World News
Kiev strives to restore power to millions of Ukrainians in the dark
Reading Time: 2 minutes
Sylvie Claire / November 25, 2022
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
In Kiev, where temperatures are close to 0°C, 60% of residents are still affected by power cuts, according to the city hall. Three nuclear power plants under Kiev’s control were able to be reconnected to the grid yesterday. “We will gradually give power for 2-3 hours until the amount of electricity entering Kiev is increased” and stabilized, promised the director of the network.
Life in Ukraine is now punctuated by power cuts. In the capital, Kiev, the authorities were working on Friday 25 November to repair the energy infrastructure, damaged by massive Russian strikes. Millions of Ukrainians are without heat and light as winter sets in. Some 15 regions are experiencing problems with water and power supplies. “The situation with electricity remains difficult in almost all regions. However, we are gradually moving away from blackouts and every hour we reconnect electricity for new consumers,” assured President Volodymyr Zelensky.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said Moscow’s new strategy to plunge Ukraine into darkness would not weaken his country’s resolve. “This is a war of strength, of resilience, it’s about who is stronger,” he said, in an interview with Britain’s Financial Times newspaper published Friday.
Russia fired about 70 cruise missiles at the country on Wednesday, 51 of which were shot down, according to Kiev. Ten people were killed and 50 injured, Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin said. In total, “eight energy facilities” were hit, he said.
The Kremlin announced Thursday that it had distributed Russian passports to more than 80,000 residents of four annexed Ukrainian territories, making them “citizens of the Russian Federation. »
Continue Reading
World News
At least 25 dead in a bus accident in Peru

Reading Time: < 1 minutes
Sylvie Claire / September 23, 2023
At least 25 people, including two children, died when a bus crashed into a ravine in the Andean region of Huancavelica, in southern Peru, the authorities announced in a revised death toll on Monday evening.
An initial police report put the death toll at 20, with a further 35 injured. A statement from the Ministry of Health later that morning put the death toll at 24. Finally, at the end of the day on Monday, the death toll stood at “25 dead and 34 wounded”, according to the Ministry of Defense.
The accident occurred on Sunday night, when the bus carrying over 50 passengers from Huanta in Ayacucho to Huancayo in the Junin region ran off the road.
Images show the damaged bus lying on its side near a river below the ravine, debris and personal belongings strewn all around.
Peruvian President Dina Boluarte expressed her “condolences to the families” from New York, where she will be attending the 78th General Assembly of the United Nations. The Peruvian Episcopal Conference, for its part, urged the government to “carry out a serious investigation” to prevent such accidents from happening again.
On August 13, another accident in the same region left 13 people dead and 5 seriously injured.
Road accidents are frequent in Peru, mainly due to speeding and poor road maintenance, especially in mountainous areas.
World News
Japan is the country with the most centenarians, with over 92,000.

Reading Time: < 1 minutes
Sylvie Claire / September 17, 2023
In Japan, the number of people aged 100 has reached a record level: the world’s third-largest economy now has 92,139 people aged 100 or over. That’s 1,613 more than a year ago, reported the Ministry of Health in Tokyo on Friday.
For over half a century, the number of people aged 100 has been rising every year. Due to a low birth rate and almost non-existent immigration, no other industrial state is aging as fast as this East Asian country.
Japan’s population is also shrinking at a record pace. Last year, the number of Japanese fell by 801,000, the biggest drop since comparable data have been recorded. There are now 122.4 million.
When the Japanese Ministry of Health began compiling statistics in 1963, there were 153 centenarians. Twenty-five years later, there were over 10,000. According to the latest figures, around 88% of centenarians are women. Japan has the longest life expectancy in the world. Life expectancy for women is around 87 years, and 81 for men.
World News
Morocco earthquake: death toll now stands at 2,946

Reading Time: < 1 minutes
Steph Deschamps / September 17, 2023
The death toll from the earthquake in Morocco has risen to 2,946, the Moroccan Ministry of the Interior announced on Wednesday evening. A further 5,674 people were injured.
The previous death toll was 2,901. The death toll is expected to rise further. Hopes of finding survivors are now very slim. Rescue workers have not yet been able to reach all the villages affected in the Atlas Mountains.
A magnitude 6.8 earthquake struck the country on Friday night. The epicenter was located some 80 kilometers southwest of Marrakech. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), over 300,000 people in and around Marrakech were affected by the disaster.