ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendiciówhose families abandoned them after the death of their husbands left them branded as purveyors of bad luck.
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióElham Ghaedi, a migrant from Iran, poses for a portrait in Panama City, Monday, March 10, 2025, after being deported from the United States, detained for weeks in a Panamanian immigration camp, and released on a temporary humanitarian visa allowing a 30‑day stay. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióElham Ghaedi left on Oct. 21, flying to Brazil and then to Venezuela’s capital Caracas.
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióShe traveled to Colombia, where took a bus north and then walked five days through the Darién Gap.ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióShe stayed 15 days in a migrant camp in southern Panama before taking a bus through Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala and to Mexico’s southern border. There, migration authorities detained her for six days.ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióShe traveled north to Mexico City, where she spent a month, before boarding a flight to Tijuana. U.S. authorities detained her when she crossed to San Diego.
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióAfghan migrant Hayatullah Omagh poses for a portrait in Panama City, Monday, March 10, 2025, after being deported from the United States, detained for weeks in a Panamanian immigration camp and released on a temporary humanitarian visa allowing a 30‑day stay. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióAfghan migrant Hayatullah Omagh poses for a portrait in Panama City, Monday, March 10, 2025, after being deported from the United States, detained for weeks in a Panamanian immigration camp and released on a temporary humanitarian visa allowing a 30‑day stay. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix)
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióOmagh fled Afghanistan in 2022 after the takeover of the Taliban because he identified as an atheist and was part of an ethnic minority, something that could put his life in danger.
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióHe first went to Pakistan, where he got a visa for six months, and struggled to get a new one due to his Afghani passport.ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióKim, a staunch conservative and former labor minister under Yoon, was named the PPP’s presidential candidate on May 3 after winning 56.3% of the primary vote, defeating a reformist rival who had criticized Yoon’s martial law. But the PPP’s leadership, dominated by Yoon loyalists, had spent the past week desperately pressuring Kim to step aside and back Han, whom they believed stood a stronger chance against liberal Democratic Party frontrunner
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióAfter talks between Han and Kim failed to unify their candidacies, the PPP’s emergency committee took the unprecedented step early Saturday of nullifying its primary, canceling Kim’s nomination and registering Han as both a party member and its new presidential candidate. However, the replacement required approval through an all-party vote conducted through an automated phone survey, which ultimately rejected the switch on Saturday night.ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendició“While we cannot disclose the figures, the vote on switching the candidate was rejected by a narrow margin,” party spokesman and lawmaker Shin Dong-wook said. Kim, who had denounced the party’s attempt to replace him as an “overnight political coup,” was immediately reinstated as the candidate and plans to officially register with election authorities on Sunday, according to the party.
ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendició“Now everything will return to its rightful place,” Kim said in a statement.ólicoenunauniversidadsecularpuedeserundesafíootroslovencomounabendicióKim, 73, was a prominent labor activist in the 1970s and ’80s, but joined a conservative party in the 1990s, saying he gave up his dream of becoming a “revolutionist” after witnessing the collapse of communist states. Since then, he has served eight years as governor of South Korea’s Gyeonggi province and completed three terms in the National Assembly.