January 17, 2024
(Wednesday)
Armed conflicts and attacks
- Red Sea crisis
- 2024 missile strikes in Yemen
- The United States Central Command says another round of U.S. strikes has destroyed 14 anti-ship missiles in Yemen that were being prepared to launch at merchant vessels and U.S. Navy ships in the region. (Reuters)
- Operation Prosperity Guardian
- The United States redesignates the Yemen-based Houthis as a terrorist organization in response to continuing attacks in the Red Sea. (Reuters) (Archive)
- 2024 missile strikes in Yemen
- 2024 Iran–Pakistan border skirmishes
- 2024 Iranian missile strikes in Pakistan
- Pakistan recalls its ambassador to Iran in response to the missile attack on its territory that killed two civilians. (The Washington Post)
- 2024 Iranian missile strikes in Pakistan
- 2024 Ecuadorian conflict
- Public prosecutor César Suárez , who was investigating the takeover of the TC Televisión newsroom by armed men, is killed in Guayaquil, Ecuador. (Al Jazeera)
Disasters and accidents
- At least 19 people are killed and three others are missing in an explosion at a fireworks factory in Suphan Buri, Thailand. (AP)
- Three people are killed and 77 others are injured in an explosion caused by explosives stored for use in illegal mining operations at several buildings in Ibadan, Nigeria. (AP)
- Three people are killed when a power line falls on a car during a major winter storm in Portland, Oregon, United States. (AP)
Law and crime
- 2024 Bashkortostan protests
- Thousands of people protest the trial of Bashkir activist Fail Alsynov in Baymak, Bashkortostan, Russia. Clashes with police are reported. (RFE/RL)
- Lèse-majesté in Thailand
- Thai activist Arnon Nampa is sentenced to four years in prison for posting a royal insult on social media in 2021. (CNA)
- Three people are killed and five others injured during a mass shooting against a group of men outdoors in Morvant, Trinidad and Tobago. (AP)
- Former Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei is barred from entering the U.S. after the State Department accuses him of "significant corruption". (Reuters)
- UK Home Secretary James Cleverly announces a ban on Hizb ut-Tahrir, an Islamic fundamentalist movement, for its support of Hamas and "violently antisemitic rhetoric". (The Algemeiner)