At least four dead, including two teenagers, after train collides with school bus in Belgium
Four people have been killed, including two teenagers, after a train crashed into a school bus on Tuesday morning in the northern Belgian town of Bu...
At least 28 people have been killed and two remain missing after a landslide hit an illegal gold mine in Angola’s Bengo province, authorities say.
The victims were aged between 18 and 40, police said, with 13 members of the same family among those buried by the landslide.
Police said the collapse happened on Saturday (23 May) at a mining site in Nambuangongo Municipality, northeast of Luanda.
Gaspar Luis Inacio, a police spokesperson, said two people were still missing after the landslide and that search and rescue teams remained at the scene.
Authorities said emergency workers were continuing efforts to locate people believed to be trapped beneath debris from the collapsed mine. The operation was still under way after the death toll was confirmed on Sunday (24 May).
Medical officials at Bengo Central Hospital said at least three injured survivors had received treatment. Francisco Rodrigues, the hospital’s health supervisor, said the patients had undergone X-ray examinations and remained under medical observation.
“All three patients are conscious and out of danger. There is no immediate need for transfer to other medical facilities,” Rodrigues told reporters.
Illegal mining remains a persistent problem in parts of Angola, where unsafe conditions and limited regulation have contributed to fatal accidents.
A peace agreement between Washington and Tehran is yet to materialise, with U.S. President Donald Trump saying that negotiations are incomplete and an Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman saying that a deal isn't imminent.
Start your day informed with the AnewZ Morning Brief. Here are the top stories for 25th May, covering the latest developments you need to know.
The World Health Organization warned on Monday that the fast-moving Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda was outpacing response efforts, with 220 suspected deaths reported so far.
As dawn broke on Monday, pilgrims began arriving at the sacred site of Mina west of Mecca, marking the start of Hajj - one of the most significant spiritual journeys in Islam.
Start your day informed with the AnewZ Morning Brief. Here are the top stories for 26 May, covering the latest developments you need to know.
Four people have been killed, including two teenagers, after a train crashed into a school bus on Tuesday morning in the northern Belgian town of Buggenhout, the country's Transport Minister Jean-Luc Crucke has said.
Seven people have died in France in incidents linked directly or indirectly to an ongoing early-summer heatwave, as large parts of western Europe continue to experience unusually high temperatures.
Thai-based cave divers have joined international efforts to rescue seven villagers trapped in a flooded gold mining cave in remote Laos after days of heavy rain cut off access underground.
Emergency teams rescued 320 tourists stranded in 65 cable cars in Kashmir after a gondola disruption triggered a six-hour evacuation operation.
Muslim pilgrims are gathering gathering at Mount Mercy on the Plain of Arafat in Saudi Arabia to mark the Hajj pilgrimage’s most important day.
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