Families search for earthquake survivors in one of Venezuela's hardest hit areas BBC correspondent Will Grant reports from Caraballeda, La Guaira, where locals are still desperately searching for family members in the rubble. Wednesday briefing: After two powerful earthquakes, what is the reality on the ground in Venezuela? In today’s newsletter: A country already in crisis since the removal of its leader earlier this year by the US, now has to find a way to rebuild with little state presence in evidence The shaking seemed to come from nowhere. In a moment captured by fishers off Venezuela’s Caribbean coast, two earthquakes struck seconds apart . Plumes of dust appear where buildings once stood in the recording as t… Archaeologists Find Maya Monuments Off the Beaten Path. Way Off. Scientists drove ATVs for miles and then hiked miles more through dense forest to reach a site untouched by looting on Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. They named it Minanbé, meaning “there is no path.” When three presidents died on the Fourth of July, Americans saw the work of God On July 4, 1831, James Monroe died from heart failure and tuberculosis at his daughter's house in New York City. Supreme Court will decide a gun-rights challenge to blue-state bans on assault weapons California's long-standing ban on semiautomatic assault rifles could be struck down by the Supreme Court. |
Congress blocks vote on restricting military funding to Israel after Democratic Party debate Rep. Ro Khanna, co-sponsor of the bill, announced on X/Twitter that Congress had blocked the vote, despite previous reports that the House Rules Committee had marked the amendment as “Made in Order.” FBI determines Nancy Guthrie kidnapping notes to be fakes, source says All three messages in question were initially delivered to various media outlets, including the celebrity news site TMZ.com, before being turned over to authorities for review. Democratic socialist Kiros defeats longtime incumbent in Colorado primary Former lawyer Melat Kiros, 29, has criticised Democrats for support of Israel during its genocidal war on Gaza. Fukushima nuclear disaster forced more than 150,000 people to flee and turned towns into ghost towns, but one man went back to More than 150,000 people were forced to abandon their homes after the Fukushima nuclear disaster struck Japan in March 2011, transforming once-bustling towns into eerie ghost towns almost overnight. Families fled with only the essentials, believing they would soon return, but many never did. Workplace trends 2026: Increase in workers ‘unfit’ to attend office, but fit to work from home ‘If you’re not fit to be in a workplace, how are you fit to work from home?’ asks Damien McCarthy of HR Buddy Gunmen storm a Nigerian school and kidnap students during exams, police say Police say gunmen have attacked and kidnapped students taking secondary school exams in northeastern Nigeria's Borno state |
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