logo
Six dead after Honduras plane crashed into the water after takeoff

Six dead after Honduras plane crashed into the water after takeoff

Al Arabiya18-03-2025
Six people have died after a plane attempted to take off from Roatán Island, just off the coast of Honduras, the local fire chief told media late on Monday.
Wilmer Guerrero, the Roatán fire chief, told local broadcaster HCH that eight passengers are likely still inside the submerged plane.
The island's police chief, Lisandro Muñoz, confirmed to local broadcaster Noticiero Hoy Mismo that the aircraft crashed into the water shortly after takeoff.
"Recovery and rescue efforts are difficult because the plane fell into the sea," he said.
Operated by Honduran carrier Lanhsa, the Jetstream aircraft was carrying 17 passengers, including three crew members, according to the country's transport minister. However, the minister did not specify the exact number of fatalities.
A flight manifest shown by local media indicated that the passengers included a U.S. national, a French national, and two minors. The plane was scheduled to fly to La Ceiba airport on the Honduran mainland.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pope Leo XIV marks new beginning for Catholic Church
Pope Leo XIV marks new beginning for Catholic Church

Saudi Gazette

time09-05-2025

  • Saudi Gazette

Pope Leo XIV marks new beginning for Catholic Church

VATICAN — After the sorrow of death, the joy of a new beginning. The warm May sun was still high in the sky when a roar echoed out in the streets surrounding St Peter's Square. One street over, startled people looked at each other, then at their phones. Then, they began to run down the narrow alleyways leading to the Vatican. "White smoke, they're saying white smoke!", they called out. By the time they reached the square, a white haze was still hovering over the left-hand side of the Apostolic Palace where 133 cardinals had been locked away since the day before, voting to elect the new head of the Catholic Church. As the evening sunshine streamed through the statues of the apostles on the ledge of St Peter's Basilica and bells tolled joyously over the square, young and older people zig-zagged through the crowd, and a group of nuns held hands as they swerved journalists and cameras. It was less than three weeks ago that Pope Francis blessed the crowds from the balcony at St Peter's, and his memory hung over the square on Thursday; almost everyone asked to share their impressions mentioned Francis and the need for the new Pope to follow in his footsteps. "We just arrived today from America," one woman named Amanda told the BBC. "It feels like a blessing. We came here for this and here it is." "Divine timing!" she joked. Two stylish women in their 20s said they were "about to cry". "It's a historic moment, it's crazy," one said, adding she hoped the next Pope would be "at least as good as the last one". This was a sentiment echoed by many in those last minutes before Pope Leo XIV was announced. "It doesn't matter to us where he's from as long as he follows in on Francis' footsteps and creates unity for all of us Catholics," said a French woman as she herded her five children to get closer to the front of the square. By the time Dominique Mamberti — the proto-deacon tasked with delivering the iconic "Habemus Papam" address to the square — appeared on the balcony, St Peter's was full to the brim. It fell silent, though, once Robert Francis Prevost's name was read out. Those in the know may have identified the Chicago-born 69-year-old cardinal — who worked for many years as a missionary in Peru before being made a bishop there – as a potential pontiff early on. But many people in the square looked puzzled at first, and the complete lack of phone coverage meant that most couldn't look him up on the internet — so the first impression most got of Pope Leo XIV came down to the way he introduced himself from the ornate balcony. Visibly moved at first, and dressed in white and red vestments and speaking in confident — if lightly accented — Italian, he read out a much lengthier speech than the remarks made by his predecessor Francis in 2013. "I would like this greeting of peace to reach all your hearts and families... and people around the world. May peace be with you," the new Pope began as the square fell silent. At other moments, his address was met with frequent warm applause, especially when he mentioned "peace" — which he did on nine occasions — and the late Francis. A section of the speech delivered in Spanish in which Pope Leo XIV remembered his time in Peru was met with cheers from various pockets of South Americans dotted across the square. He also insisted on the need for unity, and at the end asked everyone to join together in prayer. When he began reciting Ave Maria, a deep hum rose as the square followed suit, with some praying in their own languages. The crowd began to slowly amble out of the square shortly after. As people streamed past them, a young couple held each other close, beaming. "I still have goosebumps," said Carla, from Barcelona. "The energy is contagious, it's amazing — it's our first time here, and for me it's 100% surreal," said Juan, who is from Ecuador and had never been to the Vatican before. Asked what his hope for Pope Leo XIV was, he said: "That the Holy Spirit guides him. I hope that means we can all be united together going forward." Gemma, a Rome resident, said she hadn't even heard the name Robert Prevost until she came across it on Instagram this morning. "The reaction of the square wasn't that warm," her friend Marco added. "If he'd been Italian everyone would have kicked off." "But it was a beautiful evening, a beautiful occasion," said Gemma. "It was my first conclave. And this new Pope is only 69, so who knows when the next one will be?" The square emptied. The restaurants around the Vatican filled up with pilgrims, clergy, and tourists. Couples snapped the last selfies outside the basilica. Over in the Apostolic Palace — now unsealed — Robert Prevost held a moment of private prayer. Then, for the first time, he re-entered the Sistine Chapel as Leo XIV, the 267th Pope. — BBC

How Napoleon's Egypt campaign sparked a printing revolution in the Arab world
How Napoleon's Egypt campaign sparked a printing revolution in the Arab world

Arab News

time03-05-2025

  • Arab News

How Napoleon's Egypt campaign sparked a printing revolution in the Arab world

LONDON: On Sunday, July 1, 1798, a vast fleet of ships appeared off the Egyptian city of Alexandria. Aboard the flagship Orient was the French general Napoleon Bonaparte, still six years away from being proclaimed emperor of France but fresh from a series of military victories in Europe and determined to undermine Britain's influence in Egypt and the Middle East. With him were 50,000 men, hundreds of horses, numerous artillery pieces and, incongruously, 200 members of the Commission des Sciences et des Arts, a group including engineers, mathematicians, astronomers, geographers, writers, artists — and 22 printers. Back in France, between 1809 and 1829 the survivors of this group of savants would produce the 37-volume Description de l'Egypte, a triumphant catalogue of all things Egyptian, ancient and modern. Their achievement would not be shared by Napoleon's army. A month after the landing, virtually all of Napoleon's ships were destroyed at the Battle of the Nile by a British fleet commanded by Horatio Nelson. The following year Napoleon and a few men returned to France in secret. The general he left in charge, Jean-Baptiste Kleber, was assassinated a few months later by an Aleppo-born student living in Cairo. The remains of the French army, decimated by disease and endless conflict, surrendered to British forces in 1801 and, under the terms of an ignominious treaty, were ferried back to France on the enemy's ships. • 50,000 Men who accompanied Napoleon to Egypt. • £30,000 Price tag of Expedition de Syrie jusqu'a la prise de Jaffa. • 1820 Year in which Bulaq Press was established in Cairo. To rub salt into the French wounds, many of the Egyptian antiquities that had been looted by Napoleon's troops and scholars fell into British hands. Some, including the Rosetta Stone, the ancient granite stele inscribed with a decree in three languages that allowed the cracking of the code of Egyptian hieroglyphs, found their way to the British Museum, where they remain to this day. But arguably the greatest legacy of the Napoleonic invasion of Egypt lies not in what the French took, but in what they left behind — the art of printing with movable type. Some of the products of this unintended consequence of Napoleon's ill-fated Egyptian adventure can be seen this week at the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair — an extraordinary collection of rare books and pamphlets that together tell a fascinating story. 'Aware of the printing press's potential as a tool for governance and propaganda, Napoleon brought with him advanced French printing technology — something entirely new to Egypt,' said Pom Harrington, the owner of London-based Peter Harrington Rare Books. Just days after landing near Alexandria, Napoleon's team of printers established the Imprimerie orientale et francaise, under the direction of the linguist and orientalist Jean-Joseph Marcel and the Marc Aurel, the 18-year-old son of a printer and bookseller. It was, incidentally, Jean-Joseph Marcel who first recognized the third script on the Rosetta stone as Egyptian Demotic, which proved to be the ancient linguistic key to unravelling the mystery of hieroglyphics. A first-edition copy of one of their first publications, a pamphlet containing seven reports of expeditions against Ottoman forces in Syria, is at the show. The £30,000 price tag of Expedition de Syrie jusqu'a la prise de Jaffa (Expedition from Syria to the capture of Jaffa) reflects its extreme rarity. No copies of the pamphlet are known to exist in institutional libraries, none has ever appeared at auction and the manuscript is not even listed in Albert Geiss' exhaustive Histoire de l'Imprimerie en Egypte, published by the Institut Francais d'Archeologie Orientale in Cairo in 1907. Following the French victory over Ottoman forces at the Battle of the Pyramids on July 21, the press was relocated to Cairo, where it was renamed the Imprimerie nationale du Caire. Another valuable book on show in Abu Dhabi is an extremely rare first-edition copy of the first Arabic dictionary to be printed in the Arabic world. The Vocabulaire francais-arabe, contenant les mots principaux et d'un usage plus journalier (French-Arabic vocabulary, containing the main words and those of more everyday use) was printed between September 1798 and September 1799. The final eight pages of common phrases reflect the imperial expectations of those who would use the dictionary to communicate with their temporary Egyptian subjects. Alongside more typical phrases, some of which would be of use to modern travellers today, such as 'I am hungry' and 'I am going to Cairo,' is the altogether less common instruction 'Etrillez mon cheval' — 'Brush my horse.' One of the most fascinating documents produced in Cairo by the French press was an account of the interrogation and trial of Suleiman Al-Halabi, the young man who stabbed to death Jean-Baptiste Kleber, Napoleon's successor in Egypt as commander of the French army. Printed in 1800, a year before the end of the French occupation, of the 500 copies that were printed of the Recueil des pieces relatives a la procedure et au jugement de Soleyman El-Hhaleby, assassin du general en chef Kleber ('Collection of documents relating to the procedure and judgement of Soleyman El-Hhaleby, assassin of general Kleber'), only 14 survive. Suleiman Al-Halabi's execution on June 17, 1800, the day of his victim's funeral, was a gruesome affair; after his right forearm was burnt to the bone, he took four hours to die after being impaled on a metal spike. The Cairo press was shut down after the French withdrew, and the printing presses were sent back to France, 'but its impact was lasting,' said Harrington. 'The French conquerors could not have foreseen that the introduction of printing with movable types would lead to a revolution in printing in the Arab world, demonstrating to Egyptian scholars the transformative potential of print.' The influence of the short-lived French printing house lingered on through individuals including Nicolas Musabiki, whose father Yusuf had been trained during the French occupation. Nicolas later played a crucial role in the Bulaq Press, established in Cairo in 1820 by Muhammad Ali Pasha, the Ottoman viceroy and the ruler of Egypt from 1805 to 1848. 'Ali Pasha is seen as the founder of modern Egypt and was clearly inspired by Napoleon's printing presses,' said Harrington. 'In 1815 he sent the Syrian Nicolas Musabiki to Italy to study type-founding and printing, and ordered three presses from Milan, along with paper and ink, also from Italy. 'The establishment of the Bulaq Press meant that he could print manuals for the military, official guidebooks for the administration, and textbooks for new schools.' Bulaq's presses 'primarily used the Naskh script, valued for its legibility and formality, making the new texts easily readable.' In Europe, printing with movable type had begun in the 15th century — the Gutenberg Bible was printed in Germany in 1455. 'The delay in printing in the Arab world was certainly linked to the notion of calligraphy not only as an art form, but also as an expression of spirituality,' said Harrington. 'It wasn't until the introduction of lithographic techniques that the beauty of Arabic script could be adapted to printing more easily.' The Bulaq Press printed its first book, an Italian-Arabic dictionary, in 1822. But one of its greatest triumphs is on show at Abu Dhabi: the first complete edition in Arabic of the Thousand and One Nights, printed in 1835. The first edition of the collection of Arabic folk tales printed anywhere in the Arab world, fewer than a dozen copies are known to exist in libraries. Privately held copies are even rarer; this copy, from the collection of the French historian and orientalist Charles Barbier de Maynard, who died in 1908, is priced at £250,000. The impact of the Bulaq Press is celebrated by Egypt's state library, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, which in an online history credits it with having played 'an essential role in disseminating science and knowledge throughout the country. 'As books and legible material became available, a new class of intellectuals emerged, to later form the basis for a comprehensive modernization of the whole society. 'Other outcomes included an increase in the number of private schools and the emergence of female education. As the class of intellectuals broadened, self-expression and free opinions appeared in the press and daily newspapers.' The Bulaq Press 'was the main force behind this historical transformation that transferred Egypt from the Dark Ages of ignorance and backwardness and into the age of knowledge, freedom and awareness.' The advantages of modern printing with movable type, demonstrated by the Bulaq Press, were quickly appreciated elsewhere in the Arab world. The first printing press in Makkah was set up in 1882, and the first newspaper — called Hijaz — followed there in 1908. In 1949, a specialist publishing house was set up in Makkah to produce the first copies of the holy Qur'an to be printed in Saudi Arabia — a task that previously had been left to printers in Egypt. In 1984, the King Fahd Complex for the Printing of the Holy Qur'an opened in Madinah and has since produced hundreds of millions of copies of the holy book in Arabic and in multiple translations. The Bulaq Press, also known as the Amiria Press, survives to this day. Its operations were paused during the British occupation of Egypt, but in 1956 it was revived by Gamal Abdel Nasser, the then Egyptian president, and has continued publishing books and other materials as part of the country's ministry of trade and industry.

Never argue: 115-year-old British woman, now the world's oldest, gives her recipe to long life
Never argue: 115-year-old British woman, now the world's oldest, gives her recipe to long life

Arab News

time02-05-2025

  • Arab News

Never argue: 115-year-old British woman, now the world's oldest, gives her recipe to long life

LONDON: For Ethel Caterham, the trick to a long life — and in her case, it really has been — is not to argue. Caterham, who is 115, became the world's oldest living person, according to the Gerontology Research Group, after Sister Inah Canabarro , a Brazilian nun and teacher, died on Wednesday at the tender age of 116. 'Never arguing with anyone, I listen and I do what I like,' she said from her nursing home in Surrey, southwest of London, on the secret to her longevity. Ethel Caterham has become the world's oldest person at the age of 115 years and 252 days old. She is the oldest person ever recorded from the United Kingdom. Learn more about her life here — Guinness World Records (@GWR) May 1, 2025 She was born on Aug. 21, 1909, in the village of Shipton Bellinger in the south of England, five years before the outbreak of World War I. She was the second youngest of eight siblings. Travel has been in her blood, it's clear. In 1927, at the age of 18, Caterham embarked on a journey to India, working as a nanny for a British family, where she stayed for three years before returning to England, according to the GRG. She met her husband Norman, who was a major in the British army, at a dinner party in 1931, and they were stationed in Hong Kong and Gibraltar, the GRG said. They had two daughters whom they raised in the UK Norman died in 1976. Hallmark Lakeview Luxury Care Home in Camberley, where Caterham is a resident, posted pictures of her cutting a cake and wearing a '115' tiara in a Facebook post on Thursday. 'Huge congratulations to Lakeview resident, Ethel on becoming the oldest person in the world! What an incredible milestone and a true testament to a life well-lived,' it said in an accompanying statement. 'Your strength, spirit, and wisdom are an inspiration to us all. Here's to celebrating your remarkable journey!' The title of the oldest person ever is held by French woman Jeanne Calment, who lived to 122 years 164 days, according to Guinness World Records.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store