8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (3)
#17555773 at 2022-09-21 15:46:18 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #21523: Pain Thread GO! Edition
Summary
The general debate of the seventy-seventh session of the General Assembly will be held from Tuesday, 20 September, to Saturday, 24 September, and on Monday, 26 September 2022, pursuant to resolution 57/301. World leaders will discuss global issues.
Description
The theme "A watershed moment: transformative solutions to interlockingchallenges" has been proposed for the general debate at the seventy-seventh session,pursuant to resolution 58/126 (annex).
Held at the beginning of each session of the General Assembly, the General Debate provides an opportunity for world leaders to deliver a statement on global issues.
The UN Secretary-General, Ant?nio Guterres, will introduce the annual report (A/77/1) on the activities of the Organization at the opening of the general debate.
General debate website: https://gadebate.un.org/
Scheduled Speakers:
Addresses by:
His Excellency Muhammadu Buhari, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
His Excellency Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi, President of the Islamic Republic of Iran
His Excellency Khurelsukh Ukhnaa, President of Mongolia
His Excellency Paul Kagame, President of the Republic of Rwanda
His Excellency ?efik D?aferovi?, Chair of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina
His Excellency Chandrikapersad Santokhi, President of the Republic of Suriname
His Excellency Joseph R. Biden, Jr., President of the United States of America
His Excellency Egils Levits, President of the Republic of Latvia
His Excellency Guillermo Lasso Mendoza, Constitutional President of the Republic of Ecuador
His Excellency Hakainde Hichilema, President of the Republic of Zambia
His Excellency Andry Nirina Rajoelina, President of the Republic of Madagascar
His Excellency Mohamed Younis Menfi, President of the Presidential Council of the State of Libya
Her Excellency Maia Sandu, President of the Republic of Moldova
His Excellency Hage Geingob, President of the Republic of Namibia
His Excellency Borut Pahor, President of the Republic of Slovenia
His Excellency William Samoei Ruto, President and Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Forces of the Republic of Kenya
His Excellency Ali Bongo Ondimba, President of the Gabonese Republic
His Excellency Mohamed Irfaan Ali, President of the Co-operative Republic of Guyana
Her Excellency Katalin Nov?k, President of Hungary
His Excellency Alassane Ouattara, President of the Republic of C?te d'Ivoire
His Excellency Julius Maada Bio, President of the Republic of Sierra Leone
His Excellency Alar Karis, President of the Republic of Estonia
His Excellency Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, President of the Republic of Ghana
His Excellency Jos? Maria Pereira Neves, President of the Republic of Cabo Verde
His Majesty King Mswati III, Head of State of the Kingdom of Eswatini
His Excellency Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine
His Excellency Aleksandar Vu?i?, President of the Republic of Serbia
His Serene Highness Prince Albert Two of Monaco, Sovereign Prince of the Principality of Monaco
His Excellency Charles Angelo Savarin, President of the Commonwealth of Dominica
Her Excellency Elizabeth Truss, Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
His Excellency Mohammad Najib Azmi Mikati, President of the Council of Ministers of the Lebanese Republic
His Excellency Bruno Eduardo Rodr?guez Parrilla, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Cuba
His Excellency Jan Lipavsk?, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Czechia
Her Excellency Naledi Pandor, Minister for International Relations and Cooperation, South Africa
His Excellency Roberto ?lvarez Gil, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dominican Republic
His Excellency Arnoldo Andr?-Tinoco, Minister for Foreign Affairs and Worship, Costa Rica
His Excellency Gustav Aitaro, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Palau
Zelensky is also on the list
#12667667 at 2021-01-22 16:16:53 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #16173: Don't Date Fag Edition
Another government going down
I know it's Bloomberg. Don't attack anon, I only watch to downvote
Mongolia Premier Resigns, Blames President Over Covid Protests
Jan 22, 2021
Mongolia's prime minister resigned a day after protests against his government's Covid-19 control measures erupted in capital Ulaanbaatar.
Prime Minister Khurelsukh Ukhnaa submitted his resignation and a proposal to dissolve his government Thursday after hundreds gathered outside the parliament building to demonstrate against the policies. Parliament, which is controlled by Khurelsukh's Mongolian People's Party, voted overwhelmingly Thursday to accept his resignation.
In a speech Thursday, the premier accused President Battulga Khaltmaa, from the rival Democratic Party, of orchestrating the protests. Battulga, whose term expires later this year, expressed shock at Khurelsukh's remarks in a separate speech.
"I wonder and wonder why the prime minister of Mongolia did such an act that undermined the trust of the Mongolian people, undermined national unity and openly slandered the president of Mongolia," Battulga said, according to a transcript on the presidential website.
The protests erupted after a video appearing to show a mother being hastily discharged from a local maternity hospital in a bathrobe because she had tested positive for the coronavirus was widely circulated online. Demonstrators flocked to parliament to protest her treatment Wednesday, some wearing only bathrobes and slippers to show solidarity with the woman.
While the protests were not unusually large, they lasted well into the winter night, where temperatures can fall as low as -40 degrees Celsius (-40 Fahrenheit). Protesters said they were upset more broadly with extended lockdowns and restrictions on movement, as well as a ban on cross-border travel.
The vast country of 3.3 million people - landlocked between Russia and China – has so far avoided the mass coronavirus outbreaks that have troubled others. Mongolia has reported fewer than 1,600 infections since March, with 526 active cases as of Thursday.
https://youtu.be/248o9bGvrSg
#3103416 at 2018-09-20 13:42:57 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #3927: Strength Test, the Morning After Edition
Pompeo meeting w/Mongorians
.@SecPompeo greets #Mongolia Prime Minister Khurelsukh Ukhnaa, at the Department of State. @USEmbMongolia @MongolDiplomacy
cst
8kun Midnight Riders Posts (1)
#47223 at 2021-01-22 16:36:18 (UTC+1)
QR Midnight Riders #218: 10th Mountain Division Arrives Edition
Mongolia Premier Resigns, Blames President Over Covid Protests
Jan 22, 2021
Mongolia's prime minister resigned a day after protests against his government's Covid-19 control measures erupted in capital Ulaanbaatar.
Prime Minister Khurelsukh Ukhnaa submitted his resignation and a proposal to dissolve his government Thursday after hundreds gathered outside the parliament building to demonstrate against the policies. Parliament, which is controlled by Khurelsukh's Mongolian People's Party, voted overwhelmingly Thursday to accept his resignation.
In a speech Thursday, the premier accused President Battulga Khaltmaa, from the rival Democratic Party, of orchestrating the protests. Battulga, whose term expires later this year, expressed shock at Khurelsukh's remarks in a separate speech.
"I wonder and wonder why the prime minister of Mongolia did such an act that undermined the trust of the Mongolian people, undermined national unity and openly slandered the president of Mongolia," Battulga said, according to a transcript on the presidential website.
The protests erupted after a video appearing to show a mother being hastily discharged from a local maternity hospital in a bathrobe because she had tested positive for the coronavirus was widely circulated online. Demonstrators flocked to parliament to protest her treatment Wednesday, some wearing only bathrobes and slippers to show solidarity with the woman.
While the protests were not unusually large, they lasted well into the winter night, where temperatures can fall as low as -40 degrees Celsius (-40 Fahrenheit). Protesters said they were upset more broadly with extended lockdowns and restrictions on movement, as well as a ban on cross-border travel.
The vast country of 3.3 million people - landlocked between Russia and China - has so far avoided the mass coronavirus outbreaks that have troubled others. Mongolia has reported fewer than 1,600 infections since March, with 526 active cases as of Thursday.
https://youtu.be/248o9bGvrSg