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Zwcc The Guardian view on rape and the justice system: victims deserve more than this
Online pharmacies have been accused of failing to carry out proper ID checks and using inappropriate marketing tactics to sell strong and addictive opiate drugs, a Guardian investigation can reveal.At least two major online pharmacies 鈥?registered with the UK regulator 鈥?are sending customers emails urging them to order drugs by claiming stocks are running out or telling them their  limit  has been removed and they can now buy more codeine pills.Online pharmacies <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de>stanley cup</a>  have a limit on the amount of prescription drugs that can be ordered within a certain time period.There is growing concern internationally about the rising use of opioid drugs, such as morphine, fentanyl, oxycodone, tramadol and codeine. The regulator of pharmacies in England, Scotland and Wales recently introduced new rules to protect people from buying inappropriate drugs over the internet.The Doctor-4-U website contacted one customer about buying codeine, which costs 拢84.99 for 200 30mg ta <a href=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx>vaso stanley</a> blets, writing:  What are you waiting for  ... This item is going fast so grab them while you still can. Another online vendor, MyUKDoctor, alerted customers  <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz>stanley cup</a> whenever they could order highly addictive opiate drugs again, saying their  limit  had been removed.  Please click here to reorder your medication again,  it said.Ash Soni, the president of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society, said he was astounded by the marketing. That is, for me, something that should be firmly investigated by the regulators, that is appalling. That really  Qhwk UN poverty expert to visit Spain on fact-finding mission
Timor-Leste has urged Australia not to  turn its back on the law  and to negotiate over the Timor Sea maritime boundary, but Australia has claimed the commission it has been br <a href=https://www.stanleycups.ro>stanley cups</a> ought before has no jurisdiction to hear the matter and said that any decision it makes will be not be binding on Australia.Australia has been forced to appear before a UN conciliation commission at the permanent court of arbitration in The Hague 鈥?the first time any country has been broug <a href=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.uk>stanley cup uk</a> ht for  compulsory conciliation  鈥?by Timor-Leste after its consistent refusal to negotiate a permanent maritime boundary, and revelations Australian agents spied on Timor-Lestes government during earlier treaty talks.The long-running dispute centres upon the maritime boundary between Timor-Leste and Australia, most pointedly over control of the area where an estimated $40bn worth of oil and gas lies beneath the sea.On Timor, Australia look <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cups</a> s like it s denying an impoverished neighbour its birthright | Ben SaulRead moreTimor-Leste argues the maritime boundary between it and Australia should be a median line equidistant between the two countries, putting the vast majority of the exploitable area in its territory. This position is supported by international law, the UN convention on the law of the sea, which Australia signed and ratified in 1994.But Australia says a 2006 temporary revenue sharing agreement  known as CMats  that divides the revenues 鈥搒ignificantly in Timor-Lestes favour, it argues 鈥?is valid, and should be
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