Delhi Car Blast Near Red Fort Kills 10, Injures 30: Investigation Underway at UNESCO Heritage Site
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🇫🇷 French President Nicolas Sarkozy Released from Prison After 20 Days in Libya Campaign Finance Case
Former French President Nicolas Sarkozy walked free from La Santé prison on Monday after a Paris appeals court granted his release under judicial supervision, ending a 20-day incarceration that marked an unprecedented moment in French political history. The 70-year-old former head of state had been serving a five-year sentence for criminal conspiracy related to allegations that his 2007 presidential campaign was illegally financed with funds from Libya’s former dictator Moammar Gadhafi. While maintaining his innocence throughout the proceedings, Sarkozy now faces strict conditions including a ban on leaving French territory and prohibited contact with co-defendants, witnesses, and notably, current Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin.
The release comes as Sarkozy prepares for an appeal trial expected in spring 2026, with the former president describing his brief imprisonment as “a nightmare” during a video conference hearing from prison. His case represents a watershed moment in French judicial history, as he became the first former French president in modern times to be imprisoned. However, his legal troubles extend beyond the Libya case, with separate proceedings including a November 26 ruling on illegal financing of his failed 2012 reelection campaign and an ongoing investigation into alleged witness tampering, compounding the political and legal challenges facing one of France’s most controversial contemporary leaders.
🇮🇳Delhi Car Blast Near Red Fort Kills 10, Injures 30: Investigation Underway at UNESCO Heritage Site
A devastating car explosion near Delhi’s historic Red Fort monument killed at least 10 people and injured more than 30 others Monday evening, prompting nationwide security alerts across India. The blast occurred around 6:42 p.m. local time when a slow-moving vehicle came to a stop near a red light at the Red Fort Metro Station, subsequently exploding and setting at least six vehicles and three autorickshaws ablaze. While the cause remains under investigation, authorities have placed airports, railway stations, government buildings, and heritage sites on high alert, with the US embassy advising Americans to avoid the area and large crowds.
The explosion at the UNESCO World Heritage site—visited by millions annually—has drawn immediate response from India’s highest officials, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah, who visited the blast site and hospitalized victims. Delhi Police Commissioner Satish Golcha confirmed authorities are “investigating the explosion from every angle,” examining surveillance footage and gathering forensic evidence. Dr. Manish Kumar Jha from Lok Nayak Hospital warned that many of the injured are in critical condition, stating “many are not in a position of recovering,” underscoring the severity of this attack on one of India’s most recognizable landmarks in a densely populated area during evening rush hour.
🇺🇸 Trump Threatens $1 Billion Lawsuit Against BBC Over Panorama Documentary Edit of January 6 Speech
President Donald Trump has threatened the BBC with a $1 billion lawsuit over alleged defamation following a Panorama documentary that edited his January 6, 2021 speech in a manner critics say misled viewers. Trump’s legal team gave the BBC until November 14 to issue a “full and fair retraction” or face legal proceedings, claiming the broadcaster spliced two sections of his speech—originally 50 minutes apart—to make it appear he was explicitly urging supporters to attack the US Capitol. The controversy has triggered seismic changes at the BBC, with Director General Tim Davie and News CEO Deborah Turness resigning Sunday following mounting pressure over editorial standards, though both maintain the corporation is not “institutionally biased.”
The legal threat stems from a leaked internal BBC memo by former adviser Michael Prescott that accused the broadcaster of anti-Trump bias, problematic Gaza coverage, and one-sided transgender reporting. BBC Chair Samir Shah acknowledged an “error of judgement” was made with the documentary edit, which stitched together Trump saying “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol” with a later statement “And we fight. We fight like hell,” creating what Shah admitted gave the impression of a “direct call for action.” The controversy adds to Trump’s history of media litigation, following recent settlements with CBS News for $16 million over alleged deceptive editing, and raises critical questions about editorial independence, journalistic standards, and political pressure on public broadcasters in an increasingly polarized media environment.
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🇨🇦 Canada Loses Measles Elimination Status After 30 Years as 5,000+ Cases End Disease-Free Streak
Canada has lost its measles elimination status after nearly three decades following a year-long outbreak that has infected more than 5,000 people across nine provinces and one territory, the Pan American Health Organization announced Monday. The designation loss—reversible but significant—also results in the entire Americas region losing its measles-free status, though individual countries like the United States retain their elimination standing for now. Health experts describe the development as “a wake-up call” highlighting dangerous lapses in vaccination coverage, which has fallen below the critical 95% threshold needed for community herd immunity that protects vulnerable populations unable to receive the vaccine.
The outbreak, concentrated primarily in under-vaccinated communities, represents what infectious disease specialists call “a step backward and a return to more primitive times” amid rising vaccine skepticism following the COVID-19 pandemic. To regain elimination status, Canada must halt virus transmission and remain free of locally transmitted cases for 12 consecutive months while maintaining robust surveillance systems. The situation mirrors broader challenges facing wealthy nations including the United States, Mexico, and several European countries experiencing declining measles vaccination rates and active outbreaks. With measles being 97% preventable after two vaccine doses, the resurgence signals potential wider threats from other vaccine-preventable diseases in populations increasingly mistrustful of immunization programs.
🇬🇧UK Deploys Anti-Drone Troops to Belgium as Mystery Aircraft Shut Down Airports Across Europe
Britain is deploying anti-drone equipment and Royal Air Force specialists to Belgium following a spate of mysterious drone sightings that have forced the closure of Brussels’ main international airport and Europe’s largest cargo airport near Liege. The drone incursions—which include flights near a Belgian military base storing U.S. nuclear weapons—represent the latest escalation in what NATO allies are calling Russian “hybrid warfare,” with similar airspace violations reported across Germany, Denmark, Lithuania, Estonia, and other European nations in recent months. While Belgium has not officially accused any nation of operating the drones, Belgian Defense Minister Theo Francken described the incidents as “a spying operation” beyond amateur capabilities.
The coordinated response from UK military leadership, including Air Chief Marshal Richard Knighton’s deployment authorization, underscores NATO’s growing concern about deliberate provocations designed to test alliance resolve and destabilize critical infrastructure. Lithuania has been most explicit in attributing the drone campaign to Russia and Belarus, with Foreign Minister Kestutis Budrys calling the airspace incursions “calculated provocations designed to destabilize, distract and test NATO’s resolve.” The wave of incidents coincides with documented Russian military aircraft violations of Lithuanian and Estonian airspace, creating a pattern that security experts characterize as systematic hybrid warfare tactics aimed at NATO members supporting Ukraine while avoiding direct military confrontation that would trigger Article 5 collective defense obligations.
Check this Out
Buy online, pickup in store: 4 agile retail trends redefining the customer experience
Retail is one of the most dynamic segments, especially when it comes to adopting and integrating new technologies and business models. It’s the only way to exist and thrive in such a competitive world.
One of the most interesting changes in recent years is the increasing popularity of the “Buy Online, Pickup In Store” (BOPIS) model. Also known as click-and-collect, this model blurs the lines between physical and online retail by allowing customers to purchase online and collect their orders in person.
Given that the last-mile delivery industry is still on an upward growth trajectory, one might wonder why click-and-collect is also on the rise.
Retail strategy agency The Barcode Group forecasts that the buy online, pickup in store model is here to stay, suggesting that every company with physical stores should consider using it in combination with various agile retail trends to upgrade the customer experience and improve foot traffic in both physical and online locations.
Watch This
In November 2025, Johannesburg will host a G20 summit for the leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies. This will be the first time that a G20 meeting will be held on African soil.
The world’s attention will be on Johannesburg, but is the city ready?
Africa Eye reporter Ayanda Charlie investigates the inner city’s abandoned and derelict buildings, where many people live in conditions unfit for human habitation. After decades of decay and neglect, many of these buildings lack electricity, water or basic sanitation with open sewers a common sight.
Worse still, some buildings are hijacked by criminals who take control and collect rent for themselves, turning them into havens for illicit activity,.
The BBC has been able to identify the location of 102 of these abandoned and derelict buildings, but some reports say there are up to 700, in an area of only a few square miles.
South Africa’s President, Cyril Ramaphosa, has spoken of the need to “turn around those abandoned buildings and take Johannesburg back to its glory days” but the scale of the challenge is enormous, leading many people to think his words are nothing more than a hollow appeal.
Pick of the Day
The future of sustainable travel
This month, more than 80 million Americans will travel for Thanksgiving—a record.
CBS reports that flight bookings are up 2% compared with 2024, when an estimated 79.9 million travelers journeyed 50 miles or more from home.
The vast majority—71.74%—traveled by car last year. While owning and driving cars will continue to be a fundamental mode of transport for the foreseeable future, Thanksgiving traffic might look much more sustainable in the not-too-distant future, CANOPY reports.
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