Typhoon Shanshan winds cause havoc at Japan’s Fukuoka Airport.
Month: August 2024
Afghanistan is a US election issue. Will its refugees’ voices be heard?
On the third anniversary of the US troop withdrawal, advocates push candidates for legal pathways for Afghan refugees.
Appeal after boy, 13, killed in stabbing attack
Police have launched a murder investigation following the attack on Thursday afternoon.
Mpox vaccines are available – why are they not reaching Africa?
Nigeria became the first African country this week to receive a batch of vaccines against mpox, a viral disease whose rapid spread led the World Health Organization to declare a global health emergency in mid-August. While more vaccine doses are available, experts say high costs and regulatory hurdles have prevented the jabs from reaching the countries in central Africa that most need them.
In JD Vance’s home state of Ohio, an ongoing fight against opioid addiction
The Republican running mate has made his family history with addiction a key talking point in the US presidential race.
Russian attack on Ukraine’s Kharkiv kills at least four, injures dozens
Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, and the surrounding region have long been targeted by Russian attacks.
Prison population hits record high after riots
Nearly 1,000 people have been jailed in the last month in England and Wales, many linked to recent disorder.
Ukraine F16 crash. Zakharova, US greenlight missile strikes. Medvedev, $7 trillion Donbass wealth
Ukraine urges Mongolia to arrest Putin on ICC warrant, Kremlin says it has ‘no worries’ about visit
President Vladimir Putin is expected to travel to Mongolia on Tuesday, the first time the Russian leader has visited an member nation of the International Criminal Court since the court ordered his arrest in March 2023. The court alleges Putin is responsible for war crimes, saying he failed to stop the deportation of children from Ukraine to Russia after the conflict with Ukraine began.
Blast rocks German explosives manufacturing plant – media
The explosion at one of Diehl Defence’s factories has reportedly left two employees seriously injured
A powerful detonation at the Diehl Defence explosives manufacturing plant in the city of Troisdorf, Germany has left two workers with serious injuries, local media reported on Friday. Another of the company’s factories went up in flames in Berlin in May, prompting several news outlets to speculate that the incident may have been the result of Russian sabotage.
In recent months, a number of Western officials, including NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg as well as media outlets, have alleged that Moscow has intensified its sabotage campaign on European soil. Moscow’s presumed endgame is to disrupt the delivery of Western weapons to Ukraine and the training of Kiev’s troops abroad.
The Kremlin has consistently denied these claims.
On Friday, Bild quoted Lars Godel, the head of the Troisdorf fire department, as confirming that they had been called to the site of an explosion inside an industrial building that was “considerably damaged” as a result.
The two employees who sustained serious injuries in the incident managed to escape the building on their own, and were rushed to a hospital by helicopter.
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Drone threat sparked alert at NATO base – Reuters
Police officers working at the scene to establish the cause of the blast have preliminarily attributed it to an industrial accident, according to Bild.
In early May, a blaze destroyed a plant in Berlin that belonged to the same arms manufacturer, Diehl. The firm produces, among other arms, the IRIS-T air defense system, several units of which the German government has supplied to Ukraine since late 2022.
The following month, Bild and the Wall Street Journal claimed that Moscow might have had a hand in the incident.
Over this past month alone, there have been numerous scares at several German military facilities over a drone threat, a suspected breach, as well as fears over alleged water supply contamination.
Back in April, German authorities said they had arrested two German-Russian dual nationals on suspicion of planning to sabotage local military infrastructure, including US bases, on the orders of Russia’s security services.
Commenting on reported allegations of Russian sabotage activities in the West, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted in July that “all these assumptions and claims are baseless and are nothing more than an incitement of Russophobic hysteria.”