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Twenty people were injured after Iran launched missiles at Dimona, in southern Israel. According to a report by Al Jazeera, footage released by Israeli media captured the moment a missile struck the city, with the sound of a loud explosion audible in the video. Israeli media outlets report that the 20 injured individuals include a

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WASHINGTON – Robert Mueller, the no-nonsense former FBI chief who documented Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. election and its contacts with Donald Trump’s campaign but opted not to bring criminal charges against a sitting president, has died at age 81, multiple news outlets reported on Saturday. His death was reported by MS NOW and

NICOSIA – Britain will not be using its bases in Cyprus for any ​offensive action in the Iran crisis, ‌the Cypriot government spokesperson said on Saturday, citing a phone call between British Prime ​Minister Keir Starmer and Cypriot President ​Nikos Christodoulides. “The British Prime Minister reiterated … ⁠that the security of the Republic ​of Cyprus

As the Oscars draw near, Holly Hunter is reflecting on her Academy Award-winning performance in the 1993 classic, The Piano. Speaking to PEOPLE on March 10 at the Star Trek: Starfleet Academy FYC event, the actress revisited her role as the mute pianist, Ada McGrath. “Oh, I loved having the experience with my cast—that Jane

The World Health Organization said on Sunday it had released $2 million from its Contingency ​Fund for Emergencies (CFE) to support the ‌health response in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria amidst the ongoing crisis in the Middle East. The conflict has ​triggered a large-scale population movement, the WHO ​said last week, estimating that more than 100,000

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu posted a video of himself getting a cup of coffee and chatting with his aide ​on Sunday, after rumours that he was dead or injured ‌were aired by Iranian state media and spread online in Iran. In the video, taken at a cafe in Jerusalem’s outskirts and posted on Netanyahu’s

Japan plans ​to start releasing oil from its stockpiles on Monday to soften the shock from the ‌U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, a stark reminder of the oil crisis half a century ago that prompted Tokyo to create reserves. As gasoline prices across Japan started to rise with the war disrupting supplies from the Gulf’s Strait

When Saudi Aramco told its oil buyers in a letter this week that it had no clear idea which port ​it would use for April exports, it laid bare a new reality: Iran, not the United States, holds the key to reopening the global energy market. The letter, sent ‌to Saudi oil buyers around the

U.S. President Donald Trump ‌on Saturday said four of five tanker planes targeted in an attack on a ​base in Saudi Arabia suffered “virtually no ​damage.” “Four of the five had ⁠virtually no damage, and ​are already back in service. One ​had slightly more damage, but will be in the air shortly,” ​Trump wrote in