Tag Archives: collapses

Despite U.S. requests, Israel reduces aid allowed into Gaza after ceasefire collapses – Axios

  1. Despite U.S. requests, Israel reduces aid allowed into Gaza after ceasefire collapses Axios
  2. After just dozens of aid trucks enter Gaza today, US urges Israel to allow delivery to reach truce-time levels The Times of Israel
  3. Gaza aid trucks stranded as Israel-Hamas war resumes Al Jazeera English
  4. Palestine Red Crescent Society: Response Report as of Saturday, October 7th 2023, 6:00 PM Until Sunday, November 29th 2023, 00:00 AM – occupied Palestinian territory ReliefWeb
  5. With truce over, only dozens of aid trucks enter Gaza, none include fuel — COGAT The Times of Israel
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Box Office: ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel Lands on Top With $44 Million, ‘The Marvels’ Collapses With Historic 79% Drop – Variety

  1. Box Office: ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel Lands on Top With $44 Million, ‘The Marvels’ Collapses With Historic 79% Drop Variety
  2. The Ending Of The Hunger Games: The Ballad Of Songbirds And Snakes Explained Looper
  3. The Hunger Games: the Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes review – handsome but undercooked prequel The Guardian
  4. Did Snow Really Love Lucy Gray In The Ballad Of Songbirds And Snakes? I Have Some Thoughts On The Matter CinemaBlend
  5. The Biggest Dystopian Thriller of the Year Makes One Rare Mistake Inverse
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1 dead, 1 still missing after 11-story coal plant collapses in eastern Kentucky – WLKY Louisville

  1. 1 dead, 1 still missing after 11-story coal plant collapses in eastern Kentucky WLKY Louisville
  2. Kentucky declares state of emergency after coal plant collapse; 1 worker confirmed dead Fox News
  3. Governor: At least one worker dead after 11-story coal plant collapse in Eastern Kentucky WLWT
  4. ‘We haven’t given up hope’ | Officials provide details following deadly building collapse WSAZ
  5. Louisville Fire captain gives update on team sent to help with rescue efforts at collapsed Kentuc… WLKY News Louisville
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Box Office: ‘Spider-Verse’ Returns to No. 1 as ‘The Flash’ Collapses By 73% and Jennifer Lawrence’s ‘No Hard Feelings’ Opens to $15 Million – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Box Office: ‘Spider-Verse’ Returns to No. 1 as ‘The Flash’ Collapses By 73% and Jennifer Lawrence’s ‘No Hard Feelings’ Opens to $15 Million Yahoo Entertainment
  2. The Flash: 10 Reasons It’s Awful WhatCulture
  3. The Flash will be lucky to come in third at the box office this weekend The A.V. Club
  4. ‘The Flash’ Fails to Steal an Unwanted Record Away From ‘Morbius’ We Got This Covered
  5. ‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse” Returns to No. 1 at Box Office as ‘The Flash’ Drops 72% TheWrap
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I-95 Collapse in Philadelphia: Portion of Interstate in Tacony collapses due to tanker truck fire creates commuter troubles – WPVI-TV

  1. I-95 Collapse in Philadelphia: Portion of Interstate in Tacony collapses due to tanker truck fire creates commuter troubles WPVI-TV
  2. I-95 Collapse Philadelphia: People are trapped underneath debris | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  3. Section of major I-95 highway in Philadelphia that collapsed after tanker truck caught fire underneath could take months to repair, officials say CNN
  4. Shapiro to issue disaster declaration after I-95 collapse; repairs to take months 69News WFMZ-TV
  5. I-95 collapse adding to traffic in Northeast Philadelphia CBS Philadelphia

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Warren unveils bill to repeal Trump-era bank deregulation she says led to SVB, Signature collapses – CNBC

  1. Warren unveils bill to repeal Trump-era bank deregulation she says led to SVB, Signature collapses CNBC
  2. Elizabeth Warren says the millions in bonuses Silicon Valley Bank executives took home last year should be recovered by regulators: ‘We should claw all that back’ Yahoo Finance
  3. Silicon Valley Bank collapse would have been ‘prevented’ if not for Trump deregulation, Senate Democrat says Fox Business
  4. Opinion | Elizabeth Warren: We Can Prevent More Bank Failures The New York Times
  5. PAUL J DAVIES: Fed does not need new rules to stop the next SVB BusinessLIVE
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Damar Hamlin collapses on field; Bills-Bengals temporarily suspended

CINCINNATI — Bills safety Damar Hamlin collapsed on the field, was adminstered CPR and then was taken away by ambulance, which resulted in the game between Buffalo and the Cincinnati Bengals being suspended until further notice Monday night.

There was no immediate word on his condition from the Bills.

In a chilling scene that grounded to a halt the showdown between two of the NFL’s best teams, CPR was administered to Hamlin on the field for multiple minutes after he collapsed on the field following a play in the first quarter. He appeared to be receiving oxygen as he was placed in the ambulance and taken off the field some 16 minutes after he collapsed.

The injury took place after Hamlin tackled wide receiver Tee Higgins and quickly got up afterward. Hamlin then abruptly collapsed, with athletic trainers coming to help immediately. A stretcher was immediately brought to the field as athletic trainers protected his head.

The entire Bills sideline surrounded Hamlin as he received care. Multiple Bills players were visibly distressed and comforting each other as he was cared to. Many players turned away from watching Hamlin in distress.

The first attempt to move Hamlin resulted in him being brought back down onto the field, but he was ultimately placed into an ambulance, which left the stadium at about 9:25 p.m. ET. Hamlin’s family came down from the stands to be with him in the ambulance.

After Hamlin exited the field, Bills players knelt together in a circle and then returned to the sideline, with the defense heading back on the field to resume play. Wide receiver Stefon Diggs called everyone over for a word.

However, instead of resuming play, Bengals coach Zac Taylor walked over to Bills counterpart Sean McDermott and met with game officials present. The decision was then made to pause the game — which the Bengals were leading 7-3 — some 21 minutes after the injury.

Hamlin was selected in the sixth round of the 2021 NFL draft out of Pittsburgh, with the Bills taking him with the No. 212 overall pick.

One of the nation’s top cornerbacks in the class of 2016 out of McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, Hamlin chose to play for Pitt over Ohio State and Penn State. He delivered, becoming a three-year starter and the most reliable player on a defense that required much from him at the safety position.

In his final season at Pitt in 2020, Hamlin was a second-team All-ACC selection, leading the Panthers with 67 tackles and seven pass breakups. After Hamlin was drafted, Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi told WGRZ-TV: “He’s got that heart. He’s got the leadership. I mean, our entire defense revolved around him. Damar will go up there, show his skills off. I think he’s so versatile.”

Hamlin has been starting for the Bills this season in place of injured safety Micah Hyde, who suffered a neck injury in Week 2 and has been on injured reserve since.

In that same Week 2 game against the Tennessee Titans, Hamlin’s close friend and former college teammate, Bills cornerback Dane Jackson, was taken off the field with a neck injury. He missed one game.

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China’s Covid Protests Began With an Apartment Fire in a Remote Region

As smoke crept through the 21-story apartment building in far western China, panicked messages filled the residents’ chat group. “On the 16th floor, we don’t have enough oxygen,” a woman gasped in an audio message. “Soon our children won’t be OK.”

Another person added a plea about the people in apartment 1901: “They wouldn’t be able to open the door. Can you break into it and take a look? There are many children inside.”

Many who heard the reports were shocked, not by a tragedy in the remote city of Urumqi, but because it had taken firefighters three hours to control the fire. People across the country believed the delays happened in part because of the pandemic restrictions that have been a running source of discontent throughout the country. The impact has reached into the heart of Chinese politics.

Excerpts of residents’ panicked conversation began to circulate on social media, along with videos of the emergency response. They showed fire crews struggling to get around barriers to approach the building. Videos showed fire crews’ water streams falling short of the fire as its flames slithered toward the top of the apartment tower.

Pandemic controls imposed by Chinese authorities around, and possibly inside, the apartment building had delayed the fire response, neighbors and family members of those killed have said. That would mean that the death toll, which many believed was much higher than the official tally of 10, was ultimately in part a product of China’s strict, already widely detested zero-tolerance Covid policy. The government denies all that.

Outrage spilled onto the streets of Urumqi, the capital of the heavily Muslim Chinese region of Xinjiang, where residents had been locked down for more than 100 days. Footage of the fire and the protest in Urumqi spread on Chinese social media and on the popular do-everything app

WeChat.

Firefighters sprayed water on a residential-building fire in the city of Urumqi that killed 10 and triggered protests against Covid-19 lockdowns.



Photo:

Associated Press

To large numbers of Chinese people who have had the experience of being locked inside their own apartments because of Covid controls, the words and images flowing out of Xinjiang conjured a scenario that seemed terrifyingly plausible.

“The 100-plus day lockdown is real. The many deaths from Covid controls are real. Discontent has accumulated and is destined to erupt,” said a user on the Twitter-like

Weibo

platform in one widely endorsed comment about the fire.

Within days, the protest would spread throughout China, growing into the largest show of public defiance the Communist Party has faced since the 1989 pro-democracy protests at Tiananmen Square. The demonstrations have posed a rare challenge to the recently extended rule of Chinese leader

Xi Jinping,

compounding the government’s challenges over how to ease its Covid restrictions.

Large protests erupted across China as crowds voiced their frustration at nearly three years of Covid-19 controls. Here’s how a deadly fire in Xinjiang sparked domestic upheaval and a political dilemma for Xi Jinping’s leadership. Photo: Thomas Peter/Reuters

China has experienced public outrage over its strict Covid-19 restrictions before, most of which the authorities had managed to contain online. Going back nearly three years, the death from the coronavirus of Li Wenliang, a doctor who was punished for warning others about the initial outbreak in Wuhan, unleashed a flood of grief and anger.

This September, a bus crash in Guizhou province that killed 27 people who were being sent to quarantine in the middle of the night raised an outcry about steps taken to control the coronavirus.

Mourners in Hong Kong paid their respects in February 2020 to Chinese physician Li Wenliang. Dr. Li raised early alarms about the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan but was silenced by police, only to die of the disease himself.



Photo:

jerome favre/EPA/Shutterstock

More recently, after an announcement that Covid restrictions would be eased led to little actual change, public frustration spilled out onto the streets. Workers at

Foxconn Technology Group’s

main plant in the city of Zhengzhou, the world’s largest iPhone factory, clashed with police while protesting a contract dispute with roots in pandemic lockdowns. In some Beijing neighborhoods, people argued with officials over the legality of controls.

In maintaining the lockdowns in Xinjiang, local authorities have been able to rely on the country’s most advanced and suffocating security apparatus, originally built to carry out a campaign of ethnic re-engineering against the region’s 14 million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims.

Most if not all of the fire’s victims belonged to these groups, according to relatives and overseas Uyghur activists. Discrimination by China’s Han majority against Turkic minorities has long fueled ethnic tensions in the region, which exploded into deadly race riots in Urumqi in 2009.

Yet in the past week, the sides found common cause, at least temporarily, in anger over the fire.

According to an official account published in the state-run Xinjiang Daily newspaper, the blaze began on the 15th floor, in the apartment of a Uyghur woman who was having a bath in a home spa when a circuit breaker flipped. She flipped it back, then was alerted by her daughter to the smell of smoke. When she re-emerged from the bathroom, flames had risen to the wooden ceiling from the bed.

A community worker arrived just as they were fleeing the flames, according to Xinjiang Daily. He called the fire service at 7:49 p.m. last Thursday, then helped rush the pair and their neighbors downstairs.

A still taken from a social media video shows a fire truck shooting water at the burning residential building in Urumqi. The fire and delays in fighting it proved a catalyst for nationwide protests against Covid-19 lockdowns.



Photo:

REUTERS

At the ground level, burning debris had begun falling over the doorway. Those who couldn’t leave through the front gate in time had to climb out of a window from an apartment, the newspaper reported.

Firefighters didn’t reach some of the apartments until around 90 minutes after they were called, according to posts on the chat group.

Video footage showed that traffic-control structures had to be removed as a line of fire trucks waited, causing delays. The government denied the structures had been installed for pandemic-control reasons.

At a press briefing convened late Friday night as protests unfolded, officials said that three fire trucks from a nearby station arrived at the scene five minutes after the fire was reported, but they were blocked by cars that had to be moved.

On social media, residents said those cars had been parked there for months during the fall Covid lockdown, and the engines couldn’t start.

Li Wensheng, Urumqi’s fire chief, said at the press briefing that some residents’ “self-rescue abilities were weak,” a comment that added to the simmering anger.

The Xinjiang and Urumqi governments didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Han residents of Urumqi led the protests that unfolded in the freezing night air the day following the fire. Uyghur residents have faced the strictest lockdowns and largely stayed home out of fear they would bear the brunt of any reprisals, overseas activists said.

Demonstrations were fueled by the group chat conversations and footage of obstructed fire trucks, as well as by videos circulating online that appeared to capture the screams of people from the smoldering building. “Open the gate!” one woman could be heard shouting in horror in one video.

On Saturday night, several female students stood for hours on the campus of Communication University of China in Nanjing, holding blank sheets of paper in silence, widely taken to be a reference to Chinese censorship. A male student from Xinjiang offered a tribute to the victims in Urumqi and to “all other victims nationwide,” saying he had been a coward for too long.

A man was arrested on a Shanghai street when protests erupted following a deadly apartment-building fire in China’s Xinjiang region.



Photo:

hector retamal/AFP/Getty Images

That same night, dozens of people in Shanghai gathered for a vigil with flowers and candles near a street named after Urumqi. Passersby joined in, and the crowd grew into the hundreds. Just past midnight, some demonstrators began chanting for Mr. Xi to step down.

Similar protests emerged in half a dozen Chinese cities and more than a dozen university campuses in the following days. In several instances, demonstrators chanted “We are all Xinjiang people.” Others called for democracy and free speech.

Chinese authorities have devoted enormous resources to building domestic security and surveillance systems specifically designed to prevent such wide and unified outbreaks of dissent. While protests aren’t uncommon, scholars who study China say they are almost always local events with little capacity to spread.

The Cyberspace Administration of China issued guidance to companies on Tuesday, including Tencent Holdings Ltd. and ByteDance Ltd., the Chinese owner of short video apps TikTok and Douyin, asking them to add more staff to internet censorship teams, according to people familiar with the matter. The companies were also asked to pay more attention to content related to the protests, particularly any information being shared about demonstrations at Chinese universities and the fire.

In imposing its stringent Covid controls, human-rights activists and other observers say, the Communist Party created an issue that China’s citizens only have to look out their front door to understand. Some Uyghurs affected by the fire said the fear and frustration stemming from pandemic controls crossed deep-seated ethnic divides.

Marhaba Muhammad, now a resident of Turkey, said she read news of the fire with a sense of horror. She recognized the building as the home of her aunt, whom she last visited in 2016, shortly before leaving China. The family lived in apartment 1901, the subject of one of the desperate messages left in the residents’ chat group.

Ms. Muhammad said she and her family abroad learned that the aunt, Qemernisahan Abdurahman, 48, had died in the apartment, along with four children age 5 to 13.

Ms. Abdurahman’s husband wasn’t there. He and an elder son were detained as part of the crackdown in Xinjiang in 2017 and now are imprisoned, said Ms. Muhammad and her brother, Abdulhafiz Maiamaitimin, who lives in Switzerland.

“This news is so painful. No one imagined,” she said.

Qemernisahan Abdurahman, 48, with 3 of her four children who died in the fire in Urumqi.



Photo:

Marhaba Muhammad

In apartment 1801, directly below where Ms. Muhammad’s aunt and children died, a woman also died along with her children, according to Abduweli Ayup, a Uyghur activist in Norway who spoke with relatives and neighbors of the fire victims.

Han Chinese don’t have to fear the level of oppression faced by Uyghurs, Ms. Muhammad said, referring to the Chinese government’s detention of upwards of a million Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in internment camps and prisons—a practice the United Nations has said may constitute a crime against humanity.

Yet “after the fire, they realized that Uyghurs today would be the Chinese tomorrow,” she said.

Police have targeted protest participants by using some of the surveillance techniques honed in Xinjiang to target Uyghurs. In chat rooms used to organize demonstrations, protesters have reported police scanning the smartphones of pedestrians for overseas apps such as Twitter and Telegram, a common experience on the streets of Urumqi.

A lawyer representing more than a dozen protesters taken by police said she believes many of her clients were tracked through mobile-phone data, another echo of the Uyghur experience in Xinjiang.

On Tuesday, Chinese-Australian activist and cartoonist Badiucao, who goes by one name, reposted a widely shared video of police on the Shanghai subway checking the phones of passengers on Twitter. He appended a single phrase: “Xinjiang-ization.”

Protesters in Beijing lighted candles during a protest against China’s strict zero-Covid measures.



Photo:

Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

Write to Austin Ramzy at austin.ramzy@wsj.com and to Wenxin Fan at Wenxin.Fan@wsj.com

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NASA telescope images reveal brightest explosion ever recorded, as a star collapses into a black hole

An illustration shows a black hole driving powerful jets of particles traveling near the speed of light.NASA/Swift/Cruz deWilde

NASA telescopes have detected the brightest, most high-energy flood of radiation from space ever recorded.

About 1.9 billion years ago, a dying star collapsed, exploding in a powerful burst of gamma rays that careened toward Earth. Finally, they washed over our planet on October 9. They set off detectors on three telescopes in orbit: the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, and the Wind spacecraft.

Swift’s X-Ray Telescope captured the afterglow of GRB 221009A about an hour after it was first detected. The bright rings form as a result of X-rays scattered by otherwise unobservable dust layers within our galaxy that lie in the direction of the burst.NASA/Swift/A. Beardmore (University of Leicester)

Those telescopes, and other observatories around the world, quickly homed in on the source of the radiation: a distant object now called GRB 221009A, pulsing with the powerful glow of its gamma-ray emissions.

It was the most luminous, powerful event ever detected, NASA announced on Thursday. The telescopes’ images show just how dramatic the explosion was.

Images taken in visible light by Swift’s Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope show how the afterglow of GRB 221009A (circled) faded over the course of about 10 hours.NASA/Swift/B. Cenko

“In our research group, we’ve been referring to this burst as the ‘BOAT’, or Brightest Of All Time, because when you look at the thousands of bursts gamma-ray telescopes have been detecting since the 1990s, this one stands apart,” Jillian Rastinejad, a PhD student at Northwestern University, said in a statement.

This sequence constructed from 10 hours of Fermi Large Area Telescope data reveals the sky in gamma rays centered on the location of GRB 221009A. Brighter colors indicate a stronger gamma-ray signal.NASA/DOE/Fermi LAT Collaboration

Rastinejad led a group of researchers who conducted follow-up observations on Friday, taking more measurements as the gamma rays continued to flood past Earth.

The radiation probably came from a supernova explosion — a dying star collapsing into a black hole. It could be decades before another gamma-ray burst this bright appears again.

“It’s a very unique event,” Yvette Cendes, an astronomer and postdoctoral fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, told Mashable, adding that a giant gamma-ray burst in a galaxy so close to us is “incredibly, incredibly rare.”

“It’s the equivalent of getting front row seats at a fireworks show,” she said.

The sheer power and brightness of the ancient explosion allows astronomers to collect lots of data on it, which could reveal new insights about how stars die, how black holes form, and how matter behaves near the speed of light, as it’s ejected from a supernova. It helps that the object is relatively close to us, compared to other gamma-ray bursts astronomers have detected.

That proximity “allows us to detect many details that otherwise would be too faint to see,” Roberta Pillera, a Fermi LAT Collaboration member who led initial communications about the burst, said in a NASA statement. “But it’s also among the most energetic and luminous bursts ever seen regardless of distance, making it doubly exciting.”

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Sterling collapses as investors fly into dollars

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  • Sterling hits record low; risk of BOE response
  • Euro down 1%; Aussie, kiwi, yuan hit multi year lows
  • S&P 500 futures drop 0.6%

SYDNEY, Sept 26 (Reuters) – Sterling slumped to a record low on Monday, prompting speculation of an emergency response from the Bank of England, as confidence evaporated in Britain’s plan to borrow its way out of trouble, with spooked investors piling in to U.S. dollars.

Broadening worry that high interest rates will hurt growth hit Asia’s currencies and equities too, with exporters from Japanese carmakers to Australian miners hit hard.

The pound plunged nearly 5% at one point to $1.0327, breaking below 1985 lows. Moves were exacerbated by thinner liquidity in the Asia session, but even after stumbling back to $1.05 the currency is still down some 7% in just two sessions.

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“You’ve got to buy the dollar as a risk off-trade. There is nowhere else to go,” said Rabobank strategist Michael Every in Singapore.

“The BOE are going to have to step in today, surely, at which point everyone’s going to end up with massively higher mortgage rates to try and stabilise sterling.”

The collapse sent the dollar higher broadly and it hit multi-year peaks on the Aussie, kiwi and yuan and a new 20-year top of $0.9528 per euro .

In stocks, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) was down 1% to a two-year low. It is heading for a monthly loss of 11%, the largest since March 2020. Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) fell 2.2%.

S&P 500 futures fell 0.5%.

Last week, stocks and bonds crumbled after the United States and half a dozen other countries raised rates and projected pain ahead. Japan intervened in currency trade to support the yen. Investors lost confidence in Britain’s economic management.

The Nasdaq (.IXIC) lost more than 5% for the second week running. The S&P 500 (.SPX) fell 4.8%.

Gilts suffered their heaviest selling in three decades on Friday and on Monday the pound made a 37-year low at $1.0765 as investors reckon planned tax cuts will stretch government finances to the limit.

Sterling is down 11% this quarter.

Five-year gilt yields rose 94 basis points last week, by far the biggest weekly jump recorded in Refinitiv data stretching back to the mid 1980s. Treasuries tanked as well last week, with two-year yields up 35 bps to 4.2140% and benchmark 10-year yields up 25 bps to 3.6970%.

The euro wobbled to a two-decade low at $0.9660 as risks rise of war escalating in Ukraine, before steadying at $0.9686.

In Italy, a right-wing alliance led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party was on course for a clear majority in the next parliament, as expected. Some took heart from a middling performance by eurosceptics The League.

“I expect relatively little impact considering that the League, the party with the least pro-European stance, seems to have come out weak,” said Giuseppe Sersale, fund manager and strategist at Anthilia in Milan.

Oil and gold steadied after drops against the rising dollar last week. Gold hit a more-than two-year low on Friday and bought $1,643 an ounce on Monday. Brent crude futures sat at $86.29.

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Additional reporting by Danilo Masoni in Milan; Editing by Sam Holmes

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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