News

Lethal Company's new version 70 update adds a new creature and furniture, along with some changes to the game's radar system ...
Lethal Company is about to get one of its most powerful creatures ever as creator Zeekerss once again teases the co-op horror hit's first update in months. After Lethal Company's most recent patch ...
Developed by Zeekerss, Lethal Company is the latest multiplayer horror indie hit on Steam. Its explosion in popularity quickly led to it surpassing Phasmophobia in terms of peak concurrent players ...
Deputy Director Mary Wareham and Laura Lodenius, Executive Director at Peace Union of Finland, discuss the grave ...
Displaced Sudanese civilians returning to cities ravaged by over two years of brutal conflict are now facing a new, invisible threat: unexploded ordnance (UXO), landmines, and abandoned munitions ...
Hosted on MSN21d
Nuclear Landmine
In 1950, Great Britain designed the ultimate landmine, a nuclear one, during the top secret operation Blue Peacock... a project which would have undoubtedly changed the European landscape forever ...
The number of people killed or injured by landmines in Cambodia fell by a significant 26 percent in the first four months of 2025, the Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC) said, despite a funding ...
Syria: The painstaking task of clearing wartime landmines DW follows a team of experts racing to clear unexploded deadly landmines left behind by more than 14 years of civil war. Conflicts 04/14 ...
Hawaadley, Somalia — A landmine explosion targeted a vehicle carrying local militia officers known as Macawiisley in Hawaadley, a town in the Middle Shabelle region, killing one soldier and ...
While two warring surrogates battle on NATO’s doorstep, American forces have the unexpected, if tragic, opportunity to see where they stand in the race to build Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems ...
At Braun’s estimate of $300,000 per dose, Indiana spent $1.2 million on two lethal injections. Braun said he has no plans to replenish the state’s inventory. “Something I think that costs $ ...
Source: SBS News An Australian company has achieved the "holy grail" of landmine detection, developing technology which it says can definitively tell if hidden explosives lie underground.