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Dutch begin voting in three-day socially-distanced elections
By , AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Elderly and vulnerable Dutch voters on Monday began casting ballots at bike-thru polling stations, churches and conference centres as three days of socially-distanced elections got underway in the Netherlands.Prime Minister Mark Rutte, one of Europe’s longest-serving leaders, is widely expected to gain enough support to secure a fourth term.Polls indicate Rutte’s conservative VVD taking 21-26% of the vote, compared with 11-16% for its closest rival, Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam Freedom Party, which leads the parliamentary opposition.Without large face-to-face public...…By , AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - Elderly and vulnerable Dutch voters on Monday began casting ballots at bike-thru polling stations, churches and conference centres as three days of socially-distanced elections got underway in the Netherlands.Prime Minister Mark Rutte, one of Europe’s longest-serving leaders, is widely expected to gain enough support to secure a fourth term.Polls indicate Rutte’s conservative VVD taking 21-26% of the vote, compared with 11-16% for its closest rival, Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam Freedom Party, which leads the parliamentary opposition.Without large face-to-face public...WW…
Fifty meters up and two apart - Belgium's dinner-in-the-sky relaunches
By BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Belgians looking for a different culinary experience will once again be able to eat 50 metres (164 feet) above the ground as the dining-in-the-sky experience returns from COVID-19 lockdown with a new, socially distanced feel.Belgium-based Dinner in the Sky, which has been set up in some 60 countries since its 2006 launch, involves diners strapped into seats at a table suspended from a crane while well-known chefs cook and serve from the centre.Their original platform sat 22 people together along the perimeter, but in the COVID-19 era, up to 32 diners will now reserve...…By BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Belgians looking for a different culinary experience will once again be able to eat 50 metres (164 feet) above the ground as the dining-in-the-sky experience returns from COVID-19 lockdown with a new, socially distanced feel.Belgium-based Dinner in the Sky, which has been set up in some 60 countries since its 2006 launch, involves diners strapped into seats at a table suspended from a crane while well-known chefs cook and serve from the centre.Their original platform sat 22 people together along the perimeter, but in the COVID-19 era, up to 32 diners will now reserve...WW…
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