< Portal:Current events
January 26, 2018 (Friday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
- Syrian Civil War
- President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdoğan says the Afrin offensive, as announced, is now to turn east, towards Manbij and the border with Iraq. (Reuters)
Arts and culture
- Protests against Donald Trump
- Celebrities Alyssa Milano, Michael Moore and Mark Ruffalo organize a "People's State of the Union"-themed concert on Monday in New York City. Common and Andra Day are scheduled to perform. (USA Today)
Business and economy
- CSeries dumping petition by Boeing
- The United States International Trade Commission votes 4–0 in favor of dismissing the Boeing Company's petition against Bombardier Inc. over alleged price dumping. (Reuters)
Disasters and accidents
- 2018 Miryang hospital fire
- A fire breaks out in a hospital in Miryang, South Korea, killing at least 37 people and injuring over 130 others. (Reuters via ABC News) (BBC)
- Paris Zoological Park, France, is evacuated and closed after dozens of baboons escape their enclosure. (The Guardian)
- Rescuers, including the Royal New Zealand Air Force, search for the Kiribati ferry MV Butiraoi with around 50 people on board after it is declared missing. (BBC) (The New Zealand Herald)
- Cape Town water crisis
- Aftermath of the Oroville Dam crisis
- The cost of the Oroville Dam spill rises to US$870 million. The U.S. state of California continues to hope for federal aid for the project. (KQED)
Law and crime
- Crime in Guatemala
- Former Defense Minister of Guatemala Williams Mansilla is arrested for a possible corruption case associated with a bond to President Jimmy Morales. The Attorney General asked the Supreme Court to consider again the impeachment against President Morales. (Reuters)
- José Arturo Sierra, former President of the Supreme Court of Justice of Guatemala, is shot and killed while driving to Guatemala City. (AP via The New Zealand Herald)
- Cryptocurrency and security
Politics and elections
- Political appointments by Donald Trump
- U.S. President Donald Trump names former NASA astronaut James F. Reilly as leader of the U.S. Geological Survey. (The Hill)
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