At least 40 civilians are dead, including women and children, and dozens more injured in a fuel tanker bomb blast in Afrin, Syria, a town controlled by Turkish-backed opposition fighters, according to Turkey’s defence ministry.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility but Turkey blamed the attack on the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG).
Turkey accuses the YPG of being the Syrian offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged an armed rebellion against Turkey since 1984. The PKK is considered a “terrorist group” by Ankara and many western capitals.
Syrian activists said the blast on Tuesday burned several people to death, including some who were stuck inside their vehicles.
The invasion of the 73rd Police Station Interactive Police (DIP) of the municipality of Novo Aripuanã, by the population revolted and willing to kill by stoning and burned the woman Lucinete da Costa Gama, 30, who burned a house and caused severe burns in three children, one of them, aged two, did not resist the injuries and died, causing indignation in the residents.
Video showing extremely violent scenes of the episode occurred in New Aripuanã, in which Lucinete appears being beaten, stoned, dragged by the hair and being thrown into a car that caught fire in the Moment of the demonstration that began with the invasion of the dependencies of the police station, whose building was depredated and the woman dragged out to be cruelly punished by dozens of people.
The most recent information on the occurrence in Novo Aripuanã indicates that Lucinete was brought to Manaus as a security measure by the Special Rescue and Assault (Fera) police officers earlier this Tuesday and is hospitalized with severe burns in the Hospital and Emergency Room August 28th.
The two children who survived were also brought to Manaus and are hospitalized at Joaozinho Hospital.
A terrible accident in which nine Romanians, a minibus passenger, died Tuesday, May 22, near Budapest. According to the Hungarian police, it would be the fault of the minibus driver in which the victims were. The driver would have forced an overrun on a national road in Hungary, and the vehicle he was driving was violently hit by a truck carrying sand. He made a live broadcast on Facebook even when the tragedy occurred. According to sources, the driver is called Petru Kalau, is from Deaj (Mures County) and was the father of two children. Seven of the nine passengers were from Deaj, and two others from another Mures village, Agrişteu. The information also appeared on the Facebook Traffic Info page of Târgu Mureş, where the internet users claim that Petru Kalau was at the wheel of the minibus.