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On 12 October 2023, Damascus International Airport was temporarily closed due to a damaged runway following Israeli missile attacks on both it and Aleppo International Airport, during the skirmishes which occurred across the border in connection with the Israel–Hamas war. [19] The airport was put back into service on 18 October. [20]
“I said something wrong/ Now I long for yesterday…” Sir Paul McCartney first sang those moving words almost 60 years ago, but it’s only now that he’s revealed the real meaning behind them.
During the night, rebels announced that a "group" of senior government officials and military officers in Damascus were preparing to defect to the opposition. [51] That same night, the Sednaya prison was captured and its inmates freed. [9] Pro-government Sham FM radio reported that Damascus airport had been evacuated and all flights halted. [45]
The airport was officially closed in January 2007. Vicenza Airport: Vicenza: 2008 VoliRegionali S.p.A. ("Regional Flights" SpA) was an airline based at Vicenza Airport, VoliRegionali began service on 30 May 2005 with a demonstration flight to Olbia, Forlì, and Munich making it an international airport Waalhaven: Rotterdam: October 1956
Lebanon is closing all its land border crossings with Syria except for a main one that links Beirut with the Syrian capital Damascus, the General Security Directorate said Friday. The decision came hours after an Israeli airstrike damaged a border crossing in northern Lebanon just days after it was reopened.
Jam tomorrow (or the older spelling jam to-morrow) is an expression for a never-fulfilled promise, or for some pleasant event in the future, which is never likely to materialize. Originating from a bit of wordplay involving Lewis Carroll 's Alice , it has been referenced in discussions of philosophy, economics, and politics.
Carpe is the second-person singular present active imperative of carpÅ "pick or pluck" used by Horace to mean "enjoy, seize, use, make use of". [2] Diem is the accusative of dies "day". A more literal translation of carpe diem would thus be "pluck the day [as it is ripe]"—that is, enjoy the moment.
Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow, a 1963 Italian film; Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, a 2011 Filipino film; Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, a 1997 album by Kenny Loggins; Brunfelsia pauciflora, a purple flower with the common name 'yesterday-today-and-tomorrow' "Yesterday, Today And Tomorrow", a song by Small Faces from their 1967 album From the ...