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Who Is Daniella From DWTS Married To?
~1.7 mins read

Daniella Karagach Pashkova is a professional dancer and choreographer on Dancing with the Stars. Daniella along with her partner Nelly, whom she calls an annoying older brother reached the finale but Dancing with the Stars, on Monday, crowned Bachelor alum Kaitlyn Bristowe and Artem Chigvintsev the new champions of the dance reality show. Read on to know more about her personal life and who she is married to. 

Daniella Karagach's husband is fellow professional dancer Pasha Pashkov, who was partnered with Carole Baskin in this season of Dancing with the Stars. According to a report by Heavy, Karagach and Pashkov were partnered together when she was still a teenager. Karagach was aged 15 while Pashkov was 22 when they began dancing together. Daniella and Pasha first appeared together in the year 2009, on the dance reality show USA Dance Southeastern Championships in Bethesda, Maryland. They went on to attain the fourth position in the category Adult Championship Latin. Daniella along with her husband are great together in the field of dance and are seven-time winners of United States 10-Dance Champions and Latin Champions. 

Daniella has been married to Pasha Pashkov since 2014. According to a report by Distractify, Daniella's mother was concerned about her daughter dancing with Pasha and thought that she might develop a crush on him, to which Karagach dismissed the thought and said that he is too old for her. The dancer couple not just appear in professional reality dancing shows but also teach others how to dance. The pair recently debuted a new online platform called the Wedding Dance School to help prepare engaged couples for the first dance at their wedding. Karagach and Pashkov have also promoted the online dance course as a more comfortable platform for beginners because they can practice in their own homes without needing to perform in front of anyone. Daniella Karagach shared a lot of pictures on her Instagram with husband Pasha and has addressed him as 'her everything'. 

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Chuksaj
"We Are Looking For Food, Water, Clothes, Anything For Our Children." Ethiopian Refugees Get Food Aid As Humanitarian Crisis Deepens
~2.7 mins read
 in them since I arrived," Babosh Alamshed told AFP on Friday, pointing to his stained red T-shirt and worn-out black trousers.

"The war did this to us. We are starving. The help we receive is close to nothing," said the 21-year-old, who arrived in Sudan's "Village 8" transit camp two weeks ago, after a three-day trek.

Ethiopia's northern Tigray region has been rocked by bloody fighting since November 4, when Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced the launch of military operations there.

The ongoing conflict is reported to have killed hundreds of people and forced thousands more to flee into neighbouring Sudan.

On Friday morning, Alamshed took his place in a long queue outside the aid facility to receive clothes, soap and other basic items.

Ethiopians frustrated by the wait and the sweltering heat jostled to enter, as a couple of Sudanese security forces standing guard tried to shoo them away with sticks.

Hours later, refugees broke through the metal gates and rushed to compete for handouts.

'Short on resources'

Neighbouring Sudan, itself suffering from a severe economic crisis, was caught off-guard when the conflict broke out earlier this month.

It now hosts some 36,000 Ethiopians, with many in transit camps near the border, according to Sudan's refugee commission.

Many at "Village 8" said they had left behind modest lives as farmers with just the clothes on their backs to escape intense bombings, shootings and knife attacks in Tigray.

Family members and relatives were left behind, their fate unknown, they said.

"Village 8" alone is estimated to house around 14,000-15,000 refugees, said Fouad Tesfay of the Khartoum-based Tigray Development Association.

"But the numbers keep growing by the day," he added.

That has prompted an aid drive from Khartoum and other parts of Sudan.

Large bags of sorghum, salt and oil bottles have been brought to "Village 8" for distribution to the refugees, but the supplies are limited.

"There are just enough for 2,000 or 3,000 people," said one aid worker as he unloaded the bags off the lorries.

The UN is expecting that up to 200,000 Ethiopian could flee the unrest over the next six months, and its World Food Programme said it needs $24.6 million to meet their immediate needs in Sudan.

'Beyond description'

Inside the aid facility, mothers carrying crying babies on their backs pushed their way through the crowd to find warm clothes for the children.

Other Ethiopians crouched on the ground as they waited to receive assistance.

"We are looking for food, water, clothes, anything for our children. Have you seen how cold it gets here at night? It gets unbearably cold," said Abarash Harago, a mother of five.

Three young men fought over a pair of trousers, while a disabled man using walking sticks fell to the ground as he tried to get some clothes.

Away from the mayhem of the facility, listless refugees slept on tattered rugs or on the muddy ground inside small, cramped brick shelters.

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