A United States Army AH-64 Apache helicopter goes down near the Strait of Hormuz while on patrol. Both crew members are rescued by an unmanned vessel. In response, United States Central Command begins launching “self-defense” missile strikes at targets across Iran at 5 p.m. ET, with an American official claiming the helicopter was downed by an Iranian drone. (NBC News)
Israel issues an evacuation warning for Tyre, Lebanon, after an Israeli airstrike there killed at least eight people and injured 32. (Al Jazeera)
Israeli troops kill one person in northern Israel, near the border of Israel and Lebanon. (Al Jazeera)
At least 10 people are killed and 106 others are injured in a Russian missile and drone attack on Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine. (Kyiv Independent)
The United States Energy Information Administration reports that Middle Eastern oil producers have reduced output by more than 11 million barrels per day, due to the Strait of Hormuz closure. (Al Jazeera)
The death toll from yesterday’s earthquake in Mindanao, Philippines, increases to 41 people killed, with 479 more injured and four missing. All casualties come from the Davao and Soccsksargen regions. (AFP via RFI)(The Guardian)
Anti-Immigration riots erupt in Belfast and Newtownards due to yesterday’s attempted beheading by a Sudanese man in Belfast, Northern Ireland. (CBS)
The Sri Lankan High Court sentences former deputy minister Sarana Gunawardena to 16 years’ imprisonment after convicting him on corruption charges related to kickbacks from government procurement contracts. (AFP via The Manila Times)
Three people are injured in a mass stabbing at a school in Blackley, Manchester, England. A 14-year-old student is arrested. (BBC News)
Second Tuesday above
Monday, June 8th, 2026
A Sudanese man is arrested by police after attempting to behead a man on a public street in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Police have declared a “critical incident” in response to the attack. (Euronews)(BBC News)
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that Israel has agreed to stop the airstrikes on Iran at United States president Donald Trump’s request, but an official states that Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon will continue. Netanyahu also warns that Israel will respond if Iran resumes military action. (AFP via Dawn)(Al Jazeera)
The Israeli Air Force launches strikes against military sites in western and central Iran, making it the first time Israel launched strikes against Iran since the April 7 ceasefire. The strikes come as Iranian state media reported explosions were heard in Isfahan, Kermanshah, Tabriz, and Tehran. (The Jerusalem Post)(Israel National News)
The Houthis fire two missiles at Israel, one of which was intercepted, and another that did not reach it. (Al Jazeera)
Iran ambassador to Russia Kazem Jalali tells the Russian newspaper Izvestia that the Strait of Hormuz will reopen, but with new conditions set by Iran and Oman, including transit fees. (Reuters)
A U.S.-led coalition consisting of Belgium, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Norway, and the United Kingdom endorses a civilian-led political dialogue for Sudan to end the war under the facilitation of the African Union, the Arab League, the European Union, IGAD, and the United Nations. (Capital FM Kenya)(Radio Tamazuj)
Eleven people, including four police officers, are killed and dozens others are injured during clashes between police and supporters of the banned Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) in Azad Kashmir, Pakistan. Police arrest more than 70 JAAC members. (Al Jazeera)
Philippine president Bongbong Marcos orders the suspension of classes in affected areas across Mindanao, coinciding with the country’s first day of the new school year. (Nikkei Asia)
Brazil’s health ministry suspends administration of its single-dose dengue vaccine after two deaths and another severe adverse event among more than 500,000 recipients prompt a safety review, although no causal link has been established. (AFP via The Straits Times)
An Israeli official says Israel agreed to stop the airstrikes on Iran at U.S. president Donald Trump’s request, but Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon will continue. (Al Jazeera)
Philippine president Bongbong Marcos orders the suspension of classes in affected areas across Mindanao, coinciding with the country’s first day of the new school year. (Nikkei Asia)
Several members from Iran, Iraq, and Somalia, along with international sports delegations including referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan, are denied visas and blocked from entering the United States as they attempt to enter for the World Cup. (www.record.com.mx)
Sunday, June 7th, 2026
U.S. president Trump threatens that the United States will seize and destroy Iran’s highly enriched uranium, with or without their cooperation. (Al Jazeera)
At least two people are killed and 11 are injured by Israeli airstrikes in Beirut, Lebanon, which Israel claimed targeted Hezbollah infrastructure, violating the ongoing ceasefire. (Al Jazeera)(The Guardian)
U.S. president Donald Trump urges Iran to return to ceasefire negotiations and finalize a deal. He also says that Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will have “no choice” but to accept any deal that the U.S. reaches with Iran. (Shafaq)(Financial Times)
The Iranian military command says that the Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon and the Dahieh suburb of Beirut “crossed all red lines” and that there will be a response if they continue. (Axios)(Al Jazeera)
Iran closes its airspace in the western part of the country. (Al Jazeera)
Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv will remain open despite Iranian missile launches at Israel. However, officials say that they are prepared to close the airport if missile fire from Iran or Hezbollah expands. (Ynetnews)
A Palestinian man kills one person and injures five others before being shot and killed by police during an attack through several towns in central Israel. (AP)
Kosovo holds its third elections for the Kuvendi in 18 months amid continued political deadlock and the lack of a two-thirds majority to elect a president. Vetëvendosje, led by incumbent prime minister Albin Kurti, remains the largest party in the Kuvendi but falls short of a majority government. (AP)
South Korean president Lee Jae Myung names Han Seong-sook as the new prime minister. If parliament approves her appointment, she will become the first woman in twenty years to hold the post. (Reuters)
Kuwait Airways resumes flights from Kuwait International Airport after the latest Iranian attack. (Reuters)
The Kuwaiti defense ministry says that the armed forces shot down 13 ballistic missiles and 17 drones from Iran, during attacks that killed one person and injured 63 at Kuwait International Airport. (Al Jazeera)
Kuwait expels two Iranian diplomats, declaring them persona non grata, and summons Iran’s acting chargé d’affaires to hand him a protest note over the recent attacks. (Reuters)(AA)
The Bahraini defense force intercepts three Iranian missiles and multiple drones that it says were targeting “civilian” facilities. (AA)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says that Ukrainian drones have struck an oil terminal in Saint Petersburg amidst the economic forum scheduled to be held in the city and military facilities at a naval base in Kronstadt, Russia. (Kyiv Post)
Allied Democratic Forces fighters kill 16 civilians in the Mbau village in the Beni Territory, North Kivu Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). (Reuters)
At least 21 people are killed and 40 others are injured in a fire at a building in New Delhi, India. (AP)
A Royal Navy AgustaWestland AW101 crashes into a field in Sourton, Devon, England. The aircraft is destroyed and no survivors are expected as three are reported as deceased. The total number of occupants is unknown. (BBC News)
Iranian officials and state media announce a three-day funeral plan in the cities of Mashhad, Tehran, and Qom for former supreme leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed during the initial phase of the Israeli–US airstrikes on his compound. (Iran International)
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a Congress testimony says that Iran has agreed to negotiate aspects of its nuclear program despite pausing peace talks and closing the Strait of Hormuz. (The Guardian)
A court in Kenya blocks the U.S. from opening a new Ebola quarantine facility in the country for three weeks amidst protests that broke out against the facility in which two people were killed. (Reuters)
Bloomberg reports that Russia’s exports of crude oil have reached their highest level since before the 2022 invasion of Ukraine during 2026, with the country benefiting from the overall rise in oil prices amidst the Iran war fuel crisis. (OilPrice.com)
Thousands of people gather in Tirana, Albania, to protest against a development planned by Jared Kushner on the Adriatic coast that would intrude on environmentally protected areas of the Vjosa–Narta regions. (The Independent)
The U.S. Central Command says that a fighter jet has fired a Hellfire missile to disable the Botswana-flagged oil tanker M/T Lexie as it was transiting towards Kharg Island. (AA)(The Hill)
The U.S., Bahraini, and Kuwaiti militaries intercept ballistic missiles and drones fired by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps at U.S. military bases in Bahrain and Kuwait after a U.S. “self-defense” strike on Iran’s Qeshm Island. (The Warzone)
The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Navy coordinates the passage of 24 commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz over the past day after they obtained permission. (Al Jazeera)
U.S. president Donald Trump and U.S. Secretary of State Rubio says that ceasefire talks are ongoing, contradicting Iranian media statements. (CNBC)
Lebanon’s health ministry updates the toll from yesterday’s Israeli airstrike near a hospital in Tyre to at least four people killed and 127 wounded, including 39 health workers. (Al Jazeera)
Hamas reaffirms that it is ready to hand control of governance of the Gaza Strip. (Bastille Post)
Gaza health officials say that an Israeli fire has killed four Palestinians. (Middle East Eye)
A series of Russian airstrikes across Ukraine, including the cities of Kyiv and Dnipro, kill at least 23 people and injure more than 100 others. Mayor of KyivVitali Klitschko reports power outages and a fire in the Podil district on a non-residential property and nine-story apartment building. (AFP via Kyiv Independent)
Popular Mobilization Forces in Nineveh announce that three Islamic State suspects have been killed during a military operation in the Al-Ba’aj District. (Shafaq)
At least 15 people are injured as Tropical Storm Jangmi brings heavy rainfall, lanslides, floods, and strong winds from Kyushu and the Okinawa Islands to the Greater Tokyo Area in Japan, prompting evacuation advisories for more than 800,000 residents. (AFP via CNA)
A magnitude 3.5 earthquake struck the Silesian Voivodeship, Poland. The epicenter was located approximately 8 kilometers southeast of Gliwice. The event was recorded by the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) at exactly 10:31 PM. The quake was felt across a large area of the Silesian metropolitan area. Residents of Knurów, Gierałtowice, and Ruda Śląska reported noticeable swaying of buildings. The strongest effects were felt in towns closest to the epicenter, where houses visibly rocked, windows, floors, ceilings, and walls shook, and objects shifted. The strongest impact was felt by residents of Gierałtowice and Przyszowice, located just 1-3 kilometers from the source. Internet users described a very strong quake that lasted several seconds and felt as if entire houses were swaying. Many emphasized that it was one of the strongest tremors in the region in several months. (TwojaPogoda.pl)
Fifteen people are killed and 25 others severely injured after two vehicles collide head-on in the Volta Region, Ghana. (Xinhua)
Eight people are killed and 16 others injured after a vehicle veers off a mountain road and plunges into a deep ravine in Parwan Province, Afghanistan. (Xinhua)
Six children are killed and one injured after the roof of a mud house collapses in Shangla District, Pakistan. (Dawn)
U.S Secretary of State Rubio says the United States will reengage with GAVI amidst the Ebola outbreak. (Irish Independent)
The Bahraini interior ministry bans its citizens from traveling to Iran or Iraq due to “the ongoing tension in the current security situation.” (Al Jazeera)
Politico reports that Hungary will abandon its opposition to Ukraine joining the European Union ahead of the upcoming EU conference in Luxembourg after previously blocking it from doing so under former prime minister Viktor Orbán. (The New Voice of Ukraine)(Politico EU)
Protesters clash with police in Southampton, England, as thousands gather to protest against the murder of 18‑year‑old university student Henry Nowak. (BBC News)
Mozambique reports that five of its nationals were killed during anti-immigration violence in Mossel Bay, Western Cape, South Africa, over the weekend. (Reuters)
Iranian officials and state media announce a three-day funeral plan in the cities of Mashhad, Tehran, and Qom for former supreme leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed during the initial phase of the Israeli–US airstrikes on his compound. (Iran International)
A court in Kenya blocks the U.S. from opening a new Ebola quarantine facility in the country for three weeks amidst protests that broke out against the facility in which two people were killed. (Reuters)
Bloomberg reports that Russia’s exports of crude oil have reached their highest level since before the 2022 invasion of Ukraine during 2026, with the country benefiting from the overall rise in oil prices amidst the Iran war fuel crisis. (OilPrice.com)
Thousands of people gather in Tirana, Albania, to protest against a development planned by Jared Kushner on the Adriatic coast that would intrude on environmentally protected areas of the Vjosa–Narta regions. (The Independent)
The U.S. Central Command says that a fighter jet has fired a Hellfire missile to disable the Botswana-flagged oil tanker M/T Lexie as it was transiting towards Kharg Island. (AA)(The Hill)
The U.S., Bahraini, and Kuwaiti militaries intercept ballistic missiles and drones fired by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps at U.S. military bases in Bahrain and Kuwait after a U.S. “self-defense” strike on Iran’s Qeshm Island. (The Warzone)
The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Navy coordinates the passage of 24 commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz over the past day after they obtained permission. (Al Jazeera)
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in a Congress testimony says that Iran has agreed to negotiate aspects of its nuclear program despite pausing peace talks and closing the Strait of Hormuz. (The Guardian)
U.S. president Donald Trump and U.S. Secretary of State Rubio says that ceasefire talks are ongoing, contradicting Iranian media statements. (CNBC)
Lebanon’s health ministry updates the toll from yesterday’s Israeli airstrike near a hospital in Tyre to at least four people killed and 127 wounded, including 39 health workers. (Al Jazeera)
Hamas reaffirms that it is ready to hand control of governance of the Gaza Strip. (Bastille Post)
Gaza health officials say that an Israeli fire has killed four Palestinians. (Middle East Eye)
A series of Russian airstrikes across Ukraine, including the cities of Kyiv and Dnipro, kill at least 23 people and injure more than 100 others. Mayor of KyivVitali Klitschko reports power outages and a fire in the Podil district on a non-residential property and nine-story apartment building. (AFP via Kyiv Independent)
Popular Mobilization Forces in Nineveh announce that three Islamic State suspects have been killed during a military operation in the Al-Ba’aj District. (Shafaq)
At least 15 people are injured as Tropical Storm Jangmi brings heavy rainfall, lanslides, floods, and strong winds from Kyushu and the Okinawa Islands to the Greater Tokyo Area in Japan, prompting evacuation advisories for more than 800,000 residents. (AFP via CNA)
A magnitude 3.5 earthquake struck the Silesian Voivodeship, Poland. The epicenter was located approximately 8 kilometers southeast of Gliwice. The event was recorded by the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) at exactly 10:31 PM. The quake was felt across a large area of the Silesian metropolitan area. Residents of Knurów, Gierałtowice, and Ruda Śląska reported noticeable swaying of buildings. The strongest effects were felt in towns closest to the epicenter, where houses visibly rocked, windows, floors, ceilings, and walls shook, and objects shifted. The strongest impact was felt by residents of Gierałtowice and Przyszowice, located just 1-3 kilometers from the source. Internet users described a very strong quake that lasted several seconds and felt as if entire houses were swaying. Many emphasized that it was one of the strongest tremors in the region in several months. (TwojaPogoda.pl)
Fifteen people are killed and 25 others severely injured after two vehicles collide head-on in the Volta Region, Ghana. (Xinhua)
Eight people are killed and 16 others injured after a vehicle veers off a mountain road and plunges into a deep ravine in Parwan Province, Afghanistan. (Xinhua)
Six children are killed and one injured after the roof of a mud house collapses in Shangla District, Pakistan. (Dawn)
The Bahraini interior ministry bans its citizens from traveling to Iran or Iraq due to “the ongoing tension in the current security situation.” (Al Jazeera)
Politico reports that Hungary will abandon its opposition to Ukraine joining the European Union ahead of the upcoming EU conference in Luxembourg after previously blocking it from doing so under former prime minister Viktor Orbán. (The New Voice of Ukraine)(Politico EU)
Protesters clash with police in Southampton, England, as thousands gather to protest against the murder of 18‑year‑old university student Henry Nowak. (BBC News)
Mozambique reports that five of its nationals were killed during anti-immigration violence in Mossel Bay, Western Cape, South Africa, over the weekend. (Reuters)
New above wednesday
Tuesday, June 2nd, 2026
The Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Navy coordinates the passage of 24 commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz over the past day after the obtained permission. (Al Jazeera)
Israel accuses Hezbollah of violating the ceasefire negotiated yesterday by launching drones and missiles. (Al Jazeera)
Israeli airstrikes are reported in Nabatieh, in other towns of the Nabatieh District, and in the Tyre District. (Al Jazeera)
Lebanon’s health ministry updates the toll from yesterday’s Israeli airstrike near a hospital in Tyre, Lebanon, to at least 4 people killed and 127 wounded, including 39 health workers. (Al Jazeera)
Explosions are reported in Kyiv, Ukraine, with at least 20 people killed and more than 100 wounded. MayorVitali Klitschko reported power outages and a fire in the Podil district on a non-residential property and nine-story apartment building. (AFP via Kyiv Independent)
Seven more bodies are retrieved from the collapsed under-construction building in Angeles, Philippines, raising the death toll to 21. (Philippine Daily Inquirer)
Bahrain’s interior ministry bans the country’s citizens from traveling to Iran or Iraq due to “the ongoing tension in the current security situation.” (Al Jazeera)
The House of Representatives of the Philippines votes, 265–14 with eight abstentions, to expel Cavite 4th district representative Kiko Barzaga over “disruptive” and “disorderly” behavior following two prior suspensions. Barzaga is the third representative in Philippine history to have been expelled. (Philippine Daily Inquirer)
Monday, June 1st, 2026
Florida attorney general James Uthmeier announces that Florida, U.S., has filed a lawsuit against OpenAICEOSam Altman and AI-chatbot ChatGPT, accusing the chatbot of putting profit over safety. This lawsuit is the first to be filed by a U.S. state against ChatGPT. (NPR)
Iranian deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi says that Iran and Oman are the only two countries with the right to “exercise sovereignty” over the Strait of Hormuz, and that Iran implemented a new process for controlling maritime traffic in coordination with Oman. (Al Jazeera)
United States president Donald Trump says that Iran’s pause on peace talks does not mean the U.S. will resume airstrikes, but the naval blockade will continue. (Al Jazeera)
The U.S. Central Command intercepts two Iranian ballistic missiles targeting the U.S. military base in Kuwait that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps says was used for on attack on Bandar Sirik, Iran. (CNBC)
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps says that their naval forces have attacked the Panama-flagged “US-owned” container ship MSC Sariska in response to an alleged US attack on an Iranian ship in the Sea of Oman. (AA)(AFP via Gulf News)(ANI News)
U.S. president Donald Trump says that Israel and Hezbollah have agreed to dial back on fighting after holding a call with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hezbollah. (PBS)
The U.S. embassy in Beirut confirms that Hezbollah has accepted a proposal by the United States for a “mutual cessation of attacks” after Israel threatened Beirut with strikes on the eve of a fourth round of peace talks. (Reuters)(The Guardian)
The Lebanese government receives confirmation about Hezbollah’s agreement to a new ceasefire with Israel. (Times of Israel)
The Iranian military command warns residents of northern Israel to evacuate if the Israeli military strikes the Dahieh suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, in response to an Israeli evacuation order. (Al Jazeera)
58 people are killed in multiple Rapid Support Forces attacks over the past four days in various villages near Bara, North Kordofan, Sudan. (Dabanga Sudan)
Terminal 1 at Kuwait International Airport resumes operations as part of a phased reopening plan following repair, development, and upgrade works. Additionally, the airport resumes operations to Arab and foreign airlines after the airport has been closed since the war started on February 28. (Kuwait Times)(Arab Times Kuwait)
Canadian hotel operator Blue Diamond Resorts ends its operations in Cuba, citing reduced air service and operational challenges after managing 62 properties on the island. (AFP via Indo Premier)
Five employees are killed and two others are injured after an explosion at an aerospace plant owned by Hanwha Group in Daejeon, South Korea. (AP)(Reuters)
Two people are hospitalized, livestock are killed and serious property damage is reported after a massive explosion at a fireworks factory in Magħtab, Malta. (The Jerusalem Post)
The UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs advises citizens and residents against traveling to South Sudan, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo amidst the Ebola outbreak in these African countries. (Sudans Post)
The Philippines and Vietnam upgrade bilateral relations to an enhanced strategic partnership during Vietnamese president Tô Lâm‘s state visit to Manila. (Reuters)
Seven people are killed, including the gunman, in spree shootings across Muscatine, Iowa, United States. (KGAN)(Reuters)
A ban on children aged under 16 using social media formally enters force in Malaysia. Companies that fail to comply with the new rules could face penalties of up to 10 million ringgit (US$2.5 million). (AP)
Vickrum Digwa, a 23-year-old Sikh man, is sentenced to life imprisonment, with a minimum of 21 years, for murdering 18-year-old University of Southampton student Henry Nowak in Southampton, England, on 3 December 2025. Digwa’s mother is also found guilty of assisting an offender by hiding the murder weapon, a knife. (The Guardian)
One person is killed and another is seriously injured in a shooting at a clinic in Pelican Narrows, Saskatchewan, Canada. The shooter fled on foot but was later arrested. (CBC News)(BNO News)
The End Tuesday
new above Tuesday [orig]
Monday, June 1st, 2026
Iran withdraws from peace talks with the United States and rules out any further talks until Israel ends its military operations in Lebanon and Gaza. (The Guardian)
The French military, with military assistance from a Royal Navy warship, seizes a Russian shadow fleet tanker in international waters of the Atlantic Ocean. Russia says the “illegal” seizure was “bordering on international piracy”. (BBC News)
Oil prices increase by nearly 8% on the announcement of the peace talks ending, with West Texas Intermediate rising to US$94.20 per barrel and Brent Crude to US$97.23 per barrel. (CNBC)
The New York Times reports that the U.S. Central Command has guided 70 commercial ships through the Strait of Hormuz in the last three weeks, using routes closer to the Omanian coast. (The Asia Business Daily)
An Israeli airstrike kills at least two Palestinians at a cafe in Gaza City. (Reuters)
Two teenage girls are injured in a vehicle-ramming attack at a bus stop in Gush Etzion Junction, West Bank. The perpetrator, identified as a Palestinian, is shot dead by Israeli troops. (The Times of Israel)
At least eight villagers are killed and 15 others were injured after more than a hundred Fulani bandits carried out a shooting in Plateau State(Daily Post)
Two policemen are killed after unidentified gunmen attacked them on a road in Anambra State. (Daily Post)
Sri Lanka increases fuel prices by up to six percent as part of economic reforms linked to its International Monetary Fund assistance program, which includes plans to phase out fuel subsidies and achieve cost recovery in the energy sector. (AFP via The Hindu)
The death toll from the collapse of an under construction nine-story building in Angeles, Pampanga, Philippines, on May 24, rises to twelve. (The Philippine Star)
More than 55 people are killed, including six children, and 74 others are injured in an explosion at a building storing explosives for mining in Namhkam Township, Shan State, Myanmar. (AP)(BBC News)
Five people are killed and another is injured when an illegal mine collapses in Huize County, Yunnan, China. (AP)
Preliminary results from yesterday’s election revealed that the Labour Party, currently led by incumbent prime minister Robert Abela, won a record fourth consecutive term in government. (Reuters)
Saturday, May 30th, 2026
Iranian state media says that Iran shot down an American aircraft near the city of Jam, Bushehr province. However, the U.S. Central Command denies any such claim, stating that no U.S. aircraft has been shot down. (Middle East Eye)
U.S. military aircraft disable The Gambia-flagged bulk carrier Lian Star and leave it adrift in the Gulf of Oman after it ignored warnings while attempting to reach a port in Iran. (AP via Politico)
Israeli Air Force strikes and artillery shelling are reported near Beaufort Castle as Israeli troops approach the outskirts of Nabatieh, Lebanon. (Al Jazeera)
A truck carrying Afghan refugees returning from Pakistan overturns on a highway in Laghman Province, Afghanistan, killing 22 people and injuring 36 others. (AP)
At least six people are killed and ten others are injured when a four-story commercial building collapses in Saidul Ajaib, Delhi, India. (Hindustan Times)
Four more men trapped in a flooded cave in Xaisomboun province, Laos, are rescued after 10 days, bringing the total number of survivors recovered to five, while search operations continue for two missing persons. (AFP via ABS-CBN News)(Reuters)
The driver is killed and 23 people are wounded when a bus crashes in Baranya County, Hungary. (AP)
Uganda’s health ministry reports two more cases of ebola in Kampala, bringing the total number of cases in the country to nine. (Channel Africa)
Russia recalls its ambassador to Armenia over Armenia’s closer relations with the European Union, citing concerns about its commitments within the Eurasian Economic Union. (AFP via Euractiv)
India signs a 60 billion rupees (US$629 million) deal to supply BrahMos missiles to Vietnam, which will also include training and logistical support. (DW)(Reuters)
Following PSG’s Champions League victory, police arrest more than 280 people in Paris, France, following clashes, vandalism, arson, an attempted intrusion into a police station, and disruptions to traffic and public transport during celebrations. (AFP via The Daily Star)