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  • Bangladesh sets February election after year of political upheaval
  • Austrian lawmakers pass headscarf ban for under-14s in schools
  • Denmark plans to ban access to social media for anyone under 15
  • Baby in Gaza dies from cold as Israel restricts entry of needed supplies
  • US judge orders release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from immigration detention
  • World Cup 2026: When and where does the FIFA tournament start?
  • PSG bus stoned after Champions League tie; Spanish fans injured in Poland
  • Video: Winter storm brings flooding misery to Gaza
  • Bulgarian government resigns after mass protests
  • Does the ICC unfairly target certain countries?
  • Target Tehran
  • Venezuela’s Machado taunts Maduro government after dramatic exit to Oslo
  • Sweden’s push for an ex-IKEA CEO to lead UNHCR signals a new refugee order
  • ‘Act of piracy’ or law: Can the US legally seize a Venezuelan tanker?
  • Cambodia-Thailand tension “going from bad to worse”
  • Venezuela’s crisis is not an oil grab but a power grab
  • Olympic ski champion Michelle Gisin airlifted after Swiss crash
  • Israeli right-wing TV show mocks Gaza ‘drowning’ in winter storm
  • The battle for Pokrovsk is about more than gaining territory
  • Over 400 civilians killed in eastern DR Congo as US peace deal falters
  • Why are Israeli lawmakers wearing gold nooses?
  • Myanmar junta’s air attack on hospital kills dozens of people
  • Zelenskyy rallies key allies as Ukraine faces Russian and US pressure
  • Is Trump’s $686m F-16 upgrade for Pakistan a message to India?
Devastated scenes after Hurricane Maria

Devastated scenes after Hurricane Maria

Maria is the most powerful hurricane to strike Puerto Rico and Dominica in nearly a century.

By Al Jazeera Published 2017-09-26 02:25 Updated 2017-09-26 02:26 1 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Weather

Storm-battered Puerto Rico, with a population of 3.4 million, is still without electricity five days after Hurricane Maria struck with ferocious winds and torrential rains, the most powerful hurricane to hit the US territory for nearly a century.

There have been growing concerns for some 70,000 people who live in the river valley below the Guajataca Dam in the island’s northwest, where cracks were seen, on Friday, in the 88-year-old earthen structure.

The National Weather Service warned of further flash floods in the west of the island on Monday as thunderstorms moved in.

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