shots fired

Shots are fired near Donald Trump in Florida. (AP) 

NATO Chair Rob Bauer backs the use of long-range weapons by Ukrainian forces to strike targets inside Russia. (ABC News) 

The United Kingdom reportedly approves the use of Storm Shadow cruise missiles to strike targets inside Russian territory. (The Kyiv Independent) 

At least 41 people are injured when Russian guided bomb hit an apartment building in Kharkiv, Ukraine. (CNN) 

The spacecraft of the Polaris Dawn private spaceflight mission operated by SpaceX returns to Earth after five days in orbit. (BBC) 

A Houthi ballistic missile launched from Yemen reaches central Israel for the first time. The missile is fragmented by an interceptor, with no casualties reported. (Reuters) 

The death toll from Typhoon Yagi in Myanmar increases to 74 people, with 89 others still missing and nearly 240,000 displaced. (AP) 

The death toll from the ongoing floods in central and eastern Europe increases to seven, including five people in Romania, a person drowned in Poland, and a responding firefighter in Austria. (Al Jazeera) 

Three people are killed and two are injured in a multiple-vehicle collision in San Bernardino, California, United States. (KTLA-TV) 

Bulgarian Air Force L-39 Albatros jet crashes during rehearsals for an air show at the Graf Ignatievo Air Base near Plovdiv, Bulgaria, killing both pilots. (AP) 

At least four people are killed and thousands of homes are damaged in floods in Romania and the Czech Republic. (Reuters) 

American billionaire Jared Isaacman becomes the first person to perform a commercial spacewalk as part of the Polaris Dawn private spaceflight mission operated by SpaceX(AP) 

Following the launch of the Russian Soyuz MS-26 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, there is a record 19 people in outer space at the same time. The previous record was set in 2023 with 17 people. (USA Today)(CollectSPACE) 

Russian president Vladimir Putin warns that Ukrainian use of NATO weapons to strike deep into Russian territory indicates NATO’s formal entry into war against Russia, due to the programming of these weapons by NATO personnel representing a “direct confrontation”. (The Independent) 

The U.S. State Department approves $165 million in weapons sales to Israel to fund tank transporters along with spare parts, tool kits, and technical and logistics support. The parts are expected to be delivered in 2027. (AP) 

Germany and Kenya agree on a labour migration deal which will see 250,000 skilled and semi-skilled Kenyan workers go work in Germany amid a shortage of skilled labour in the German economy. The agreement will also simplify the return of illegal migrants to Kenya. (BBC News) 

China increases the country’s retirement age for the first time since 1978. Beginning in 2025, the retirement age for men will be increased to 63, and the retirement age for women will be increased to either 55 or 58 depending on their occupation. (NPR) 

Russia says that the approval of Ukrainian use of long-range weapons to strike inside Russia will result in an “uncontrolled escalation” with the West and the “destruction” of Kyiv. (Reuters) 

Following a meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine, the foreign ministers of Poland and Ukraine call for ending social benefits for Ukrainian men in Poland, and for programs in the European Union to return them to Ukraine in order to stop draft evasion(Reuters) 

At least five people are killed and eight others are injured in a series of roadside explosions in Kahda District, Mogadishu, Somalia. The local government blames jihadist group Al-Shabaab due to its frequent targeting of civilians. (Garowe Online) 

The estimated area burned by wildfires in Brazil this year reaches 37.6 million hectares (93 million acres), an area larger than the size of Germany and more than double the yearly average from 2012–2023. (Financial Times) 

At least four people are killed and thousands of homes are damaged in floods in Romania and the Czech Republic. (Reuters) 

At least 15 people are killed and around 40 others are injured when a tank truck explodes in Miragoâne, Haiti. (Al Jazeera) 

At least three people are killed and 49 others are injured in a train collision in Zagazig, Sharqia Governorate, Egypt. (CNN) 

Tunisian police arrest more than 80 members of the opposition Ennahda Movement party amid protests against President Kais Saied in the capital city Tunis. (Al Jazeera) 

Venezuelan interior minister Diosdado Cabello announces that three US citizens, two Spanish citizens, and a Czech citizen have been arrested and are accused of planning to “generate violence” and “destabilize” Venezuela, with the Spanish citizens also accused of being Spanish secret service workers. (Reuters) 

The government of South Sudan and President Salva Kiir postpone the general election originally scheduled for December 2024 to December 2026, citing a need for additional time to complete a census, register political parties, and draft a permanent constitution. (Al Jazeera) 

More than 30,000 Boeing factory workers go on strike for the first time since 2008 after rejecting a labor contract. (CNBC) 

Maria Daniela Icaza, director of the Litoral Penitentiary in Guayaquil, the largest prison in Ecuador and the site of the country’s deadliest prison riot in 2021, is fatally shot in her vehicle by suspected drug cartel gunmen. (CBS News) 

A court in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo, sentences 37 people to death for their alleged roles in the attempted coup the prior May. (AP) 

Reuters reports that Russia has begun production of thousands of Garpiya-A1 long-range combat drones used against Ukrainian civilian and military targets, that incorporate engines, parts, and technology from China. (Reuters) 

Russian artillery targets 15 areas in Sumy Oblast, Ukraine, killing two civilians near the village of Yampil and injuring nine others. (Reuters) 

The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency reports that due to the ongoing war, Ukraine’s death rate is now the highest in the world at 18.6 per thousand people, while its birth rate is the lowest at six children born per thousand people. (Kyiv Post) 

Two Indian soldiers are killed in action in clashes with separatists in Kishtwar, Jammu and Kashmir, India. (NDTV) 

Abu Ali Al-Tunisi, an Islamic State commander for whom the U.S. Treasury Department had offered $5 million for information, is killed during a joint United States–Iraq operation in Al Anbar Governorate. Ahmad Hamed Zwein, an Islamic State deputy commander in Iraq, is also killed in the operation. (AP) 

The death toll from Typhoon Yagi in northern Vietnam increases to 233 people, with more than 820 others injured, and 103 people still missing. (AP) 

At least ten people are killed by flooding and landslides caused by Typhoon Yagi in Thailand, along with at least 33 people killed in Myanmar. (DW) 

Two people are presumed dead and at least two others are injured in an explosion and subsequent fire at a gas station in Clearwater County, Idaho, United States. (AP) 

Russia revokes the accreditation of six British diplomats and accuses them of espionage. (BBC News) 

Seven men receive prison sentences ranging from six to 25 years for sexual offences against girls aged 11 to 16. (BBC News) 

Bedfordshire Police arrest an 18-year-old man on suspicion of murder after three people are found dead in flat in a tower block in Luton, England, United Kingdom. (BBC News) 

Three young Chinese people are killed in a suspected arson attack against a shop in Milan, Italy. (ANSA) 

Microsoft announces that it will lay off 650 Microsoft Gaming employees as part of cuts to its workforce. (Variety) 

A new wave of shootouts erupts in Haiti over soccer match leaving at least one gang leader dead. Reports admit being unable to determine the total death toll. (AP) 

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy strongly denounces a Brazilian–Chinese peace initiative, stating that both nations are effectively siding with Russia for allowing the Russian army to take Ukrainian territory as a means to “de-escalate” the war instead of assisting Ukraine in resisting the invasion. (Kyiv Independent) 

Russian artillery shelling kills three Red Cross workers and injures two others in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine. (Reuters) 

A spokesperson for the Indian Foreign Ministry say that about 45 Indian nationals have been discharged from the Russian military, with efforts currently underway to get a further 50 Indians released. (Reuters) 

Russian shelling of the settlement of Borova in Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine, kills three civilians and injures nine others, including several emergency service personnel. (Reuters) 

Ukraine accuses Russia of conducting missile strikes on a Saint Kitts and Nevis-flagged bulk carrier carrying grain to Egypt in the exclusive economic zone of Romania in the Black Sea. No casualties are reported. (Reuters) 

The death toll from Israel’s military operation in the occupied West Bank increases to 50, with three people killed by a drone strike in Tulkarm. (Al Jazeera) 

Fourteen people are killed and six more are injured during a mass shooting by Islamic State militants against a bus carrying Shia Hazara people between the Afghan provinces of Ghor and Daikundi, after returning from a pilgrimage in Iraq. (AP) 

Three border guards are killed and a civilian is injured by Jaish ul-Adl gunmen in Mirjaveh, Sistan and Baluchestan province, Iran. (AP) 

The British government announces that a ban on junk food adverts on television before 9 PM will enter force in October 2025 under plans to tackle childhood obesity. (Sky News) 

The United Kingdom suspends visa-exempt status for Jordanian nationals traveling to the UK due to an increase in asylum claims made by Jordanians. (The Jerusalem Post) 

The United States government imposes sanctions on 16 allies of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, accusing them of voter suppression and human rights abuses. (AP) 

The United States announces it will support the addition of two new permanent seats on the United Nations Security Council for African nations and one non-permanent seat for a small island developing nation. (AP) 

A police officer shoots and kills a man being held in custody on suspicion of blasphemy at a police station in Quetta, Balochistan, Pakistan. (Al Arabiya) 

Senegalese president Bassirou Diomaye Faye dissolves the opposition-led National Assembly and calls for a snap election on November 17. (AP) 

Eighteen people, including six UNRWA staffers, are killed in Israeli airstrikes on a school in central Gaza. (Reuters) 

An Israeli Air Force UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter crashes in Rafah during a mission to evacuate an injured combat engineer, killing two personnel on board. (Times of Israel) 

At least six Palestinians are killed by an Israeli drone strike on Tubas in the West Bank. (Reuters) 

Russian forces reportedly recapture 10 settlements in Kursk Oblast. (Anadolu Agency) 

One Hezbollah militant is killed and one militant and two civilians are injured in Israeli drone strikes in southern Lebanon. (Al Jazeera) 

Hundreds of workers at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi, Kenya, go on strike to protest against a planned deal to lease the airport to the Indian conglomerate Adani Group for 30 years. (Al Jazeera) 

Hurricane Francine makes landfall in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, United States, as a Category 2 hurricane. (National Hurricane Center) 

The National Weather Service issues a flash flood emergency for New Orleans and municipalities west of it, due to the eye wall of Hurricane Francine stalling over the region. (NBC News) 

Due to the Alau Dam collapse by heavy floods more than 80% of the animals in the Sanda Kyarimi Park Zoo in Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria. (Reuters) 

dragon drones

Ukraine begins the implementation of “dragon drones” that spray molten thermite on forest cover to reveal and help destroy Russian units and military equipment. (Al Jazeera) 

Kingdom of Jesus Christ pastor Apollo Quiboloy, who is charged with sex trafficking, is arrested amid a standoff between the police and members of the church at the church’s headquarters in Davao City, Philippines. (Al Jazeera) 

More than of the 80% of the animals in the Sanda Kyarimi Park Zoo are killed after heavy floods in Maiduguri, Borno State, Nigeria(Reuters) 

Ali Kiba, a Tanzanian official from the opposition party Chadema, who went missing last week, is found dead with signs of beatings and acid poured on his face. (ABC News) 

Authorities in Guinea-Bissau say that they have seized more than 2.6 tonnes of cocaine that was found on a plane arriving from Venezuela at Osvaldo Vieira International Airport in Bissau. (BBC News) 

Finnish-Canadian sportswear mogul Peter Nygård is sentenced to 11 years in prison for sexual assault. (CBC News) 

Five Palestinians are killed by an Israeli drone strike in Tubas, in the Palestinian occupied territories, West Bank. (Reuters) 

The death toll from Typhoon Yagi in northern Vietnam increases to 155 people, while 141 more are missing. The majority of the victims were killed by floods and landslides, mainly in the provinces of Lào Cai, Yên Bái, and Cao Bằng. (AP) 

Malaysian police rescue 400 minors suspected of being sexually abused at Islamic charity homes linked to Al-Arqam. (Reuters) 

A presidential debate hosted by ABC News between U.S. Vice President and Democratic nominee Kamala Harris and former president and Republican nominee Donald Trump takes place at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. (CNN) 

His Majesty’s Prison Service begins releasing thousands of prisoners in England and Wales on early release amid a record high prison population and a shortage of prison cells for new inmates. (BBC News) 

The Court of Justice of the European Union rules that Apple Inc. must pay €13 billion (US$14.3 billion) to the government of the Republic of Ireland as compensation for extraordinarily low taxes levied by Ireland against Apple. (Euronews) 

Google is fined €2.4 billion (US$2.7 billion) by the Court of Justice of the European Union for favoring its own shopping search results over those of its competitors. (Politico) 

The House of Commons of the United Kingdom votes 348–228 to end the Winter Fuel Payment for 10 million pensioners in England and Wales after Prime Minister Keir Starmer warned that the scheme was no longer affordable. (Sky News) 

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken claims that Russia has received a shipment of Fath 360 tactical ballistic missiles from Iran, and expects their deployment “within weeks”. Iran denies the claim, calling it “psychological warfare”. In response, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany announce new sanctions on Iran for supplying Russia with ballistic missiles. (BBC News) 

The Netherlands lifts all of its weapons restrictions on military equipment that it provided to Ukraine, allowing the Ukrainian army to target Russia with deep strikes while also urging other nations to lift their weapons restrictions. (Kyiv Post) 

Ukraine launches drone attacks on multiple regions of Russia, including Moscow, prompting all flights to be suspended at Vnukovo International Airport and Moscow Domodedovo Airport. Bryansk Governor Alexander Bogomaz says that at least 59 Ukrainian drones have been shot down over the region. Russia also reports that two people were killed in the Ukrainian drone attack on Moscow. (Reuters) (Times of Israel) 

Prime Minister of Poland Donald Tusk condemns Germany’s new land border restrictions due to Germany’s previous lack of support for other European Union nations impacted by irregular migration. (Reuters) 

According to Hamas, at least 40 people are killed and more than 60 others are injured in an Israeli airstrike on the Al-Mawasi refugee camp in Rafah in the Gaza Strip. Twenty tents housing displaced people are destroyed during the attack. (Al Jazeera) 

The Israeli military claims that it struck senior Hamas commanders operating in a command center embedded inside a designated humanitarian area who the Israel Defense Forces claims were all involved in the October 7 attack. (Al Arabiya) 

A Hezbollah militant is killed and two civilians are injured in an Israeli airstrike on Saghbine in southern Lebanon. (Al Jazeera) 

The death toll from the capsizing of a migrant boat off the coast of Senegal over the weekend increases to 26 after the discovery of 17 more bodies. (Reuters) 

A Swiss appeals court convicts Islamic scholar Tariq Ramadan of rape and sexual coercion, sentencing Ramadan to three years in prison, with two years suspension. (BBC News) 

Protesters opposed to the ruling Morena party’s reform package storm the Senate of Mexico and force an interruption of the bill’s first reading in the upper house. The session reconvenes later at an alternative venue. (CNN) 

Fifty-nine percent of Brazil’s area suffers from significant drought conditions, the worst national drought recorded. These conditions cause historically low Amazon basin levels and are contributing to at least 160,000 wildfires in 2024 that are causing widespread air pollution(AP) 

The death toll from Typhoon Yagi in northern Vietnam increases to more than 64 people, with 24 others still missing. (Al Jazeera) 

The Nigerian State Security department arrests Joe Ajaero, the leader of the Nigeria Labour Congress, at Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja, Nigeria, days after Ajaero criticised the Nigerian government for increasing gas prices. (DW) 

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry expresses “disappointment” regarding assertions made by Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico that Kyiv should remove “fascist elements” from the Armed Forces of Ukraine, using rhetoric similar to Russian allegations of current neo-Nazism in Ukraine’s Azov Brigade(Reuters) 

The Latvian Defence Ministry confirms that a Russian military Shahed drone that crashed near the village of Gaigalava, Latvia, last week was carrying explosives and was likely intended to strike Ukraine. (Reuters) 

Russian troops capture the village of Memryk in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine. (Al Jazeera) 

Germany’s traffic light coalition government announces border restrictions on all its national land borders, including those with other EU nations, for at least six months in order to combat irregular migration from asylum seekers. (Reuters) 

The exiled National Council of Resistance of Iran claim that its offices in Stockholm, Sweden, were firebombed overnight with Molotov cocktails. The Swedish Police Authority announces that they have opened an investigation into the arson(Al Arabiya) 

At least eight people are killed and dozens are wounded in Israeli strikes across the Gaza Strip, bringing the confirmed Palestinian death toll to over 41,000. (Al Jazeera) 

At least 25 people are killed and more than 40 others are injured in overnight Israeli airstrikes targeting Iranian research centers in Syria, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. (The Guardian) 

Thirteen people are injured when a roadside bomb targets a police vehicle escorting a polio vaccination team in Wana, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. (Arab News) 

The Turkish Ministry of Defense announces that a Turkish soldier was killed in clashes with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party in Duhok Governorate, Iraq. (Daily Sabah) 

The Rapid Support Forces renew an assault on the city of Sennar, Sennar State, Sudan, killing at least 31 people and injuring more than 100 others. (Reuters) 

Eighteen people are killed and four are missing during floods caused by torrential rains in southern Morocco. Fifty-six homes are destroyed and 110 roads damaged. (Arab News) 

At least 16 people are killed and 22 others are injured when a bus and a truck collide in Bambey Department, Senegal. (TRT Afrika) 

At least six people are killed when a boat carrying migrants capsizes off the coast of Senegal over the weekend. (Reuters) 

Forty-seven inmates escape from a maximum security prison in Margibi County, Liberia. (Reuters) 

American historical drama television series Shōgun wins a record 14 Emmys at the 2024 Creative Arts Emmy Awards, the most won for any single season. (AP) 

Russia formally claims control of Novohrodivka, Donetsk Oblast, twelve kilometers (seven miles) from the strategically important Ukrainian logistical hub city Pokrovsk. (Reuters) 

Over 11,000 people are evacuated in San Bernardino County, California, United States, as the Line Fire quadruples in size to over 27 sq mi (17,000 acres).  (BBC News) 

Nine people, including El Salvador‘s National Civil Police chief Mauricio Arriaza Chicas and a fraud suspect, are killed during a helicopter crash while being en route to San Salvador. The crash is considered to be intentional. All flags on government buildings will be flown half-mast for three days. (BBC) 

Incumbent President of Algeria Abdelmadjid Tebboune is re-elected for his second term with 95% of the vote. (Al Jazeera) 

Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo González flees Venezuela to seek political asylum in Spain. The Spanish government says that González left Venezuela on a Spanish Air Force plane at his own request. (BBC News) 

In tennis, Jannik Sinner defeats Taylor Fritz in the final of the US Open Men’s singles tournament to win his first US Open title ever and his second Grand Slam title overall. Sinner is also the first Italian man to ever win the US Open. (CNN) 

artificial stupid

The European Union, the United States, the United Kingdom and seven other countries sign the first international legally binding treaty on the use of artificial intelligence systems. (DW) (Council of Europe) 

China opens the world’s largest indoor skiing resort in Pudong, Shanghai, with a 90,000 square metres (970,000 sq ft) skiing area and a total campus area of 350,000 square metres (3,800,000 sq ft). (DW) 

Kingdom of Jesus Christ pastor Apollo Quiboloy, who is charged for sex trafficking, is arrested amidst a standoff between the police and church members at the religious organization’s headquarters in Davao City, Philippines. (Al Jazeera) 

Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo González flees Venezuela to seek political asylum in Spain. The Spanish government says González departed Venezuela on a Spanish Air Force plane at his own request. (BBC News) 

Three Israeli border guards are killed in a mass shooting at the Allenby Bridge, on the Israel–Jordan border. (Reuters) 

The World Health Organization reports that the death toll from the ongoing civil war in Sudan has increased to more than 20,000 people. (AP) 

The Israeli military claims Hezbollah militants are killed in airstrikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon. (Al Jazeera) 

Over 5,000 people are evacuated in San Bernardino County, California, United States, as the Line Fire quadruples in size. (The New York Times) 

Forty-eight people and 50 cattle are killed after an explosion caused by a collision between a fuel tanker and a truck in Agaie, Nigeria. (AP) 

In Yemen, a bus moving from Aden to Taiz crashes on a highway, killing 14 people and wounding another. (AP) 

A 15-year-old Hindu boy is killed by a Muslim mob inside a police station in Khulna, Bangladesh, after allegedly insulting the Islamic prophet Muhammad on Facebook. (The Hindustan Times) 

The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs announces the end of its international adoption program after suspending the program during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Al Jazeera) 

New York Supreme Court justice Juan Merchan postpones former U.S. President Donald Trump’s sentencing in his criminal case until after Election Day on November 5. (Reuters) 

Three Lebanese paramedics are killed and two others are wounded in an Israeli airstrike while they were firefighting in Faroun with two Amal militants killed in southern Lebanon. Hezbollah launches over 100 missiles and shelling at IDF targets in Mount NeriaBiranitHadab Yaroun and Raheb in retaliation. (VOA) 

Four people are killed and at least 78 people are injured by Typhoon Yagi in Hải Dương and Quảng Ninh province, Vietnam, as it makes landfall in Hanoi. (BBC News) 

Thirteen people are killed and 44 more injured after a collision between a tank truck and a bus between Bouaké and Korhogo, in Ivory Coast. (AP) 

The Boeing Crew Flight Test capsule returns uncrewed to Earth, after three months docked at the International Space Station(CNN) 

Several people are injured in a mass shooting near Interstate 75 in Laurel County, Kentucky, United States. (CNN) 

Five inmates escape from a high-security prison near Lisbon, Portugal. (Reuters) 

Nationwide protests against Emmanuel Macron’s appointment of Michel Barnier as the new French Prime Minister break out in 130 cities and towns across France, with left-wing coalition New Popular Front claiming that Macron stole the election. (Reuters) 

Luis Suárez makes his final appearance for Uruguay, playing Paraguay in a Conmebol World Cup qualifier. (ESPN) 

In tennis, Aryna Sabalenka defeats Jessica Pegula in the final of the US Open Women’s singles tournament to win her first US Open title ever and her second Grand Slam title this year. (Reuters) 

The End Sunday 

Russian artillery targets Kostiantynivka, Donetsk Oblast, killing three civilians and wounding three others. (Reuters) 

Ethnic violence between the Meitei and Kuki tribes kills five people in Manipur, India. The Government of Manipur orders all schools in the state to remain shut in response. (Al Jazeera) 

Venezuelan security forces surround the Argentine embassy in Caracas after several opposition members take refuge inside. Electricity is reportedly cut to the embassy, with Vente Venezuela describing the situation as a siege. (CNN) 

Hachette v. Internet Archive The Internet Archive loses its court appeal in a copyright lawsuit over its digital library of ebooks and documents that major publication companies have worked to shut down over claims of lost revenue. (Jurist) (The New York Times) 

The United Kingdom’s Competition and Markets Authority announces an investigation into Ticketmaster over the dynamic pricing of Oasis Live ’25 Tour tickets. (AP) 

Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi, a Turkish American woman, is shot dead by Israeli troops during an anti-Israeli settlement protest in the West Bank. (AP) 

Israeli settlers and soldiers storm the Palestinian village of Qaryut, beating and opening fire against the residents, killing a 13-year-old girl and wounding two men. (Palestine News Network) 

Eighteen students are killed and 27 others are injured in a fire at a boarding school in Nyeri, Kenya. (Al Jazeera) 

Sheffield Crown Court in South Yorkshire, UK, sentences Thomas Birley, a British man who set fire to a hotel that housed asylum seekers in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, to nine years in prison for arson with the intent to endanger life, the longest sentence related to the riots so far. (Al Jazeera) 

Polish prosecutors charge three Belarusian citizens for diverting Ryanair Flight 4978 under a fabricated bomb threat to arrest political activist Roman Protasevich and his girlfriend Sofia Sapega(DW) 

Brazilian human rights minister Silvio Almeida is fired from his cabinet position following several accusations of sexual harassment towards women, including another cabinet minister. (Reuters) 

In Canada, New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh announces that he has terminated the confidence and supply agreement his party made with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau‘s Liberal government in 2022. (CBC News) 

Piper PA-46 aircraft crashes into a cornfield after going into a nosedive in Anderson, Indiana, United States, killing all four occupants on board. (FOX59) 

At least 27 Palestinians are killed by Israeli airstrikes in cities across the Gaza Strip, including in the Nuseirat refugee camp. (Reuters) 

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation arrests the father of Colt Gray, the perpetrator of yesterday’s mass school shooting in Barrow County, Georgia, United States, on charges of second-degree murder and involuntary manslaughter for allowing his son to possess a gun. (AP) 

Four people are killed and nine others are injured in a mass school shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder, Georgia, United States. (CNN) 

Michel Barnier is named the prime minister of France, two months after the July legislative elections. (The Washington Post) 

Hunter Biden pleads guilty to federal tax evasion shortly before his trial was expected to begin in California, United States. (NBC News) 

Twenty percent of the Brasília National Forest in Brazil is destroyed by a wildfire that investigators suspect was started deliberately. (Reuters) 

American rock band Linkin Park emerges from a seven-year hiatus with the announcement of an upcoming studio album, a worldwide concert tour, and introduces Emily Armstrong as the band’s new co-vocalist. The band went on hiatus in 2017 following the death of then-lead vocalist Chester Bennington(Rolling Stone) 

The Democratic Republic of the Congo receives its first batch of Bavarian Nordic mpox vaccines donated by the European Union and is expected to receive the second batch of vaccines on September 7. (Al Jazeera) 

The United States announces that it has secured the release of 135 political prisoners in Nicaragua, who were jailed by the government of President Daniel Ortega(Al Jazeera) 

An armed Austrian is killed in a shootout with police in Munich, Germany, near the Munich Documentation Centre for the History of National Socialism and the Israeli Consulate. (TIME) 

Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro announces that Venezuela will celebrate an early Christmas on 1 October. (NBC News) 

San Marino, the lowest-ranked FIFA-affiliated national team, defeats Liechtenstein 1–0 in Serravalle, San Marino, to win the team’s first competitive victory in their 36-year history. (ESPN) 

Ugandan marathoner Rebecca Cheptegei dies after sustaining burns from a petrol attack by her partner almost a month after her participation in the women’s marathon at the 2024 Summer Olympics. (BBC) 

SpaceX removes its employees from Brazil amid ongoing legal issues between CEO Elon Musk and the Brazilian Supreme Court over Musk’s social media company X. (The Wall Street Journal) 

Jonathan Meijer files a lawsuit against Netflix for allegedly portraying him negatively for his serial sperm donation in its documentary series The Man With 1,000 Kids(DW) 

The New Zealand Māori Council selects Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō as the new Queen following the death of her father King Tūheitia in August. (DW) 

At least seven people are killed and 53 others are injured when Russian drones and missiles hit buildings in Lviv, Ukraine. (Reuters) 

A civilian is killed and seven others are injured in Israeli airstrikes and shelling in southern Lebanon. (Al Jazeera) 

Seven people are rescued and at least 21 others remain missing after a boat carrying Syrian migrants from Libya capsizes off the coast of Lampedusa in the Pelagie Islands of Italy. (Al Jazeera) 

The second phase of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry concludes, with the report noting “systematic dishonesty” of manufacturers and the failures of the government leading up to the fire. (BBC News) 

Ukrainian foreign affairs minister Dmytro Kuleba resigns from office amid a cabinet reshuffle. (Left Bank)