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- Norway bow and arrow attack: suspect showed signs of radicalisation, say police
- Giulio Regeni: trial of Egyptian security agents charged over death begins in Rome
- ‘Last chance’: WHO reveals new team to investigate Covid origins
- Covid booster shots important to stop infection, finds English study
- Afghan refugees accuse Turkey of violent illegal pushbacks
- Prince William criticises space race and tourism’s new frontier
- Netflix and Unesco search for African film-makers to ‘reimagine’ folktales
- US leads world in bitcoin mining after China crackdown sends industry overseas
- Walrus from Space census seeks public help to spot animals in satellite images
- ‘Sophisticated’: ancient faeces shows humans enjoyed beer and blue cheese 2,700 years ago
- Coronavirus live: WHO experts to revive virus origins inquiry; UK Covid situation ‘quite stable’, says health secretary
- Javid sorry for Covid losses but says he has not read Commons report in detail
- ‘We’re ready’: Fiji prepares to welcome tourists almost two years after closing borders
- New Zealand modelling shows Covid cases could peak at 5,300 a week in Auckland next year
- ‘People shunned me like hot lava’: the runner who raised his fist and risked his life
- Isn’t it good, Swedish plywood: the miraculous eco-town with a 20-storey wooden skyscraper
- How to expose corruption, vice and incompetence – by those who have
- The life less ordinary of artist Laura Knight
- Leave no trace: how a teenage hacker lost himself online
- What went wrong with the exploitative Brittany Murphy docuseries?
- Australian Chloë McCardel sets world record for most swims across the Channel – video
- House Capitol attack panel issues subpoena to top Trump official Jeffrey Clark – as it happened
- Azor review – eerie conspiracy thriller about the complacency of the super-rich
- North Korean leader watches extreme martial arts performance – video
- Sydney storm: BoM warns of potential ‘tornado activity’ before thunderstorms and giant hail hit
- Killing of two boys for alleged shoplifting shocks Colombia
- ‘Who wouldn’t want out?’: migrants deported to Haiti face challenge of survival
- Will China’s plan to build more coal plants derail Cop26?
- How my ivermectin research led to Twitter death threats | Dr Andrew Hill
- 'Many crime scenes': at least five dead in bow-and-arrow attacks in Kongsberg – video
- Claims that Russia is using energy as a weapon is nonsense, says Putin – video
- Huge leatherback sea turtle stranded on Cape Cod rescued by volunteers – video
- La Palma volcano: giant boulders float down rivers of lava – video
Norway bow and arrow attack: suspect showed signs of radicalisation, say police Posted: 14 Oct 2021 01:47 AM PDT Danish man, who is in custody in connection with deaths of five people, is Muslim convert A Danish man who is in custody in Norway suspected of a bow-and-arrow attack on a small town that killed five people and wounded two others is a Muslim convert who had previously been flagged as having been radicalised, police have said. "There earlier had been worries of the man having been radicalised," the police chief Ole B Saeverud told a news conference. Continue reading... |
Giulio Regeni: trial of Egyptian security agents charged over death begins in Rome Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:00 PM PDT The accused, all members of the National Security Agency, will be tried in absentia after the researcher's kidnap and killing in Cairo A court in Rome is due to begin the trial of four Egyptian security service officers accused of killing an Italian researcher, Giulio Regeni, five and a half years after his mutilated body was found in a ditch by a road in Cairo. Italian prosecutors accuse Gen Tariq Saber, Col Aser Ibrahim, Capt Hesham Helmi, and Maj Magdi Abd al-Sharif of the "aggravated kidnapping" of Regeni, while Sharif is also charged with "conspiracy to commit aggravated murder". Kidnap carries a potential sentence of up to eight years in Italy, while Sharif could receive a life sentence. Continue reading... |
‘Last chance’: WHO reveals new team to investigate Covid origins Posted: 13 Oct 2021 04:20 PM PDT A group of 26 experts will also be tasked with examining new pathogens and how to prevent future pandemics The World Health Organization has unveiled a team of scientists it wants to revive the stalled inquiry into Covid-19's origins, with one senior official saying it may be the last chance. The group of 26 experts will be charged with producing a new global framework for studies into the origins of emerging pathogens of epidemic and pandemic potential – and their remit includes Sars-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. Continue reading... |
Covid booster shots important to stop infection, finds English study Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:01 PM PDT Study shows protection against Covid starts to wane several months after full vaccination Scientists have urged eligible people to have Covid booster shots after a major survey in England found evidence of "breakthrough infections" more than three months after full vaccination. Researchers at Imperial College London analysed more than 100,000 swabs from a random sample of the population and found that Covid infection rates were three to four times higher among unvaccinated people than those who had received two shots. Continue reading... |
Afghan refugees accuse Turkey of violent illegal pushbacks Posted: 14 Oct 2021 12:00 AM PDT Migrants, many fleeing the Taliban regime, claim they are being beaten, harassed and turned back by Turkish border forces As the sun sets over a dusty ravine on the outskirts of Van city in eastern Turkey, Muhammdullah Sangeen and dozens of other Afghans are preparing for another night sleeping rough. The 22-year-old, who has a bruised left eye and fresh cuts all over his arms, arrived from Iran a few days earlier with the help of smugglers. "I am not OK," said Sangeen, his legs trembling. "I'm not feeling human." Continue reading... |
Prince William criticises space race and tourism’s new frontier Posted: 14 Oct 2021 12:48 AM PDT Duke of Cambridge says world's greatest minds need to focus on trying to fix the Earth instead The Duke of Cambridge has criticised the space race and space tourism, saying the world's greatest minds need to focus on trying to fix the Earth instead. Prince William's comments, in an interview with Newscast on BBC Sounds, will be aired the day after William Shatner made history by becoming the oldest person in space. Continue reading... |
Netflix and Unesco search for African film-makers to ‘reimagine’ folktales Posted: 13 Oct 2021 11:01 PM PDT Competition opens to find six young creators in sub-Saharan Africa who will be funded to produce movies for 2022 For Nelson Mandela they were "morsels rich with the gritty essence of Africa but in many instances universal in their portrayal of humanity, beasts and the mystical." Passed down through the generations, whispered at bedtimes and raucously retold by elders, folktales have long been a mainstay of African cultural heritage. Continue reading... |
US leads world in bitcoin mining after China crackdown sends industry overseas Posted: 13 Oct 2021 04:33 PM PDT Industry's huge use of electricity could present an awkward question for Joe Biden ahead of the Cop26 climate talks The United States has overtaken China to account for the largest share of the world's bitcoin mining, according to data published by researchers at Cambridge University. The figures demonstrate the impact of a crackdown on bitcoin trading and mining launched by the Chinese government in late May, which devastated the industry and caused miners to shut up shop or move overseas. Continue reading... |
Walrus from Space census seeks public help to spot animals in satellite images Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:00 PM PDT Project aims to give scientists a better understanding of how global heating is affecting the species Conservationists are on the hunt for "citizen scientists" to spot walruses from their own home to help track populations of the creatures and give scientists an understanding of how many are left in the wild. Keen-eyed members of the public are being asked to scour images of the Arctic taken from space for the blubbery mammals and report any sightings to WWF and the British Antarctic Survey, as part of a census of Atlantic walrus and walrus from the Laptev Sea. Continue reading... |
‘Sophisticated’: ancient faeces shows humans enjoyed beer and blue cheese 2,700 years ago Posted: 13 Oct 2021 05:42 PM PDT Austrian Alps salt miners had a 'balanced diet', with an analysis of bronze and iron age excrement finding the earliest evidence of cheese ripening in Europe It's no secret that beer and blue cheese go hand in hand – but a new study reveals how deep their roots run in Europe, where workers at a salt mine in Austria were gorging on both up to 2,700 years ago. Scientists made the discovery by analysing samples of human excrement found at the heart of the Hallstatt mine in the Austrian Alps. Continue reading... |
Posted: 14 Oct 2021 01:58 AM PDT Team of expert scientists is set to revive the stalled inquiry into Covid origins; Sajid Javid says UK Covid defences are working as cases hit 42,776
The UK health minister Sajid Javid has become the latest government figure to say "sorry" about the coronavirus pandemic. Appearing on the BBC this morning, Javid, who became health secretary just short of four months ago following the resignation of Matt Hancock, said: Yes, of course I'm sorry. Obviously I am new in the role but on behalf of the government I am sorry for, during the pandemic, anyone that suffered, especially anyone that lost a loved one, a mother, a dad, a brother, a sister, a friend. Of course I am sorry for that. Also all those people that may not have lost someone but they are still suffering - there are many people sadly suffering from long Covid, we still don't know the impact of that. Of course I am. Continue reading... |
Javid sorry for Covid losses but says he has not read Commons report in detail Posted: 14 Oct 2021 01:55 AM PDT Health secretary falls short of apologising for government decision to delay lockdown last March but says 'there are lessons to learn' The health secretary, Sajid Javid, has said he is sorry for the losses that have occurred due to the Covid-19 pandemic, but fell short of apologising for the government's decision to delay lockdown last March. Javid's comments came in response to the publication on Tuesday of a damning health select committee report on lessons learned from the pandemic, which found the government's management of the outbreak was one of the worst public health failures in British history. Continue reading... |
‘We’re ready’: Fiji prepares to welcome tourists almost two years after closing borders Posted: 13 Oct 2021 07:13 PM PDT Fully vaccinated travellers from select countries including New Zealand and Australia will be able to visit from November Fiji says it is already experiencing a boom in demand after announcing this week that it would open up quarantine-free travel to visitors from select countries, almost two years after closing its borders due to the Covid-19 pandemic. "Our website data is well up – we are seeing a real lift in interest. It is exciting, and we want to encourage people to come and spend Christmas and new year in Fiji," Tourism Fiji chief executive Brent Hill said. Continue reading... |
New Zealand modelling shows Covid cases could peak at 5,300 a week in Auckland next year Posted: 13 Oct 2021 05:50 PM PDT Plans for how health system would deal with surge revealed as country records 71 new cases New Zealand is preparing to face up to 5,300 cases of Covid-19 a week in Auckland and the neighbouring region of Northland alone next year, even with a vaccination rate of 90%, according to modelling from the Ministry of Health. The minister of health, Andrew Little revealed the plan for how the health system could manage a surge in cases after the current vaccination drive, as the country recorded 71 new cases on Thursday. Continue reading... |
‘People shunned me like hot lava’: the runner who raised his fist and risked his life Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:00 PM PDT At the 1968 Olympics, Tommie Smith, winner of the men's 200 metres, stood on the podium and lifted his hand to protest racism. That moment would end his running career – and shake the world Tommie Smith still gets chills when he hears the opening bars of The Star Spangled Banner. It takes him right back to that night in October 1968 when he stood on the Olympic podium in Mexico City, wearing his gold medal, and made the raised-fist salute that has defined his life. "It's kind of a push, when I hear 'dum, da-dum'," he says, singing the opening notes of the United States national anthem. "Because that's the first three notes I heard in Mexico, then my head went down, and I saw no more of it until the last note." While the anthem played, all that was going through Smith's head, he says, was "prayer and pain". Pain because he had picked up a thigh injury that day on the way to winning the 200m final (he still set a world record). And prayer because Smith was not just putting his career on the line – he was risking his life. There was a real possibility that somebody in the stadium might try to shoot him or his team-mate John Carlos, who was making the salute beside him after winning bronze. In the months leading up to the Olympics, he had been receiving death threats. Two weeks before, Mexican police had fired into a crowd of student protesters, killing as many as 300 people. Martin Luther King had been assassinated just six months earlier. So Smith fully expected that the last thing he would hear, halfway through The Star Spangled Banner, would be a gunshot. "So when I hear that 'dum, da-dum', I get chills," he says. "I got chills then when I sang it," he laughs, holding out his arms to show the hairs standing on end. Continue reading... |
Isn’t it good, Swedish plywood: the miraculous eco-town with a 20-storey wooden skyscraper Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:00 PM PDT Skellefteå has wooden schools, bridges, even car parks. And now it has one of the world's tallest wooden buildings. We visit Sweden to see what a climate-conscious future looks like As you come in to land at Skellefteå airport in the far north of Sweden, you are greeted by a wooden air traffic control tower poking up from an endless forest of pine and spruce. After boarding a biogas bus into town, you glide past wooden apartment blocks and wooden schools, cross a wooden road bridge and pass a wooden multistorey car park, before finally reaching the centre, now home to one of the tallest new wooden buildings in the world. "We are not the wood Taliban," says Bo Wikström, from Skellefteå's tourism agency, as he leads a group of visitors on a "wood safari" of its buildings. "Other materials are allowed." But why build in anything else – when you're surrounded by 480,000 hectares of forest? Continue reading... |
How to expose corruption, vice and incompetence – by those who have Posted: 13 Oct 2021 11:29 PM PDT Unmasking tax dodgers, sexual predators and corrupt officials can be lonely, daunting, unnerving work. But it can change the world Investigative journalism is costly, time-consuming, risky and difficult, and sometimes results in legal threats, personal abuse to our journalists – or no publishable story at all. So why do we do it? Six of our investigative journalists answer questions from editor Mark Rice-Oxley. Why does the Guardian feel it has to do this work – isn't investigation for the police, or parliament? Make a contribution from just £1. Become a digital subscriber and get something in return for your money. Join as a Patron to fund us at a higher level. Continue reading... |
The life less ordinary of artist Laura Knight Posted: 14 Oct 2021 12:00 AM PDT From painting nudes at a time when it was forbidden to sleeping among the troops in both world wars, the vitality of her work makes her still strikingly relevant "It is my opinion that fine realism is indeed true abstractionism," the British painter Laura Knight wrote in 1954. Her critics complained that she was just copying life, but Knight believed that she transformed the world more than abstract painters, who seemed to her, to ignore its sensuality and specificity. We can decide for ourselves at the largest exhibition of her work since 1965, curated at MK Gallery in Milton Keynes. What becomes swiftly clear is the copiousness of Knight's subject matter and style. She was a modern painter in many ways: committed to taking on modern life and experience, and to being a modern woman. She wanted to do all that men could do, painting nudes at a time when female art students weren't allowed to do so. She treated her subjects with seriousness and commitment, but also with enormous sensuous energy and a feel for the pleasures of looking, whether it's the naked women on Cornish beaches, the garish clowns in her 1930s circus pictures, or even the Women's Auxiliary Air Force commanders of the 1940s, surrounded by the meticulously rendered paraphernalia of their working lives. Continue reading... |
Leave no trace: how a teenage hacker lost himself online Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:00 PM PDT Edwin Robbe had a troubled life, but found excitement and purpose by joining an audacious community of hackers. Then the real world caught up with his online activities José Robbe was leaving her place of work in Rotterdam when she saw a man and a woman walking towards her. It was a Tuesday afternoon, 20 March 2012. "Are you Mrs Robbe?" She nodded. The woman, who was wearing jeans and a black windcheater, explained that she was with the police. "I'd like to talk to you for a minute. It's about your son, Edwin. We're arresting him." José stared, frozen. The woman asked if she would accompany them. Warily, José agreed. At the police car, the officer told her they intended to surprise her son at the family home in Barendrecht, just south of Rotterdam, and arrest him on the spot. She asked if José wanted to be there for her son's arrest. "No," she replied grimly. It felt as if she had just betrayed her son. To stand by and watch would make it even worse. The police asked José for her house keys and dropped her off at a plaza by the local supermarket a few blocks from her house. She felt terrible as the officers drove away to arrest her eldest child, just a troubled 17-year-old. A little while later, three officers emerged from the house, escorting Edwin between them. He offered no resistance. Continue reading... |
What went wrong with the exploitative Brittany Murphy docuseries? Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:37 PM PDT A new two-part HBO Max series on the Clueless actor's shocking death at 32 in 2009 is less monument to her short life than exploitation of her death It's telling that What Happened, Brittany Murphy?, a new docuseries on the Clueless and Girl, Interrupted actor's confounding death in December 2009, is bookended by two overwrought sleights of hand. The two-part HBO Max series begins with the frantic 911 call by her mother, Sharon Murphy, over a recreation of the EMS trip from Murphy's house in Hollywood Hills to Cedars Sinai medical center, where she died from a combination of pneumonia, severe anemia and several prescription and over-the-counter medications at age 32. It ends with a hammy montage of fan videos made by internet detectives – straight-to-camera, brightly lit, skeptical recaps that often double as makeup tutorials – spliced with scenes from Murphy's films, as if her expressive face is in conversation with their fascination. That dialogue is a ruse; for the two hours between these moments, What Happened, Brittany Murphy? takes on the role of amateur sleuth. Combing through tabloid reports, medical documents and first-hand accounts of people orbiting her death, it purports to explain Murphy's tragic, untimely demise and, more pertinent to headlines, her abusive, constrictive marriage to Simon Monjack, who died five months after her of pneumonia. Continue reading... |
Australian Chloë McCardel sets world record for most swims across the Channel – video Posted: 13 Oct 2021 03:34 PM PDT Chloë McCardel finally achieved her dream of crossing the Channel more times than anyone else. The 36-year-old Australian completed her 44th crossing a little after 2pm BST, eclipsing the previous record held by British swimmer Alison Streeter. 'I'm buzzing right now, I feel like I could go again and swim the channel again tomorrow, although that's not a very good idea', she said. After starting in the dead of night at Shakespeare Beach at Dover, she touched land at Wissant Beach on the French side, before returning to her support boat to celebrate ► Subscribe to Guardian Australia on YouTube |
House Capitol attack panel issues subpoena to top Trump official Jeffrey Clark – as it happened Posted: 13 Oct 2021 05:01 PM PDT
The FDA on Wednesday released a set of new, voluntary guidelines to help Americans eat less salt. The long-awaited guidelines, aim to reduce the average daily sodium intake by 12% over the next 2.5 years by pressuring food manufacturers, restaurants and other food service companies to significantly reduce their use of salt. The guidance outlines 163 categories, from baby food, to cheese, to cookies. Continue reading... |
Azor review – eerie conspiracy thriller about the complacency of the super-rich Posted: 13 Oct 2021 02:40 PM PDT Andreas Fontana's debut feature is an unnervingly subtle drama about a Swiss private banker visiting clients in Argentina during the period of the military junta and 'disappearances' Pure evil is all around in this unnervingly subtle, sophisticated movie; an eerie oppression in the air. Andreas Fontana is a Swiss director making his feature debut with this conspiracy drama-thriller, shot with a kind of desiccated blankness, about the occult world of super-wealth and things not to be talked about. The title is a Swiss banker's code-word in conversation for "Be silent". It is set in 1980 in Argentina, at the time of the junta's dirty war against leftists and dissidents, and you could set it alongside recent movies including Benjamín Naishtat's Rojo (2018) and Francisco Márquez's A Common Crime (2020), which intuited the almost supernatural fear among those left behind when people they knew had vanished and joined los desaparecidos, the disappeared ones. But Azor gives a queasy new perspective on the horror of those times, and there is even a nauseous echo of the Swiss banks' attitude to their German neighbours in the second world war. Continue reading... |
North Korean leader watches extreme martial arts performance – video Posted: 13 Oct 2021 08:41 PM PDT North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has watched an extreme martial arts demonstration by soldiers at a military event marking the 76th founding anniversary of its ruling party. In the video aired by the North's state-run television station, KRT, soldiers performed multiple shows of strength: smashing items, breaking free from chains, lying on glass and throwing knives. Kim smiled and clapped as he watched the show at the Defence Development Exhibition 'Self-Defence-2021'. During the exhibition, Kim said his country's weapons development is necessary in the face of the US' hostile policies and a military buildup in South Korea. Continue reading... |
Sydney storm: BoM warns of potential ‘tornado activity’ before thunderstorms and giant hail hit Posted: 14 Oct 2021 01:56 AM PDT Bureau of Meteorology issued severe thunderstorm warning for much of the NSW coastline with sustained hail falling on western Sydney Residents in greater Sydney bunkered down after being warned of potential "tornado activity" on Thursday afternoon and while that didn't eventuate the city was hit by a series of thunderstorms that caused flooding, traffic accidents and power outages. The severe storms also ripped the roof off a Westfield shopping centre at Mount Druitt which resulted in water gushing into stores and the mall before distressed shoppers were evacuated. There were no reports of serious injuries. Continue reading... |
Killing of two boys for alleged shoplifting shocks Colombia Posted: 13 Oct 2021 05:30 AM PDT Pair were taken away by armed men on motorbikes and later found shot dead on edge of town The murder of two boys for allegedly shoplifting in Colombia has evoked memories of some of the country's darkest days of armed conflict. The pair, who were 12 and 18, were allegedly trying to rob a clothing store in Tibú, a small town near the Venezuelan border, last Friday when they were apprehended by bystanders who taped their hands together, according to witnesses quoted by local media. Continue reading... |
‘Who wouldn’t want out?’: migrants deported to Haiti face challenge of survival Posted: 13 Oct 2021 03:30 AM PDT Many returned to a country they had not seen for years, and many are already plotting another escape as gang violence has left Haiti on the brink of civil war When Reynold Joseph was deported from the US back to Haiti after five years in South America, he was unprepared for just how bad things had become in his homeland. Outside a ramshackle guesthouse near downtown Port-au-Prince, where he and a dozen other deportees are staying, some goats were grazing on burning piles of rubbish, while drivers honked and cursed in a queue for petrol that snaked round the block. Each night, Joseph's three-year-old son stirs in the sweltering heat, and bursts of gunfire ring out in the distance. Continue reading... |
Will China’s plan to build more coal plants derail Cop26? Posted: 13 Oct 2021 10:16 AM PDT Analysis: while the short-term consequences are grim, veteran analysts talk of a wobble rather than a fall China's decision to build more coal plants is a setback for climate action, but analysts say it could still meet its long-term emission reduction targets and may even have scope to raise its ambition at Cop26 in Glasgow. In recent days, Beijing has announced a buildup of coal capacity to address the most severe power cuts in a decade, which have caused rolling blackouts in half its provinces. Continue reading... |
How my ivermectin research led to Twitter death threats | Dr Andrew Hill Posted: 13 Oct 2021 09:29 AM PDT I was sent images of coffins and hanged Nazi war criminals after finding medical fraud in clinical trials The story of online threats and abuse is very dark. In early 2021, my research team was analysing a new drug called ivermectin. In the first clinical trials, this drug seemed to prevent new infections and improve survival. When I first wrote about this, I started getting regular threats on Twitter, demanding that ivermectin should be approved worldwide and questioning the safety of vaccines. In March 2021, I received my first vaccine dose and posted a photo on Twitter from the clinic. Within minutes I was receiving strange messages: "Why would you do that?", "not safe", "why not use ivermectin instead", "you are paid by the Gates Foundation". One person even sent a link to a suction device to remove the vaccine fluid from my arm. Any message I sent promoting the benefits of vaccines led to threats and abuse. Continue reading... |
'Many crime scenes': at least five dead in bow-and-arrow attacks in Kongsberg – video Posted: 13 Oct 2021 05:12 PM PDT A police official describes bow-and-arrow attacks in the Norwegian town of Kongsberg that have killed five and wounded two others. The government said police had launched a large-scale investigation. Kongsberg police chief Øyvind Aas said police would investigate whether the attacks amounted to an 'act of terror'. The death toll was the worst of any attack in Norway since 2011, when far-right extremist Anders Behring Breivik killed 77 people, most of them teenagers at a youth camp. Continue reading... |
Claims that Russia is using energy as a weapon is nonsense, says Putin – video Posted: 13 Oct 2021 08:57 AM PDT President Vladimir Putin says Russia is ready to provide more gas to Europe if requested, emphatically rejecting the suggestion that Moscow is squeezing supplies for political motives. European gas prices have hit record levels this month, but the Kremlin has repeatedly denied that Russia is deliberately withholding supplies in order to exert pressure for quick regulatory approval of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline across the Baltic Sea to Germany Continue reading... |
Huge leatherback sea turtle stranded on Cape Cod rescued by volunteers – video Posted: 13 Oct 2021 04:51 AM PDT A leatherback sea turtle has been returned to the ocean after becoming stranded on a mudflat in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, US. It took dozens of volunteers from three conservation organisations to free the 270kg reptile. After a health assessment confirmed the disorientated turtle was in good health, it was released to cheers from the crowd of volunteers. The turtle was fitted with a tracking device that will monitor its migration patterns over the next decade |
La Palma volcano: giant boulders float down rivers of lava – video Posted: 13 Oct 2021 02:15 AM PDT Drone footage shows lava flows carrying huge boulders from the Cumbre Vieja volcano in La Palma. The advancing rivers of molten rock prompted a lockdown on Monday, as houses in their path were destroyed. More than 1,000 homes have been destroyed since the eruption began on 19 September, and 6,000 people have been evacuated from the area Continue reading... |
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