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#13049444
2 December 2025
Windows are smashed by a Russian ballistic missile strike in Dnipro, Ukraine, on December 1, 2025. On Monday, December 1, Russian troops launch a ballistic missile on the central Ukrainian city, killing four people and injuring more than forty. The strike destroys enterprises, an administrative building, four academic institutions, and the same number of high-rise buildings, as well as two service stations and more than fifty cars in the city.
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#13049447
2 December 2025
Windows are smashed by a Russian ballistic missile strike in Dnipro, Ukraine, on December 1, 2025. On Monday, December 1, Russian troops launch a ballistic missile on the central Ukrainian city, killing four people and injuring more than forty. The strike destroys enterprises, an administrative building, four academic institutions, and the same number of high-rise buildings, as well as two service stations and more than fifty cars in the city.
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#13049457
2 December 2025
A law enforcer squats by a woman talking on the phone after a Russian ballistic missile strike in Dnipro, Ukraine, on December 1, 2025. On Monday, December 1, Russian troops launch a ballistic missile on the central Ukrainian city, killing four people and injuring more than forty. The strike destroys enterprises, an administrative building, four academic institutions, and the same number of high-rise buildings, as well as two service stations and more than fifty cars in the city.
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#13016880
23 November 2025
Sign with the inscription arrivals behind two people. Passengers arriving at the Arrivals area of the airport terminal after the significant delay due to diversion for safety reasons. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#13016873
23 November 2025
The gates entrance area closed. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#13016876
23 November 2025
Passengers arriving at the Arrivals area of the airport terminal after the significant delay due to diversion for safety reasons. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#13016877
23 November 2025
Passengers arriving at the Arrivals area of the airport terminal after the significant delay due to diversion for safety reasons. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#13016878
23 November 2025
Passengers arriving at the Arrivals area of the airport terminal after the significant delay due to diversion for safety reasons. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#13016879
23 November 2025
Passengers arriving at the Arrivals area of the airport terminal after the significant delay due to diversion for safety reasons. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#13016872
23 November 2025
A passenger holding his luggage walks towards the closed departure gates area. Eindhoven Airport had a significantly disrupted travel evening after air traffic was suspended for several hours due to multiple drone sightings in the vicinity. The suspension impacted hundreds of passengers in the evening and lasted for approximately two hours, with flights only resuming around 11:00 PM. The incident stranded hundreds of travelers in the departure hall, with many flights being diverted to alternative airports in the country, as well as in Belgium and Germany. Dutch Minister of Defence confirmed that defence counter-drone measures were "ready to intervene" and that action was taken against the unmanned aerial vehicles. The closure at Eindhoven came the same day when the Dutch military used weapons against drones sighted above the Volkel Air Base, located a few kilometers northeast, which hosts the Dutch F-35 fighter jets. The origin of the drones remains unknown, and the incident is part of a wider pattern of disruptive airspace incursions across Europe, with many recently in Brussels, that have raised security alerts and been described by European leaders as a form of "hybrid warfare." Eindhoven Airport is both a public and military one, an Air Base with NATO aircraft, known as Welschap. After the incident only Transavia low cost airline returned the planes back. Eindhoven Airport, the Netherlands on November 23, 2025
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#12844706
9 October 2025
Two tourists take photos of a golf cart parked in Piazza della Repubblica, Florence. In the background, the Arcone building with the inscription ''L'ANTICO CENTRO DELLA CITTA DA SECOLARE SQUALLORE A VITA NUOVA RESTITUITO'' (''The ancient center of the city, restored from centuries of squalor to new life'') is visible, along with the Apple Store and the carousel. In Florence, Italy, on October 9, 2025, golf cars, caddies, and rickshaws operate and park in the historic center of Florence, one day after the protest held by tour operators against the new municipal regulations. Starting from October 15, new rules come into force in the UNESCO area: no more than 24 vehicles circulate at the same time, only two pre-defined routes are allowed, and just one stop per route. Tour companies contest the restrictions and announce legal appeals.
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#12844707
9 October 2025
A golf cart parks in Piazza della Repubblica, Florence, near the statues and the historic carousel. A passerby holding a mobile phone walks through the square. In Florence, Italy, on October 9, 2025, golf carts, caddies, and rickshaws operate and park in the historic center of Florence, one day after the protest held by tour operators against the new municipal regulations. Starting from October 15, new rules come into force in the UNESCO area: no more than 24 vehicles circulate at the same time, only two pre-defined routes are allowed, and just one stop per route. Tour companies contest the restrictions and announce legal appeals.
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#12844708
9 October 2025
A golf cart parks in front of a Prada store on Via Roma in Florence as pedestrians walk through the city center. In Florence, Italy, on October 9, 2025, golf carts, caddies, and rickshaws operate and park in the historic center of Florence, one day after the protest held by tour operators against the new municipal regulations. Starting from October 15, new rules come into force in the UNESCO area: no more than 24 vehicles circulate at the same time, only two pre-defined routes are allowed, and just one stop per route. Tour companies contest the restrictions and announce legal appeals.
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#12844709
9 October 2025
Four golf carts park in front of the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore in Florence, Italy, on October 9, 2025. Golf cars, caddies, and rickshaws operate and park in the historic center of Florence, one day after the protest held by tour operators against the new municipal regulations. Starting from October 15, new rules come into force in the UNESCO area: no more than 24 vehicles circulate at the same time, only two pre-defined routes are allowed, and just one stop per route. Tour companies contest the restrictions and announce legal appeals.
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#12844710
9 October 2025
Two golf carts park in front of the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo) as Piazza del Duomo is crowded with tourists. In Florence, Italy, on October 9, 2025, golf carts, caddies, and rickshaws operate and park in the historic center of Florence, one day after the protest held by tour operators against the new municipal regulations. Starting from October 15, new rules come into force in the UNESCO area: no more than 24 vehicles circulate at the same time, only two pre-defined routes are allowed, and just one stop per route. Tour companies contest the restrictions and announce legal appeals.
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#12844711
9 October 2025
A tourist asks the driver of a golf cart for information in front of the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore (Florence Duomo). In Florence, Italy, on October 9, 2025, golf carts, caddies, and rickshaws operate and park in the historic center of Florence, one day after the protest held by tour operators against the new municipal regulations. Starting from October 15, new rules come into force in the UNESCO area: no more than 24 vehicles circulate at the same time, only two pre-defined routes are allowed, and just one stop per route. Tour companies contest the restrictions and announce legal appeals.
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