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Morning Mail / 2 lines: What mattered to the world yesterday

Morning Mail / 2 lines: What mattered to the world yesterday

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Politiko.al based on reports of American newspapers, brings you a flash of news from the world in 'Morning Post'. To receive the 'Post' every morning by email write us at [email protected]

Në The growing coronavirus outbreak in Nepal has spread to the Himalayas, with a growing number of climbers on Mount Everest having tested positive.

. Hong Kong announced that regular flights from Britain would resume on Friday, allowing hundreds of stranded residents to return home as of December.

. In Britain, more than one in five adults experienced some form of depression during the severe blockade earlier this year, according to the government statistics agency.

■ Isabel Díaz Ayuso, a conservative politician called "Trumpista" by her opponents, won the election as Madrid's regional leader with a big result after she refused to close the capital's bars and shops.

■ Both the Scottish National Party, led by Nicola Sturgeon, which is pushing for Scottish independence, and the Conservative Party of Prime Minister Boris Johnson are expected to win the regional and local elections in Britain today.

. A French journalist who went missing in Mali last month said in a video yesterday that he had been abducted by a jihadist group and called for help from authorities in France.

. Two Americans were sentenced to life in prison for the murder of an Italian military police officer.

. A Belgian farmer, apparently disappointed by a 200-year-old stone border marker, pulled it out and moved it about seven meters into French territory, slightly enlarging Belgium.

. Clashes in Colombia between police and people protesting against poverty and inequality have killed at least 24 people. Protesters attacked the country's Congress yesterday.

■ Yair Lapid, an Israeli centrist politician, and former media celebrity has 28 days to form a governing coalition after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu failed to do so.

Panel A panel appointed by the company ruled that Donald Trump's ban from Facebook was justified at the time of the Capitol riots, but added that the company should re-evaluate the decision in six months. Nick Clegg, the former British Deputy Prime Minister, has shaped the company’s handling of the Trump case at every turn.

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