Foreign News
Prague shooting: Gunman dead after killing more than 15 at Charles University
More than 15 people have been killed and 24 injured in a shooting at a university in Prague, officials say.
Police said the gunman had also been “eliminated” following the shooting at Charles University – the deadliest attack in modern Czech history.
Prime Minister Petr Fiala said he had cancelled upcoming engagements in light of the “tragic events” on Thursday. University staff were told to stay put, barricade themselves in rooms and turn off the lights.
Footage has emerged on social video showing terrified crowds fleeing the area popular with tourists.
Police received first reports of shooting at the university’s Faculty of Arts on Jan Palach Square in the centre of the capital after 15:00 local time (14:00 GMT).
At a briefing later on Thursday, the police and city authorities said the gunman was a student at the faculty. They said he was a 24-year-old from a village 21km (13 miles) outside Prague. The suspect’s father had been found dead earlier on Thursday. The gunman’s motives were not immediately known.
Preliminary information suggested that no police officers were injured in the attack, the authorities said.
Sergey Medvedev, a professor at the university, told the BBC he was in the auditorium when the shootings began. “I was giving a lecture at the moment and at first didn’t quite realise what happened because there were some sounds. The students, I think, heard it better because I was so much concentrated on my talking, on my lecture,” he said.
“Then, we understood that something big is happening. There was nothing online yet, nothing in the Czech press and the news networks. Then at some point, the special operation groups went storming in, they searched the room briefly and then went out… they told us to stay inside. “One hour later, another police squad broke in and then put us on the floor, briefly searched us then evacuated from the building,” the professor added.
Verified images from the scene appeared to show people clinging on to the outside wall of the university building, several storeys up.
Targ Patience, a British-Australian who was staying in a flat near the scene, told the BBC that he heard “a lot of gunshots”. “I looked out of my balcony and saw the police arrive. A few officers were having a hard time stopping people walking towards the scene,” he sad.
“We heard four loud gunshots,” Joe Hyland, 18, from Truro, Cornwall, told the BBC. “Everyone was sprinting and running for cover. “I have a bad knee, am on a crutch. So I hobbled as quickly as possible,” added Hyland, who was on his first holiday with friends. “We got to the metro and went down there because we thought it would be safest.”
Students said they had barricaded themselves in classrooms. “Currently stuck inside my classroom in Prague,” Jakob Weizman, a student at Charles University, wrote on X (formerly Twitter) as it unfolded.
“Locked the door before the shooter tried to open it.”

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen wrote on X that she was “shocked by the senseless violence”. She added: “We stand and mourn with you.”
An email to staff at the philosophy faculty of Charles University, seen by Reuters, warned staff of the shooting. It read: “Stay put, don’t go anywhere, if you’re in the offices, lock them and place furniture in front of the door, turn off the lights.”
Authorities said the whole of the square and several streets around the university were closed.
Charles University is located in Prague’s Old Town, about 500m from the historic Charles Bridge, a tourist magnet.
(BBC)
Foreign News
Plane crashes near South Sudan’s Juba, killing all 14 on board
A plane has crashed on the outskirts of South Sudan’s capital, Juba, killing all 13 passengers and the pilot.
The country’s civil aviation authority said on Monday that initial reports indicate the aircraft may have crashed due to bad weather conditions that caused low visibility.
The Cessna 208 Caravan, which was operated by CityLink Aviation, lost communication while flying from Yei to Juba International Airport, it added in a statement.
Among those onboard were two Kenyan nationals, while the rest were South Sudanese.
A team has been sent to the site to gather information and support emergency services, the aviation authority said.
Videos of the crash site, located some 20km (12 miles) outside of Juba, showed the remains of the aircraft in flames.

Foreign News
Gunmen kidnap 23 children from Nigerian orphanage
Gunmen have raided an orphanage and kidnapped at least 23 children, authorities in Nigeria report.
The gang took the children late on Sunday from an unregistered facility called the Dahallukitab Group of Schools, located in an “isolated area” in Kogi State’s capital, Lokoja, Kogi Information Commissioner Kingsley Fanwo said in a statement on Monday.
Mass kidnappings have become a common way for gangs and armed groups to make quick money in Africa’s most populous country, especially in rural areas with little government presence.
Fanwo said the “prompt and coordinated response” of security agencies led to the rescue of 15 children but eight are still missing.
The wife of the proprietor of the orphanage was also abducted, according to the statement.
“Intensive operations are ongoing to secure the safe return of the remaining eight victims and apprehend the perpetrators,” the official said.
[Aljazeera]
Foreign News
Trump cancels US envoys’ trip to Pakistan for talks on Iran war
President Donald Trump cancelled a planned trip by US officials to Pakistan for talks on the Iran war on Saturday, shortly after Tehran’s delegation had left Islamabad.
The US president said special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner would be wasting “too much time”, adding that if Iran wanted to talk “all they have to do is call”.
Earlier, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi held talks with mediator Pakistan, saying afterwards he had shared Iran’s position on ending the war but was yet to see whether the US was “truly serious about diplomacy”.
Diplomatic efforts have stalled despite Trump’s extension of a ceasefire that had been due to expire on 22 April to allow talks to continue.
Both sides have been locked in a standoff over the Strait of Hormuz, with Iran restricting passage through the key shipping route in the wake of the US and Israel commencing strikes in February, as well as over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.
The US has since increased its naval presence in the strait – through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil supply passes – to block Iranian oil exports.
The White House had said the Iranians “want to talk” when the trip was announced on Friday, but Iran said there were no plans for a direct meeting.
Trump said the ceasefire would hold on Saturday despite hopes of another round of face-to-face talks fading.
[BBC]
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