Koreas agree to restore military hotline

Above, South Korean Lieutenant Choi Don-Rim, left, communicates with a North Korean officer during this December 10, 2005 phone call at a military office near the Demilitarized Zone which separates North and South Korea. (AFP)
Updated 09 January 2018
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Koreas agree to restore military hotline

SEOUL: North and South Korea agreed Tuesday to restore a military hotline, an official said, less than a week after an civilian cross-border phone link was reopened.
The North said during the rivals’ first formal talks in more than two years that a link in the western part of the border had been put back into action, the South’s vice unification minister Chun Hae-Sung told reporters in Seoul.
“Accordingly, our side decided to start using the military telephone line, starting 8am tomorrow.”


WHO warns of health risks from ‘black rain’ in Iran

Updated 11 March 2026
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WHO warns of health risks from ‘black rain’ in Iran

  • “The black rain and the acidic rain ​coming with it is indeed a danger for ​the population, respiratory mainly,” WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier told a press ‌briefing in Geneva, adding that Iran had advised people to stay indoors

GENEVA: The World Health Organization warned on Tuesday that the “black rain” falling in Iran ​after strikes on oil facilities could cause respiratory ‌problems, and it backed Iran’s advisory urging people to remain indoors.
The UN health agency, which has an office in ​Iran and works with authorities on health emergencies, ​said it has received multiple reports of oil-laden ⁠rain this week. 

HIGHLIGHT

Tehran was choked in black ​smoke on Monday after an oil refinery was hit, ​in an escalation in strikes on Iran’s domestic energy supplies as part of the US-Israeli campaign.

Tehran was choked in black ​smoke on Monday after an oil refinery was hit, ​in an escalation in strikes on Iran’s domestic energy supplies as part of the US-Israeli campaign.
“The black rain and the acidic rain ​coming with it is indeed a danger for ​the population, respiratory mainly,” WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier told a press ‌briefing in Geneva, adding that Iran had advised people to stay indoors.
Asked whether the WHO backed that advice, he said: “Given what is at risk right now, the ​oil storage facilities, ​the refineries that have been struck, triggering fires, bringing serious air quality concerns, that is ​definitely a good idea.”
One video sent to ​Reuters by a WHO staff member showed what they said was a cleaner mopping up black liquid at its office entrance ​in Tehran on March 8. ​