Maine shooting: At least 16 people feared dead in Lewiston as police hunt for gunman
At least 16 people are feared dead and dozens more have been injured following a mass shooting in the US state of Maine.
Hundreds of police fanned out across the state early on Thursday hunting for a man wanted in connection with shootings at a bar and a bowling alley in the town of Lewiston.
Officials said there were multiple casualties but declined to provide figures. US news outlets reported a death toll ranging from 16 to 22, a range of fatalities on par with the number of homicides that normally occur in Maine in any given year, reports Washington Correspondent Martin Wall.
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- Irish citizens urged to leave Lebanon immediately as Middle East situation deteriorates: Irish citizens in Lebanon should leave immediately, the Department of Foreign Affairs has advised.
- Abnormalities detected in cervical cancer screening fall: Diagnoses of serious abnormalities in cervical screening have fallen by almost 60 per cent, in early evidence of the positive impact of HPV vaccination against the disease.
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- Ireland’s weather today: Today will bring sunny spells and widespread showers. Some will be heavy with a chance of isolated thunderstorms, which may cause spot flooding. Highest temperatures of 11 to 14 degrees in a light to moderate south to southwest wind.
Israel-Hamas conflict
- EU leaders to call for Gaza ‘humanitarian pauses’: The EU is expected to unanimously back a call for “humanitarian pauses” of the shelling in Gaza to allow food, water and medical supplies to reach Palestinians on multiple occasions.
- Netanyahu tells Israelis ground invasion of Gaza is coming, despite delays: Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu has told Israelis that a ground invasion of Gaza, and the besieged Palestinian enclave already subject to intensive Israeli air strikes, is coming in spite of delays.
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News from around the World
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Tech Analysis
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The best from Opinion
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Culture and Life & Style highlights
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Today's Business
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Top Sports news
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Martyn Turner
Letters to the Editor
Dublin Airport expansion, at what cost?
Blindboy: ‘I left my first day of school feeling great shame. The pain of that still rises up in me’
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Gladiator II review: Don’t blame Paul Mescal but there’s no good reason for this jumbled sequel to exist
Spice Village takeaway review: Indian food in south Dublin that will keep you coming back
Sir, – The Irish Times leader on Dublin Airport refers to three main parties involved: the DAA, the residents of Finglas and the owners of a nearby piece of land, suited for development, who are apparently seeking €200 million (“A third terminal on the horizon”, October 25th).
However, there are other significant “actors” whose interests should be taken into account when considering expansion of air travel.
Planet Earth is in an advanced stage of irreversible decline because of climate change, caused in no small part by carbon dioxide emissions from air transport.
The populations of almost all countries are severely affected by increasing emissions, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa through drought and unpredictable weather patterns leading to severe food shortages.
Non-flying, or unwilling, Irish people must, through their taxes, contribute to the massive subsidies provided to the airline industry by the Government in respect of fuel costs, thus fuelling the “expansion” of the industry. It is long past time where questions of proposed airport expansion can be considered in a meaningful and responsible way in isolation from our responsibilities under, for example, the Paris agreement.
There were probably 100,000 international flights taken by Irish rugby fans alone during the recent series. If I travel by car to Donegal to see a football game, I receive no subsidy on the cost of the fuel, but if I fly to Paris for similar reasons, adding to an already large carbon footprint, I do.
Something doesn’t seem right. If air fares fairly reflected the unsubsidised fuel costs of passengers per flight, then fewer journeys would be taken, resulting in a reduction of emissions and, perhaps, the “need” for expansion at the airport might be obviated.
The vital environmental needs of our planet should not be trumped by the so described “economic imperative for regular, reliable air access to our island”. – Yours, etc,
PAUL O’SHEA, Shankill, Dublin 18.
Video & Podcast Highlights
Review of the day
- Cat Person: Kristen Roupenian’s New Yorker sensation becomes a flabby film starring Cousin Greg and that nice girl from Coda: I have come across complaints that the studios don’t release enough horror films for what we are now obliged to call “spooky season”. Fear not (or do I mean “fear plenty”?). Here is a film about a sweet young girl who falls in with an unmistakable psychopath and allows him every opportunity to do his grisly worst.
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