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Kite Festival Returns to Lahore, US Military Conducts Airstrikes in Syria, and More
LAHORE, Pakistan/WASHINGTON, D.C. - In a weekend of diverse events, the skies of Lahore, Pakistan, filled with kites for the first time in nearly two decades, while the U.S. military launched airstrikes against Islamic State targets in Syria. Elsewhere, pop star Dua Lipa made a surprise appearance at the Berlin Film Festival, and Americans prepared to celebrate Presidents' Day.
In Lahore, the springtime festival of Basant saw a resurgence after a 19-year ban. According to NPR Politics, vendors in the city's Old City were busy selling kites and string to eager customers. The festival, which draws crowds to the streets near Mochi Gate, was met with excitement, despite reports of inflated prices for supplies.
Meanwhile, the U.S. military conducted a series of airstrikes in Syria. The Associated Press reported that the strikes, which targeted over 30 IS targets between February 3 and Thursday, were in retaliation for a December ambush that killed two U.S. soldiers and an American civilian interpreter. U.S. Central Command confirmed the strikes, which hit weapons storage facilities and other infrastructure.
Across the Atlantic, pop star Dua Lipa made a surprise appearance at the Berlin Film Festival, accompanying her fiancé, Callum Turner, to the premiere of his new film, "Rosebush Pruning." Variety reported that the couple celebrated Valentine's Day at the event.
In other news, scientists have discovered how parasitic wasps castrate moth larvae. According to Nature News, the wasps inject the larvae with a domesticated virus that causes the cells in the larvae's testes to die.
Finally, the upcoming Presidents' Day holiday, observed on the third Monday of February, will honor the birthday and legacy of George Washington. Time reported that the holiday is marked by patriotic parades, historical reenactments, and readings of presidential speeches. "Its a really good opportunity to reflect on the origins of the presidential office," Lindsay Chervinsky, executive director of the George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon, told TIME.
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