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US launches fresh strikes against ISIS in Nigeria; Four divers dead in Maldives; Earthquake shakes China
19 Articles •
US, Nigeria Launch Fresh Airstrikes Against ISIS in Borno State
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What happened: U.S. Africa Command and Nigerian forces conducted coordinated airstrikes yesterday in Borno State's Metele area, killing over 20 ISWAP militants after intelligence detected a gathering of fighters. The operation follows Friday's strike that killed senior ISIS commander Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, marking intensified U.S.-Nigerian counterterrorism cooperation.
Why it matters: The strikes represent a significant escalation in U.S. involvement from advisory roles to active operations against Islamic State, which now focuses 86% of its global activity in Africa. The 17-year insurgency has killed thousands and displaced two million people in northeastern Nigeria, with militants threatening regional stability.
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34 Articles •
NextEra, Dominion Agree to $67B Merger Forming Largest U.S. Utility
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The deal: NextEra Energy is buying Dominion Energy for $66.8 billion in an all-stock transaction announced today, creating the world's largest regulated electric utility serving 10 million customers across Florida, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. Dominion shareholders will receive 0.8138 NextEra shares per share and own 25.5% of the combined company, with the deal expected to close in 12 to 18 months pending regulatory approvals.
What it means: The merger aims to meet surging electricity demand driven by AI and data centers, with the combined company proposing $2.25 billion in bill credits for Dominion's 4 million customers over two years. The deal faces significant regulatory scrutiny from federal and state agencies, with critics concerned about long-term impacts on household bills as utilities accommodate power-hungry AI facilities.
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93 Articles •
Bolivia's Economic Crisis Sparks Violent Clashes in La Paz
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What happened: Bolivian security forces deployed 3,500 officers this weekend and used tear gas against miners, teachers, and rural workers blocking roads into La Paz for two weeks. Protesters set off dynamite charges, attempted to breach the presidential palace, and maintained nationwide blockades despite President Rodrigo Paz repealing contested Law 1720 on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The blockades have caused severe shortages of food, medicine, and oxygen in La Paz, with three deaths reported from blocked hospital access and food prices skyrocketing. Bolivia faces its worst economic crisis in four decades, driven by collapsed natural gas production, fuel shortages, and depleted foreign currency reserves.
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107 Articles •
Deadly Earthquake Strikes Southern China, Thousands Evacuated
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What happened: A magnitude 5.2 earthquake struck Liuzhou city in Guangxi region early Monday at 12:21 a.m., killing two people (a 63-year-old man and 53-year-old woman), collapsing 13 buildings, and forcing over 7,000 residents to evacuate. A 91-year-old man was rescued alive, while four others were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries.
What to know: Rescue operations are ongoing with drones, search dogs, and heavy machinery deployed to the affected areas. Railway authorities are inspecting rail infrastructure and warning of transport disruptions, though communication systems, electricity, water, gas, and roads remain operational throughout the quake-hit region.
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73 Articles •
Four Italian Divers Found Dead in Deep Maldives Cave
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What happened: Five Italian divers went missing last Thursday after entering an underwater cave at 50 meters depth in Vaavu Atoll, Maldives, well beyond the country's 30-meter recreational limit. One body was recovered near the cave entrance that day, while the remaining four were located inside the cave days later by Finnish cave-diving experts and Maldivian forces after searches resumed Monday.
Why it matters: This is the deadliest diving disaster in Maldives history and has exposed safety gaps in the popular tourist destination, prompting suspension of the yacht's operating license and an investigation. A Maldivian rescue diver also died from decompression sickness during recovery efforts, highlighting the extreme dangers of deep cave diving without proper technical equipment and training.
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