@takaharu0328: @TAKAHARU@emoji_dancer #TAKAHARUchannel #TAKAHARUemoji #マスク #ダンス #絵文字 #fyp

TAKAHARU channel
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Region: JP
Wednesday 05 July 2023 12:34:24 GMT
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an07277
an :
ニコニコ顔素敵です😊
2023-07-05 13:00:25
2
moutasimeboukarit
AbjkMRstY :
Thank you, thanks to you, I learned to dance to these songs. Thank you. Greetings from Algeria
2023-07-05 21:06:26
1
useradelaidegemeas
userAdelaidegemeas :
so beautiful 🥰♥️
2023-07-08 20:20:00
1
userb0uokol0hc
🫣🥴น้องเนเน่🫣🥴 :
[😳]
2023-07-06 00:12:39
0
jannattahri0
JANNATTAHRI :
😆😁
2023-07-06 11:31:53
0
makhmudov_777_
💫 :
47 ming prasmotr 💀
2024-02-16 17:13:40
0
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”It’s destroyed everything,” says Victoria Salceanu, whose home was flooded by Storm Boris and which continues to batter central and eastern Europe. Torrential rain and flooding has forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes across countries including Austria, Poland, Slovakia and Romania. At least 16 people have died as a result of the extreme weather, which has destroyed buildings and wreaked havoc on infrastructure. The disaster in Europe comes after floods around the world last week; entire villages were submerged in Myanmar and nearly 300 prisoners escaped a collapsed jail in Nigeria, where floods have affected more than 1 million people. Extreme rainfall has become more common and more intense because of human-caused climate breakdown, particularly in Europe, most of Asia, Africa, Australia, central and eastern North America, and parts of South America. Climate scientists say they are troubled by the damage but unsurprised by the intensity. “The catastrophic rainfall hitting central Europe is exactly what scientists expect with climate change,” said Joyce Kimutai, of Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute. Kimutai said the death and damage across Africa and Europe highlighted “how poorly prepared the world is for such floods”. What is the climate science behind flooding: – and why is it getting worse? Tap the link in bio for our full video explainer and for our latest reporting on Storm Boris. #StormBoris #Flood #Weather #Storm #ClimateCrisis #Europe
”It’s destroyed everything,” says Victoria Salceanu, whose home was flooded by Storm Boris and which continues to batter central and eastern Europe. Torrential rain and flooding has forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes across countries including Austria, Poland, Slovakia and Romania. At least 16 people have died as a result of the extreme weather, which has destroyed buildings and wreaked havoc on infrastructure. The disaster in Europe comes after floods around the world last week; entire villages were submerged in Myanmar and nearly 300 prisoners escaped a collapsed jail in Nigeria, where floods have affected more than 1 million people. Extreme rainfall has become more common and more intense because of human-caused climate breakdown, particularly in Europe, most of Asia, Africa, Australia, central and eastern North America, and parts of South America. Climate scientists say they are troubled by the damage but unsurprised by the intensity. “The catastrophic rainfall hitting central Europe is exactly what scientists expect with climate change,” said Joyce Kimutai, of Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute. Kimutai said the death and damage across Africa and Europe highlighted “how poorly prepared the world is for such floods”. What is the climate science behind flooding: – and why is it getting worse? Tap the link in bio for our full video explainer and for our latest reporting on Storm Boris. #StormBoris #Flood #Weather #Storm #ClimateCrisis #Europe

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