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  1. #531
    Biệt Thự Triển's Avatar
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    Khí công.




    Vital medical supplies reach India as COVID deaths near 200,000

    Vital medical supplies began to reach India on Tuesday as hospitals starved of life-saving oxygen and beds turned away coronavirus patients, and a surge in infections pushed the death toll close to 200,000.

    A shipment from Britain, including 100 ventilators and 95 oxygen concentrators, arrived in the capital New Delhi, though a spokesman for Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Britain had no surplus COVID-19 vaccine doses to spare.

    France is sending eight large oxygen-generating plants this week while Ireland, Germany and Australia are dispatching oxygen concentrators and ventilators, an Indian foreign ministry official said, underlining the crucial need for oxygen.

    U.S. President Joe Biden reaffirmed U.S. commitment to helping India, saying he was expecting to send vaccines there while senior officials from his administration warned that the country was still at the "front end" of the crisis.

    India's first "Oxygen Express" train pulled into New Delhi, laden with about 70 tonnes of oxygen from an eastern state, but the crisis has not abated in the city of 20 million people at the epicentre of the world's deadliest wave of infections.

    "The current wave is extremely dangerous and contagious and the hospitals are overloaded," said Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, adding that a large public area in the capital will be converted into a critical care hospital.

    With frustration mounting, relatives of a recently deceased COVID-19 patient assaulted staff with knives at a hospital in the southeast of New Delhi, injuring at least one person, a hospital spokeswoman said.

    A video posted on social media showed several people brawling with guards at the same hospital. Delhi High Court has advised local authorities to provide security at hospitals.

    The World Health Organization said it was working to deliver 4,000 oxygen concentrators to India, where mass gatherings, more contagious variants of the virus and low vaccination rates have sparked the second major wave of contagion.

    With vaccine demand outstripping supply in the country of 1.3 billion people, two U.S. drugmakers have offered support.

    Gilead Sciences (GILD.O) said on Monday it would give India at least 450,000 vials of its antiviral drug remdesivir. Merck & Co (MRK.N) said on Tuesday it was partnering with five Indian generic drugmakers to expand production and access to its experimental COVID-19 drug molnupiravir.

    India is also negotiating with the United States, which has said it will share 60 million doses of AstraZeneca's (AZN.L) COVID-19 vaccine with other countries. A senior official participating in the talks said Prime Minister Narendra Modi had been assured of priority for India.

    Supply uncertainty could force Maharashtra, India's hardest-hit state, to postpone inoculations for people aged between 18 and 45, a government official said.

    Biden said he had spoken on Monday at length with Modi, including about when the United States would be able to ship vaccines to India, the world's second most populous country, and said it was his clear intention to do so.

    MOUNTING TOLL

    India's 323,144 new cases over the past 24 hours stood below a worldwide peak of 352,991 hit on Monday, and 2,771 new deaths took the toll to 197,894.

    But the fewer confirmed infections were largely due to a drop in testing, according to health economist Rijo M John of the Indian Institute of Management in Kerala, a southern state.

    "This should not be taken as an indication of falling cases, rather a matter of missing out on too many positive cases," he said on Twitter.

    The U.S. State Department's coordinator for global COVID-19 response, Gayle Smith, warned India's challenge will require a sustained effort: "We all need to understand that we are still at the front end of this. This hasn't peaked yet."

    Dr K. Preetham, an administrator at the Indian Spinal Injuries Centre, said patients there were having to share oxygen cylinders because of the oxygen shortage.

    New Delhi is in lockdown, as are the southern state of Karnataka and Maharashtra, where the country’s financial capital Mumbai is situated.

    An uneven patchwork of restrictions, complicated by local elections and mass gatherings such as the weeks-long Kumbh Mela, or pitcher festival, could trigger COVID-19 breakouts elsewhere.

    About 20,000 devout Hindus gathered by the Ganges river in the northern city of Haridwar on the last auspicious day of the festival for a bath they believe will wash away their sins.

    "We believe Mother Ganga will protect us," said a woman on the riverbank, where people bathed with few signs of physical distancing measures.

    India has turned to its armed forces for help with the pandemic. Even China, which is locked in a military standoff with India along their disputed Himalayan border, said it was trying to get medical supplies to its neighbour.

    In some cities, bodies were being cremated in makeshift facilities in parks and parking lots. Television channels showed bodies crammed into an ambulance in the western city of Beed as modes of transport ran short.

    SUPPLY UNCERTAINTY

    India has converted hotels and railway coaches into critical care facilities to make up for the shortage of beds, but experts say the next crisis will be a lack of healthcare professionals.

    Companies ranging from conglomerates such as Tata Group and Reliance Industries Ltd (RELI.NS) to Jindal Steel and Power (JNSP.NS) have stepped forward to help supply medical oxygen.

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has said India’s economy, the world’s sixth largest, could falter because of the spike in infections, creating a drag for the global economy.

    Australia halted direct passenger flights from India until May 15, joining other nations taking steps to keep out more virulent variants of the virus.

    India has an official tally of 17.64 million infections, but experts believe the real number runs much higher.

    Companies ranging from conglomerates such as Tata Group and Reliance Industries Ltd (RELI.NS) to Jindal Steel and Power (JNSP.NS) have stepped forward to help supply medical oxygen.

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has said India’s economy, the world’s sixth largest, could falter because of the spike in infections, creating a drag for the global economy.

    Australia halted direct passenger flights from India until May 15, joining other nations taking steps to keep out more virulent variants of the virus.

    India has an official tally of 17.64 million infections, but experts believe the real number runs much higher.

    /*src.: https://www.reuters.com/world/india/...es-2021-04-27/
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  2. #532
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    Bi hài kịch




    Video from India shows a body falling out of a battered ambulance as the health system buckles under huge COVID-19 surge




    A video from India shows a COVID-19 patient's body falling out of an ambulance and onto the road on Friday, a particularly stark moment as the country's strained healthcare system struggles in a huge surge of the virus.

    Friday's incident has caused consternation both online, where it was shared widely, and from families gathered outside the medical facility in Vidisha, in the central state of Madhya Pradesh, according to the newspaper The Indian Express.

    In the video, the ambulance can be seen leaving the gates, then swerving a corner. A side panel falls open and a shrouded body falls out onto the road. Family members can then be heard yelling in protest.

    A medical official later said the ambulance was old and had been donated by an unspecified nongovernmental organization.

    The scene is a snapshot of a healthcare system under immense strain as the number of new coronavirus cases skyrockets.

    Day after day last week, the country set global records for the highest number of new cases, a situation worsened by critical shortages both of oxygen and vaccines.

    The most recent figures available on Johns Hopkins University's tracker — from Sunday — showed the country's highest-ever number for new daily cases, 353,000.

    Outside the Vidisha facility — converted from an unfinished medical college — families were upset because of how little information they were getting, India Today, a news magazine, reported.

    Complaining of not being able to visit, and of getting no updates from medics, families were barring staff from leaving until they got more information, according to The Indian Express.



    "My relative has died, but the hospital is not providing any details," one family member, Prakash Lodhi, told India Today.

    "We don't even know whether he died this evening or yesterday itself. No one is telling us anything. We have been waiting for four, five hours outside the hospital."

    GS Varma, a Vidisha official, told India Today the families' "concerns are genuine."

    "But we can't allow everyone to go in," he said. "They are also angry that no one is answering their calls. The doctors aren't able to answer calls because they are treating patients. It isn't possible for them to attend all calls, but we will make arrangements to improve the situation."

    The Vidisha Medical College dean Sunil Nandeshwar told The Indian Express that the ambulance was a donation from an NGO and was old. In the video, the vehicle's rear windows appear to be broken.

    Families also complained that they could not retrieve bodies themselves, The Indian Express reported. A local official named Pankaj Jain told the paper that bodies instead had to be cremated under COVID-19 protocol.

    Though India is the world's largest producer of vaccines, rich countries' rush to acquire a surplus has helped create a major disparity in global distribution.

    This week, the US offered further help for the country's vaccine production, while the UK has begun sending ventilators, the BBC reported.

    /* src.: https://www.businessinsider.com/indi...21-4?r=DE&IR=T
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  3. #533
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    Thương tâm: Hô hấp thê tạo




    Ấn Độ: Vợ tuyệt vọng hô hấp cứu chồng bị COVID-19 trước của bệnh viện

    Last updated Apr 27, 2021


    Bà Renu Singhal hồi sức bằng miệng cho chồng bị dương tính với COVID-19. (Hình: India Today)

    AGRA, Ấn Độ – Vào ngày 26 Tháng Tư, truyền thông Ấn Độ lan truyền bức hình gây chấn động dư luận: một người vợ đang hô hấp nhân tạo bằng miệng để cố gắng cứu chồng mình bị nhiễm COVID-19.

    Bà Renu Singhal, một cư dân của Awas Vikas Sector 7 ở Uttar Pradesh’s Agra, đã đưa chồng là ông Ravi Singhal (47 tuổi) đến Bệnh viện Cao Đẳng Y Tế Sarojini Naidu (SNMC) sau khi ông ta bị khó thở.

    Ông Singhal không được vào trong, vì bệnh viện không còn giường, oxy cũng không đủ. Cả hai ngồi chờ trên chiếc xe kéo tự động bên ngoài. Khi tình trạng của ông Singhal trở nên tồi tệ, trong nỗ lực cuối cùng cứu chồng, Renu đã dùng miệng làm hô hấp nhân tạo cho ông trên xe. Bà không nghĩ đến việc sẽ bị lây nhiễm COVID-19 từ chồng, mà chỉ nghĩ làm sao cứu được ông.


    Bà Renu Singhal được dìu ra ngoài sau khi chứng kiến cái chết của chồng ngay trên tay mình. Chồng bà không được bệnh viện tiếp nhận, vì không còn giường và oxy cho bệnh nhân. (Hình: India Today)

    Lực bất tòng tâm, dù cố gắng níu kéo, van nài chồng ở lại, ông Singhal vẫn từ từ lịm dần, rồi gục chết trên tay vợ. Đó là những giây phút ám ảnh nhất trong cuộc đời bà Renu.

    Bức ảnh bi thảm của vợ chồng bà Renu đã gây chấn động dư luận Ấn Độ, khắc họa thêm mảng tối u ám đang đeo bám người dân nước này vì đại dịch COVID-19.

    Số phận của ông Singhal cũng như hàng ngàn số phận tử vong mỗi ngày vì COVID-19 trong tình hình hiện nay ở Ấn Độ, như cô Sunita, 31 tuổi, vừa qua đời trên một con đường ở New Delhi khi bị hàng chục bệnh viện, phòng khám từ chối tiếp nhận vì hết oxy và giường bệnh.

    /* src.: https://saigonnhonews.com/article-ca...cua-benh-vien/





    Heartbreaking pictures show Agra woman resuscitating dying Covid positive husband by breathing into mouth

    In a desperate attempt to save her Covid-19 positive husband, a woman in Agra tried to resuscitate him by breathing into his mouth but couldn't save his life.


    Woman performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on her Covid-19 positive husband (India Today photo)

    Renu Singhal, seeing her Covid-19 positive husband gasping for breath, tried to resuscitate him but couldn't save his life. Even as she performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on her husband, Ravi Singhal died on her lap inside an auto outside a hospital in Agra.

    Renu Singhal, a resident of Awas Vikas Sector 7 in Uttar Pradesh's Agra, had brought Ravi Singhal (47) to the Sarojini Naidu Medical College (SNMC) and Hospital after he experienced breathlessness.

    Renu Singhal took an auto from her residence in Sector 7 and reached the government facility.

    As his condition deteriorated, in desperate attempts to save him, Renu even tried to give mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to him. But, Ravi died gasping for breath. Photos of a visibly distraught Renu went viral on social media.



    Reports of Covid-19 patients dying due to the shortage of oxygen and beds in the hospitals have become common in the city. Overwhelmed due to an unprecedented rise in the number of virus-infected patients, hospitals, running out of medical oxygen and beds, are now turning people away.

    The hospitals' refusal to admit patients due to the unavailability of beds has left people running from pillar to post either to get their ailing family members admitted to hospitals or to procure medical oxygen and medicines. Or it is a combination of the two factors in some cases.

    India on Monday saw a deluge of over 3.52 lakh Covid-19 cases and 2,812 deaths in a single day. A total of 2,812 Covid-19 patients died due to the infection, according to health ministry data, taking total coronavirus fatalities to 1,95,123.

    Maximum casualties were reported in Maharashtra (832), followed by Delhi with 350 daily deaths. 53.18 per cent of the new cases are reported from these five states, with Maharashtra (66,191 cases) alone responsible for 18.75 per cent of the new cases.

    /* src.: https://www.indiatoday.in/coronaviru...068-2021-04-26



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  4. #534
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    Chiến tranh lạnh.




    EU-China investment deal put on ice over sanctions

    The EU's long-time-coming investment deal with China is facing major hurdles. The EU's economy commissioner says diplomatic tensions have made conditions for the deal "unfavorable."


    The two sides signed the deal in 2020, but recent sanctions have jeopardized the deal

    A diplomatic spat between the European Union and China has jeopardized a major investment agreement, officials said on Tuesday.

    EU Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis told AFP news agency that efforts to win approval for the deal were effectively on ice.

    "We now in a sense have suspended ... political outreach activities from the European Commission side," Dombrovskis said in an interview.

    "It's clear in the current situation with the EU sanctions in place against China and Chinese counter sanctions in place, including against members of European Parliament (that) the environment is not conducive for ratification of the agreement," Dombrovskis said.

    A spokesperson for the European Commission told DW that the ratification process had not begun, and was subject to a legal review.

    The spokesperson said the ratification process was now effectively paused as it "cannot be separated from the evolving dynamics of the wider EU-China relationship."

    Chinese sanctions were "unacceptable and regrettable," the spokesperson added.

    What is the EU-China agreement?

    Brussels and Beijing signed a new investment agreement in 2020 intended to guarantee a stable framework of conditions for trade and investment in each other's markets.

    The EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI) was signed in December after seven years of negotiation.

    To enter into force, it must still be ratified by EU member states and the European Parliament, where it faces massive opposition.

    The pact would offer European companies access to Chinese markets and facilitate Chinese investment in Europe. It also sets level playing field rules that prevent state assistance from undercutting competition, and sustainable development provisions.

    Why have relations deteriorated?


    In March, the EU imposed sanctions against China for its treatment of the Uyghur Muslim minority in the Xinjiang region. These were the first human rights sanctions against China since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.

    In response, Beijing immediately announced counter-sanctions against members of the European Parliament, and others.

    Doubts have been raised about the deal in recent months, with experts and human rights advocates calling on the EU to ditch the deal.

    /* src.: https://www.dw.com/en/eu-china-inves...ons/a-57427703

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  5. #535
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    Cứu vật vật trả thân,
    cứu người người trả ... tượng.


    Noto một làng chài nhỏ trên bán đảo Ishikawa có gần 20 ngàn dân, trích 30 triệu Yên, tương đương 270 ngàn USD, từ tiền viện trợ dịch covid của chánh phủ Nhựt để tạc tượng con mực khổng lồ. Mạng xã hội Nhựt người thích chí kẻ dè bỉu cho là hoang phí. Một phát ngôn viên của làng nói với tờ Fuji News Network rằng con mực sẽ trở thành điểm hấp dẫn du khách dndu ngoạn coi "mực bay". Nghe Wiki đồn rằng Nhựt có loài mực bay, đặc biệt vùng biển nơi này có mực bay để coi và lên dĩa ăn luôn. Con mực này có thể bay xa tới 30 thước.




    Covid: Japan town builds giant squid statue with relief money


    THE TONARINOPOTI YOUTUBE CHANNEL - Flying squid are a delicacy in the fishing town of Noto, however tourism has dropped considerably due to the pandemic

    A seaside town in Japan has raised eyebrows after it used funding from an emergency Covid-19 relief grant to build a giant statue of a squid.

    The 13m-long (43ft) sea creature lies in the port of Noto, where flying squid is the town's delicacy.

    It reportedly used 25m yen ($228,500; £164,700) of the emergency funding to build the statue.

    Noto officials have told local media it is part of a long term plan to lure tourists back after the pandemic.

    Japan is battling another surge in coronavirus cases, and Tokyo is currently under a state of emergency - the third for the country since the pandemic began.

    The fishing town of Noto - which is located in Ishikawa prefecture on Japan's central-west coast - has had a very low number of cases, but it has been impacted by the significant drop in tourists.

    Noto received 800m yen ($7.3m; £5.3m) through the national grants, which were intended as an emergency economic boost to help regional areas affected by the pandemic, reports Yahoo Japan.

    The funds did not have to be spent directly on Covid relief. Some however have criticised the town's administration for spending so much money on the giant cephalopod, especially as the pandemic is not yet over.

    One local told the Chunichi Shimbun newspaper that while the statue may be effective in the long run, the money could have been used for "urgent support", such as for medical staff and long-term care facilities.

    But a spokesperson for the town told Fuji News Network that the statue would be a tourist attraction and part of a long term strategy to help promote Noto's famous flying squid.

    Like in many other countries, the coronavirus pandemic has badly hit Japan's tourism industry. The country is hosting the Olympics this year but no international fans will be allowed at the event, which could amount to losses of 200bn yen ($1.8bn; £1.3bn), according to Takahide Kiuchi, an executive economist at Nomura Research Institute.

    /* src.: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-56978075
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  6. #536
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triển View Post


    Cứu vật vật trả thân,
    cứu người người trả ... tượng.


    Noto một làng chài nhỏ trên bán đảo Ishikawa có gần 20 ngàn dân, trích 30 triệu Yên, tương đương 270 ngàn USD, từ tiền viện trợ dịch covid của chánh phủ Nhựt để tạc tượng con mực khổng lồ. Mạng xã hội Nhựt người thích chí kẻ dè bỉu cho là hoang phí. Một phát ngôn viên của làng nói với tờ Fuji News Network rằng con mực sẽ trở thành điểm hấp dẫn du khách dndu ngoạn coi "mực bay". Nghe Wiki đồn rằng Nhựt có loài mực bay, đặc biệt vùng biển nơi này có mực bay để coi và lên dĩa ăn luôn. Con mực này có thể bay xa tới 30 thước.




    Covid: Japan town builds giant squid statue with relief money


    THE TONARINOPOTI YOUTUBE CHANNEL - Flying squid are a delicacy in the fishing town of Noto, however tourism has dropped considerably due to the pandemic

    A seaside town in Japan has raised eyebrows after it used funding from an emergency Covid-19 relief grant to build a giant statue of a squid.

    The 13m-long (43ft) sea creature lies in the port of Noto, where flying squid is the town's delicacy.

    It reportedly used 25m yen ($228,500; £164,700) of the emergency funding to build the statue.

    Noto officials have told local media it is part of a long term plan to lure tourists back after the pandemic.

    Japan is battling another surge in coronavirus cases, and Tokyo is currently under a state of emergency - the third for the country since the pandemic began.

    The fishing town of Noto - which is located in Ishikawa prefecture on Japan's central-west coast - has had a very low number of cases, but it has been impacted by the significant drop in tourists.

    Noto received 800m yen ($7.3m; £5.3m) through the national grants, which were intended as an emergency economic boost to help regional areas affected by the pandemic, reports Yahoo Japan.

    The funds did not have to be spent directly on Covid relief. Some however have criticised the town's administration for spending so much money on the giant cephalopod, especially as the pandemic is not yet over.

    One local told the Chunichi Shimbun newspaper that while the statue may be effective in the long run, the money could have been used for "urgent support", such as for medical staff and long-term care facilities.

    But a spokesperson for the town told Fuji News Network that the statue would be a tourist attraction and part of a long term strategy to help promote Noto's famous flying squid.

    Like in many other countries, the coronavirus pandemic has badly hit Japan's tourism industry. The country is hosting the Olympics this year but no international fans will be allowed at the event, which could amount to losses of 200bn yen ($1.8bn; £1.3bn), according to Takahide Kiuchi, an executive economist at Nomura Research Institute.

    /* src.: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-56978075


    Trong oanh tạc nét chỉ có cái phinh 1 phút chiếu cảnh con "mực bay" này đang ... bơi, chớ hổng phải đang bay. Ngoài cái phinh này ra có mấy cái hình chụp cả đàn mực đang bay lên khỏi mặt biển của một ông nhiếp ảnh nào đó chụp năm 2013. Nếu muốn coi mực bay phải đến Nhựt. Chỉ "du lịch internet" là không đủ đô (Nhớ chích ngừa trước khi đi Nhựt ):


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  7. #537
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    Thô Bỉ:

    Belgium ambassador’s wife invokes immunity over Seoul assault claims
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...assault-claims

    The ambassador, Peter Lescouhier, previously said that he “sincerely regrets the incident involving his wife”, adding that he “wants to apologise on her behalf”.

    The woman, named in media reports as Xiang Xueqiu, was questioned on Thursday, said a detective at Yongsan police station in central Seoul, without providing further details.

    The Belgium embassy “has expressed it would maintain the right of immunity for the ambassador’s wife”, said a detective at Yongsan police station in central Seoul, adding the police would not pursue the case.

    Reports say the envoy’s wife tried on clothes in a Seoul store before walking out, prompting an assistant to run after her to ask about an item she was wearing and triggering the confrontation.

    CCTV camera footage showed her pulling at one employee’s arm and hitting her in the head, before slapping another worker across the face who tried to intervene.

    The footage – provided by the family of an alleged victim – was widely reported by local media and circulated online and turned public opinion sharply against the ambassador’s family.
    Bà vợ ông đại sứ thật ra gốc Tàu, sư tử Á đông.

  8. #538
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    Nghe đồn nhiều cửa tiệm ở Đại Hàn
    còn để bản cấm luôn người Việt Nam vô tiệm
    của họ hoặc cảnh cáo người Việt có camera
    quay phim vì bị trộm cắp quá nhiều.

    Phép vua thua lệ Hàn
    Last edited by Triển; 05-18-2021 at 10:09 PM.
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  9. #539
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    Phép vua thua cố đạo:

    Timor-Leste begins to reckon with alleged Catholic church sex abuse
    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...urch-sex-abuse

    Daschbach, born in Pittsburgh and a former member of the Society of the Divine Word, was a powerful man. He was regarded as an expert in local language and many residents were convinced he had magical powers. Over the years the shelter, which had the support of international donors, took care of more than 600 orphans, poor children, vulnerable adults and abused women.

    Lita says that in the evenings, as they gathered for prayers, Daschbach would take a girl on his lap.

    “She was the one who would go to spend the night with him in his room and on his bed,” Lita says in an interview with Neon Metin. “In the following night, there would be another girl. The priest himself would say, ‘Tonight, you sleep with me.’”

    Lita says he also used a list of the names of the children, taped to the door of his room, to indicate which girl should spend the night with him.

    When Daschbach took her into his room, she says, he would lock the door, close the windows, then rape her.
    Nhập Gia tô tuỳ tục.

  10. #540
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    Chung quy chỉ vì mê tín đồ.


    Chẳng tham ruộng cả ao liền,
    Tham về cái bút cái nghiên cho đồ.



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