News Watch

As ITN went to press, the State Department had travel warnings on 31 destinations: Eritrea, Mexico, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Afghanistan, Israel/West Bank/Gaza, Mali, Mauritania, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Chad, Haiti, Guinea, Nepal, Nigeria, Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, Niger, Georgia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Philippines, Algeria, Lebanon, Iran, Kenya, Colombia, Central African Republic, Yemen, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Somalia. 

For details, call the State...

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Europe heat wave — Two months of record scorching heat ended for Eastern Europe in mid-August. 

In the Moscow area alone, over 4,000 deaths were attributed to the heat wave, with 50% more deaths in July 2010 than July 2009. Temperatures hit 104ºF, the highest there in over 130 years.

At the same time in Russia, months of drought contributed to wildfires over 2,900 square miles, blanketing Moscow in smoke for days. 

China floods — At press time, continuing storms in China...

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Violent crime in Nicaragua is increasing, the US embassy announced.

Nearly a dozen taxi kidnappings were reported in July. In six cases, tourists each were befriended by a stranger on a bus who offered assistance in locating or sharing a taxi at their destination. In the taxis, the tourists each were held at knifepoint or gunpoint, threatened with injury and/or rape, robbed, taken to ATM machines to withdraw funds from their accounts, then left in remote areas.

Among the...

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The US Department of State warns of the risk of traveling to Mali and against all travel in the north. The extremist group AQIM (Al-Qaeda in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb) has an “ongoing interest” in kidnapping Westerners in the Mali-Niger-Burkina Faso border area and as far south as Bamako.

On July 24, AQIM executed a French hostage in retaliation for the killing of six AQIM members during a Mauritania-launched hostage-rescue operation with French assistance in northern Mali....

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The Department of State still warns against travel to Afghanistan. All areas are unsafe due to military combat operations, land mines, banditry, drug-related activity, armed rivalry between political and tribal groups, and/or the possibility of kidnapping and insurgent attacks. 

On Aug. 5, a group of doctors and nurses was shot and killed in Badakhshan province after completing a medical aid visit to Nuristan province.

The US Embassy issued a warning in Gaborone, Botswana, following six incidents of serious crime in July. Among these were a stabbing during an attempted robbery of a laptop computer; the theft of a handbag from a vehicle, and the attempted theft of a cell phone from a tourist at Riverwalk Mall (local shoppers caught the thief). 

The Kgale Hill and Gaborone Dam areas are high crime areas where gangs of criminals target individuals or groups. The embassy suggests traveling there in very...

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Greece has instituted stringent “austerity measures” that have caused many labor unions to protest and go on strike. Strikes in June, July and August effectively paralyzed the transport and tourism industries. The Greek armed forces were enlisted to escort fuel trucks to hospitals, airports and power stations. 

The government is negotiating, but union leaders have indicated they may continue strikes and street protests.

A 19-day strike by miners in the Potosí region of Bolivia in July-August shut down all road, rail and, for a short time, airport access. Thousands of protesters, mostly peaceful, blocked the roads while demanding the government fulfill its promise to invest in infrastructure. Thousands of people, including several hundred tourists, were trapped by the roadblocks, most for a few days but some for more than two weeks.