التصنيف: أخبار

  • نتائج الانتخابات الأميركية.. متابعة مباشرة لفرز الأصوات

    نتائج الانتخابات الأميركية.. متابعة مباشرة لفرز الأصوات

    يترقب العالم والأميركيون بشكل خاص، الإعلان عن نتائج الانتخابات الأميركية ومعرفة هوية الفائز بمنصب الرئيس السابع والأربعين للولايات المتحدة، بين دونالد ترمب وكامالا هاريس.

    وتقدّم “الشرق” تغطية مباشرة “لحظة بلحظة” لنتيجة انتخابات الرئاسة الأميركية، ومجلسي الشيوخ والنواب وحكام الولايات، التي يمكنك متابعتها مباشرة هنا عبر الخرائط التفاعلية فور بدء إحصاء الأصوات في الولايات المختلفة:

    نتائج انتخابات الرئاسة الأميركية

    يتنافس في انتخابات الرئاسة الأميركية الرئيس السابق ومرشح الحزب الجمهوري دونالد ترمب (78 عاماً)، ونائبة الرئيس ومرشحة الحزب الديمقراطي كامالا هاريس (60 عاماً).

    وتتوجه الأنظار إلى 7 ولايات متأرجحة هي بنسلفانيا، وميشيجان، وويسكنسون (ولايات الجدار الأزرق)، ونورث كارولاينا، وجورجيا، وأريزونا، ونيفادا (ولايات حزام الشمس)، ستحدد هوية الرئيس الأميركي المقبل.

    ويتوقع أن تعلن نتائج جورجيا ونورث كارولاينا، أولاً، نظراً لتغيير قواعد الفرز بما يسرع إعلان النتيجة، فيما ينتظر أن تستغرق نتائج بقية الولايات عدة أيام، لأن فرز أصوات التصويت المبكر وعبر البريد ستستغرق وقتاً، كما لن يبدأ فرزها سوى بعد إغلاق مراكز الاقتراع في أغلب تلك الولايات.

    نتائج انتخابات مجلس الشيوخ الأميركي

    تجرى انتخابات مجلس الشيوخ الأميركي المكون من 100 عضو، كل عامين، وفي كل مرة يتم انتخاب 33 عضواَ، وفي المرحلة الثالثة  يتم انتخاب 34 عضواً.

    وفي الانتخابات الحالية سيختار الناخبون 34 عضواً من إجمالي 100 عضو. وفي مجلس الشيوخ، يُخصص لكل ولاية عضوين، بغض النظر عن حجم الولاية سكانياً.

    وتتوجه الأنظار إلى سباقات ولايات مونتانا وتكساس وأريزونا، على وجه التحديد، إذ قد تحسم السيطرة على المجلس. ويتوقع بشكل كبير أن ينجح الجمهوريون في قلب المجلس، والحصول على الأغلبية فيه.

     

    نتائج انتخابات مجلس النواب الأميركي

    يختار الناخبون جميع أعضاء مجلس النواب البالغ عددهم 435 عضواً. وتبلغ مدة العضوية في هذا المجلس عامين، لذا تُطرح جميع المقاعد للتصويت كل عامين وتجري مع انتخابات الرئاسة، وفي الانتخابات النصفية.

    ويمتلك مجلس النواب، سلطة عزل الرئيس والمسؤولين الفيدراليين، وانتخاب رئيس في حالة ظهور نتائج غير حاسمة من المجمع الانتخابي، وكذلك سن مشاريع قوانين الموازنة، ويرأس مجلس النواب حالياً الجمهوري مايك جونسون.

    ويتوقع أن ينجح الديمقراطيون في قلب المجلس الذي يسيطر عليه الجمهوريون، وتتوجه الأنظار إلى دوائر نيويورك التي قد تحسم السيطرة على المجلس، وإذا نجح الديمقراطيون في السيطرة عليه، فسيصبح حكيم جيفريز زعيم الأقلية الديمقراطية الحالية هو الرئيس المقبل لمجلس النواب.

    ويحتاج الديمقراطيون إلى 5 مقاعد للسيطرة على المجلس.

     

    نتائج انتخابات حكام الولايات الأميركية

    يختار الناخبون في 11 ولاية حكام الولايات المتحدة في انتخابات هذا الشهر.

    وتشمل الولايات التي تنتخب حكاماً جدداً “ديلاوير، وإنديانا، وميزوري، ومونتانا ونيوهامشير، وويست فيرجينيا، ونورث كارولاينا، ونورث داكوتا، ويوتا، وفيرمونت، وواشنطن”.

    ويشغل حاكم الولاية منصبه لمدة 4 سنوات، باستثناء نيوهامشر وفيرمونت، حيث يتم انتخاب الحاكم لمدة عامين فقط.

    وفي بعض الولايات تحدد فترات الترشح لمنصب الحاكم، بفترة واحدة فقط، أو اثنتين، وبعضها لا تضع سقفاً لعدد مرات الترشح لهذا المنصب.

     

  • خالد داوود: هاريس تواجه صعوبات فى الانتخابات مقارنة بترامب المخضرم

    خالد داوود: هاريس تواجه صعوبات فى الانتخابات مقارنة بترامب المخضرم


    قال خالد داوود، مدير تحرير الأهرام ويلكي، إن الموقف يميل إلى المرشح الجمهوري دونالد ترامب مقارنة بالمرشحة الديمقراطية كامالا هاريس في استغلال الظروف، لأن “ترامب” معتاد على خوض الانتخابات الرئاسية والترشح منذ عام 2015 أي منذ 9 سنوات، بينما “هاريس” عمرها في السباق الانتخابي 16 أسبوعا فقط، بالتالي مهمتها كانت أصعب بكثير مقارنة بترامب المخضرم.


    وأضاف “داوود”، خلال لقاء مع الإعلامي عمرو خليل، على قناة القاهرة الإخبارية، أن التقليد بأن الرئيس الأمريكي الذي يخدم في البيت الأببض لمدة يخوض الانتخابات لمدة ثانية، وكان هذا الأمر معلوما إلى حد ما بالنسبة للرئيس الأمريكي جو بايدن.


    ولفت أن فكرة أن الرئيس الأمريكي جو بايدن متقدم في العمر ليست مفاجأة للجميع، لكن ما حدث أن الرجل بسبب عوامل السن وأسباب أخرى تدهور الوضع بالنسبة له وكانت القشة التي قسمت ظهر البعير، وهي المناظرة في 27 يوليو الماضي، والتي كان فيها بايدن وكأنه مغيب عن الوعي، غير قادر على استكمال الجمل، بالتالي قيادات الحزب الديمقراطي طلبت من بايدن الرحيل من منصبه.

  • ‘Entirely normal’: Why counting US votes takes time, is not a sign of fraud | US Election 2024 News

    ‘Entirely normal’: Why counting US votes takes time, is not a sign of fraud | US Election 2024 News

    Just hours after the polls closed in the 2020 United States presidential election, as millions of votes were still being counted, Donald Trump delivered an extraordinary address.

    “We were getting ready to win this election – frankly, we did win this election,” the then-president told reporters in the early morning hours after Election Day, alleging that “a major fraud” was being committed.

    “We want all voting to stop. We don’t want them to find any ballots at 4 o’clock in the morning and add them to the list,” he said.

    Trump’s premature — and false — claim of victory over his Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who ultimately won the 2020 election, capped weeks of untrue voter fraud allegations made by the Republican incumbent.

    Four years later, as the 2024 race between Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris remains too close to call, experts again are stressing that it could take days to count the votes — and that is not a sign of malfeasance.

    “Just like in 2020, it’s entirely normal for vote counting to take several days,” said Sophia Lin Lakin, director of the voting rights project at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

    That’s especially true “in closely contested states where things are going to be scrutinised and you’re going to have to count a lot of votes before you’re going to have a sense of who’s going to win those states”.

    “It’s going to take time, and that’s due to built-in verification steps in the counting process to ensure accuracy,” she told Al Jazeera.

    Different procedures

    Vote counting takes time in the US for a variety of reasons, including how elections are administered and how ballots are processed.

    Each US state runs elections its own way, and as a result, each state’s vote count takes a different amount of time, explained Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, a professor of law at Stetson University College of Law in Florida.

    For example, the battleground states of Pennsylvania and Wisconsin do not allow mail-in ballots to be processed before Election Day, meaning their respective counts will likely take longer.

    “Others get a head start by starting the counting process earlier during the early voting period,” Torres-Spelliscy told Al Jazeera in an email.

    “And states have vastly different population sizes. Wyoming has a tiny population while California has more people living in it than Canada. The bigger the population of voters, the longer it takes to count their ballots, which can number in the millions.”

    Meanwhile, states also must sort through what are known as provisional ballots. These are ballots cast by people whose voter registration status must first be verified before their vote is counted, thereby taking a little bit longer.

    Ultimately, that it can take hours — or even days — after Election Day to count votes is not a sign of any illegal act, Torres-Spelliscy said. “Just because it takes a populous state a few days to count millions of votes is not evidence of fraud.”

    Misperceptions, misinformation

    Still, misinformation can quickly spread in the time it takes to tabulate the votes — and between when the polls close and when a projected winner is announced.

    While states can take weeks to release their official vote tallies, US media organisations make projections based on their own methodologies as well as preliminary results.

    This “election call” — a news outlet announcing a projected presidential winner — can happen on election night. But in closer contests, such as the 2020 race between Trump and Biden, it can take a few days.

    Most polling leading up to Election Day this year showed Harris and Trump locked in a race that is too close to call and will likely come down to how the candidates fare in seven critical battleground states: Pennsylvania, Georgia, North Carolina, Michigan, Arizona, Wisconsin and Nevada.

    The potential for misinformation in this period is especially high in a polarised nation where Trump has now spent years claiming that the 2020 election was stolen from him and the electoral system overall is rife with fraud.

    Those beliefs are held by many Americans: According to a September 2023 survey by the Public Religion Research Institute, 66 percent of Republican voters said they believed the “Big Lie” that the 2020 election was stolen from Trump.

    A phenomenon known as the “Blue Shift” can also add to false perceptions that something nefarious is going on, as it did in 2020.

    The term refers to a moment in US elections when the results begin to shift in favour of Democrats as more mail-in ballots get counted throughout the day. Generally, more Democratic voters have voted by mail than Republicans, but it remains to be seen if that will again be the case this year.

    In 2020, Trump “used that change in the numbers over the course of the day … to create this idea that something was wrong”, Lakin at the ACLU said.

    “But it was the normal processing of ballots; it was just a feature of the way people were opting to vote in that particular year.”

    ‘Yelling fraud and irregularity’

    Despite myriad experts debunking Trump’s fraud claims, the former president has continued to make false allegations throughout the 2024 race.

    On the campaign trail, the former president repeatedly warned of voter fraud, including the prospect that noncitizens were voting as part of a Democratic plot to skew the results in Harris’s favour — a claim experts have slammed as untrue.

    His team has filed a number of lawsuits related to alleged irregularities on voter rolls, the lists of people who are eligible to cast ballots.

    And Trump also embraced the slogan “too big to rig” to urge his supporters to vote in numbers large enough to “guarantee we win by more than the margin of fraud”.

    “He’s already sort of announced that he’s the winner before the ballots have even been counted. This is the same claim that he made in 2020: If he’s not the winner of the official count, it can only be because of fraud,” said James Gardner, a professor at the University of Buffalo School of Law in New York state.

    “He has already laid the groundwork for yelling fraud and irregularity just because he might not win. If that’s your starting point, the fact that it takes a while to count the ballots is only one of a million different things that you can say.”

    According to Gardner, “the root of the problem is that the Republican Party under Trump is not willing to play by the rules of democracy.

    “It believes that it deserves to be in power regardless of electoral outcomes. So as a result, it does not adhere to any of the ethics of democratic fair play. Democracy is based on fair rules of fair competition, and the Trump Republican Party is not committed to those.”

    Potential for violence

    Torres-Spelliscy noted that even if Trump does say he won before all the votes are counted, that type of pronouncement “makes no difference legally”.

    “What matters is who states and DC certify and which candidate wins 270 Electoral College votes,” she explained.

    Still, if Trump prematurely declares victory over Harris and is ultimately found to have lost after the votes are counted, that would add to the distrust, anger and feelings of injustice that already permeate among many of the former president’s supporters.

    “What’s going to happen this time — what’s already happening — is that there’s going to be all kinds of outlandish claims made through the media, and that will at the very least inflame Trump’s supporters,” Gardner said. “And who knows what they’ll do.”

    Amid Trump’s false fraud claims after the 2020 vote, a mob of his supporters stormed the US Capitol in Washington, DC, to try to stop Congress from certifying Biden’s election victory.

    The January 6, 2021, insurrection continues to reverberate across the country, Lakin said, as the false claims of a stolen election “created this huge divide in this country and ultimately led to violence”.

    “That would be unfortunate if that were to happen again,” she said. “It would be a travesty for democracy if we can’t figure out how to return to a peaceful transfer of power.”

  • ترامب للجمهوريين: ابقوا في الصفوف للتصويت

    ترامب للجمهوريين: ابقوا في الصفوف للتصويت

    قال الرئيس الأمريكي السابق، دونالد ترامب إنه يشعر “بثقة كبيرة” في ليلة الانتخابات، وأضاف أنه سيكون في منزله في منتجع مار إيه لاغو بولاية فلوريدا لمعظم الليل.
  • Election News, Polls and Results

    The 538 probabilistic forecast model relaunched Friday, updated to reflect a Harris vs. Trump general election. 

    “538 is excited to unveil our forecast for Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump. Our forecast starts out with a slight lead for Harris, reflecting her current edge in polls but uncertainty about how the rest of the election could impact the state of the race. With 75 days to go, we think anything from a clear Trump victory to a clear Harris win is possible (while a close win either way is most likely).”

    In the image below, the Toss-up tan color is used where neither candidate currently has a 60% or higher chance of winning. The colored gradients are used to show higher probabilities for Harris or Trump, deepening as the likelihood of winning increases: Light (60%+), Medium (75%+), Dark (95%+).

  • نعاه كاظم الساهر.. كوينسي جونز ترك بصمته على مغنين عرب أيضا

    نعاه كاظم الساهر.. كوينسي جونز ترك بصمته على مغنين عرب أيضا

    قبل نحو 12 عامًا ترددت أصداء أغنية “بكرا” في العالم العربي أملاً بغدٍ جديد يحمل الفرح، والمحبة، والسلام. هذه الأغنية التي لا تزال تبعث الأمل رغم الصراعات والحروب التي تغرق فيها المنطقة حملت بصمة عملاق الموسيقى الأمريكي الراحل كوينسي جونز.
  • 3 أهداف رئيسية لحملة “إيد واحدة” للتحالف الوطنى.. تعرف عليها

    3 أهداف رئيسية لحملة “إيد واحدة” للتحالف الوطنى.. تعرف عليها


    يعمل أعضاء التحالف الوطنى للعمل الأهلى التنموى على قدم وساق لتقديم خدمات متنوعة فى كافة المحافظات والقرى ضمن حملة “ايد واحدة” التى أطلقها التحالف الوطنى لتقديم يد العون لكافة الأسر الأكثر احتياجا فى المحافظات والقرى والمناطق النائية.


    وتأتى هذه الحملة فى إطار الشراكة الاستراتيجية بين التحالف ووزارة التضامن الاجتماعى ومؤسسة حياة كريمة والهلال الأحمر المصرى، وذلك بهدف تعزيز مظلة الحماية الاجتماعية وتحسين جودة حياة الفئات الأكثر احتياجًا.


    وتتمثل أهداف حملة “إيد واحدة” فى الآتى:


    – تقديم الدعم الغذائى والرعاية الصحية للأسر الأكثر احتياجًا.

    – تحسين مستوى المعيشة فى المناطق المستهدفة.

    – تعزيز التكامل المجتمعى والتماسك الاجتماعي.

  • Harris appears in Pennsylvania with Oprah Winfrey in final push for votes | US Election 2024 News

    Harris appears in Pennsylvania with Oprah Winfrey in final push for votes | US Election 2024 News

    Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris has made her last appeal to voters, holding a series of rallies in battleground Pennsylvania, with a final, glitzy event in the city of Philadelphia, where producer-actress Oprah Winfrey introduced her.

    In her fifth and final event late on Monday night, Harris told a large crowd she was ready to represent the next generation of leadership in the United States.

    “But this race is not over, and we must finish strong,” she said.

    “And this could be one of the closest races in history. Every single vote matters.”

    Winfrey appeared on stage at the event at the Philadelphia Museum of Art with 10 young people who were all first-time voters.

    “[If] you’re feeling burned out and bruised and maybe inconsequential, nothing could be further from the truth. Every single vote, everyone is going to matter,” said Winfrey. “That’s why I’ve come to Philadelphia tonight.”

    As she closed her address, Harris said voters had a chance in this election to finally “turn the page on a decade of politics that has been driven by fear and division”.

    “We are done with that. We’re done [and] we’re exhausted with it,” she said.

    “America is ready for a fresh start, ready for a new way forward, where we see our fellow Americans not as an enemy.”

    ‘You’re going to make the difference’

    Throughout the day, Harris’s message had been consistent – every vote was crucial in the state that holds 19 Electoral College votes, the most of all the seven swing states that will likely determine the outcome.

    “We need everyone in Pennsylvania to vote,” she said to an exuberant afternoon crowd in Allentown. “You are going to make the difference in this election.”

    The polls have Harris essentially tied in Pennsylvania with her Republican rival, former President Donald Trump, who held one of his final rallies in Reading, Pennsylvania, only a few kilometres away from Harris.

    Over the last few days, Harris has sought to further differentiate her campaign from Trump’s by not mentioning his name, and emphasising optimism and community.

    “Momentum is on our side, momentum is on our side, can you feel it? We have momentum, right?” she said to cheers.

    “Because our campaign has tapped into the ambitions and aspirations and the dreams of the American people, we are optimistic and excited about what we will do together.”

    Harris, 60, could make US history as the first woman, the first Black woman and the first person of South Asian descent to reach the Oval Office. Four years ago, she broke the same barriers in national office by becoming President Joe Biden’s second-in-command.

    Harris’s last day was all about encouraging supporters to vote and think about the future.

    “It’s time for a new generation of leadership in America, and I am ready to offer that leadership as the next president of the United States of America,” she said.

    ‘No joke’

    Harris’s Allentown rally was introduced by Grammy Award-winning musician Fat Joe, who was raised by parents of Puerto Rican and Cuban descent. He wasted no time in taking aim at the racist remarks that featured at the recent Republican rally in New York’s Madison Square Garden.

    “That was no joke ladies and gentlemen. That was no joke, filled with so much hate,” he said.

    Comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who was part of Trump’s warm-up act at the New York rally, created a firestorm of protests when he called Puerto Rico a “floating island of garbage”.

    Southeast Pennsylvania is home to thousands of Latinos, including a sizeable Puerto Rican population. Harris and her allies have repeatedly hit at Trump for those comments.

    Fat Joe reminded the Allentown rally that people can make their feelings clear when they vote.

    “My Latinos, where is your pride,” he asked.

    “If I am speaking to undecided Puerto Ricans, especially in Pennsylvania, what more do they gotta do to show you who they are? If I tell you that Kamala Harris is with us, she’s with us.”

    On Monday, Harris told supporters: “I stand here proud of my longstanding commitment to Puerto Rico and her people and I will be a president for all Americans.”

    Harris also swung by Scranton – the birthplace of Biden.

    “Are you ready to do this?” she yelled to supporters there, with a large handmade “Vote For Freedom” sign behind her and a similar “VOTE” banner to her side.

    ‘We are not going back’

    Throughout the whirlwind last day, Harris repeated one of the slogans of her campaign – “We Are Not Going Back”. It is designed, in part, to contrast her with Republicans who supported the US Supreme Court decision that overturned a national right to an abortion.

    She repeated her promise to protect women’s reproductive rights.

    “We are not going back because ours is the fight for the future, for freedom, like the fundamental freedom for a woman to make decisions over her own body and not have the government tell her what to do,” Harris said.

  • Justices who split on an abortion measure ruling vie to lead Arkansas Supreme Court

    Justices who split on an abortion measure ruling vie to lead Arkansas Supreme Court

    LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Two justices who split on whether Arkansas voters should have the chance to scale back the state’s abortion ban are both vying to lead the state Supreme Court, though the election won’t affect the court’s conservative tilt.

    Justices Rhonda Wood and Karen Baker are running to replace Chief Justice Dan Kemp in Tuesday’s election, where the state’s four congressmen are fending off challenges from Democratic candidates.

    Voters will also be asked to approve a constitutional amendment that would revoke the license issued by a state panel for a casino.

    A historic race for chief justice

    No matter if Wood or Baker wins, history will be made: For the first time, Arkansas will elect a woman to chief justice of its Supreme Court.

    The two justices were on opposites sides of the debate over whether to keep a measure on the ballot that would have scaled back an Arkansas law banning nearly all abortions.

    Wood wrote the court’s 4-3 majority opinion that upheld the state’s decision to reject petitions submitted in favor of the proposal. The court ruled sponsors of the measure did not comply with paperwork requirements for paid signature gatherers.

    In a blistering dissent, Baker asked: “Why are the respondent and the majority determined to keep this particular vote from the people?”

    Though the seats are nonpartisan, Wood is running with the endorsement of the Republican Party of Arkansas’ state committee, Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders and GOP Sen. Tom Cotton. Conservatives are already ensured a 5-2 majority on the court, with Sanders slated to fill two vacancies on the seven-member court after the election.

    Arkansas has had one woman serve as chief justice, but Betty Dickey was appointed to the post by former Gov. Mike Huckabee in 2003, not elected.

    Republicans look to defend U.S. House seats

    All four of Arkansas’ Republican congressmen are fending off challenges from Democrats who are trying to break the GOP’s hold on all of the state’s federal seats.

    Rep. Rick Crawford is running against Democrat Rodney Govens for the 1st District, which covers east Arkansas. Crawford was first elected in 2010 to represent the district, which includes Jonesboro and West Memphis. He is a senior member of the House Agriculture Committee and has said he’ll seek the top Republican spot on the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee. Govens is a Cabot resident who has worked in the telecommunications industry. Libertarian nominee Steve Parsons is also running.

    Rep. French Hill faces Democrat Marcus Jones in the race for the 2nd District, which includes Little Rock and surrounding areas. Hill was first elected to the seat in 2014 and is vice chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. Jones is a retired Army colonel who served as senior Army adviser to the Arkansas Army National Guard at Camp Robinson.

    In northwest Arkansas’ 3rd District Rep. Steve Womack is running against Democrat Caitlin Draper, a clinical social worker. Womack was first elected in 2010 to the district, which includes Fayetteville and Fort Smith. Libertarian Bobby Wilson is also running. Womack, a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee, fended off a challenge in the Republican primary earlier this year from a state legislator.

    And in the 4th District, which covers south Arkansas, Rep. Bruce Westerman is running against Democrat Risie Howard, an attorney from Pine Bluff. Westerman was first elected to the U.S. House in 2014 and chairs the House Committee on Natural Resources.

    The 2024 election is here. This is what to know:

    News outlets globally count on the AP for accurate U.S. election results. Since 1848, the AP has been calling races up and down the ballot. Support us. Donate to the AP.

    Voters decide the fate of planned casino

    A measure on the ballot in Arkansas could block the last of four casinos that voters approved in what has become a battle between the Cherokee and Choctaw nations.

    The proposed constitutional amendment would revoke a license the state issued to Cherokee Nation Entertainment to build a casino in Pope County. Choctaw Nation has spent more than $17 million on the campaign for the proposal.

    Pope County was one of four sites where casinos were allowed to be built under a constitutional amendment that voters approved in 2018. Casinos have already been set up in the other three locations. Cherokee Nation Businesses has spent more than $12 million on the campaign against the amendment.

    Other proposals that would have scaled back the state’s abortion ban and expanded its medical marijuana program were blocked from the ballot by state election officials.

    Another measure that the state Legislature voted to place on the ballot would allow proceeds from the state’s lottery to be used to fund scholarships at vocational and technical schools.

  • تداول فيديو يظهر ما فعله رونالدو عند استبداله في مباراة النصر والعين

    تداول فيديو يظهر ما فعله رونالدو عند استبداله في مباراة النصر والعين

    تداول مستخدمون لمنصة “إكس” (تويتر سابقا) فيديو يظهر ما فعله النجم البرتغالي كريستيانو رونالدو عند استبداله، في مباراة بين ناديه النصر السعودي والعين الإماراتي، على أرض ملعب الأول بارك، الثلاثاء.