News Watch

In Sanaa, Yemen, at least 52 people were killed and 160 injured on Dec. 5 when suicide bombers in cars attacked the gates of the Defense Ministry headquarters compound, followed by armed gunmen trying to take over the buildings. Government sources stated that of an estimated dozen gunmen, most were killed in the ensuing battle and three were captured. Al-Qaeda has claimed responsibility.

In Egypt, a suicide bomber attack on a police compound in the city of Mansoura (120 kilometers north of Cairo) on Dec. 24 killed 12 and injured over 100, after which the military declared the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist group and police began a crackdown that resulted in at least 11 members of the group being killed. The Muslim Brotherhood insists it was not involved in the attack on the compound; another group claimed responsibility.

Meanwhile, an explosion near a bus in Cairo on...

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In Kiev, Ukraine, street protests began in late November over the president’s decision to pull back from an agreement with the European Union and turn to Russia for financial assistance. In December, the numbers of demonstrators grew to hundreds of thousands.

On Dec. 17, the debt-ridden country signed a deal to sell $15 billion worth of Ukrainian bonds to Russia in exchange for a discount on natural gas. The deal done, the number of protesters dwindled, but on Dec. 29, after a popular...

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A scandal over government intervention into anticorruption investigations involving Turkey’s current Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and his political party has resulted in a round of protests in Istanbul by both supporters of Erdoğan and those opposing his regime. Police used tear gas and water cannons to disperse the crowds of thousands of protesters who marched in Taksim Square and Kadıköy Square on Dec. 27.

In Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Nov. 15 and 20, gangs of young thieves swarmed the Ipanema and Arpoador beaches with clubs and grabbed jewelry, cell phones, beach bags and other items from sunbathing Brazilians and tourists. The dozens of hoodlums made several such arrastoes, or “big drags.”

This style of robbery, common in the 1990s, is difficult to stop because the thieves scatter over a wide area. Police are stepping up beach patrols.

The CDC has issued a warning to avoid any nonessential travel to the islands of St. Martin and Martinique, due to an outbreak of chikungunya fever. Although it is common in many parts of Asia and Africa, this is the first outbreak in the Caribbean. (There have been prior isolated cases of “imported” fever.) 

Caused by a virus spread by mosquito bites, the illness causes fever, joint pain, headache and muscle pain. There is no vaccine, and the only protection is preventing mosquito...

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As ITN went to press, the State Department had travel warnings on 34 destinations: Afghanistan, Algeria, Burundi, Central African Republic, Chad, Colombia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, El Salvador, Eritrea, Haiti, Honduras, Iran, Iraq, Israel/West Bank/Gaza, Kenya, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Lebanon, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Mexico, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Republic of South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, Venezuela and Yemen...

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On Nov. 8, the typhoon Haiyan, one of the largest and most destructive ever recorded, roared across six islands in the Philippines, leaving more than 5,200 people dead, 1,500 missing, 23,400 injured and hundreds of thousands homeless. Entire towns were flattened.

Hardest hit were locations in the Eastern and Western Visayas regions, including Guiuan in Eastern Samar Province; Tacloban and Ormoc in Leyte Province; Bantayan Island and Daanbantayan in Cebu Province; Concepcion in Iloilo...

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