myagmar, Mongolia, 24.63.
1. Andrej Barna, Serbia, 22.29.
2. Brett Fraser, Cayman Islands, 22.46.
2.
Dylan Carter, Trinidad and Tobago, 22.46.
4. Enzo Martinez, Uruguay, 22.52.
5. Renzo Tjon-A-Joe, Suriname, 22.56.
6. Santiago Grassi, Argentina, 22.67.
7. Hwang Sunwoo, South Korea, 22.74.
8.
David Popovici, Romania, 22.77.
1. Vladyslav Bukhov, Ukraine, 21.73.
2. Santo Condorelli, Italy, 22.14.
3. Heiko Gigler, Austria, 22.17.
4. Ali Khalafalla, Egypt, 22.22.
5.
Gabriel Castano Garcia, Mexico, 22.32.
6. Konrad Czerniak, Poland, 22.33.
7. Ho Ian Yentou, Hong Kong, 22.45.
8. Oussama Sahnoune, Algeria, 22.61.
1. Bruno Fratus, Brazil, 21.67.
2.
Thom de Boer, Netherlands, 21.75.
3. Jesse Puts, Netherlands, 21.84.
4. Brent Hayden, Canada, 21.85.
5. Michael Andrew, United States, 21.89.
6. Maxime Grousset, France, 21.97.
7.
Joshua Liendo Edwards, Canada, 22.03.
8. Nikola Miljenic, Croatia, 22.14.
1. Kristian Gkolomeev, Greece, 21.66.
2. Kliment Kolesnikov, ROC, 21.88.
3. Vladimir Morozov, ROC, 21.92.
4.
Alberto Mestre, Venezuela, 21.96.
5. Meiron Amir Cheruti, Israel, 22.01.
6. Yu Hexin, China, 22.14.
7. Bjoern Seeliger, Sweden, 22.19.
8. Ari-Pekka Liukkonen, Finland, 22.25.
1.
Caeleb Dressel, United States, 21.32.
2. Florent Manaudou, France, 21.65.
3. Lorenzo Zazzeri, Italy, 21.86.
4. Benjamin Proud, Britain, 21.93.
5. Pawel Juraszek, Poland, 21.97.
6.
Bradley Tandy, South Africa, 22.22.
7. Maxim Lobanovskij, Hungary, 22.25.
8. Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 22.31.
1. Daniel Wiffen, Ireland, 15:07.69.
2. Marcelo Acosta, El Salvador, 15:27.37.
3.
Aflah Prawira, Indonesia, 15:29.94.
4. Theo Druenne, Monaco, 16:17.20.
5. Marwan Aly Elkamash, Egypt, DNS.
1. Felix Auboeck, Austria, 14:51.88.
2. Kirill Martynychev, ROC, 14:52.66.
3.
Gergely Gyurta, Hungary, 15:01.85.
4. Thomas Neill, Australia, 15:04.65.
5. Michael Brinegar, United States, 15:04.67.
6. Victor Johansson, Sweden, 15:05.53.
7. Akos Kalmar, Hungary, 15:17.02.
8.
Cheng Long, China, 15:18.71.
1. Florian Wellbrock, Germany, 14:48.53.
2. Daniel Jervis, Britain, 14:50.22.
3. Serhii Frolov, Ukraine, 14:51.83.
4. Domenico Acerenza, Italy, 14:53.84.
5.
Huy Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam, 15:00.24.
6. Anton Ipsen, Denmark, 15:01.58.
7. Henrik Christiansen, Norway, 15:11.14.
8. Jan Micka, Czech Republic, 15:17.71.
1. Mykhailo Romanchuk, Ukraine, 14:45.99.
2.
Robert Finke, United States, 14:47.20.
3. Gregorio Paltrinieri, Italy, 14:49.17.
4. Jack McLoughlin, Australia, 14:56.98.
5. Lukas Martens, Germany, 14:59.45.
6. Guilherme Costa, Brazil, 15:01.18.
7.
Aleksandr Egorov, ROC, 15:06.55.
8. Alexander Norgaard, Denmark, 15:28.70.
1. Italy (Thomas Ceccon; Nicolo Martinenghi; Federico Burdisso; Alessandro Miressi), 3:30.02.
2. China (Xu Jiayu; Yan Zibei; Sun Jiajun; He Junyi), 3:31.72.
3.
Australia (Mitch Larkin; Izaac Stubblety-Cook; David Morgan; Kyle Chalmers), 3:32.08.
4. United States (Joseph Armstrong; Andrew Wilson; Tom Shields; Blake Pieroni), 3:32.29.
5. Canada (Markus Thormeyer; Gabe Mastromatteo; Joshua Liendo Edwards; Yuri Kisil), 3:32.37.
6.
Poland (Kacper Stokowski; Jan KOZAKIEWICZ; Jakub Majerski; Jakub KRASKA), 3:32.62.
7. Belarus (Mikita Tsmyh; Ilya Shymanovich; Yauhen Tsurkin; Artsiom Machekin), 3:34.82.
8. Hungary (Richard Bohus; Tamas Takacs; Hubert Kos; Peter Holoda), 3:34.91.
1.
Britain (Luke Greenbank; James Wilby; James Guy; Duncan Scott), 3:31.47.
2. ROC (Grigory Tarasevich; Anton Chupkov; Mikhail Vekovishchev; Vladislav Grinev), 3:31.66.
3. Japan (Ryosuke Irie; Ryuya Mura; Naoki Mizunuma; Katsumi Nakamura), 3:32.02.
4.
France (Yohann Ndoye-Brouard; Antoine Viquerat; Leon Marchand; Mehdy Metella), 3:33.41.
5. Germany (Marek Ulrich; Lucas Joachim Matzerath; Marius Kusch; Damian Wierling), 3:34.08.
6. Greece (Eyaggelos Makrygiannis; Konstadinos Meretsolias; Andreas Vazaios; Apostolos Christou), 3:36.28.
7.
Brazil (Guilherme Guido; Felipe Lima; Vinicius Lanza; Marcelo Chierighini), DQ.
7. Lithuania (Danas Rapsys; Andrius Sidlauskas; Deividas Margevicius; Simonas Bilis), DQ.
1. Tatjana Schoenmaker, South Africa, 2:18.95.
2.
Lilly King, United States, 2:19.92.
3. Annie Lazor, United States, 2:20.84.
4. Evgeniia Chikunova, ROC, 2:20.88.
5. Kaylene Corbett, South Africa, 2:22.06.
6. Molly Renshaw, Britain, 2:22.65.
7.
Abbie Wood, Britain, 2:23.72.
8. Fanny Lecluyse, Belgium, 2:24.57.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 51.96.
2. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 52.27.
3. Cate Campbell, Australia, 52.52.
4.
Penny Oleksiak, Canada, 52.59.
5. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 52.68.
6. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 52.79.
7. Anna Hopkin, Britain, 52.83.
8. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 53.23.
1.
Emily Seebohm, Australia, 2:07.09.
2. Phoebe Bacon, United States, 2:07.10.
3. Rhyan Elizabeth White, United States, 2:07.28.
4. Taylor Ruck, Canada, 2:08.73.
5. Margherita Panziera, Italy, 2:09.54.
6.
Lena Grabowski, Austria, 2:10.10.
7. Africa Zamorano Sanz, Spain, 2:10.42.
8. Sharon van Rouwendaal, Netherlands, 2:12.98.
1. Kylie Masse, Canada, 2:07.82.
2.
Kaylee McKeown, Australia, 2:07.93.
3. Liu Yaxin, China, 2:08.65.
4. Peng Xuwei, China, 2:08.76.
5. Katalin Burian, Hungary, 2:09.65.
6. Tatiana Salcutan, Moldova, 2:10.09.
7.
Laura Bernat, Poland, 2:12.86.
8. Aviv Barzelay, Israel, 2:12.93.
1. Imelda Ximenes Belo, Timor-Leste, 32.89.
2. Odrina Kaze, Burundi, 33.39.
3. Haneen Ibrahim, Sudan, 34.49.
1.
Alphonsine Agahozo, Rwanda, 30.50.
2. Osisang Chilton, Palau, 30.67.
3. Tity Dumbuya, Sierra Leone, 31.56.
4. Chloe Sauvourel, Central African Republic, 32.18.
5. Roukaya Moussa Mahamane, Niger, 32.21.
6.
Aya Girard de Langlade Mpali, Gabon, 32.24.
7. Stefan Sangala, Congo, 37.92.
8. Nada Arakji, Qatar, DNS.
1. Anastasiya Tyurina, Tajikistan, 29.05.
2. Siri Arun Budcharern, Laos, 29.22.
3.
Bunpichmorakat Kheun, Cambodia, 29.42.
4. Lara Dashti, Kuwait, 29.69.
5. Junayna Ahmed, Bangladesh, 29.78.
6. Nafissath Radji, Benin, 29.99.
7. Robyn Young, Eswatini, 30.41.
8.
Dania Nour, Palestine, 30.43.
1. Judith Meauri, Papua New Guinea, 27.56.
2. Aleka Persaud, Guyana, 27.76.
3. Angelika Ouedraogo, Burkina Faso, 28.38.
4. Mya de Freitas, St Vincent and the Grenadines, 28.57.
5.
Noor Yusuf Abdulla, Bahrain, 28.87.
6. Jessica Makwenda, Malawi, 28.96.
7. Noelani Malia Day, Tonga, 29.06.
8. Alicia Mateus, Mozambique, 29.63.
1. Norah Elisabeth Milanesi, Cameroon, 26.41.
2.
Mikaili Charlemagne, Saint Lucia, 26.99.
3. Cheyenne Rova, Fiji, 27.11.
4. Enkhkhuslen Batbayar, Mongolia, 27.29.
5. Tilka Paljk, Zambia, 27.34.
6. Samantha Roberts, Antigua and Barbuda, 27.63.
7.
Bisma Khan, Pakistan, 27.78.
8. Unilez Takyi, Ghana, 27.85.
1. Anicka Delgado, Ecuador, 25.36.
2. Elinah Phillip, British Virgin Islands, 25.74.
3. Nikol Merizaj, Albania, 26.21.
4.
Emily Muteti, Kenya, 26.31.
5. Ema Rajic, Croatia, 26.49.
5. Talita Baqlah, Jordan, 26.49.
7. Kirabo Namutebi, Uganda, 26.63.
8. Natalya Kritinina, Uzbekistan, 26.93.
1.
Isabella Arcila Hurtado, Colombia, 25.41.
2. Bianca-Andreea Costea, Romania, 25.61.
3. Jeserik Pinto, Venezuela, 25.65.
4. Amel Melih, Algeria, 25.77.
4. Karen Torrez, Bolivia, 25.77.
6.
Huang Mei-Chien, Taiwan, 25.99.
7. Allyson Ponson, Aruba, 26.03.
8. Cherelle Thompson, Trinidad and Tobago, 26.19.
1. Lidon Munoz del Campo, Spain, 25.10.
2. Farida Osman, Egypt, 25.13.
3.
Julie Meynen, Luxembourg, 25.36.
4. Kalia Antoniou, Cyprus, 25.41.
5. Andrea Murez, Israel, 25.48.
6. Danielle Hill, Ireland, 25.70.
7. Jenjira Srisa - Ard, Thailand, 25.97.
8.
Ting Wen Quah, Singapore, 26.16.
1. Pernille Blume, Denmark, 24.12.
2. Cate Campbell, Australia, 24.15.
3. Zhang Yufei, China, 24.36.
4. Wu Qingfeng, China, 24.55.
5.
Fanny Teijonsalo, Finland, 24.79.
6. Marie Wattel, France, 24.82.
7. Michelle Coleman, Sweden, 24.84.
8. Kayla Sanchez, Canada, 24.93.
1. Emma McKeon, Australia, 24.02.
2.
Emma Chelius, South Africa, 24.65.
2. Simone Manuel, United States, 24.65.
4. Melanie Henique, France, 24.69.
5. Femke Heemskerk, Netherlands, 24.77.
6. Mariia Kameneva, ROC, 24.83.
7.
Barbora Seemanova, Czech Republic, 24.92.
8. Etiene Medeiros, Brazil, 25.45.
1. Sarah Sjoestroem, Sweden, 24.26.
2. Katarzyna Wasick, Poland, 24.31.
3. Abbey Weitzeil, United States, 24.37.
4.
Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 24.41.
5. Arina Surkova, ROC, 24.52.
6. Julie Kepp Jensen, Denmark, 24.70.
7. Haughey Siobhan Bernadette, Hong Kong, 24.75.
8. Anna Hopkin, Britain, DNS.
1.
Australia (Emily Seebohm; Chelsea Hodges; Brianna Throssell; Mollie O'Callaghan), 3:55.39.
2. Italy (Margherita Panziera; Arianna Castiglioni; Elena di Liddo; Federica Pellegrini), 3:55.79.
3. Japan (Anna Konishi; Kanako Watanabe; Rikako Ikee; Chihiro Igarashi), 3:57.17.
4.
China (Chen Jie; Tang Qianting; Yu Yiting; Wu Qingfeng), 3:57.70.
5. Britain (Cassie Wild; Sarah Vasey; Harriet Jones; Freya Anderson), 3:58.12.
6. Germany (Laura Riedemann; Anna Charlott Darcel Elendt; Lisa Hopink; Annika Bruhn), 4:00.16.
7.
South Africa (Mariella Venter; Tatjana Schoenmaker; Erin Gallagher; Aimee Canny), 4:03.02.
8. Spain (Africa Zamorano Sanz; Jessica Vall Montero; Mireia Belmonte; Lidon Munoz del Campo), 4:04.14.
1. Canada (Taylor Ruck; Sydney Pickrem; Margaret Macneil; Kayla Sanchez), 3:55.17.
2.
United States (Rhyan Elizabeth White; Lilly King; Claire Curzan; Erika Brown), 3:55.18.
3. Sweden (Michelle Coleman; Sophie Hansson; Louise Hansson; Sarah Sjoestroem), 3:56.23.
4. ROC (Anastasiia Fesikova; Yuliya Efimova; Svetlana Chimrova; Mariia Kameneva), 3:57.36.
5.
Netherlands (Kira Toussaint; Tes Schouten; Maaike de Waard; Femke Heemskerk), 3:59.89.
6. Belarus (Anastasiya Shkurdai; Alina Zmushka; Anastasiya Kuliashova; Nastassia Karakouskaya), 4:00.49.
7. Hong Kong (Wong Toto Kwan To; Yeung Jamie Zhen Mei; Haughey Siobhan Bernadette; Cheng Camille Lily Mei), 4:02.86.
8.
Denmark (Karoline Enevold Soerensen; Clara Rybak-Andersen; Emilie Beckmann; Signe Bro), 4:04.04.
By Devik Jain and Medha Singh
June 22 (Reuters) - The S&P 500 was set to open within 1% of its peak on Tuesday as investors looked to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's remarks for clues on how the central bank is balancing inflation risk with its promise to ensure a full jobs market recovery.
In his prepared remarks released late Monday afternoon, Powell said inflation has "increased notably in recent months" but regarded the recent jump as likely to fade.
The Fed chief is due to speak before Congress at 2 p.m. ET (1800 GMT).
"The Fed, and particularly Powell, are going to continue to talk to the transitory nature of inflation," said Tony Minopoli, chief investment officer at Knights of Columbus Asset Advisors in Connecticut.
"We are at this inflection point where employment is getting better and we move from a stimulus-driven economic situation to a more traditional, consumer-led growth."
U.S.
stocks rebounded on Monday after the Fed's hawkish tone on the back of improving economic data triggered a sharp profit booking last week on the companies touted as "re-opening" stocks.
Still, energy, financials and other economically sensitive stocks have far outperformed the benchmark S&P 500 and the blue-chip Dow indexes year-to-date.
"We are approaching at least the peak of the V-shaped economic recovery and that's a more challenging time as we have to think of what that means for growth and corporate earnings and incremental policy support," said David Riley, chief investment strategist, BlueBay Asset Management.
At 8:33 a.m.
ET, Dow e-minis were up 37 points, or 0.11%, S&P 500 e-minis were up 5.75 points, or 0.14%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were up 26.25 points, or 0.19%.
Crypto stocks including miners Riot Blockchain, Marathon Patent Group, Ebang International and MicroStrategy Inc fell between 4.4% and 7% as China's crackdown on bitcoin mining expanded to the province of Sichuan.
Sanderson Farms jumped 11.3% as J.P.
Morgan raised its price target on the stock after a source told Reuters that the chicken producer was exploring a sale. (Reporting by Devik Jain and Medha Singh in Bengaluru, additional reporting by Sujata Rao-Coverley; Editing by Maju Samuel)
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