logo
Rockfall at Indonesian limestone quarry kills eight

Rockfall at Indonesian limestone quarry kills eight

Yahoo5 days ago

At least eight people were killed and a dozen injured Friday in a rockfall at a limestone quarry on Indonesia's Java island, police said.
The company overseeing the mine was operating legally but safety standards were lacking, according to West Java governor Dedi Mulyadi, who said he has ordered its closure following the accident.
Workers and heavy equipment were buried when rocks suddenly crumbled at the mining site in the city of Cirebon in West Java province at around 09:30 am local time (0230 GMT).
"We are now focusing on evacuating victims. Until now, eight people have been found dead, and 12 others were injured and have been taken to hospitals," local police chief, Sumarni, who like many Indonesians has one name told AFP.
Rescuers were still scouring the site to find more victims who might be trapped under the debris, deploying excavators for the search effort.
Friday's incident was the second time the quarry collapsed. Parts of the mine collapsed in February but there were no casualties reported.
"I decided to shut down the pit permanently, not just this pit but also other pits nearby," Dedi told Metro TV.
Mining accidents are common across the mineral-rich Southeast Asian archipelago, especially in unlicensed sites where safety protocols are often ignored.
In 2023, eight workers died after being trapped in an illegal gold mine in Central Java.
In July last year at least 23 people died and 35 others were missing when a landslide hit a remote village near an illegal gold mine on the central island of Sulawesi.
str-dsa/jfx/tc

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iconic 19th century time ball back on Edinburgh's Calton Hill
Iconic 19th century time ball back on Edinburgh's Calton Hill

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Iconic 19th century time ball back on Edinburgh's Calton Hill

A large wood and metal ball used by ships' crews as a visual aid to set their clocks by has been reinstalled at the top of Edinburgh's Nelson Monument following restoration work. The device, which is called a time ball and is more than 170 years old, is traditionally dropped down a pole to signal that the time is 13:00. The firing of the one o'clock gun at Edinburgh Castle was later added to mark the time on foggy days when it was harder see the Calton Hill monument from Leith docks. The 19th Century time ball, restored at a cost of £500,000, is to be dropped again daily from next month. Karl Chapman, City of Edinburgh Council's head of heritage, culture, museums and galleries, said the time ball was once cutting edge technology. He said it allowed sailors to set their clocks to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), an international standard for time from 1884 to 1972, and used as an aid to ships' navigation systems. Mr Chapman said: ''Now we have GPS and phones but back in the day this was modern technology." ''People are still fascinated by this today which is why it's important we maintain the time ball and the Nelson Monument - it's a fascinating piece of history and mechanism.'' The wood and metal time ball was taken down for repair last year. Restorers in the north of England found the zinc coating had failed and the wood beneath was rotten in places. The ball was lifted and lowered manually, the last public timepiece in the UK to be wound by hand. The process is now to be automated. Mark Crangle, a restorer from the Cumbrian Clock Company, said it was great to be involved in such a prominent project. He said: ''It's not very often you get to work on a time ball. "It's quite unique and it has its own history so it's quite nice, because it's not worked for quite a few years now. "It's right in the centre of Edinburgh and everybody looks up and sees it so it's nice to bring that back alive again.'' Margaret Graham, City of Edinburgh Council's culture and communities convener, said: ''Half a million pounds sounds like a lot of money but in the scheme of things, in our heritage buildings, it's not a lot. "It's a lot of specialist work that needs to be done.'' She added: ''The Calton Hill itself gets a million visitors every year and it's important that we keep our heritage buildings in good repair, and also residents are very proud of their heritage so it's important from that perspective as well.'' Nelson monument to reopen for first time since Covid

Satellite images show row of destroyed Russian bombers after Ukrainian attack
Satellite images show row of destroyed Russian bombers after Ukrainian attack

New York Post

time5 hours ago

  • New York Post

Satellite images show row of destroyed Russian bombers after Ukrainian attack

New satellite images show the extent of the destruction against one fleet of Russian bombers during Ukraine's 'Operation Spider Web' attack on the Kremlin's air bases over the weekend. The images, shared by open source analysts, show nothing but dust and debris where more than a dozen of Russia's nuclear-capable bombers once stood on the runway at the Belaya airfield, one of at least four military bases struck by 117 Ukrainian drones on Sunday. John Ford, a research associate at the California-based James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, said the images supplied by Capella Space, a satellite company, confirm Ukraine's achievement in destroying the fleet based in the Irkutsk region. Advertisement 5 Satellite images of the Belaya airfield in Irkutsk region shows the military base before and after the Ukrainian attack on Russia's bombers. via REUTERS 5 Several of the heavy bombers at the airbase were blown to smithereens. via REUTERS The SAR images showed the remnants of at least two Tu-22 Backfires — the same type of supersonic aircraft that have been used to bombard Ukraine. At least four strategic heavy Tu-95 bombers were also identified among the aircraft destroyed at the Belaya airfield. Advertisement 'It is clear that the attack on this airbase was very successful,' Brady Africk, an open source intelligence analyst, told Reuters after studying the images. 'The aircraft targeted in the attack were a mix of Tu-22 and Tu-95 bombers, both of which Russia has used to launch strikes against Ukraine.' 5 Similar before and after satellite images were released of the Ivanovo air base. 2025 Planet Labs PBC/AFP via Getty Images Advertisement 5 Kyiv touted the assault that saw 41 of Moscow's nuclear-capable bombers hit on Sunday. SECURITY SERVICE OF UKRAINE/AFP via Getty Images Africk noted that the Belaya airfield is littered with flat decoy aircraft, none of which appeared to fool the Ukrainian drones deployed at the military base. Similar satellite images were released of the attack on the Ivanovo air base, located 100 miles northeast of Moscow. In total, Operation Spider Web hit 41 warplanes in at least 4 different airbases, according to Ukraine's intelligence agency SBU, with pro-Moscow military bloggers describing the attack as 'Russia's Pearl Harbor.' Advertisement 5 Ukrainian officials dubbed the operation 'absolutely brilliant,' dealing a major blow to the bombers Moscow has been using to drop missiles over the border. SECURITY SERVICE OF UKRAINE/AFP via Getty Images Some 34% of Russia's Tu-95 bomber fleet, equipped to carry nuclear payloads, were reportedly wiped out, the SBU added. Andriy Kovalenko, an official on Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, said that at least 13 of the targets were fully destroyed, with the damage estimated to have cost Russia $7 billion in losses. The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said the daring attack will likely force Moscow to reconfigure its air defenses following the humiliating blow. 'The… operation will force Russian officials to consider redistributing Russia's air defense systems to cover a much wider range of territory and possibly deploying mobile air defense groups that can more quickly react to possible similar Ukrainian drone strikes in the future,' the ISW said. With Post wires

The challenges facing South Korea's new leader Lee
The challenges facing South Korea's new leader Lee

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The challenges facing South Korea's new leader Lee

South Korea's incoming president Lee Jae-myung assumes office with a bulging in-tray, from a deepening economic slump and global trade war to mounting concerns over military ties between Pyongyang and Moscow. He will also have to navigate a mounting superpower standoff between the United States, South Korea's traditional security guarantor, and China, its largest trade partner. AFP takes a look at the new president's substantial to-do list: - Trade tensions - Chief among Lee's priorities will be steering South Korea's export-dependent economy -- Asia's fourth largest -- through economic turmoil sparked by US President Donald Trump and tariffs he has imposed on trading partners. In the first quarter of the year, South Korea's economy grew less than expected as the export giant and chip powerhouse reeled from global economic tensions and chaos at home sparked by then-president Yoon Suk Yeol's brief imposition of martial law in December. But Lee is seen by his supporters as a pragmatic and effective negotiator, with over a decade of experience as a city mayor and provincial governor. On the campaign trail, Lee said Seoul needs to "start negotiations on tariffs immediately" with the Trump administration, promising to put "national interest first." But he has stressed "there's no need for us to rush into a deal." He also said it was crucial to diversify South Korea's export markets and products. - Nefarious neighbour - Lee's Democratic Party has taken a relatively dovish approach to the nuclear-armed North in the past, with former president Moon Jae-in holding several historic summits with Pyongyang's leader Kim Jong Un -- and Trump. But Moon's efforts to normalise ties failed and Pyongyang has since bolstered relations with Russia, sent at least 14,000 troops to help Moscow's war in Ukraine, and declared the South its enemy state. Lee has hinted that he will take a different approach compared to hawkish Yoon, under whom inter-Korean ties fell to their worst point in years. On the campaign trail, Lee accused Yoon of deliberately provoking the North to justify his martial law bid -- prompting backlash from conservatives. Under Yoon, Pyongyang blew up roads and railways connecting it to the South and erected what looked like walls near the border. "Wasn't it out of fear that the South might push up with tanks that North Korea built those tank barriers?" Lee said. - Superpower standoff - Lee's tenure begins as Seoul finds itself in the middle of a growing superpower standoff between the US, its traditional security guarantor, and China, its largest trade partner. US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth in May warned Beijing was "credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific". He called on US allies in Asia such as Seoul to boost their defences in the face of mounting threats. Lee, however, has suggested Seoul should pursue friendlier ties with Beijing, a long-time backer of Pyongyang. He drew backlash last year by saying he would say "xie xie" -- thank you in Chinese -- to both China and the self-ruled island of Taiwan in the event of a conflict involving the two. When asked during the campaign by TIME magazine whether he would come to Taiwan's aid if it were attacked by Beijing, Lee said: "I will think about that answer when aliens are about to invade the earth." - Polarised politics - Lee must also lead a nation still reeling from the political turmoil triggered by Yoon's attempted martial law in December, and deeply divided. If the new administration too aggressively goes after the conservatives, it will "only galvanise the far-rightists, ultimately undermining efforts to reduce political polarisation," Gi-Wook Shin, a sociology professor at Stanford University, told AFP. During the campaign, Lee said he would push to amend the constitution to make it harder to impose martial law. He also said it was necessary to launch a special investigation to identify those who may have been complicit with Yoon's bid to end civilian rule. - Birth rate bottomed-out - Lee's administration will also have to deal with one of the world's lowest birth rates, a soaring cost of living and growing inequality. During the campaign, Lee said the younger generation's "sense of hopelessness" and deepening inequality was the main cause of South Korea's declining fertility rate. Many young Koreans are not confident that "their children's lives will be any better than their own". Lee has pledged to create a shorter work week, extend the retirement age, expand state-led care services for children, the disabled and the elderly, offer more housing options and increased support for small businesses and young Koreans, among others. cdl/oho/ceb/st

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store