News

51 readers
1 users here now

Breaking news and current events worldwide.

founded 2 years ago
1801
 
 

Witnesses report seeing globs of asphalt binder that spilled into Montana's Yellowstone River during a bridge collapse and train derailment on islands and the riverbanks a week after the spill.

1802
 
 

Authorities discovered Gabriel Trujillo's body in the state of Sonora, days after his fiancée reported him missing.

1803
 
 

Created 10 years ago by a private-equity firm, USAP is now one of the largest in the U.S., with more than 4,000 doctors and spanning nine states. As it gobbled up existing practices, substantial price hikes followed.

1804
 
 

Hi everyone, i'm SO SO SO happy to be here, its my first day / post sorry if i do it wrong, I LOVE ALL OF YOU

1805
 
 

An 18-year-old woman was pronounced dead at the scene, and a 20-year-old man was pronounced dead later at a local hospital. Nine of the people injured were transported to hospitals from the scene, while the other 20 victims walked into various hospitals in the area. A suspect has not been arrested in connection with the mass shooting.

1806
 
 

It'll probably never happen, but a person can dream

1807
 
 

Moscow relying on 'dual use' equipment and third-party exporters

1808
 
 

A group representing the Indigenous people has sued to regain the right, lost over a century ago, to freely fish for salmon in a Hokkaido river.

1809
 
 

France’s left has often failed to speak up for marginalized minorities. But after the backlash over the police murder of 17-year-old Nahel, left-wing parties have taken a clear stance, refusing to condemn rioters and insisting their anger is justified.

1810
 
 

The evangelical school earns substantial revenues from former members of the military whose tuition is supported by the GI Bill, but it continues to generate complaints from aggrieved vets.

1811
 
 

"We never thought it was going to get to the point where they were actually getting us all off the flight."

1812
 
 

When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the national right to abortion a year ago, it shook efforts to legalize and make abortions safer in Africa. Sub-Saharan Africa has the world’s highest rate of unintended pregnancies, and 77% of abortions are estimated to be unsafe.

1813
 
 

Overdoses linked to tranq, the street drug that can cause horrific wounds, have spiked 276 percent, according to the CDC.

1814
 
 

Morocco recognized Israel as part of the Abraham Accords — and is reaping its rewards against the Polisario Front.

1815
 
 

Over half a million German Roman Catholics left the church last year alone. Why do people break with the institution? DW's Christoph Strack caught up with one of those who have done so.

1816
 
 

South Africans are experiencing worsening blackouts as winter hits and the crisis is fuelling demands for political change in Africa's most-advanced economy.

1817
 
 

Quebec’s housing agency says almost 200 households have been forced to find temporary shelter after being unable to find a new place to live on the pr...

1818
 
 

An uprising is underway in France in response to the murder of Nahel Merzouk. Participants set it in the context of struggles dating back to the 1970s.

1819
 
 

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) will expand its facial recognition program to around 430 US airports over the next several years following what it calls “extremely promising” results in its pilot program, according to Fast Company. The agency reportedly said its program yielded 97% effective results across all demographics, including those with dark skin. The program is currently in use in 25 airports.

1820
 
 

Experts says these doomsday scenarios are no fantasy but instead thoroughly possible.

1821
 
 

Tens of thousands of police were deployed in cities across France as fears of rioting grew following the funeral of teenager Nahel M, whose shooting by police sparked nationwide unrest.

1822
 
 

The Public Prosecution Service (OM) and the police are "ready to enforce the laughing gas ban," the OM reported on Saturday. Since January 1 of this year, it has been illegal in the Netherlands to transport, sell, manufacture, or possess laughing gas for recreational use. However, enforcement of this ban has not yet occurred. Last November, the police said they were in favor of a ban, but that a few problems needed to be resolved before enforcement was possible. Among other things, a solution had to be found for the transportation and destruction of seized laughing gas.

1823
 
 

Ladies and gentlemen, here in the Oosterpark, on the Museumplein, in Suriname, in the Caribbean part of our Kingdom, or wherever in the world you are tuning in, "Within the city of Amsterdam and its jurisdiction, all men are free, and none are slaves." These are the words of a Dutch legal provision from 1644.

1824
 
 

Police, coastguard and ambulance crews were called to Loch Ryan port at around 5.50pm on Saturday.

1825
 
 

KHC and the private office of Prince Alwaleed bin Talal are jointly the second largest investors after Elon Musk.

view more: ‹ prev next ›