
In Armenia, demonstraters gathered Wednesday night to protest
đ Sannu!*
Welcome to Thursday, where Russian troops have unleashed an all-out assault on the strategic city of Severodonetsk, Ukraineâs president lashes out at Henry Kissinger for âMunichâ stance and the writer of a notable âHow toâ essay is convicted of murder. We also look at how the plague of school shootings is not exclusive to the United States.
[*Hausa - Nigeria]
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đ 7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW
⢠Russia hones in on Severodonetsk: Fighting is increasingly concentrated in the industrial city of Severodonetsk, reports the Ukrainian presidential administration, with Russian shelling of the town having âincreased exponentiallyâ in the past few hours. Moscow appears intent on encircling the city with tactics similar to those in the siege of Mariupol in order to secure that last major city in the eastern Luhansk region.
⢠World Bank president warns of global recession: The head of the World Bank, David Malpass, has warned that Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine will continue to cause soaring food and energy prices, making a global recession more likely. Malpass also said that the strict lockdowns in China due to the Covid-19 pandemic are increasing the chance of a recession.
⢠Fire in Senegal kills 11 newborns: Eleven newborn babies in the western Senegalese city of Tivaouane died in a fire that broke out in the neonatal department of a local hospital.
⢠Texas shooting update: The gunman responsible for the school shooting that killed 21 in Uvalde, Texas, sent out messages on social media just prior to his attack. U.S. President Joe Biden announced that he will be traveling to Texas âin the coming daysâ to visit the families mourning the loss of loved ones, who included 19 children and two teachers.
â˘BoJo defiant after government report on lockdown parties: Boris Johnson insisted he will remain Britainâs Prime Minister despite Sue Grayâs report on the parties held in Downing Street during the Covid pandemic. Several members of Johnsonâs own Tory party have demanded his resignation.
⢠Probe finds slain Palestinian journalist was likely targeted by Israeli forces: An in-depth CNN investigation has found evidence that the West Bank killing earlier this month of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh was not an accident. Israeli forces shot Abu Akleh, a veteran correspondent, in the head, but claimed she was caught in crossfire. CNN gathered videos, along with testimonies from eyewitnesses, that suggest that Abu Akleh was shot dead in a targeted attack by Israeli forces aware that there were journalists in their cross-hairs.
⢠How to murder your husband author convicted of murdering her husband: A jury in the U.S. state of Oregon has found the author of a self-published essay titled âHow to Murder Your Husbandâ guilty of second-degree murder for shooting her husband to death four years ago.
đď¸Â FRONT PAGE
The Manila Times dedicates its front page today to the proclamation of Ferdinand Marcos Jr. as the new president of the Philippines after winning this monthâs election with an impressive 59% of the vote. The son of the countryâs late former dictator, Ferdinand Marcos, was flanked at Wednesdayâs ceremony at the national Congress by his family, including his controversial mother Imelda Marcos.
#ď¸âŁÂ BY THE NUMBERS
62
Latin America is confirmed as the worldâs prime âcrime hotspotâ, with 62 of the worldâs 100 most dangerous cities located in the region, according to risk analysis firm Verisk Maplecroft. The data of their Cities@Risk Security Index, which ranks 579 urban centers with a population over 1 million on their exposure to a range of threats, shows that Kabul, Afghanistan is the riskiest city overall. Joining Kabul at the top of the list are Mogadishu, Somalia and Cali, Colombia.
Eight of the 62 cities located in Latin America record the highest possible risk scores. These include Chihuahua, Mexico, San Salvador, El Salvador and MedellĂn, Colombia. Although believed to have turned a corner, a recent crime surge in MedellĂn is what helped Latin America reach the top of the list, according to the Guardian
đ°Â STORY OF THE DAY
Uvalde And The World: School Shootings Spread Beyond The U.S.
The killing Tuesday of 19 children and two adults at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, adds to the United Statesâ long, sad list of mass shootings. It is the deadliest school attack in the country since the Dec. 2012 Sandy Hook shooting that left 20 children and six adults dead â and comes just 10 days after a gunman killed 10 at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York.
đşđ¸ 𪌠There is no doubt that mass shootings, particularly at schools, is a distinctly American plague. According to the independent organization Gun Violence Archive, 200 mass shootings have occurred so far this year in the U.S., with 27 school shootings resulting in deaths or injuries.
đ đŤ Still, the rest of the world is not immune to the phenomenon. Is this global spread of these senseless shootings associated with the influence of American culture, media coverage and social media, inspiring copycats to commit similar crimes? Are school shootings linkable to places with lax gun-control laws? While research on this phenomenon continues, we take a look at places around the world that have grappled with comparable tragedies in recent years.
đˇđş đ§đˇ đ¨đŚ Worldcrunch gathered reports of some of the recent school shootings that occurred around the world, from Russia to Brazil to Canada.
âĄď¸ Read the full article on Worldcrunch.com
đŁ VERBATIM
It seems that Mr. Kissingerâs calendar is not 2022 but 1938, and he thought he was talking to an audience not in Davos but in what was then Munich.
â Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky lashes out at former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissingerâs comments made at the Davos summit earlier this week, suggesting that Kyiv should cede territory to Russia in order to bring the war to an end.
âď¸ Newsletter by Emma Albright and Meike Eijsberg
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