Staff

Staff

The one-time lover of Spain's former king has accused him of ordering the secret service to deliver death threats to her after their relationship was exposed.

Speaking as a witness in a court hearing on Friday, Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein stated that her life and those of her children were threatened by the then head of Spain’s CNI secret service, General Félix Sanz Roldán, in her London hotel room in May 2012.

The beginning of the alleged campaign of harassment came weeks after a disastrous elephant-hunting trip to Botswana had led to her relationship with Juan Carlos becoming public knowledge.

“Sanz Roldán and King Juan Carlos were at great pains to make it clear that it was Juan Carlos who was giving orders to Sanz Roldán, that these orders were coming from the top,” the 56-year-old businesswoman said, speaking to the court in Madrid via a video link from Westminster Magistrates Court.

The comments came in a trial in which former Spanish police commissioner José Manuel Villarejo faced charges of slander and false accusation against Mr Sanz Roldán.

Mr Villarejo was facing defamation charges after he accused Mr Sanz Roldán of threatening Ms zu Sayn-Wittgenstein during a 2017 television interview. Mr Villarejo has been remanded in custody since November 2017 while he is investigated on dozens of counts of alleged illegal espionage and other offences.

In court, Mr Villarejo said he had been commissioned by the CNI to meet Ms zu Sayn-Wittgenstein in London in 2015 “to gain her confidence” and convince her to hand over sensitive documents and defuse the dispute between her and Juan Carlos.

Ms zu Sayn-Wittgenstein ratified that she had told Mr Villarejo that Mr Sanz Roldán had said he “could not guarantee my safety and that of my children” during a meeting she said was arranged by Juan Carlos in London’s The Connaught hotel.

Since a tape of the conversation between Mr Villarejo and Ms zu Sayn-Wittgenstein was leaked to the media in 2018, she and other associates of Juan Carlos have been placed under investigation in Switzerland for alleged money laundering. After prosecutors at Spain’s Supreme Court also opened a probe into the former monarch last June, Juan Carlos left Spain and has remained in exile in UAE since.

•             NASA has given up on its InSight lander's "Mars mole" after two years of trying to burrow into the planet's surface.

•             The Martian soil turned out to be too thick, and dust accumulating on the lander's solar panels was causing the robot to generate less and less power.

•             No Mars mission in the foreseeable future will take the planet's temperature — a measurement crucial to understanding the planet's history and potential underground water.

NASA sent its InSight lander to Mars with an ambitious mission: to study the planet's deep internal structure. A crucial piece of that effort - the "mole" - has failed despite two years of attempts to salvage it.

The mole is a revolutionary heat probe designed to burrow 16 feet into the Martian soil and take the planet's temperature. Its measurements would have revealed clues about how the planet formed and has changed over the last 4.6 billion years - a history that would help scientists track down Martian water, and possibly life.

But the mole has made little progress in the unexpectedly thick soil. Now the InSight team must ration the lander's solar power. NASA announced Thursday that the mole won't be able to dig its hole.

"It's a bit of a personal tragedy," Sue Smrekar, a lead scientist on the InSight team who has spent 10 years working on the mole, told Insider. "Everyone tried as hard as they could make it work. So I can't ask for anything more than that."

No other Mars mission in NASA's foreseeable can take the internal temperature measurements for which the mole was designed.

"This has been our best attempt to get that data," Smrekar added. "From my personal standpoint, it's super disappointing, and scientifically it's also a very significant loss. So it feels really like a huge letdown."

An unexpected energy crisis

The InSight team spent two years maneuvering the lander's robotic arm to see if it could help the mole burrow further. The probe, a 16-inch-long pile driver, is designed to leverage the loose dirt that other Mars missions have encountered. The soil would flow around the mole's outer hull and provide friction to keep hammering deeper.

But in February 2019, the mole found itself bouncing in place on a foundation of firm soil called "duracrust." The next two years were spent troubleshooting, beaming new software to InSight to teach its robotic arm new maneuvers to assist the mole, and anxiously waiting for photos that might show progress.

"It's just been a huge effort across the board, and one that we never anticipated," Smrekar said. "We thought that we were going to punch the hole down."

The InSight team first instructed the robotic arm to push on the mole, but that just caused it to pop out of the hole. Once they got the probe back in the ground, a year later, they instructed the arm to pile dirt on top of it, hoping that would provide enough friction for the probe to dig deeper.

But the mole made no progress with 500 hammer strokes last Saturday. The top of it was just 2 or 3 centimeters below the surface.

By then, InSight's problems were compounding. Unlike other sites where NASA has sent rovers and landers, the open plain where InSight sits wasn't having powerful gusts of wind. Smrekar calls such gusts "cleaning events," since they blow the planet's pervasive red dust off any robots in the area. Without them, InSight's solar panels have accumulated a significant layer of dust.

At the same time, the seasons were changing and InSight's home on a flat plain near Mars' equator was getting colder. In the chill, InSight will require more energy just to stay functional, even while its solar panels are absorbing less sunlight than they should.

"Power is decreasing and so we're coming up on a time period where, for probably two or three months, we're probably going to have to stand down from doing instrument operations for awhile and just kind of go into survival mode until it gets warmer on Mars," Smrekar said.

With this new time constraint, Saturday's hammering attempt was the mole's last chance to burrow.

Over the next two years, InSight will still listen for quakes on Mars and collect data on the planet's rumblings with its seismometer. This can provide some insight about the planet's interior. Already, Mars quakes have revealed that the Martian crust is drier and more broken up than scientists had thought - more like the moon than like Earth.

A planet's internal temperature reveals its history

If the mole had hammered down to 16 feet below, it would have measured temperatures all the way down its hole. That would allow scientists to calculate how much heat is leaving Mars - a metric called "heat flow."

"It's a single number, the heat flow, but it has ramifications for all kinds of aspects of understanding Mars," Smrekar said.

Heat leaving a planet is, in part, warmth left over from its formation, but it also comes from decaying radioactive elements. Measuring the heat flow would tell scientists how much radioactive material is inside the Martian crust - the outer layer of the planet - versus the mantle beneath.

That would reveal not only how material was distributed when the planet formed (and whether it's made of the same stuff as Earth), but also how the planet's internal structure has changed over time.

"That goes back to understanding the early evolution of Mars, that time period when there was a lot of liquid water on the surface," Smrekar said.

A higher concentration of radioactive material in the mantle would make that layer more active. More radioactive material in the crust could keep the planet's upper layers warm.

Heat flow could also indicate how deep you'd have to drill into Mars to reach liquid water today. Underground water on the planet could still host microbial life. Future humans traveling to Mars will likely need to harvest water there.

Now there is no possibility of measuring the planet's heat flow in the foreseeable future.

"I was hoping to get the data and be able to understand what that means for Mars," Smrekar said.

Business Insider

•             NASA announced that 2020 was likely Earth's hottest year on record, just edging out 2016 (though the difference was small enough to consider it a tie).

•             Last year brought a record-breaking hurricane season, extreme wildfires, heat waves, and flood-inducing storms to the US.

•             The intensity of these climate disasters is, in part, linked to rising temperatures.

NASA announced Thursday that 2020 was likely the planet's hottest year on record, edging out 2016 by one-tenth of a degree Celsius. The temperatures were close enough to fall within the scientists' margin of error, so they considered it "a statistical tie."

Average global temperatures in 2020 were 1.84 degrees Fahrenheit (1 degree Celsius) warmer than in the 30-year average between 1951 and 1980, NASA scientists found.

A second study of global warming conducted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) found that 2020 was actually the second-warmest year ever, behind 2016, perhaps due to the fact that NOAA researchers compared the annual temperature average to the 100-year average between 1901 and 2000.

Still, the data may help explain why the climate crisis surged to new heights in 2020, particularly in the US.

Scientists can't say whether an individual storm or fire was directly caused by climate change, since many factors contribute to each event. But experts agree that as the planet warms, weather becomes more extreme.

"The last seven years have been the warmest seven years on record, typifying the ongoing and dramatic warming trend," Gavin Schmidt, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said in a press release.

Extreme weather is linked to rising temperatures

It's probably no coincidence that Earth's hottest year (tied or not) was plagued by bizarre weather.

Bushfires raged through eastern Australia in January. In South America, the largest tropical wetland on Earth went up in flames. Typhoon Goni barreled into the Philippines with sustained winds of 195 mph, making it the strongest tropical cyclone landfall in history. A huge glacier broke off a Greenland ice shelf and drifted into the sea.

Research has shown that the changing climate is contributing to stronger hurricanes, more severe heat waves, larger and more destructive wildfires, and heavier rainfall that can cause flooding.

"Global warming won't necessarily increase overall tropical storm formation, but when we do get a storm it's more likely to become stronger," Jim Kossin, an atmospheric scientist at NOAA, told The Guardian. "And it's the strong ones that really matter."

Some studies have linked the warming climate to the now-familiar arrival of the polar vortex at temperate latitudes. Rising temperatures could even be driving more severe thunderstorms and tornado outbreaks.

The US saw $95 billion in climate disaster damages

No part of the US was spared a disaster last year.

Heat waves dried out the West and a polar vortex chilled the Northeast.

Wildfires in the Pacific Northwest and Rockies forced tens of thousands of people to evacuate their homes in late summer. Four million acres burned in California - more than double the previous state record. Fires killed at least 31 people in California, nine in Oregon, and one in Washington. Colorado, too, saw three of the four largest fires in state history. The region hadn't seen fires of that scale in 1,000 years, journalist Eric Holthaus reported.

At the same time, more hurricanes howled along the Gulf and Southeast coasts than in any other year in recorded history. Lake Charles, Louisiana didn't have time to recover from one cyclone before the next one hit. Hurricane Laura ripped up homes with 150 mph winds. Six weeks later, Hurricane Delta dumped more than 15 inches of rain.

The center of the continental US, meanwhile, endured record storms, floods, and tornado swarms.

All told, the US had 22 weather and climate disasters in 2020 that cost the nation $1 billion in damages or more - blowing by the previous annual record of 16 disasters in 2017.

The 22 billion-dollar disasters - seven linked to tropical cyclones, 13 to severe storms, one to drought, and one to wildfires - totaled $95 billion in damages, according to NOAA.

No place to hide

Earth's warming over time makes one thing increasingly clear: Soon, if not already, there will be no place to hide from the destructive consequences of humans' climate-altering behavior.

Extreme heat could make some regions across the central US, Middle East, and Australia almost unlivable in the summers. Scientists expect extreme storms and fires to get worse, too. All that could deal a severe blow to food production.

Some cities are also expected to run out of water. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects severe reductions in water resources for 8% of the global population from 2021 to 2040.

The Amazon rainforest, the world's coral reefs, and the Greenland ice sheet are all at risk of collapse. The Arctic is on track to lose more ice this century than at any point since the last Ice Age. By 2100, rising sea levels could swallow cities like New Orleans, Boston, Venice, Lagos, and Jakarta, driving waves of refugees inland.

"Whether one year is a record or not is not really that important - the important things are long-term trends," Schmidt said. "With these trends, and as the human impact on the climate increases, we have to expect that records will continue to be broken."

Business Insider

Riyadh has urged Bangladesh to take back some 54,000 Rohingya that are currently in Saudi Arabia. But agreeing to this would complicate Bangladesh's Rohingya repatriation talks with Myanmar.

In a recent interview with DW, Bangladeshi Foreign Minister A K Abdul Momen said that authorities in Dhaka could provide legal documents to some of the Rohingya that live in Saudi Arabia.

The Muslim Rohingya are an ethnic minority originating in Myanmar's Rakhine state. However, Myanmar refuses to recognize them as citizens. For decades, the Rohingya have fled from persecution to other countries, most of them to neighboring Bangladesh.

Almost 40 years ago, Saudi Arabia took in tens of thousands of Rohingya refugees who were facing persecution in Myanmar. The Saudi government told Dhaka in September 2020 that it "would be helpful" if the refugees were given Bangladeshi passports as the kingdom "doesn't keep stateless people."

The Rohingya in Saudi Arabia do not hold a passport from any country. Even the children of the refugees who were born in Saudi Arabia and speak Arabic are not offered Saudi citizenship.

Bangladesh does not recognize the Rohingya as its citizens, therefore experts say that Foreign Minister Momen's statement that Dhaka was considering giving passports to some Rohingya in Saudi Arabia could put the South Asian country on a backfoot in its repatriation talks with Myanmar.

A tough decision for Dhaka

"We have discussed it with Saudi authorities and assured them that we will renew passports of Rohingya that have traveled to Saudi Arabia from Bangladesh," Momen told DW.

The foreign minister said that many Rohingya bribed Bangladeshi officials to get the country's passports.

"In 2001, 2002 and 2006, many Rohingya traveled to Saudi Arabia with Bangladeshi passports. Some corrupt Bangladeshi officials issued them these documents," Momen said.

The foreign minister, however, said that Dhaka will not be responsible for the children of these people.

"These Rohingya have not been in Bangladesh since the 1970s. Their children were born and brought up in other countries. They don't know anything about Bangladesh. They were raised as Arabs," Momen told DW, adding that the Saudi government does not want to deport all Rohingya.

"Those who have already acquired Saudi citizenship will stay there."

Some 300,000 Rohingya have already received work permit in Saudi Arabia. Many of the 54,000 Rohingya that Riyadh wants to repatriate now either carried Bangladeshi passports when they traveled to Saudi Arabia, or they received them from Bangladeshi consulates in the Middle Eastern country.

Who should take responsibility for the Rohingya?

C R Abrar, executive director of the Dhaka-based Refugee and Migratory Movements, told DW that if these people have Bangladeshi documents, Dhaka must take responsibility for them.

But he condemned Riyadh for pressuring Bangladeshi authorities over their repatriation.

"Bangladesh, whose economy is not too strong, has shown a lot of courage to provide shelter to these people. Saudi Arabia should not pile more pressure on the country," he said.

Implications for Bangladesh

The expert is of the view that if Bangladesh accepts taking back Rohingya from Saudi Arabia, it will weaken its Myanmar repatriation case.

"Myanmar may try to use it to its advantage and force Bangladesh to recognize more Rohingya refugees as its citizens," Abrar said.

Ali Riaz, a distinguished professor of political science at Illinois State University, says it is a tricky situation for Bangladesh. He, however, believes that the Saudi issue will not have an impact on Bangladesh's negotiations with Myanmar.

"They are separate issues," Riaz told DW. "Recognizing some Rohingya as citizens does not mean that Bangladesh accepts the entire ethnic group as their own."

WASHINGTON(AA)

The New York Jets have announced they reached an agreement in principle to hire Robert Saleh, setting him on the path to become the first Muslim head coach in American football history.

The team announced the yet-to-be-finalized agreement in a statement on Thursday.

Saleh had been the San Francisco 49ers defense coordinator for the past four seasons, overhauling the team's once unimpressive defense and turning it into a formidable behemoth.

"Congrats to Coach Saleh and his family. @nyjets you got a great coach and an even better person," 49ers kicker Robbie Gould said on Twitter.

Saleh was born in Dearborn, Michigan, a major hub of Arab-American life. He is of Lebanese descent.

Turkey has been completely purged of far-left terror groups’ structures outside cities, Turkey’s interior minister said Friday.

“There are either one or two people or none” in rural areas, Suleyman Soylu told a graduation ceremony for 500 women special forces police officers. “They are also in a hurry to flee to Europe.”

The leadership of the terrorist PKK in northern Iraq’s Mt. Qandil area is also reeling from the efforts of both the Turkish state and a longstanding protest of the terror group by families in Diyarbakir, southeastern Turkey.

Around 5,000 people used to join the terrorist PKK group every year, Soylu said, but now just a small fraction do, with only 52 joining in 2020.

“We will rescue those 52 people they deceived and kidnapped before it’s too late,” he added.

In its more than 30-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the US and EU – has been responsible for the deaths of some 40,000 people, including women, children, and infants./aa

A magnitude-5.5 earthquake shook Hormozgan province in southern Iran, according to officials Saturday. 

The quake struck at 1.01 a.m. local time (2201GMT Friday) at a depth of 19 kilometers (12 miles) with the epicenter in Bandar Lengeh district, according to Tehran University Seismological Center.

There were no immediate reports of casualties.

Iran is one of the most seismically active countries in the world, where earthquakes occur often and are destructive./aa  

The key emergency committee of the World Health Organization (WHO) said Friday that a lack of data on vaccine safety is a barrier to ensuring a quick and equitable global supply of vaccines and recommended against countries issuing vaccine passports.

"If you look at the recommendation made by the committee around vaccination for travelers, it says at the present time that the committee does not recommend including a requirement of proof of vaccination for international travel," said Dr. Mike Ryan, head of the WHO's emergencies program.

"It is not because that would be a good idea in the future," he said. "But because we are lacking critical evidence regarding whether or not these persons were vaccinated, continued to be affected or continue to transmit disease."

It recommended countries not require vaccination proof from incoming travelers but
advised nations to implement “coordinated, evidence-based measures for safe travel and to share with WHO experiences and best practices learned.”
During the group’s bi-weekly news webinar, the confirmed global death toll from the coronavirus pandemic surpassed 2 million, according to Johns Hopkins University in the US.

"Health workers are exhausted, health systems are stretched, and we're seeing supplies of oxygen run dangerously low in some countries," said WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus. "Now is the time we must pull together as a common humanity and rollout vaccines to health workers and those at the highest risk."

The pandemic continues to constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern, the committee on COVID-19 again declared.
"The committee strongly encouraged vaccine manufacturers to rapidly provide safety and efficacy data to the WHO for emergency use listing," it said.

"The lack of such data is a barrier to ensuring the timely and equitable supply of vaccines at the global level." It "strongly encouraged vaccine manufacturers to rapidly provide safety and efficacy data to the WHO for emergency use listing.

"The lack of such data is a barrier to ensuring the timely and equitable supply of vaccines at the global level," it said,
The effects of vaccines in reducing transmission are yet unknown and the current availability of vaccines is too limited, the committee added./aa

WhatsApp postponed its new privacy policy update from Feb. 8 to May 15, the company announced Friday.

The popular messaging app said in a statement that there is misinformation that is "causing concern” after users began switching to alternatives because its new privacy policy rules forced them to accept sharing personal data with Facebook companies.

"We will always protect your personal conversations with end-to-end encryption, so that neither WhatsApp nor Facebook can see these private messages,” it said. "We also can’t see your shared location and we don’t share your contacts with Facebook."

The statement noted that the new update will not change the messaging system.

"Instead, the update includes new options people will have to message a business on WhatsApp, and provides further transparency about how we collect and use data," the company added.

It highlighted that the update does not change WhatsApp’s ability to share data with Facebook.

It underlined that users' accounts will not be suspended or deleted Feb. 8.

"We're also going to do a lot more to clear up the misinformation around how privacy and security works on WhatsApp,” it said. "We’ll then go to people gradually to review the policy at their own pace before new business options are available on May 15," it added.

- Alternatives

The most controversial issue in the update is that the rules will not be implemented for users in the EU, which was not noted in the press release.

Many Turkish users have shared posts on social media and deleted WhatsApps accounts since last week and switched to foreign and local alternatives, such as Telegram, Signal, Bip and Dedi.

On Friday, GSM operators in Turkey -- Turkcell, Turk Telekom and Vodafone -- joined hands to support locally developed messaging and social media platforms, Bip and Yaay, respectively./aa

YAOUNDE, Cameroon

The UN chief is concerned about persistent violence in Cameroon's North-West and South-West regions, in which civilians continue to pay a terrible price, said a UN spokesman on Friday.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ spokesman told reporters he has taken note "of the willingness of the government of Cameroon to launch an investigation into the 10 January incident in Mautu (South-West Region) that reportedly left at least 10 civilians dead."

Earlier this week, the Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa (CHRDA) accused the Cameroonian military of killing at least eight civilians in the village of Mautu in the South West region.

Cameroon’s Defense Ministry denied the allegations but admitted having launched an operation in the area.

It said a few terrorists were neutralized, while others were wounded. Arms and ammunition were also recovered in the operation, it added.

Guterres also condemned an attack on the convoy of the prefect of the department of Momo last week that led to the death of several members of the armed forces and a journalist.

He extended "his deepest condolences to the bereaved families and wishes a speedy recovery to the wounded."

The situation in the Central African country's North-West and South-West – both English-speaking regions – has worsened in recent months, with continued violent attacks on schools and children.

The Central African country has been marred by protests and violence since 2016, with residents in English-speaking regions contending they have been marginalized for decades by the central government and the French-speaking majority.

They are calling for independence or a return to a federal state.

Violence in the Anglophone regions in the last three years has claimed an estimated 3,000 lives and caused the displacement of more than 730,000 civilians, according to Human Rights Watch.

In June 2020, the Norwegian Refugee Council declared the conflict in Cameroon as the most neglected crisis on the planet for a second year running./aa

hacklink al dizi film izle film izle yabancı dizi izle fethiye escort bayan escort - vip elit escort erotik film izle hack forum türk ifşa the prepared organik hit betkanyoncasibom girişcasibom girişCasibombahis siteleribahis siteleribahis siteleribahis siteleribahis sitelerijojobet girişjojobetbetpark girişmeritking 1130 com girişcasibom güncelcasibomMarsbahis girişcasibomjojobetholiganbetbaywincasibombaywinbetistbetisttarafbetportobetcasibomtest1jojobetmarsbahistest66paribahiscasibomsahabetmarsbahistarafbetholiganbetjojobet girişerotik film izlejojobetmarsbahismobilbahismobilbahisankara evden eve nakliyatbetpark girişjojobet girişjojobetjojobetcasibompadişahbetBettürkeycasibom günceljojobetاباحيسكسporno izlepornohd porno sexultrabetby casinotipobet girişEkrem Abi Sitelerholiganbetdeneme bonusu veren sitelerbahis sitelerivqvk30 tl bonus veren sitelerbahis sitelerimeritkingbetebetmarsbahismarsbahisholiganbetbahis siteleriartemisbetCasinolevantSuperbahisopenbook market idbetgitcasinolevanttipobetnakitbahiscasinolevantkocaeli escortjojobet girişsahabetjojobetjojobetbaywin girişkralbettipobet girişcasibombahis siteleribahis siteleribahis siteleribahis siteleribizbet1xbetjojobet giriş güncelcasibom güncel girişonwin girişonwinsuperbahisGrandpashabetGrandpashabetbycasinocasinolevantcasinolevantdumanbetgoldenbahisbetsatsekabetMatbetSahabetOnwinMeritkingBahsegelTipobetTarafbetVdcasinoMariobetBetebetPusulabetUltrabetbetinedeneme bonusu veren sitelerbahis siteleriMostbetnakitbahissafirbetdinamobetmariobetmavibetjokerbetvdcasinolunabetcratosslotpiabellacasinokralbetbetkanyonbetsmovecasibomcasibomtempobetbahis siteleribahis sitelericasibom güncel girişsekabetonwinmeritkingjojobetmariobetnakitbahismavibetbetsmovepiabellacasinotempobetlunabetjokerbetdinamobetvdcasinocratosslotcasibomcasinolevantBetriyalbaywinbahis siteleribahis siteleriCasinoplus girişmatbetbetpark girişbetebetmarsbahiscasibom girişjojobetjojobetdeneme bonusu veren sitelerbetkombetcupMeritkingholiganbetmatbet+18 film izleMeritkingcasibom girişMeritkinghdfilmcehenneminicasibom girişmatbetbetkanyonbahis siteleribahis siteleribetebet girişbahis siteleriHoliganbetbahis sitelerimatadorbetsweet bonanzaBetturkey Jojobetportobetçilingirdeneme bonusu veren sitelerbahis siteleribahis sitelerimarsbahis giriştipobetdumanbetnvi randevucasibommarsbahiscasibom girişjojobetultrabet güncel girişCasibombetparkbahis sitelerisahabetbahis siteleribahis siteleribahis sitelerihermesbetcasibom girişMeritkingMeritkingMeritkingSekabetSekabetBETS10BETS10Denizli evden eve nakliyatsazanhdfilm cehennemimeritking 1131casibomvaycasinongsbahismeritkingsekabetimajbetMatbetmarsbahiscasibomsekabetjojobetBETS10CasibomJojobetJojobetJojobetMarsbahisbahsegelbahiscasinobetist girişjojobetjojobetdeneme bonusu veren sitelergorabetbaywinbaywinLunabetbetistbahiscomBetist girişBetist girişBetist girişBetist girişBetist girişBetistCasibomTarafbettipobetlunabetbetnanocasibombetineultrabetcasibomwinpapelultrabetbetebetcasibommarsbahis girişjojobetultrabetprodaja autajojobet girişmeritking 1131kingbettingbetebetpadişahbettipobettipobetBetturkey telegrammarsbahispadişahbetmarsbahisTarafbetholiganbet girişbetturkeyjojobet girişjojobetJojobetultrabetultrabetultrabetHoliganbettümbettümbetdeneme bonusu veren sitelermeritking girişwinpapelCasibomwinpapelultrabetbetebetbakirkoy escortMeritkingbetkommarsbahis girişjojobetMeritkingbaywinDeneme Bonusu Veren SitelermatbetMeritkingaraç muayene randevuantalya özel okul fiyatlarıGrandpashabetgrandpashabet girişcasibom girişjojobet güncel girişpusulabetultrabettipobetmeritkingsekabetmatadorbetimajbetGALABET GİRİŞGALABET GİRİŞonwinmeritkingmeritking twitterMeritkingcasibomjojobettümbetextrabetvaycasinomeritkingbio linkstarzbetsahabet