U.S EQUIPMENT, EXPERTS ARRIVE AT KENYA EBOLA FACILITY DESPITE COURT ORDER, PROTESTS. (PHOTO).

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 U.S equipment, experts arrive at Kenya Ebola facility despite court order, protests Around 20 flights carrying medical equipment and specialist staff have landed at a base in Kenya where the U.S. ​government is continuing to build an Ebola quarantine facility despite protests and Kenyan court orders blocking it, according to flight data and officials. At least two ‌people have been killed in protests in the central Kenyan town of Nanyuki, home to the Kenyan air force base where the U.S. military is building a 50-bed unit for Americans who might be exposed to the virus, which has infected hundreds in Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. A Kenyan court first ordered work on the Ebola facility to be suspended on May ​28, yet U.S. military flights into Nanyuki continued in the days that followed, according to data from flight-tracking service Flightradar24. The planes have brought in technical ​equipment as well as dozens of physicians, engineers, lab experts and construction work...

PIERRE DENY, ACTOR FROM EMILY IN PARIS, DIES AT 69 AFTER ALS DIAGNOSIS, DAUGHTERS SAY. (PHOTO).



Pierre Deny, actor from Emily in Paris, dies at 69 after ALS diagnosis, daughters say


Pierre Deny, a French actor known for his role in “Emily in Paris,” has died at the age of 69 after a sudden diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), his daughters confirmed.

His family said in a statement that Deny died on Monday. They described the illness as sudden.

Deny appeared in three episodes between seasons three and four of the Netflix series “Emily in Paris,” where he played Louis de Leon, a fictional executive in the French luxury goods industry.

Beyond the international series, he was a familiar face in French television, with extensive work in police dramas and soap operas. He notably appeared in more than 300 episodes of the long-running soap opera “Tomorrow Is Ours,” portraying the character Renaud Dumaze.

ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease in the United States, is a progressive neurological condition that affects nerve cells controlling muscle movement. The disease is known as Charcot’s disease in France, named after the neurologist who first described it.


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