Anonymous ID: 71d1d3 Aug. 4, 2021, 2:06 a.m. No.14265938   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6171 >>6265 >>6283 >>6325

Afghanistan: 6 dead after explosion targeting defence minister residence in Kabul

 

At least six people were killed and seven wounded after a car bomb exploded near the residence of the Afghan defence minister, in Kabul, on Tuesday. Three attackers are amongst the six deceased.

 

Local police and Afghan special forces could be seen at the site after the attack.

 

Defence Minister Bismillah Mohammadi and his family were unharmed, although some of his security guards were reportedly wounded. His residence is believed to have been the target.

 

An investigation into who carried out the attack is underway.

Anonymous ID: 71d1d3 Aug. 4, 2021, 3:02 a.m. No.14266067   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6171 >>6265 >>6283 >>6325

>>14266057

>Fire

 

Deadly wildfire races toward Turkish power plant

A roaring blaze raced toward a Turkish thermal power plant Tuesday and farmers herded panicked cattle toward the sea as wildfires that have killed eight people raged on for a seventh day.

 

The nation of 84 million has been transfixed in horror as the most destructive wildfires in generations erase pristine forests and rich farmland across swaths of Turkey's Mediterranean and Aegean coasts.

 

Frightened tourists have been forced to scamper onto boats for safety and dozens of villages have been evacuated as wild winds and soaring heat spread the flames.

 

An AFP team in the Aegean city of Marmaris saw farmers pulling their screaming animals out of burning barns and pulling them to the relative safety of the beach.

 

Officials in neighbouring Greece have blamed two smaller fires on the island of Rhodes and the Peloponnese peninsula on a record heatwave they link to climate change.

 

Temperature in excess of 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Farenheit) across the south of Turkey also set off a record surge in electricity use that caused power outages Monday in cities such as Ankara and Istanbul.

 

Turkey's energy ministry blamed the outages on drought-like conditions that have emptied dams responsible for hydropower production and a "record level" in electricity use in the heat.

 

But the mayor of the Aegean coast city of Milas said he was more worried about what might happen should an uncontrolled fire raising massive plumes of smoke over the region engulf the local thermal power plant.

 

  • 'Whole new dimension' -

 

Milas Mayor Muhammet Tokat posted an increasingly urgent series of messages on Twitter showing the blazes spreading up a hill toward the presumed location of the plant.

 

"This is a critical place," he said in one video showing the blazes.

https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20210803-deadly-wildfire-races-toward-turkish-power-plant