Description
Added on the 06/01/2016 18:51:51 - Copyright : Eyewitness Video Online
Johannesburg, Aug 28 (EFE/EPA).- Johannesburg held Saturday the Brixton Burn event, in which participants could join wearing costumes and watched the burning of event's artworks at the end of the night. The annual event is run by members of the 'Afrikaburn' community, which is a regional event organizer of the 'Burning Man' in the United States. (Camera: KIM LUDBROOK). B-ROLL OF THE BRIXTON BURN EVENT IN JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA.
As the manhunt in the south of France continues, the Alpes-Maritimes prefect Bernard Gonzalez has urged the man suspected of a femicide who shot a gendarme to "lay down his arms" and "give himself up", at a press conference in Gréolières near Nice. SOUNDBITE
In Johannesburg, students burn tyres and demonstrate after a passerby was shot dead amid protests over student debt. Students began sporadic protests in early January over the alleged exclusion of some students by a government-sponsored tuition aid scheme. They are demanding that the University of the Witwatersrand allows all students with outstanding debt to register for the 2021 academic year. IMAGES
Scientists used to say there were millions of tons of ice in the permanently shadowed craters of the moon’s poles. Now, HuffPost reports a pair of studies in the journal Nature Astronomy says there's far, far more potential water available. Twenty percent more, to be exact. A team led by the University of Colorado's Paul Hayne says more than 15,400 square miles of lunar terrain have the capability to trap water in the form of ice. However, lead researcher Casey Honniball says the molecules are so far apart that they are in neither liquid nor solid form. To be clear, this is not puddles of water. Casey Honniball, Lead Researcher Postdoctoral fellow, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland Greater access to water could allow astronauts and robots more places to land, and support future lunar bases. Scientists believe the moon's water came from comets, asteroids, interplanetary dust, solar wind, or even lunar volcanic eruptions.