News Watch

An ethnic-Albania militia led by five men from Kosovo attacked the Macedonian town of Kumanovo, near the country’s southern border with Kosovo, on May 11, killing eight security officers and injuring at least 40 more officers. Macedonian officers killed 14 of the gunmen and detained more than 30, later charging them with terrorism. 

On April 21, at least 40 ethnic-Albanian Kosovoans captured a police station in the Macedonian town of Gošince, demanding the creation of an independent...

CONTINUE READING »

In Yemen, a short-term cease-fire between Houthi rebels and a Saudi-led coalition of Arab states ended on May 18 as the coalition resumed shelling and air strikes against Houthi positions, most heavily in the southwestern city of Aden. Strikes have avoided the airport in the capital, Sana’a, and the port city of Al Hudaydah to allow food aid to be delivered.

The Houthi, a Sunni Muslim ethnic group, took control of Sana’a in January and eventually forced president Abdrabbuh Mansour...

CONTINUE READING »

Responsibility for three deadly attacks in Kabul, Afghanistan, in May was claimed by the Islamic fundamentalist group the Taliban. 

In the deadliest attack, on May 14, Taliban gunmen stormed the Park Palace Guest Hotel and killed 14 people, including an American. Afghani forces retook the building, killing two of the gunmen and rescuing at least 50 people.

On May 17, a Taliban suicide bomber killed three people and injured at least 11 near Hamid Karzai International Airport. On...

CONTINUE READING »

Coup attempt in Burundi 

Burundi General Godefroid Niyombare announced that he had deposed president Pierre Nkurunziza on May 13 while the president was visiting neighboring Tanzania. The coup was quickly put down by soldiers and police loyal to the president.

Protests, often becoming violent, have plagued Burundi since Nkurunziza announced on April 25 that he would seek a third term in office in elections scheduled for June 26. According to the Burundi constitution, a...

CONTINUE READING »

An antiracism protest in Tel Aviv became violent on May 4, leaving seven protesters and more than 40 police officers injured.

The protest began after a video, shot in January and showing two Israeli police officers beating an Ethiopian-Israeli soldier, was released on April 27. Among their grievances, Ethiopian-Israeli protesters also cite having poorer job prospects and less access to education. 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with the beaten soldier and called for an...

CONTINUE READING »

Liberia was declared free of ebola on May 9, forty-two days (two full incubation periods) after the last confirmed new case there. At the height of the ebola epidemic, Liberia was reporting 300 to 400 new cases every week.

However, with 43 new cases being reported in Guinea and 19 in Sierra Leone, the total number of new ebola cases rose slightly in May.

The number of confirmed cases of ebola since the viral outbreak began in March 2014 is 26,969, with 11,135 deaths, almost all...

CONTINUE READING »

The Wolf volcano on Isabela Island in the Galápagos Islands erupted on May 25, ejecting lava and spewing smoke. Isabella Island is home to the world’s only population of pink iguanas, but the eruption was not expected to threaten the iguanas or the island’s only town, Puerto Villamil. The Wolf volcano last erupted in 1982.

As ITN went to press, the State Department had travel warnings on 38 destinations: Afghanistan, Algeria, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Colombia, Dem. Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, El Salvador, Eritrea, Haiti, Honduras, Iran, Iraq, Israel/West Bank/Gaza, Kenya, North Korea, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Mexico, Nepal, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Republic of South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, Venezuela and...

CONTINUE READING »