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10 years of rural finance at BNP Paribas, based in the city of Basel.
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Indian flood effort struggling to stop water reaching the shores of the village on Tuesday. (PTI Photo)
  
But, on the day Mr Liguori was informed that BNP had changed its mind, he was on his way to Paris to visit Mr Vougros.
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The Uttarakhand government has come under fire for its failure to tackle the rising waters along its flood-hit eastern coast, as thousands of people fled their homes in the past 24 hours amid rising waters.
  
His passport had been confiscated by the French authorities when he was arrested earlier that day.
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A massive landslide, also known as a Ganga, hit Bhuj, the main river in the region that flows into the Bay of Bengal and also houses thousands of displaced people.
  
It would have had to be exchanged within days or weeks for the right to reenter the EU.
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"The water came and came, then we were forced to move out of here. It was all about saving people from the inundation of water in the Bay of Bengal. Many people who are staying in one place are going to move on," resident Sunil Kumar told AFP, adding there was no water to sell in the village after the landslide.
  
Now, a month after the EU had rejected his application to leave the Schengen area, Mr Liguori faces being deported to Morocco at the beginning of July, after a court ruled he had missed his deadline for a Schengen permit, after which he must return to Italy to re-enter as a Moroccan.
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The Uttarakhand government in a statement released on Monday blamed an "act of God" for the incident.
  
Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption An hour before his interview Mr Liguori says he had hoped for a visa and is determined to take action against his EU passport
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The disaster has claimed more than 200 lives since it began late on Monday when a massive landslide engulfed parts of Bhuj near the village of Lalichapuram, leaving several people dead.
  
The court has said that he failed to prove he was a Moroccan citizen when he applied for a Schengen visa in April 2008.
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State officials say more than 2 million houses and 40,000 villages have been destroyed due to the calamity, as much as one in every three homes has suffered severe damage.
  
But Mr Liguori told the Italian newspaper Il Fatto Quotidiano he had been told after receiving his passport, "the Moroccan authorities refuse to grant your visa".
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But on Tuesday, officials blamed floods on "unknown forces." Some villagers have been complaining that the government is not providing adequate assistance and is not even taking action on reports of deaths in villages downstream from the landslide.
  
"I never suspected they had taken me for a foreigner - not like today," he said.
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"We are suffering without knowing what is happening here. There are no water pumps or drains. We are at a standstill because people are still stuck," said a witness who was leaving the town as the rain continued to pour down.
  
Mr Liguori has been in France for weeks - on a week-long "temporary", business-visa visa - with a small group of friends but says they had spent hundreds of euros to travel to the country on holiday with little travel insurance and no hotel rooms.
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The disaster has highlighted the need for better coordination between various state agencies, particularly as many areas in the Bay of Bengal are on the brink of becoming submerged as water rushes up from the Bay and moves into other rivers to form powerful, tributaries.
  
He says he can't bring his wife with him.
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"As of today, Bhuj lies on a level with the eastern section of the Bay. The water flow along this section has created a grave danger to people who have to move on," state department of water resources (DWR) chairman Sudhir Gupta said.
  
"It's impossible for me," he said. "I'm trying very hard to find a solution."
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"The level of the river has already made our lives very difficult. We will ensure that the situation does not get much worse," he said.  
 
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In an interview with French newspaper Le Figaro published on Friday, he said: "I feel I'm really at fault. I thought that I was French, I thought I would get a visa.
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"I wasn't a Moroccan, I wasn't a Syrian, I wasn't a Lebanese or Palestinian - I was one who had no idea what was going on in Paris - I was absolutely wrong, in the end. I'm not ready to leave France but there's something better for me, in my career."
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Cyd charisse dies aged 86
 
 
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Mr Liguori said he does not consider himself a terrorist
 
  
Mr Liguori's lawyer, Antoine Liguori, has said he would seek the return of his passport when his client is in Paris.
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Her death was not publicised until June 2009, according to a press release sent out by his daughter.
 
 
He described his client as "very emotional" when he was handed his rejection lette
 
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Pilbara police fall ill after cleaning mouldy shed
 
  
LACO officers are in the midst of an ongoing cleaning task to rid the shed they are cleaning of mould before a sale starts.
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It was in a 2009 interview with the German magazine "Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftswoche" that said: "One of my friends told me that Cyd passed away in June 2008, at 86 years of age. He had become very ill and it is not yet clear how."
  
LACO Deputy Inspector Chris Johnson said one of the officers had a cold and said the other two had a flu, one was taken off duty and is in stable condition.
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His daughter is now claiming that the family died after he had been taken ill at a hotel in London and not at the hospital where he was taken for treatment.
  
A sale of land at the site is tentatively set to start next Monday.
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She claimed she had read the press release online and had believed it to be true, but then found out that in fact she knew nothing.
  
Johnson said a contractor was to provide services to keep the shed clean and it was likely it would need to be moved on with the rest of the site being cleaned.
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She said: "The family has been living under a great amount of stress in London. I am not so much surprised about this as disappointed that everything I thought was true has turned out to be false. I did not believe it until then, but I am not surprised at all."
  
"Our concern is that the shed may have to be moved and we don't want to have a hazardous situation at the site," Johnson said.
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She added: "The family has received no money from Cyd's estate and, until recently, Cyd lived the way he did throughout his life.
  
Topics: community-and-society, melbourne-3000
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"He was an active member of the local party and, therefore, my father should not be so closely associated with it."

Revision as of 00:10, 30 May 2020

Indian flood effort struggling to stop water reaching the shores of the village on Tuesday. (PTI Photo)

The Uttarakhand government has come under fire for its failure to tackle the rising waters along its flood-hit eastern coast, as thousands of people fled their homes in the past 24 hours amid rising waters.

A massive landslide, also known as a Ganga, hit Bhuj, the main river in the region that flows into the Bay of Bengal and also houses thousands of displaced people.

"The water came and came, then we were forced to move out of here. It was all about saving people from the inundation of water in the Bay of Bengal. Many people who are staying in one place are going to move on," resident Sunil Kumar told AFP, adding there was no water to sell in the village after the landslide.

The Uttarakhand government in a statement released on Monday blamed an "act of God" for the incident.

The disaster has claimed more than 200 lives since it began late on Monday when a massive landslide engulfed parts of Bhuj near the village of Lalichapuram, leaving several people dead.

State officials say more than 2 million houses and 40,000 villages have been destroyed due to the calamity, as much as one in every three homes has suffered severe damage.

But on Tuesday, officials blamed floods on "unknown forces." Some villagers have been complaining that the government is not providing adequate assistance and is not even taking action on reports of deaths in villages downstream from the landslide.

"We are suffering without knowing what is happening here. There are no water pumps or drains. We are at a standstill because people are still stuck," said a witness who was leaving the town as the rain continued to pour down.

The disaster has highlighted the need for better coordination between various state agencies, particularly as many areas in the Bay of Bengal are on the brink of becoming submerged as water rushes up from the Bay and moves into other rivers to form powerful, tributaries.

"As of today, Bhuj lies on a level with the eastern section of the Bay. The water flow along this section has created a grave danger to people who have to move on," state department of water resources (DWR) chairman Sudhir Gupta said.

"The level of the river has already made our lives very difficult. We will ensure that the situation does not get much worse," he said. <a href=https://www.gohappyclub.com/>온라인카지노</a> <a href=https://www.shamsbim.com/>바카라</a>

Cyd charisse dies aged 86

Her death was not publicised until June 2009, according to a press release sent out by his daughter.

It was in a 2009 interview with the German magazine "Zeitschrift für Wirtschaftswoche" that said: "One of my friends told me that Cyd passed away in June 2008, at 86 years of age. He had become very ill and it is not yet clear how."

His daughter is now claiming that the family died after he had been taken ill at a hotel in London and not at the hospital where he was taken for treatment.

She claimed she had read the press release online and had believed it to be true, but then found out that in fact she knew nothing.

She said: "The family has been living under a great amount of stress in London. I am not so much surprised about this as disappointed that everything I thought was true has turned out to be false. I did not believe it until then, but I am not surprised at all."

She added: "The family has received no money from Cyd's estate and, until recently, Cyd lived the way he did throughout his life.

"He was an active member of the local party and, therefore, my father should not be so closely associated with it."