Description
Added on the 17/08/2012 22:30:58 - Copyright : Ubisoft
When our nation is threatened, the president turns to one man, and one man only: Sam Fisher. With devastating terrorist attacks imminent, he is the last line of defense to protect our country. Armed with state-of-the-art technology, top-of-the-line gadgets and his deadly combat abilities, Sam Fisher holds nothing back and gets the job done through whatever means necessary. Complete deniability. Unlimited resources. Unapologetic. In Sam Fisher we trust. Splinter Cell: Blacklist -- In Stores August 20, 2013. Available Now for Pre-Order. Official Website: http://www.splintercell.com Join Us On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/splintercell Follow Us On Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/splintercell Follow Us On Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/115575648611906695782/ #SplinterCell
Splinter Cell on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/splintercell @splintercell: http://www.twitter.com/splintercell Splinter Cell on Google+: https://plus.google.com/115575648611906695782/posts Official Ubisoft Forums: http://forums.ubi.com/forumdisplay.php/378-Splinter-Cell-Blacklist In this third installment of our ComDev Q&As, Zack Cooper gives us a brief overview about how the scoring system in Blacklist works for all three play styles.
Splinter Cell on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/splintercell @splintercell: http://www.twitter.com/splintercell Splinter Cell on Google+: https://plus.google.com/115575648611906695782/posts In this third installment of our ComDev Q&A's, Zack Cooper gives us a brief overview about how the scoring system in Blacklist works for all three play styles.
Necocli, Sep 26 (EFE).- Numerous migrants, most of them Haitians, wait for space on the boats that cross to the other side of the Gulf of Uraba, the end of Colombia, where some 17,000 people wait to continue their way to North America. Only 500 people can board a day on the boats that leave them in Acandi to begin their journey through the Darien Gap, which separates Colombia from Panama. (Camera: JUAN DIEGO LOPEZ). SHOT LIST: MIGRANTS, MOST OF THEM HAITIANS, PLAY SOCCER CAMP IN NECOCLI, COLOMBIA.
New York City, Sep 24 (EFE).- The former president of Costa Rica, Laura Chinchilla, said here Friday that the failure of Latin American governments to speak with one voice about the dangerous developments in Nicaragua displays an absence of unity in the region."We are only six weeks away from the consolidation of a North Korea-style dictatorship in the heart of the Americas, in Nicaragua," she said during the Global Forum on Latin America and the Caribbean in New York.The forum is organized by the Global Foundation for Democracy and Development, whose founder and director is former Dominican President Leonel Fernandez. (Camera: PACO MILLÁN).B-ROLL OF THE GLOBAL FORUM ON LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN IN NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, US. SOUND BITES: FORMER PRESIDENT OF COSTA RICA, LAURA CHINCHILLA (IN SPANISH).TRANSLATIONS: We are only six weeks away from the consolidation of a North Korea-style dictatorship in the heart of the Americas, in Nicaragua. And it will happen when the region is celebrating 20 years of its democratic charter. It will happen in a broad daylight, after three resolutions of the United Nations and more or less 8 resolutions of the OAS Permanent Council and General Assembly. It will happen after 12 years of clear democratic decay in that country.
Bajo Chiquito (Panama), Feb 12 (EFE) (Camera: Carlos Lemos).- "We come from Brazil and Chile. We are looking for a good life.", said Evans Paul Pierre, a 33 year-old Haitian who, along with dozens of fellow citizens, arrived in Panama through the Darien jungle, the dangerous route they use to try and reach North America.Evans' destination is Mexico. He travels with his 6 year-old son, who lost his mother. She died of Covid-19 back in Chile, the young mechanic, who left his country last January, explained with his limited Spanish.FOOTAGE OF PEOPLE CROSSING THE JUNGLE AND A RIVER IN BAJO CHIQUITO, PANAMA.