Rabu, 30 Agustus 2023

Hurricane Idalia makes landfall as Florida braces for impact of Category 3 storm - The Independent

Hurricane Idalia made landfall as a Category-3 on Wednesday morning bringing “catastrophic storm surge” to parts of Florida.

The hurricane slammed into the Big Bend area, near Keaton Beach, just before 8am (Eastern Time) with 125mph winds. Storm surge could rise as high as 16 feet in some places.

Idalia rapidly intensified to a Category 4 hurricane overnight before being downgraded as it reached Florida’s west coast where thousands of residents had been ordered to evacuate. Authorities were now in search-and-rescue mode for those in harm’s way who had failed to heed evacuation warnings.

The storm is now a Category-2 after losing power as it moves inland towards Georgia and South Carolina. However the National Hurricane Center warned that Idalia remains “extremely dangerous” and forecasters warned of “catastrophic storm surge”.

“Water levels along the coast of the Florida Big Bend are rising rapidly,” read the latest NHC update.

Along the coastline, homes were underwater up to their rooflines and some structures, boats and docks were being swept away by the power of the storm surge. In Cedar Key, a small island community on the Gulf coast, the storm surge had already reached 6ft.

Away from the coast, authories warned that high levels of rainfall could increase the chance of inland flooding.

Idalia’s impacts were being felt in areas devastated by Hurricane Ian less than a year ago such as Fort Myers. Ian killed 150 people and damaged 52,000 structures.

Some 240,000 customers in Florida and 12,000 in Georgia were without power on Wednesday morning as the powerful winds snapped utility lines. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis‘ press conference in Tallahassee was hit by a power cut as Idalia came ashore.

“Life-threatening” storm surge of 10ft-15ft was expected along with destructive waves between Aucilla River and Yankeetown. Tampa, the state’s third latest city, could see up to 7ft of water.

Hurricane Idalia seen from space on Wednesday morning as it made landfall in Florida

“Hurricane Idalia will likely be an unprecedented event for many locations in the Florida Big Bend. Looking back through recorded history, NO major hurricanes have ever moved through the Apalachee Bay. When you try to compare this storm to others, DON’T. No one has seen this,” NWS Tallahassee office warned on Tuesday.

Evacuation notices were issued in at least 21 counties in western and central Florida with mandatory orders in places. Some 46 Florida counties are under a state of emergency.

The trajectory of Hurricane Idalia

Tolls were waived on Florida highways to allow residents to quickly evacuate. Some 4,500 people were in Red Cross shelters across the state.

More than 30,000 utility workers were gathering to make repairs to the downed power lines, supported by the Army Corps of Engineers.

Tampa General Hospital, the city’s only Level 1 trauma centre located on an island in Hillsborough Bay, was being surrounded by “Aquafences” on Tuesday in attempts to keep out predicted storm surge.

In coastal Tarpon Springs, a community northwest of Tampa, 60 patients were evacuated from a hospital out of concerns of high water levels.

Governor DeSantis said on Tuesday that supplies of food, bottled water and tarps were on standby to move into affected areas and thousands of troops with the Florida National Guard had been activated.

He urged Floridians to heed the warnings, noting that even travelling a short distance could be life-saving.

“You do not have to leave the state. You don’t have to drive hundreds of miles,” he said.

“You have to get to higher ground in a safe structure. You can ride the storm out there, then go back to your home.”

President Joe Biden approved a federal emergency declaration for Florida on Monday. “Florida has my full support as they prepare for Idalia and its aftermath,” he wrote on X, formely known as Twitter.

Hundreds of flights were cancelled at Tampa International Airport while Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando said that it was operating under normal conditions but “closely monitoring” the storm. The company said it was closing the Typhoon Lagoon water park and minature golf areas due to the inclement weather on Wednesday.

Visitors to the Southernmost Point take risks while capturing the impacts of Hurricane Idalia as it passes the Florida Keys some 175 miles to the west, on Tuesday

While most weather models projected that Idalia was moving northeast and out into the Atlantic in the coming days, the Global Forecasting System, a US federal project, indicated that there was an outside chance that the hurricane could circle back and strike Florida for a second time early next week - but with much less power. Such looping is considered highly unusual for tropical storms but is not unprecedented.

Idalia may be the first major storm to hit Florida this hurricane season but it joins a long list of disasters in the United States and globally which are being amplified by the climate crisis.

Ocean temperatures have reached unprecedented highs this summer including in the Gulf of Mexico. Warming oceans fuel stronger tropical cyclones that bring more heavy rainfall and higher storm surge when they make landfall, according to Climate Central.

Idalia has already deluged western Cuba, particularly the province of Pinar del Rio which is also still recovering from Hurricane Ian last year. More than 10,000 people evacuated as up to four inches (10cm) of rain fell, leaving half the province without power.

The Atlantic hurricane season, which runs from 1 June to 30 November, is forecast to be above average this year.

This is a developing news story and this article is being updated

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2023-08-30 14:25:29Z
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Ukraine-Russia war live: Drone attacks set Russian military planes ablaze - The Telegraph

Six Russian regions and the occupied Crimean Peninsula were hit by what has been described as the biggest Ukrainian drone attack on Russian soil since the start of the war.

Drones hit an airport in Russia’s western Pskov region near the border with Estonia and Latvia, damaging at least four military cargo planes, authorities said. 

Some of the planes are used for the war in Ukraine but the Kremlin also reportedly uses the Pskov airfield for the cargo planes that fly Vladimir Putin’s limousine whenever he travels abroad or long distances within Russia.

More drones were shot down over Oryol, Bryansk, Ryazan, Kaluga and the Moscow region surrounding the Russian capital, according to the defence ministry.

Russia’s foreign ministry said that the wave of Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian territory overnight “will not go unpunished”.

The attacks came as authorities in Kyiv reported at least two people killed in what they described as the heaviest Russian air strikes on the Ukrainian capital for months.

Follow all the latest updates below.

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2023-08-30 10:03:25Z
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Hurricane Idalia makes landfall in Florida as Category 3 storm: Live - The Independent

Lightning flashes as Tropical Storm Idalia forecast to hit Florida

Hurricane Idalia has made landfall in Florida, hitting the Big Bend region as a “life-threatening” Category 3 storm.

The National Hurricane Center said in a 7.45am ET update that the “extremely dangerous Category 3” hurricane had made landfall, bringing maximum sustained winds of 125 mph, catastrophic storm surge and damaging winds to the Sunshine State.

In an early morning press briefing, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis warned that the hurricane was approaching as a category 4 storm. “Don’t mess with this storm. Don’t do anything that will put yourself in jeopardy,” he said.

The briefing itself was hit with a brief power outage as the storm had already plunged thousands of homes into darkness.

Idalia has already forced mass evacuations in low-lying areas and the state activated 55,000 national guardsmen and 25,000 electric linemen ahead of the hurricane’s arrival.

A terrifying forecast model has also shown that Hurricane Idalia could hit the state of Florida twice over the coming week. Global Forecasting System, a federal hurricane projection model, forecasts that Idalia will first make landfall on Florida’s big bend region on Wednesday morning.

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Forecast shows Hurricane Idalia could hit Florida twice

A terrifying forecast model has shown that Hurricane Idalia could hit the state of Florida twice over the coming week.

Global Forecasting System, a federal hurricane projection model, forecasts that Idalia will first make landfall on Florida’s big bend region on Wednesday morning.

It will then travel up through north Florida and into Georgia and South Carolina, before heading back out into the Atlantic.

However, after that, the storm is forecast to turn southwest and head back toward Florida’s Atlantic coast to make landfall in the state for a second time on Monday.

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 13:20
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Idalia moves inland from Florida’s Big Bend

Idalia is moving inland from Florida’s Big Bend region, the National Hurricane Center said in an udpate at around 8am ET.

“Hurricane #Idalia Advisory 15A: Eye of Idalia Moving Just Inland From the Florida Big Bend Coast. Catastrophic Storm Surge and Damaging Hurricane-Force Winds Continue,” the NHC tweeted.

Hurricane Idalia made landfall in Florida as a “life-threatening” Category 3 storm at around 7.45am ET.

The “extremely dangerous Category 3” hurricane is bringing with it maximum sustained winds of 125 mph, catastrophic storm surge and damaging winds to the Sunshine State.

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 13:10
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Hurricane Idalia makes landfall in Florida

Hurricane Idalia has made landfall in Florida, hitting the Big Bend region as a “life-threatening” Category 3 storm.

The National Hurricane Center said in a 7.45am ET update that the “extremely dangerous Category 3” hurricane made landfall, bringing maximum sustained winds of 125 mph, catastrophic storm surge and damaging winds.

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 12:56
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Thousands of Florida inmates relocated from prisons ahead of hurricane

Around 4,000 inmates have been moved from prisons ahead of Hurricane Idalia making landfall in Florida.

The Florida Department of Corrections announced on Tuesday evening that inmates housed in facilities along the projected path of the major hurricane were being evacuated to facilities better equipped to handle the storm.

This included inmates from the following facilities:

  • Bradenton Bridge
  • Bridges of Cocoa
  • Bridges of Jacksonville
  • Bridges of Lake City
  • Bridges of Orlando
  • Bridges of Santa Fe
  • Cross City Work Camp
  • Dayton Beach CRC
  • Desoto Work Camp
  • Ft. Pierce CRC
  • Hardee Work Camp
  • Hernando CI
  • Jacksonville Bridges
  • Kissimmee CRC
  • Lancaster Work Camp
  • Largo Road Prison
  • Madison Work Camp
  • Miami North CRC
  • Opa Locka CRC
  • Orlando Bridge
  • Orlando CRC
  • Panama City CRC
  • Reality House
  • Re-entry of Ocala
  • Shisha House
  • St. Pete CRC
  • Suncoast CRC
  • TTH Bartow
  • TTH Dinsmore
  • TTH Kissimmee
  • TTH Tarpon Springs
  • Tallahassee CRC
  • Tomoka CRC
  • Tomoka Work Camp
  • Turning Point

Visitations have also been canceled at other facilities.

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 12:40
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WATCH: Ron DeSantis' press conference hit by power cut as Florida braces for Hurricane Idalia

Ron DeSantis' press conference hit by power cut as Florida braces for Hurricane Idalia
Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 12:30
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DeSantis refuses to call out Trump’s silence on Idalia

Ron DeSantis refused to call out Donald Trump’s silence on Storm Idalia – despite the former president being a resident of the Sunshine State.

When asked in the briefing about the fact that Mr Trump has not commented on the storm, Mr DeSantis quickly dismissed the question.

“Not my concern. My concern is protecting the people of Florida, being ready to go.”

He added of the preparedness: “In Florida, you just have to do this.”

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 12:15
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‘Don’t mess with this storm'

Ron DeSantis warned residents “don’t mess with this storm” as he said that Hurricane Idalia will likely make landfall by 8am ET.

“Don’t mess with this storm,” he said.

“Don’t do anything that will put yourself in jeapardy.”

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 12:05
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Ron DeSantis’ press conference is hit with brief power outage

Ron DeSantis’ press conference was hit with a brief power outage as the governor spoke about Storm Idalia wiping out power to homes across the Big Bend region.

The briefing went dark momentarily before a generator kicked in and lights came back on.

Around 50,000 homes across the state are currently without power while 100,000 homes have already had their power restored.

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 11:55
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Officials warn that emergency services may not be able to reach people in storm

In the briefing, officials warned that emergency services may not be able to reach people in the midst of the storm.

Search and rescue operations are poised and ready to go as soon as the storm passes but – during the storm – residens were urged to look after their families and hunker down in their homes.

“We are here, we are ready. We will deploy recovery teams as soon as we can,” one official said.

Even after the storm passes, Mr DeSantis urged people to proceed with caution:

- Do not drive in flooded streets

- Assume all downed power lines are live

- Do not misuse generators (for risk of carbon monoxide poisoning)

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 11:44
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‘Life-threatening’ storm surge expected: Ron DeSantis

Ron DeSantis warned that the storm surge from Idalia will be “life-threatening”.

“The storm surge up to 16 feet in some areas of the Big Bend region – this storm is life-threatening,” he said.

“So do not go outside in the storm... if it’s calm where you are it may be because you are in the eye of the storm.”

Residents are urged to hunker down until further notice.

Rachel Sharp30 August 2023 11:42

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2023-08-30 12:28:25Z
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Selasa, 29 Agustus 2023

Storm Idalia strengthens into hurricane ahead of Florida landfall - BBC

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Tropical Storm Idalia has strengthened into a hurricane as it barrels towards Florida, with officials warning of potential destruction and risk to life.

It will intensify into an "extremely dangerous major hurricane", forecasters say, before slamming into the state's western shoreline on Wednesday.

Much of Florida, including the heavily populated area around Tampa, will be affected by severe weather.

High winds, heavy rain and potentially deadly storm surges are all forecast.

"Don't be complacent. Don't get relaxed," Mayor Dan Allers of Fort Myers Beach told residents on Monday.

The coastal city, which is still recovering from last year's deadly Hurricane Ian, is one of many areas in south-west Florida where residents are weighing whether to evacuate.

Some 14 million people in the state are under hurricane and weather warnings, owing to Idalia's uncertain path as it gathers force and moves northward over the Gulf of Mexico.

"This is going to be a powerful hurricane," Governor Ron DeSantis said at a news conference on Monday. "This is absolutely going to impact the state of Florida in many, many ways."

President Joe Biden has approved an emergency declaration in preparation for it making landfall. Governor DeSantis, meanwhile, has declared a state of emergency in dozens of counties and evacuation orders are in place for 21 of them.

Mr DeSantis encouraged Florida residents in low-lying coastal areas to seek higher ground. "Floridians, you need to be executing your plans now," he said. "Buckle up for this one."

Map shows predicted path of the hurricane

"There's going to be destruction of houses and homes and structures," said David DeCarlo, director of Hernando County Emergency Management. "This is going to be [a] life-impacting storm surge."

Idalia is expected to bring sustained winds topping at least 111mph (179kph) on Wednesday before coming ashore north of Tampa at around 08:00 local time (12:00 GMT).

In Cuba, thousands evacuated towns along the island's west coast as Idalia skirted past and brought intense rain and winds on Monday.

Residents battened down homes and secured fishing boats, while brown floodwaters had swamped the small fishing village of Guanimar, south of Havana, by mid-afternoon.

"We've had two days of rain already," Yadira Alvarez, 34, told Reuters on Monday. She said stormwater had already swelled to knee-height inside her home.

In Florida, Governor DeSantis said more than 1,100 National Guardsmen had been mobilised with 2,400 high-water vehicles and other rescue equipment.

Officials have prepared 400,000 gallons of fuel to be deployed at petrol stations along evacuation routes.

State officials also warned that many residents in the area would be without power as the storm took hold.

They said the major threat to life would come from storm surges, meaning walls of seawater that are pushed inland by the hurricane's high winds.

Much of the Florida coast is under warnings for surges such as these, with some of up to 11ft (3.3m) forecast for several north-western towns.

The states of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina could see heavy rainfall as well, forecasters said.

Far to the east of Idalia, Hurricane Franklin, the first major hurricane of the season, risked bringing life-threatening storm surges to the US East Coast and Bermuda. It is not, however, expected to pose a serious threat on land.

The impact of climate change on the frequency of tropical storms is still unclear, but increased sea surface temperatures warm the air above and make more energy available to drive hurricanes. As a result, they are likely to be more intense with more extreme rainfall.

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2023-08-29 10:00:10Z
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'Alive and wriggling' parasitic worm removed from Australian woman's brain - The Independent

A live, 8cm-long (3in) worm has been removed from the brain of a 64-year-old Australian woman by a neurosurgeon investigating the patient’s mystery symptoms.

The surgeon, Hari Priya Bandi, was operating on the woman’s skull when she discovered the parasite still alive – thought to be a world-first.

“I just thought: ‘What is that? It doesn’t make any sense. But it’s alive and moving,’” Dr Bandi was quoted by local media. She ended up plucking the worm out with forceps. “It continued to move with vigour. We all felt a bit sick.”

The roundworm – Ophidascaris robertsi – was still “wriggling”, according to a study of the case just published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, following the operation last year. It was the larva of the Australian-native species, not previously known to be a human parasite.

Dr Brandi co-wrote the case study with Sanjaya Senanayake, an infectious diseases physician at Canberra Hospital. Dr Senanayake said he was on duty at the hospital in June last year when the worm was found.

“I got a call saying: ‘We’ve got a patient with an infection problem. We’ve just removed a live worm from this patient’s brain,’” Dr Senanayake said. “This is the first-ever human case of Ophidascaris to be described in the world”.

Doctors said the woman’s symptoms first started in January 2021. She first developed abdominal pain and diarrhoea, “followed by fever, cough and shortness of breath”.

The patient was first admitted to a local hospital in late January 2021 after suffering three weeks of abdominal pain and diarrhoea, followed by a constant dry cough, fever and night sweats.

They said these symptoms were likely due to the migration of roundworm larvae from the bowel and into other organs such as the liver and the lungs.

When respiratory samples and a lung biopsy were performed, no parasites were identified in these tissue specimens.

“At that time, trying to identify the microscopic larvae, which had never previously been identified as causing human infection, was a bit like trying to find a needle in a haystack,” said Karina Kennedy, another author of the study from Canberra Hospital.

By 2022, doctors said the patient was experiencing forgetfulness and depression, prompting an MRI scan that showed an atypical tissue injury within the right frontal lobe of the brain.

Dr Senanayake said the brain biopsy was expected to reveal a cancer or an abscess.

"This patient had been treated ... for what was a mystery illness that we thought ultimately was an immunological condition because we hadn’t been able to find a parasite before and then out of nowhere, this big lump appeared in the frontal part of her brain,” the physician said.

“Suddenly, with [Dr Bandi’s] forceps, she’s picking up this thing that’s wriggling. She and everyone in that operating theatre were absolutely stunned,” Dr Senanayake added.

Dr Bandi said her patient regained consciousness after the worm was successfully extracted. “She was so grateful to have an answer for what had been causing her trouble for so very long.”

Six months after the worm was removed, the patient’s neuropsychiatric symptoms had improved but persisted, the journal article said.

The patient had been sent home soon after the surgery with antiparasitic drugs and had not returned to hospital since, Dr Senanayake said. “She’s done OK, but obviously because this is a new infection, we're keeping a close eye on her,” the doctor told Ten Network television.

Detection of ‘Ophidascaris robertsi’ nematode infection in a 64-year-old woman from southeastern New South Wales, Australia

This worm is usually commonly found in carpet pythons. Its larvae are usually found in small mammals and marsupials, which are then eaten by the python, allowing the life cycle to complete itself in the snake.

Researchers said the worm typically lives in a python’s oesophagus and stomach and sheds its eggs in the host’s faeces. Humans would be considered accidental hosts of Ophidascaris robertsi larvae, they said.

The patient, from southeastern New South Wales, likely caught the roundworm after collecting a type of native grass, called Warrigal greens, beside a lake near where she lived.

This is where a python may have likely shed the parasite through its faeces.

In the new case study, researchers said the woman used Warrigal greens for cooking and was likely infected with the parasite from touching the native grass or after eating the greens.

Roundworms are known to be resilient and capable of thriving in a wide range of environments.

They are known to cause stomach pain, vomiting, diarrhoea, appetite and weight loss, fever, and tiredness in humans.

Researchers cautioned that the case highlights the danger of diseases and infections passing from animals to humans in a world where the habitats have increasingly come to overlap with each other.

“There have been about 30 new infections in the world in the last 30 years. Of the emerging infections globally, about 75 per cent are zoonotic, meaning there has been transmission from the animal world to the human world. This includes coronaviruses,” Dr Senanayake said.

“People who garden or forage for food should wash their hands after gardening and touching foraged products,” Dr Kennedy said.

“Any food used for salads or cooking should also be thoroughly washed, and kitchen surfaces and cutting boards, wiped downed and cleaned after use.”

Associated Press contributed to this report

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2023-08-29 12:10:07Z
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EU's €86bn budget battle casts shadow over Ukraine funding - Financial Times

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2023-08-29 04:00:55Z
2329922050

Vladimir Putin sends condolences to family of Yevgeny Prigozhin - The Guardian

Vladimir Putin has sent his condolences to the family of the Wagner group head, Yevgeny Prigozhin, the Kremlin has said, adding that it did not know when the warlord’s funeral would take place and whether the Russian president would attend.

“The Kremlin does not yet have information about the format and date of Prigozhin’s funeral, so there can be no answer to the question of whether Putin will attend it,” Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said, speaking to journalists during his daily call.

“As soon as a decision is made, it will be communicated to the public. Such decisions are always made together with the relatives,” Peskov added.

Russia’s investigative committee on Sunday confirmed Prigozhin was among the people killed in a plane crash last Wednesday. The committee said in a statement that after forensic testing, all 10 bodies recovered at the site had been identified, and their identities “conform to the manifest”.

Several Wagner members told the Guardian on Monday that they did not know when and where Prigozhin’s funeral would be held.

“We have not been told anything. I hope he gets the farewell that he deserves,” one Wagner soldier who fought with the group in Ukraine said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Makeshift memorials have sprung up across the country, with tearful visitors leaving flowers and other tributes to Prigozhin. In St Petersburg, one Wagner fighter identified as Yuri Novikov was detained after shooting in the air with an AK-47. Local media reports said Novikov was distressed about the death of Prigozhin.

Several channels on the Telegram messaging app close to Prigozhin have speculated that “enemies within Russia” had him killed in retaliation for his brief mutiny against Russia’s military leadership in June. The Wagner group has not yet issued an official statement following Prigozhin’s death.

One Telegram account with links to Prigozhin suggested the warlord’s funeral may take place on Tuesday at a cemetery for Wagner fighters in the Krasnodar area of southern Russia.

Others have speculated that an event would be organised in Prigozhin’s home town of St Petersburg. The St Petersburg outlet Fontanka reported he could be buried either at the Bogoslovsky or Serofimov cemeteries in the city.

Meanwhile, the Russian investigative committee has not yet put forward a list of possible causes of last week’s deadly crash.

A preliminary US intelligence assessment concluded that an intentional explosion caused the crash that killed the mercenary head along with nine others. One western official who described the initial assessment said it determined that Prigozhin was “very likely” targeted and that the explosion was in line with Putin’s “long history of trying to silence his critics”. Joe Biden also suggested Putin could be behind the plane crash

“There’s not much that happens in Russia that Putin’s not behind,” the US president told reporters last week.

Raw flight tracking data indicates Prigozhin’s plane experienced a sudden drop in altitude and remained in the air for several more minutes before falling from the sky. Aviation experts have suggested that the precipitous drop and widespread debris found at the crash site indicated an explosion or sudden breaking apart of the aircraft rather than a mechanical failure.

The Kremlin has denied it killed the Wagner chief, calling western intelligence assessments of Putin’s potential involvement “an absolute lie”.

Also on Monday, Russian authorities said its air defences destroyed one drone approaching Moscow and two in a region bordering Ukraine.

Air defences in the Lyubertsy district south-east of the Russian capital “destroyed a drone flying toward Moscow”, the city’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, wrote on Telegram without specifying whether it was Ukrainian.

Moscow and other Russian regions have been targeted by a series of Ukrainian drone attacks in recent weeks after Kyiv vowed earlier this summer to “return” the conflict to Russia.

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2023-08-29 01:30:00Z
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