Participants were divided into groups, depending on how they commute to work, and analyzed by the University of Glasgow, Scotland. The results offer clues about how this part of each person’s routine can make a difference in their physical and mental well-being.
Israel attacks the north of the Gaza Strip again, pro-Palestinian demonstrations intensify, Guterres calls for an end to the “bloodshed”
One day after one year since the start of the conflict in the Middle East, pro-Palestinian demonstrations are intensifying and there was a man who tried to set himself on…