NewsGlobal crisis: Airstrikes, fires, and rising tensions overnight. This is what happened in the news

Global crisis: Airstrikes, fires, and rising tensions overnight. This is what happened in the news

It happened while you were sleeping. Here’s what global agencies reported on the night from Wednesday to Thursday.

Theatre fire in Khabarovsk
Theatre fire in Khabarovsk
Images source: © Licensor
Paweł Buczkowski

3 October 2024 08:52

  • A fire broke out around 9 PM local time (around 5 PM Greenwich Mean Time) in the city of Khabarovsk, in the southeastern region of the Asian part of Russia. The roof and façade of the local theatre caught fire. Structures and part of the building cover collapsed inside. At the time of the incident, three people were inside the theatre and were evacuated before the firefighters arrived, according to the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations. Dozens of firefighters took part in the operation. "The façade and the external wall collapsed. Four gas cylinders exploded during the firefighting. Initially, there were no casualties," added the Russian authorities.
  • At least six people died, and seven were injured on the night from Wednesday to Thursday due to an Israeli airstrike in the centre of the Lebanese capital, Beirut – announced the Lebanese Ministry of Health. Israel continued to conduct air raids on Lebanon on Wednesday as part of an operation against the Iranian-backed Hezbollah organisation operating in the country. Ground fighting also continued on the border. The Israeli armed forces announced that they carried out a precision airstrike on a target in Beirut. According to Hezbollah, the target was a health centre belonging to the organisation.
  • A Russian-guided aerial bomb struck a five-storey residential building in Kharkiv, eastern Ukraine, late Wednesday evening. As a result of the attack, at least eight people were injured.
  • The Dominican government announced plans on Wednesday to begin mass deportations of arrivals from neighbouring Haiti residing in the country illegally. According to reports, up to 10,000 people per week may be sent back - reported the Associated Press. Government spokesperson Homero Figueroa told journalists that the decision was made due to the "excess" of Haitians living in the Dominican Republic. The relatively wealthy and politically stable Dominican Republic shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with the state of Haiti, from which thousands flee chaos and brutal gang warfare.
  • The investigation into the death of actor Matthew Perry, known for his role in the series "Friends," is ongoing. According to BBC News, one of the accused doctors, Mark Chavez, pleaded guilty to the distribution of ketamine, a powerful anaesthetic.
  • Out of approximately 600 ships transporting Russian oil, nearly half are part of the so-called "shadow fleet", reported the Finnish portal Yle. The Kremlin exports the raw material mainly through the Baltic, and several units passing through the Gulf of Finland have been placed on the international "blacklist" as ships "for repair" or "for scrap."
  • Mexican soldiers opened fire on a van carrying 33 migrants from Asia, North Africa, and Cuba, resulting in six deaths and ten injuries - reported the Mexican Ministry of Defence on Wednesday. The incident occurred Tuesday evening on a road in Chiapas in southern Mexico. According to the communiqué, soldiers noticed a vehicle travelling at high speed, trying to avoid military interception. Two small delivery trucks followed, "similar to those used by criminal groups in the region." "The soldiers reported hearing explosions, so two of them used their guns, stopping one of the vans," it was stated. The vehicle contained "33 migrants of Egyptian, Nepali, Cuban, Indian, Pakistani, and Arab nationality." Four people died, and 12 were injured. The injured were taken to the hospital, but two could not be saved, it was added.
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