News Watch

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

For details, call the State Department at 202/647-5225 or...

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In the worst violence Thailand has seen in nearly 20 years, 25 people were killed and more than 800 wounded on April 10 in a failed attempt by government troops to dislodge several thousand “red shirt” (UDD) opposition members who, in the ongoing political protests, had occupied part of the financial district in Bangkok.

During a demonstration in the financial district on April 22, five explosions went off on a walkway of the elevated train system and near the Dusit Thani hotel on...

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A huge plume of ash thrown out of Eyjafjallajökull Volcano in Iceland on April 14 drifted east and caused airlines all over Europe to ground planes. Cargo shipments piled up in warehouses, and stranded travelers scrambled to find hotel rooms and make alternate arrangements. Flights resumed on April 21.

The immediate loss to airlines was more than $2 billion. In addition, airlines based in European Union countries must, by law, reimburse passengers not only for the difference in...

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More than 2,000 people died in China’s Qinghai province when a magnitude-6.9 earthquake hit on April 14. More than 12,000 people were injured and tens of thousands were without shelter in the bitter cold of the high mountains.

In western-central China, the Qinghai region is adjacent to Tibet and the population is primarily ethnically Tibetan. Rescue efforts were hampered by the limited access and altitudes of over 14,000 feet.

Torrential rains in Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro region caused flooding and mudslides that killed at least 230 people, April 5-7. In the city of Niteroi, across the bay from Rio, 60 were killed in a single mudslide when the Morro Bumba slum, built on a giant, unstable garbage dump, was swept down the mountain. 

Throughout the region, about 14,000 people were displaced by the flooding. Thousands more may be evicted from unsafe houses.

Bihar and West Bengal, states in northeastern India, were ravaged by a tornado with winds of 75 mph on April 13 that killed 137 people, left more than a million homeless and flattened tens of thousands of homes. More than 200,000 homes were damaged, many the mud-and-thatch homes of farmers.

The corn crop was destroyed and stocks of rice seed were ruined. Thousands of dead livestock have fouled the waters, causing concerns of disease.

Violent antigovernment demonstrations in the Kyrgyz Republic on April 7 resulted in 85 people dead and hundreds wounded when police opened fire on protesters outside the presidential offices in Bishkek.

President Bakiyev fled and later resigned, and an opposition government took power. The interim government announced plans to hold a referendum in July on a new constitution that would limit centralized power. The situation remains unstable.

The Department of State continues to warn of the risks of traveling to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Congo-Kinshasa).

Both government soldiers and rebel fighters — located especially in North Kivu, South Kivu, Orientale and Bas-Congo provinces as well as in the northern part of Katanga province — are known to pillage, steal vehicles, kidnap, rape and kill.

In two separate incidents in early April 2010, one in Equateur province in the western DRC and one in South Kivu...

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