Category: WORLD 24

  • Apartment block in The Hague ‘partially collapsed’ after explosion: authorities

    THE HAGUE — A three-story apartment block in The Hague partially collapsed Saturday after a fire and explosion, firefighters said, with first responders searching for people under the rubble.

    “At this moment, the emergency services are busy rescuing and searching for people and fighting the fire,” said the city’s fire service in a statement.

    It was not known how many people could be missing nor what caused the explosion in the block of flats not far from the center of the city.

    According to local media outlet Regio15, several people had already been rescued from the scene.

    Four people injured in the explosion had been taken to local hospitals, according to the fire service.

    “The fire is releasing a lot of smoke in the immediate vicinity… Residents are advised to close windows and doors and turn off ventilation,” authorities said.

    The city’s mayor Jan van Zanen was on site to coordinate rescue efforts, according to Regio15.

    Homes on multiple floors appeared to have been destroyed by the explosion, said Regio15.

    Early images from public broadcaster NOS showed several dozen firefighters tackling a large blaze and breaking down doors to gain access to the block.

    A picture from local news agency ANP showed one person being led away on a stretcher into a waiting ambulance.

    AN-AFP

  • 26 killed in western Cote d’Ivoire minibus collision

    ABIDJAN — At least 26 people were killed and 28 others injured in a road accident Friday afternoon on the Issia-Daloa axis, western Cote d’Ivoire, according to a statement from the Ivorian Ministry of Transport.

    The statement said that the tragedy happened near the village of Brokoua when one of two passenger minibusses’ tires burst, leading to the collision of the two vehicles.

    The injured were evacuated to the Issia General Hospital, about 357 km from Abidjan, the economic hub of Cote d’Ivoire.

    XINHUA

  • Man arrested for killing 2 at U.S. New Orleans parade

    HOUSTON — Police arrested a suspect on Friday over two mass shootings that killed two and wounded at least 10 during a parade in New Orleans, southern U.S. state of Louisiana, last month.

    Curtis Gray, aged 19, is charged with two counts of second-degree murder tied to the Nov. 17 shootings, according to a news release from the New Orleans Police Department.

    The parade has deep ties to the city’s Black culture, local media reported.

    XINHUA

  • Three killed in clashes between Druze militias and Syrian security forces in Sweida

    AMMAN/BEIRUT — At least three people were killed in clashes between Druze militias and security forces in the southern Syrian city of Sweida on Friday, two witnesses and a local activist said.

    They said anti-government fighters also took control of the main police station and the biggest civilian prison hours after hundreds of people protested in a main square demanding the downfall of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    “People are seeing what is happening in the rest of Syria as liberation of Syria and a chance to bring down the regime,” activist Ryan Marouf, editor of Suwayda 24, a website that covers the province, told Reuters.

    The outlet further showed footage of staff leaving the police headquarters building and a clip of fighters destroying a picture of Assad.

    “The Sweida governor, the police and prison chiefs, and the local Baath Party leader left their offices in the city of Sweida, as local fighters took control of some checkpoints in the province,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

    AN, Dec 6, 2024

  • Air strike on Khartoum mosque kills 7: Sudan lawyers’ group

    PORT SUDAN — A Sudanese military air strike on a north Khartoum mosque killed seven civilians on Friday, pro-democracy lawyers said, in a toll also confirmed by an activists’ committee.

    “The attack occurred as worshippers were leaving the mosque” after Friday noon prayers, said the Emergency Lawyers, who have been documenting human rights abuses during the 19-month war between Sudan’s regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

    The local resistance committee, one of hundreds of volunteer groups across Sudan delivering frontline aid during the war, confirmed the death toll and said “a number of wounded” had also been transported for treatment.

    The attack was “part of a series of arbitrary military assaults that do not discriminate between civilians and military targets,” the lawyers said in a statement, calling the strike a “crime against humanity and a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law.”

    Both the army and the RSF have been accused of deliberately targeting civilians and indiscriminately shelling residential areas.

    Friday’s attack occurred on a mosque in Khartoum North, also known as Bahri, which has been under near-total control of the RSF since the war began in April 2023.

    Tens of thousands of people have been killed in the war and more than eight million internally uprooted in what the United Nations calls the world’s largest displacement crisis, with another three million having fled abroad.

    AN-AFP, Dec 6, 2024

  • 12 killed, dozens injured in attacks on Ukrainian cities

    KIEV — At least 12 people were killed and 39 others injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine on Friday, authorities reported.

    Ten people lost their lives, and 20 others were injured when guided aerial bombs struck the southern city of Zaporizhzhia, igniting a fire at a car service station, said the State Service for Emergencies.

    The blaze, which spread to an area of 250 square meters and damaged six vehicles, was extinguished.

    In central Ukraine’s city of Kryvyi Rih, a ballistic missile hit a civilian administrative building, killing two people and injuring 19 others, said Oleksandr Vilkul, head of the city’s defense council.

    Vilkul said the attack also damaged six apartment buildings, five private houses, and several vehicles.

    XINHUA

  • 20 dead in 3 separate road accidents in India’s Uttar Pradesh

    NEW DELHI — At least 20 people were killed and over two dozen injured Friday in three separate road accidents in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, police said.

    In Pilibhit district, six were killed and five injured after a car carrying them crashed into a tree and fell into a ditch around midnight, a police official said, adding that in Chitrakoot, another six were killed and five injured when a vehicle collided head-on with a truck.

    The police official added that eight passengers traveling in a private bus were killed and 19 others injured when the bus struck a water tanker in Kannauj district.

    Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath expressed his condolences to the families of the victims and wished for the speedy recovery of those injured in these mishaps.

    Deadly road accidents are common in India often caused due to overloading, bad condition of roads and reckless driving.

    Around 150,000 people are killed every year in about half a million road accidents across India, officials said.

    XINHUA

  • Israeli troops force Indonesian medical team to leave north Gaza

    DUBAI — Indonesian medics volunteering at the Kamal Adwan Hospital in north Gaza said they were forced by Israeli troops to leave the area on Friday, days after arriving with emergency assistance.

    Like the rest of Gaza’s north, the Kamal Adwan Hospital has been cut from any supplies since early October, enduring multiple Israeli strikes and a siege and running out of fuel, among other essentials.

    Five volunteers from the Indonesian nongovernmental organization Medical Emergency Rescue Committee, or MER-C, arrived in the facility on Dec. 1 and were the first emergency medical team to reach it in 60 days.

    They were forced to leave on Friday morning following two warnings, Dr. Faradina Sulistiyani, a surgeon from the MER-C, said in a video clip upon arrival in Gaza City.

    “We walked from Kamal Adwan until Salah Al-Din Street,” she said. “They are bombing the hospital now.”

    Most of the hospital’s doctors have been detained by Israeli soldiers in raids since late October.

    The Indonesian team, comprising Sulistiyani, another surgeon, an obstetrician, and two nurses, were the only ones able to perform surgeries in the past days, the hospital’s director, Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, said in a statement after their departure.

    “No surgeons are left,” he said, as he reported scores of casualties from Friday’s attacks.

    “Medical supplies are running out, and there are hundreds of victims.”

    From the Kamal Adwan Hospital, the Indonesian team walked to the nearby Indonesia Hospital — a facility that was funded and opened by MER-C in 2016. Heavily damaged by Israeli strikes last year, the hospital partly reopened in June. It has been targeted again since October.

    Video footage shared by MER-C shows the Indonesian medics sheltering in the facility, amid strikes hitting the building.

    “We have evacuated from the Kamal Adwan Hospital, now at Indonesia Hospital. God willing, we’ll walk to Salah Al-Din,” one of the volunteers said in the clip. “Dr. Hussam and other local medical staff remained in Kamal Adwan.”

    When they reached Salah Al-Din Road, the main highway of the Gaza Strip, they were picked up by a Palestine Red Crescent Society ambulance.

    “There were still people walking some 300 meters behind us,” Kamal Putra Pratama, a nurse from the team, said in a video from the car. “Hopefully the people who were in Kamal Adwan, the sick people, can be evacuated.”

    One of the last functioning health centers in north Gaza, the Kamal Adwan Hospital has been hit multiple times since the start of Israel’s war on the Palestinian enclave in October last year.

    The hospital’s intensive care unit director Ahmad Al-Kahlut was killed in an air strike late last month.

    The Israeli military has killed at least 44,600 people and injured more than 105,000. The real death toll is believed to be much higher, with estimates published by medical journal The Lancet indicating that, as of July, it could be more than 186,000.

    AN, Dec 6, 2024

  • Clashes reported in Syria’s Dara amid murky situation in Homs

    DAMASCUS — Heavy clashes broke out Friday in parts of Syria’s southern Daraa province as local factions seized multiple government-held positions. Meanwhile, in central Homs province, the Syrian army asserted that its defenses remain solid despite opposition claims of troop withdrawals.

    Pro-government Sham FM radio said clashes erupted in eastern rural Daraa and near the Nassib border crossing with Jordan, though the militants had not entered the compound itself.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, reported that factions in western Daraa took over several government sites in the city of Nawa, including the local security branches. At least one civilian was killed, and government soldiers stationed in the targeted buildings were reportedly captured.

    In response, government forces shelled residential areas from their nearby positions, triggering panic among civilians, according to the Observatory.

    Elsewhere in Daraa, the Observatory noted that the factions gained control of additional checkpoints, forcing army units to reposition. There are also unverified reports of government forces withdrawing some of their checkpoints in the region.

    Meanwhile, in Homs province, Sham FM reported that fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) entered areas of the northern countryside, including the city of Al-Rastan and the town of Talbisa. No clashes were reported during these incursions, it noted.

    Despite opposition claims of an army withdrawal from Homs, a Syrian military statement denied such movements, affirming that troops remain deployed along “solid defensive lines” and have received reinforcements.

    The latest developments in Daraa and Homs reflect a rapidly evolving situation, with local factions and militant groups taking advantage of emerging vulnerabilities.

    A day earlier, the HTS and allied militant groups captured the city of Hama, Syria’s fourth-largest city after capturing Aleppo and all of Idlib provinces in northern Syria.

    XINHUA

  • Jordan closes border crossing into Syria, ministry says

    AMMAN — Jordan has closed its only passenger and commercial border crossing into Syria, the interior ministry said on Friday.

    A Syrian army source told Reuters that armed groups had been firing at Syria’s Nassib border crossing into Jordan.

    “Armed groups who infiltrated the crossing attacked Syrian army posts stationed there,” the source added.

    He said dozens of trailers and passengers were now stranded near the area.

    Jordan’s interior minister said Jordanians and Jordanian trucks would be allowed to return via the crossing, known as the Jaber crossing on the Jordanian side, while no one would be allowed to cross into Syria.

    AN-REUTERS

  • Five dead, seven missing in Indonesia floods, landslides

    JAKARTA — Flash floods and landslides struck Indonesia’s main Java island earlier this week, killing at least five people, the national disaster agency said Friday, as rescuers race to find seven others still missing.

    Intense rains triggered flash floods and landslides in the Sukabumi district in West Java province on Tuesday, destroying at least 10 bridges and damaging hundreds of houses.

    “As of Friday at 09:00 (0200 GMT), it was reported that the number of fatalities had increased to five people in total,” Abdul Muhari, the spokesman for the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB), said in a statement Friday.

    “Aside from that, seven people remained missing.”

    He added that efforts to build a temporary bridge to open access to affected areas are ongoing.

    BNPB chief Suharyanto — who goes by one name — instructed rescuers to optimize the search operation for those missing, noting that rescuers have a seven-day “golden time” to find them.

    “If necessary to use heavy equipment, please do so,” urged Suharyanto in a statement.

    Indonesia has suffered from a string of recent extreme weather events, which experts say are made more likely by climate change.

    Last month, heavy downpour triggered landslides and flash floods in Sumatra Island, killing at leaast 27 people.

    In May, at least 67 people died after a mixture of ash, sand and pebbles carried down from the eruption of Mount Marapi in West Sumatra washed into residential areas, causing flash floods.

    AN-AFP

  • Rail services disrupted across UK’s National Rail network

    LONDON — Some services across the UK’s National Rail network were disrupted on Friday morning due to “a nationwide fault with the communication system used between train drivers and signalers.”

    Routes to London’s Heathrow Airport and Gatwick Airport were among those affected, along with services operated by Northern, South Western Railway, and Transport for Wales.

    Travelers across the country faced short-notice cancellations and alterations due to the knock-on effect on the timetables.

    According to a statement by the National Rail, the issue mainly affected trains registering to enter their route for the start of service and deregistering to end their service.

    XINHUA

  • Over 100 flights canceled as strong winds batter Netherlands

    THE HAGUE — Strong gusts of wind caused widespread disruption across the Netherlands on Friday, with over 100 flights canceled at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, and impacting railways, road traffic, and waterways.

    The Dutch national weather institute KNMI issued a code yellow weather alert for nearly the entire country, covering 10 of the 12 provinces. Only the southern provinces of North Brabant and Limburg remain under code green.

    Wind gusts of 75 to 90 kilometers per hour were reported, with coastal areas experiencing gusts of 90 to 100 kilometers per hour. On the northern Wadden Islands, wind speeds could reach as high as 100 to 120 kilometers per hour.

    Travelers passing through Schiphol were warned to prepare for cancellations and delays. Over 100 flights had already been canceled as of Friday morning.

    The storm also disrupted train services, with trees and branches blown onto tracks in several locations.

    Road traffic faced significant challenges as well. The Markerwaard dike near the province of Flevoland was closed due to strong winds, and the A15 motorway toward Nijmegen was shut down after a truck jackknifed.

    High water levels and strong winds forced the closure of the Ramspol storm surge barrier near Kampen in Overijssel province, halting shipping traffic temporarily. The closure was a precaution to prevent flooding in nearby areas, including the city of Zwolle.

    XINHUA

  • 8 dead in north India road mishap

    NEW DELHI — At least eight people, including one woman and seven men, died and 19 others were injured in a road accident between a private bus and a water tanker on an expressway in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh on Friday, confirmed a senior cop over the phone.

    The mishap occurred in the Kannauj district on an expressway connecting Uttar Pradesh’s capital city Lucknow and Delhi.

    The passenger bus was running from Lucknow towards the national capital, when it rammed into the water tanker from behind and toppled, resulting in human casualties. Some of the passengers were trapped under the bus, said the cop.

    According to him, the injured were admitted to a local hospital. The cause of the accident couldn’t be known yet.

    XINHUA

  • Thousands flee as Syrian militants push on toward Homs

    BEIRUT — Thousands of people fled the central Syrian city of Homs overnight and into Friday morning, a war monitoring group and residents said, as militant forces sought to push their lightning offensive against government forces further south.

    They have already captured the key cities of Aleppo in the north and Hama in the center, dealing successive blows to President Bashar Assad, nearly 14 years after protests against him erupted across Syria.

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group, said thousands of people had begun fleeing on Thursday night toward western coastal regions, a stronghold of the government.

    A resident of the coastal area said thousands of people had begun arriving there from Homs, fearing the militants’ rapid advance.

    On Friday morning, Israeli air strikes hit two border crossings between Lebanon and Syria, Lebanese transport minister Ali Hamieh said.

    The Syrian state news agency (SANA) said the Arida border crossing with Lebanon was out of service due to the attack.

    The Israeli military said it had attacked weapons transfer hubs and infrastructure overnight on the Syrian side of the Lebanese border, saying these routes had been used by the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah to smuggle weapons.

    Russian bombing overnight also destroyed the Rustan bridge along the key M5 highway, the main route to Homs, to prevent militants using it, a Syrian army officer told Reuters.

    “There were at least eight strikes on the bridge,” he added. Government forces were bringing reinforcements to positions around the city, he said.

    Militants led by the Islamist faction Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham have pledged to press on southward to Homs, a crossroads city that links the capital Damascus to the north and Assad’s heartland along the coast.

    A militant operations room urged Homs residents in an online post to rise up, saying: “Your time has come.”

    AN-REUTERS

  • Israeli strikes hit two Syria border crossings with Lebanon

    BEIRUT — Israeli strikes early on Friday hit two border crossings linking Lebanon with Syria, Lebanon’s transport minister Ali Hamieh said.

    The strikes hit just across the border on the Syrian side of both the Arida crossing in northern Lebanon and the Jousieh crossing which links to eastern Lebanon, Hamieh said.

    Both crossings are important access points to Syria’s Homs province, where anti-government rebels are seeking to advance against government forces after sweeping through northern Syria.

    AN-REUTERS

  • Strikes on key bridge linking Syria’s Homs, Hama: war monitor

    BEIRUT — Air strikes targeted a bridge on the highway linking the Syrian cities of Homs and Hama, a war monitor said Friday, as government forces scramble to secure Homs after Islamist-led militants captured Hama and commercial hub Aleppo.

    “Fighter jets executed several airstrikes, targeting Al-Rastan bridge on (the) Homs-Hama highway… as well as attacking positions around the bridge, attempting to cut off the road between Hama and Homs and secure Homs,” the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

    The militants led by Islamist group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) launched their offensive a little more than a week ago, just as a ceasefire in neighboring Lebanon took hold between Israel and Syrian President Bashar Assad’s ally Hezbollah.

    To slow the militants advance, the Observatory said Assad’s forces erected soil barriers on the highway north of Homs, Syria’s third-largest city which lies just 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Hama.

    Tens of thousands of members of Assad’s Alawite minority community were fleeing Homs on Thursday, for fear that the militants would keep up their advance, the Observatory said earlier.

    The militants captured Hama on Thursday following street battles with government forces, announcing “the complete liberation of the city” in a message on their Telegram channel.

    Militant fighters kissed the ground and let off volleys of celebratory gunfire as they entered Syria’s fourth-largest city.

    Many residents turned out to welcome the militants.

    An AFP photographer saw some residents set fire to a giant poster of Assad on the facade of city hall.

    The army admitted losing control of the city, strategically located between Aleppo and Assad’s seat of power in Damascus.

    Defense Minister Ali Abbas insisted that the army’s withdrawal was a “temporary tactical measure.”

    “Our forces are still in the vicinity,” he said in a statement carried by the official SANA news agency.

    Aron Lund, a fellow of the Century International think tank, called the loss of Hama “a massive, massive blow to the Syrian government” because the army should have had an advantage there to reverse militants gains “and they couldn’t do it.”

    He said HTS would now try to push on toward Homs, where many residents were already leaving on Thursday.

    Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman reported a mass exodus from the city of members of Assad’s Alawite minority community.

    He said tens of thousands were heading toward areas along Syria’s Mediterranean coast, where the Alawites, followers of an offshoot of Shiite Islam, form the majority.

    “We are afraid and worried that what happened in Hama will be repeated in Homs,” said a civil servant, who gave his name only as Abbas.

    “We fear they (the militants) will take revenge on us,” the 33-year-old said.

    Until last week, the war in Syria had been mostly dormant for years, but analysts have said it was bound to resume as it was never truly resolved.

    In a video posted online, HTS leader Abu Mohammed Al-Jolani said his fighters had entered Hama to “cleanse the wound that has endured in Syria for 40 years,” referring to a crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood in 1982, which led to thousands of deaths.

    In a later message on Telegram congratulating “the people of Hama on their victory,” he used his real name, Ahmed Al-Sharaa, instead of his nom de guerre for the first time.

    The Observatory, which relies on a network of sources in Syria, said 826 people, mostly combatants but also including 111 civilians, have been killed in the country since the violence erupted last week.

    It marks the most intense fighting since 2020 in the civil war sparked by the repression of pro-democracy protests in 2011.

    Key to the militants’ successes since the start of the offensive last week was the takeover of Aleppo, which in more than a decade of war had never entirely fallen out of government hands.

    While the advancing militants met little resistance earlier in their offensive, the fighting around Hama has been especially fierce.

    Assad ordered a 50-percent raise in career soldiers’ pay, state news agency SANA reported Wednesday, as he seeks to bolster his forces for a counteroffensive.

    Militants drove back the Syrian armed forces despite the fact that the government sent in “large military convoys,” the Observatory said.

    The militants launched their offensive in northern Syria on November 27, the same day a ceasefire took effect in the war between Israel and Hezbollah in neighboring Lebanon.

    Both Hezbollah and Russia have been crucial backers of Assad’s government, but have been mired in their own conflicts in recent years.

    HTS is rooted in Syria’s Al-Qaeda branch.
    The group has sought to moderate its image in recent years, but experts say it faces a challenge convincing Western governments it has fully renounced hard-line jihadism.

    The United States maintains hundreds of troops in eastern Syria as part of a coalition formed against Daesh group jihadists.

    AN-AFP

  • S. Korea’s defense ministry suspends duty of commanders involved in martial law declaration

    SEOUL — South Korea’s defense ministry said on Friday that it suspended the duty of three military commanders involved in the martial law declaration, made by President Yoon Suk-yeol earlier this week.

    Chiefs of the capital defense command, the army special warfare command, and the counterintelligence command were suspended and transferred to other units.

    It came amid the lingering worry about another martial law declaration in the opposition bloc.

    Yoon declared an emergency martial law Tuesday night before repealing it early Wednesday as the parliament voted against it. The revocation was approved at a cabinet meeting.

    XINHUA

  • 8 terrorists killed in separate operations in NW Pakistan

    ISLAMABAD — Eight terrorists were killed in two military operations in Pakistan’s northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, the military said.

    The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the media wing of the Pakistan Army, said on Thursday night in a statement that personnel of security forces engaged with the terrorists in two separate locations in the province.

    In the first engagement, the ISPR said that the security forces conducted an intelligence-based operation in the South Waziristan district on the reported presence of terrorists, resulting in the killing of two terrorists, including a ring leader.

    Two terrorists were also arrested during the operation in South Waziristan, the ISPR added.

    In another operation, six terrorists were killed in the Lakki Marwat district of the province.

    The ISPR said that the killed terrorists remained actively involved in terrorist activities against security forces as well as extortion and target killing of civilians in the area.

    Clearance of the surrounding areas is being conducted to eliminate any other terrorists found in the area, it added.

    XINHUA

  • 9 killed in Ecuador armed attacks

    QUITO — At least nine have been killed in two armed attacks in west Ecuador, local media reported Thursday.

    Early Thursday morning, police confirmed the discovery of six male bodies aged 17-25, all piled together.

    Local media reports indicated that some of the bodies were bound and showed gunshot wounds. Police have transported the bodies to a forensic center in the port city of Manta, Manabi.

    On Wednesday night, three members of the same family were murdered in the city of Bahia de Caraquez, Sucre canton, Manabi.

    Manabi, a key region for drug trafficking on Ecuador’s Pacific coast, has seen rising violence in 2024, with numerous crimes linked to organized crime, police said.

    In response, the government deployed police and military forces to target criminal groups in conflict zones. President Daniel Noboa declared an “internal armed conflict” in January against 22 criminal gangs labeled as “terrorist.”

    XINHUA