
Indonesian soldiers perform battle cry during Bastille Day rehearsal in Paris
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Indonesian soldiers perform battle cry during Bastille Day rehearsal in Paris
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CNA
5 days ago
- CNA
NDP 2025: Mobile Column returns; display takes place over land, air and water
Spectators at the National Day Parade (NDP) were treated to a display of power and might, as some of Singapore's most advanced military and emergency response assets returned to the Padang. It was a first at the historic venue since 2019. The Mobile Column also made NDP history by taking place not just on the ground, but in the air and in the sea as well. Nasyrah Rohim with more.


CNA
06-08-2025
- CNA
Bird strike damages nose of Iberia plane, forces emergency landing
Iberia flight IB579 was forced to make an emergency landing after the plane was hit by a bird strike shortly after taking off from Madrid en route to Paris on Sunday (Aug 3). The Spanish carrier told aviation outlet AeroTime that the Airbus A321XLR struck a "large bird on the front section of the aircraft and on one of its engines" just minutes after departure. "In accordance with the established safety protocols for such situations, the captain requested authorisation to return to the departure airport, where the aircraft landed safely. The entire flight crew, including pilots and cabin crew, acted with the utmost professionalism to manage the situation and care for the passengers," the airline said. Viral footage showed oxygen masks deployed, with one passenger breathing heavily through theirs as a baby cried in the background. Photos circulating on social media also revealed substantial damage to the aircraft's nose. An incident report on the Aviation Safety Network noted that one of the plane's engines and the nose radome had suffered damage from the bird strike, but the flight landed safely back at Adolfo Suarez Madrid–Barajas Airport. Bird strikes are a relatively common issue in aviation but rarely result in serious accidents. In 2024, the United States recorded an average of 54 wildlife strikes per day, according to the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), with most involving birds. About 90 per cent of bird strikes occur near airports - during takeoff, landing, or low-altitude flight - according to the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). Last month, South Korean investigators provided an update on the December 2024 Jeju Air crash, stating that the plane, which crashed during an emergency landing after a bird strike, could have continued flying on the damaged engine that remained operational after the pilots shut down the other one. The Boeing 737-800 instead belly-landed at Muan airport without its landing gear down, overshot the runway and erupted into a fireball after slamming into an embankment, killing all but two of the 181 people on board. The most famous bird strike incident occurred in 2009, when a US Airways flight made an emergency landing on the Hudson River in New York after striking a flock of geese. All 155 passengers and crew on board survived. View this post on Instagram A post shared by CNA (@channelnewsasia)


CNA
05-08-2025
- CNA
Danish zoo in hot water over public call for animals as food
COPENHAGEN: Any chickens or rabbits to spare? Denmark's Aalborg Zoo is seeking animals to feed to its predators - after they have been euthanised - a plea that has sparked a public backlash. "We are looking for small livestock, not pets," Anette Sofie Warncke Nutzhorn, one of the zoo's managers, told AFP on Tuesday (Aug 5). "It can be for instance a chicken that doesn't lay eggs anymore." "Predators usually catch prey of this size, so it's like the natural course," she added. The zoo has found itself in hot water since sending out the appeal in social media. "If you have an animal that, for various reasons, has to go, you are welcome to donate it to us," it wrote last week. The zoo specified that it was looking in particular for chickens, rabbits, guinea pigs and horses. "The animals are carefully put down by qualified staff and then used as food," it said. Only healthy animals are accepted by the zoo, which has been accepting donated animals for several years. "It is a very common practice, we were just sending a friendly reminder," Warncke Nutzhorn said. The zoo later turned off the comments section on the social media post in response to what it called "hateful" postings. Practices at Danish zoos, particularly the euthanasia of healthy animals to limit the risk of inbreeding, have in the past triggered fierce international criticism. In 2014, a giraffe calf named Marius was put down at the Copenhagen Zoo and staff later performed an autopsy on the carcass in front of visitors, before feeding it to the lions.