Man due in court after pedestrians struck in UK city of Derby

LONDON (AP) — A man is set to appear in court Wednesday on charges related to an incident in which a car plowed into pedestrians enjoying a night out in the English city of Derby over the weekend, sending seven people to the hospital.

Associated Press A forensic investigator works on the scene in Friar Gate, Derby, Sunday March 29, 2026, where a number of people had been injured, some of them seriously, after being hit by a car in the city centre on Saturday night. (Jacob King/PA via AP) Forensic investigators work on the scene in Friar Gate, Derby, Sunday March 29, 2026, where a number of people had been injured, some of them seriously, after being hit by a car in the city centre on Saturday night. (Jacob King/PA via AP)

Britain Pedestrians Struck

Sandhu Ponnachan, 36, has been charged with six counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent, one count of attempted grievous bodily harm and one count of possession of a bladed article, the Derbyshire Constabulary said.

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Counterterrorism officers assisted local police in the investigation, but Derbyshire police said that is common practice for this type of incident and they were "keeping an open mind" about the incident.

The incident occurred at about 9:30 p.m. Saturday on Friar Gate, a popular night spot in central Derby, a city of about 275,000 people northeast of Birmingham.

The victims, four men and three women, were aged between 36 and 52. Four have been discharged from hospital, Derbyshire police said.

Man due in court after pedestrians struck in UK city of Derby

LONDON (AP) — A man is set to appear in court Wednesday on charges related to an incident in which a car plowed into pede...
Australia PM Albanese to address nation over Iran crisis

By Alasdair Pal

Reuters

SYDNEY, April 1 (Reuters) - Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will deliver a rare address to the nation on Wednesday ‌about the war in the Middle East, with media reporting he ‌will encourage Australians to conserve fuel.

The address will be broadcast simultaneously across major television and ​radio networks at 7 p.m. (0800 GMT). Similar addresses were made by previous prime ministers during the COVID pandemic and the 2008 global financial crisis.

"Australian prime ministers traditionally address the nation in times of great challenge," Housing Minister Clare ‌O'Neil said in an interview ⁠with Sky News on Wednesday when asked about the address.

"The prime minister will be talking about the status of ⁠what's going on in Iran and the plans that the government has to protect the Australian community from the worst."

A spokesperson for Albanese declined to comment ​on ​the contents of the address.

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The month-long conflict ​in the Middle East has ‌spread across the region, killing thousands, disrupting energy supplies and threatening to send the global economy into a tailspin.

Albanese said on Monday the government would halve the excise on petrol and diesel and remove the heavy-road-user charge for three months to help households cope with a surge in costs ‌driven by the war, at a cost ​to the government of around A$2.55 billion ($1.75 billion).

Australia ​has its highest fuel ​stocks in 15 years, but they are still far below ‌International Energy Agency recommendations of 90 ​days.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers ​said on Wednesday small businesses affected by the war would be given easier access to credit.

"We know that the fallout is affecting everyone, ​but we believe that ‌by working together, if everybody does their bit, we can ​get through this difficult period," Chalmers told reporters.

(Reporting by Alasdair Pal ​in Sydney; Editing by Stephen Coates)

Australia PM Albanese to address nation over Iran crisis

By Alasdair Pal SYDNEY, April 1 (Reuters) - Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will deliver a rare addr...
Lebanese displaced by war fill Beirut's streets, upending city life

BEIRUT (AP) — Beirut is bursting.

Associated Press Children displaced from Beirut's southern suburb of Dahiyeh shelter from the rain inside their tents along the coast in Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, March 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Abed Driss, displaced with his family from Beirut's southern suburbs of Dahiyeh, holds up his son Benin, 3 months, next to a tent used as a shelter in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, March 28, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Displaced people who fled Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon sit inside tents used as shelters as a rainbow breaks through the rain in Beirut, Lebanon, Sunday, March 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Zahra, 6, displaced from Beirut's southern suburb of Dahiyeh, sits inside a tent used as a shelter along the beachfront in Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, March 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Displaced women reach out to receive an aid package distributed by a volunteer in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

APTOPIX Lebanon Israel Iran War

It's been a month since Hezbollah fired rockets into Israel after the U.S.-Israeli attack on its patron, Iran, triggeringIsraeli bombardment of Lebanon and a ground invasion. Since then, more than1 million peoplefrom southern and eastern Lebanon and Beirut's southern suburbs have fled. Many have crammed into theever-tighter spacesof the country's capital where the bombs have not yet fallen.

Israel's attacks andevacuation orders— unprecedented in scope, covering what humanitarian agencies estimate to be 15% of this tiny country — have emptied villages in south Lebanon and pushed almost the entire population of thesouthern suburbsinto Beirut, shifting the city's center of gravity, reshaping its geography and stirring fears about its future.

A huge tent encampment has sprouted up in the grassy field between a yacht club and nightlife venue, transforming the Beirut waterfront. Some families squat in storefronts, live in mosques and sleep in the cars they drove here, double- and triple-parking convoys on thoroughfares. Others huddle in tents pulled together from sheets of tarp along the curving coastal corniche or around Horsh Beirut, a park of pine trees on the outskirts of an area of the southern suburbs known as Dahiyeh.

"It's horrid because we feel this tension, that we're not wanted here," said Noor Hussein, who settled at the waterfront in early March after fleeing the first Israeli airstrikes on Dahiyeh. She watched a stream of well-to-do joggers navigate a maze of tents and soiled mattresses, her three youngest children clambering onto her lap.

"We don't want to be here," she said. "We have nothing here and nowhere to go."

Experts say this displacement is unprecedented

Waves of displacement have upended this city before, most recently during the2024 Israel-Hezbollahwar. But experts struggle to recall such a dramatic exodus — about 20% of the country's population, according to government statements — hitting Beirut so fast.

"The scale and intensity of this is just unprecedented," said Dalal Harb, the spokesperson for the United Nations refugee agency in Lebanon. She said the figure of 1 million displaced is almost certainly an undercount because it misses anyone who has not formally registered as displaced with the Ministry of Social Affairs.

The government has converted hundreds of public schools into shelters and pitched tents for displaced families beneath the bleachers of the city's main sports stadium. Charities have scrambled to help, with one refashioning an abandoned slaughterhouse destroyed in Beirut's 2020port explosioninto a dormitory for almost 1,000 displaced people.

But urban researchers note a staggering number of people on the streets compared with past conflicts, making it difficult for ordinary residents to block out the war and the misery it has wrought.

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"This is relatively new, that you have so many people spending time in these open spaces, who are very vulnerable, living in very precarious conditions," said Mona Harb, a professor of urban studies at the American University of Beirut. "You have to confront this visually when you're coming and going to work, to school ... and there are strong, mixed feelings associated with this presence that's unregulated."

Families say they've struggled to find space at government-run shelters in Beirut and would rather brave the elements than travel north to cities where they might find better accommodations but where they have no relatives or connections.

"The further away we go, the more we'll lose hope about finding our way back," said Hawraa Balha, 42, when asked why her family of four was squeezing into the small car they drove from the devastated southern border village of Duhaira rather than sleeping in an available shelter further north. "We don't want to move again."

Residents of the suburbs of Dahiyeh have largely opted to remain in Beirut. That way, every so often, they can retrieve belongings and check whether their homes are still standing, albeit in furtive dashes under the threat of bombardment. Hussein said her kids grew so desperate for a shower after nearly a month without a bathroom that they rushed home to wash up last week despite the incessant buzz of Israeli drones.

As more tents appear, Lebanon's sectarian balance is at risk

The prospect of hundreds of thousands of Shiites on the move has inflamed Lebanese sensitivities about the country's fragilesectarian balance. Ever since its bloody 15-yearcivil war, Lebanon has relied on apower-sharing agreementto accommodate the interests of Christians, Shiite Muslims and Sunni Muslims, the country's largest religious groups, which make up roughly equal shares of the population.

"It's generating anxieties in Beirut, where the bulk of the displacement is, that this may cause a significant transformation in the demographic balance within the country, or within certain spaces and cities," said Maha Yahya, director of the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center.

Each day that passes, more tents appear at the waterfront settlement. Children have started to complain of skin rashes. Heavy rainfall recently flooded the grassy lot and seeped into tents, leaving a trail of soggy clothes and sore throats. A fight broke out last week as volunteers arrived to distribute donations.

"We're not used to living like this — we had a house, we had normal lives," said Lina Shamis, 51, warming herself by a fire at the foot of a billboard advertising luxury watches. She, her three adult daughters and their small children set up camp here after heeding Israeli evacuation orders for Dahiyeh in a panic, carrying almost nothing with them.

"Now the kids are out of school and hungry, and our neighborhood is gone," she said. "All I feel is despair."

With Israel thrusting deeper into Lebanon andthreatening to seizeLebanese territory as far as the Litani, a river 20 miles (30 kilometers) north of the Israeli border, the situation of displaced people in Beirut "will be even worse than what we're seeing now," warned Harb, from the U.N. refugee agency.

"The needs will continue to increase," she said. "It's an imminent humanitarian catastrophe."

Lebanese displaced by war fill Beirut's streets, upending city life

BEIRUT (AP) — Beirut is bursting. APTOPIX Lebanon Israel Iran War It's been a month since Hezbollah f...

Many people have played 'Two Truths and a Lie' and pushed it to its limit. It's a well-known classic that gets people talking. But let's be honest, the lie is usually pretty easy to spot. Whether it's an over-the-top story, a nervous giveaway, or obvious social cues, the truth often wins out. This quiz is different.

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Image credits:Ketut Subiyanto

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“April Fools!”: Identify 26 Lies And Prove You Cannot Be Tricked

Many people have played 'Two Truths and a Lie' and pushed it to its limit. It's a well-known classic that get...

 

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