Israeli strikes across Lebanon escalate 2026 war
Israel has carried out its most intense attacks of the 2026 Lebanon war, code‑named Operation “Eternal Darkness”, striking more than 100 targets across southern Lebanon, Beirut, and the Bekaa Valley within minutes.
- Lebanese officials and aid groups say Beirut hospitals are “flooded” with casualties.
- Early tallies indicate hundreds killed or wounded, with some counts reporting about 250 dead nationwide.
- The assault comes just hours after announcement of a two‑week U.S.–Iran ceasefire tied to the wider 2026 Iran war.
- Israel says the ceasefire “does not include Lebanon”, while Pakistan claims it covers all fronts.
- Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has warned of a “regret‑inducing response” if strikes on Lebanon continue.
Iran war pause, Hormuz reopening, and UN tensions
On April 7 (April 8 in Iran), the U.S. and Iran agreed to a two‑week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan, in the context of the 2026 Iran war.
- The deal is tied to Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
- It launches talks on a broader peace arrangement, including sanctions relief and potential withdrawal of U.S. forces from regional bases.
At the UN Security Council, a draft resolution urging coordination to protect commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz was vetoed by China and Russia.
- The U.S. ambassador criticized the vetoes and called on “responsible nations” to help secure the waterway.
Sources: Wikipedia – 2026 Iran war ceasefire, The Straits Times
Tropical Cyclone Vaianu threatens New Zealand
Cyclone Vaianu, currently a Category 3 tropical cyclone with central winds above 150 km/h, is tracking south of Fiji toward New Zealand.
- Forecasters warn of possible life‑threatening winds, heavy rain, and coastal impacts in parts of New Zealand in the coming days.
- The exact track and intensity at landfall remain uncertain.
Source: The Guardian
“One Health” summit ends with pledges and criticism
The One Health Summit in Lyon, France (April 5–7) brought together over 20 ministers and hundreds of scientists to promote the idea that human, animal, plant, and ecosystem health are interconnected.
Key outcomes include:
- Plans for an international pact on antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and an “international meta‑network” on AMR.
- New WHO‑linked initiatives on One Health data convergence and AI‑based surveillance pilots (including work in Botswana).
- Funding pledges of roughly $580 million from Gavi and $750 million from the World Bank over two years.
Critics argue the summit lacked a clear overarching strategy, and activists pointed to gaps between France’s rhetoric and recent cuts to some global health funding.
Source: Le Monde
World Health Day 2026: WHO urges governments to “stand with science”
For World Health Day 2026 (April 7), the World Health Organization is urging governments to “stand with science” and adopt integrated One Health approaches.
- The focus is on coordinated action against threats such as pandemics, vector‑borne diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and pollution.
Source: WHO
NASA’s Artemis II begins crewed lunar flyby
On April 1, 2026, NASA launched Artemis II, the first crewed mission in the Artemis program.
- The mission sends astronauts on a roughly 10‑day flyby around the Moon.
- It is a key step toward future crewed lunar landings.
Source: Wikipedia – 2026 in spaceflight
AI and tech: chip projects, new models, and power demand
In the AI and tech sector, hardware and infrastructure remain in focus.
- Intel has joined Elon Musk’s “Terafab” AI chip manufacturing project in Texas, aimed at supplying chips for humanoid robots and AI data centers.
- Anthropic has introduced a restricted Claude “Mythos” Preview model focused on defensive cybersecurity under “Project Glasswing,” available only to selected partners (including major cloud and hardware firms) due to dual‑use concerns.
- Coverage also highlights surging projected U.S. power demand from AI data centers and rapidly rising valuations for AI‑infrastructure companies.