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South Africa contemplates renaming renowned wildlife reserve

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Khanyisile NgcoboJohannesburg

Corbis via Getty Images A stone bust of Paul Kruger sits atop some concrete slabs. It is in the Kruger National Park and greenery and trees can be seen around it.Corbis via Getty Images

A bust of Paul Kruger stands at one of the gates to the national park that bears his name

South Africa’s world-famous Kruger National Park could become known by a new name if some local politicians have their way.

The vast wildlife sanctuary, called the Sabi Game Reserve at the time, was re-christened in 1926 to honour Paul Kruger. He was president in the late 19th Century of what was known as the South African Republic, which forms part of what is now the east of South Africa.

For Afrikaners, descendants of 17th Century European settlers, Kruger is revered as a hero who led the resistance against British colonialism.

But for the majority of South Africans, he is viewed as a relic of the country’s racist past, as he was one of those responsible for driving black Africans off their land and excluding them from having a say in running the republic.

Many South African cities, towns, roads and other major infrastructure have been given new names since the end of the legalised system of racial discrimination, known as apartheid, and the beginning of the democratic era in 1994. Though sometimes controversial, the decisions have been justified as a way to break with what went before – both the apartheid and colonial era.

But the proposed Kruger name-change does not just touch on history, it also could have a bearing on the country’s fragile economy.

AFP via Getty Images A herd of buffalo in Kruger National Park. The sun can be seen rising in an orangey-pink cloudy sky.AFP via Getty Images

Tourists go to the park in their hundreds of thousands every year to view the wildlife on offer

The national park, home to elephants, lions, hippos, leopards and many other animals, attracts almost a million visitors a year, and is a jewel in the crown of South Africa’s tourism industry.

Some argue that changing Kruger’s name could threaten that.

Part of the park is in Mpumalanga province and in September, as the country celebrated Heritage Month, representatives from the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) put forward a proposal in the region’s legislature to change Kruger’s name.

“How do we celebrate our heritage as South Africans when we still have our beautiful national parks named after the architect of apartheid Paul Kruger,” EFF representative Rhulani Qhibi was quoted as saying in a stirring speech. While not historically accurate, as apartheid in its legal form was introduced decades after Kruger’s death, the rhetoric reflects the way he is viewed by some.

The EFF also proposed the renaming of other key landmarks in the province, including the Kruger Mpumalanga International airport.

But in their haste to remove Kruger’s association with the park, the EFF, whose national leader is the firebrand MP Julius Malema, put forward another problematic name: Skukuza.

Skukuza, which means “he who sweeps clean” in the Tsonga language, was the nickname given to the park’s first warden, James Stevenson-Hamilton, who was known for driving out poachers and black communities that lived in the park in its early days, among other things.

The EFF leader in Mpumalanga, Collen Sedibe, was quoted in South African publication Sunday World as admitting the party’s blunder.

“We are still engaging with the land claimants at Kruger National Park and the people who were staying there because they said Skukuza is not the right name. He was the man who kicked them out of the park,” Sedibe said.

Gallo Images via Getty Images A statue of Paul Kruger in a square in Pretoria set against a cloudless blue sky. The word "killer" has been spray-painted onto the plinth below and pigeons are flying around the base of the statue.Gallo Images via Getty Images

The Paul Kruger statue in Pretoria has sometimes attracted the ire of protesters – it was daubed with red paint in 2020

Afrikaner lobby group AfriForum condemned the EFF’s proposal as “cheap politics and proof that political power-hunger in the province outweighs informed or responsible decision-making”.

The group vowed to mount legal challenges to any attempts to rename the park without due process and blasted the EFF for criticising its namesake.

“The Kruger National Park was created thanks to Kruger’s vision [and] to ignore Kruger’s contribution to the establishment of the country’s most important national park… is opportunistic and blatantly spreading lies,” AfriForum’s Marais de Vaal said in reaction to the news.

The motion to change the name was adopted by the provincial legislature after receiving support from its largest parties, the African National Congress (ANC), which is in power nationally, and uMkhonto weSizwe.

Despite it not being legally binding, as there is a national process that any name change needs to go through, detractors have warned that if approved it could damage the tourism sector, which contributes almost 9% to the country’s economy.

It could have “severe consequences… it might even dilute the international recognition of this park and South Africa as a tourism destination that we’ve built over so many years”, tourism expert Prof Elmarie Slabbert told the BBC.

There would also be the cost of having to rebrand the park.

The academic, a research director at the North West University’s school of tourism management, did acknowledge “that we need to honour indigenous heritage”.

“But the effect on the economy is going to be so significant that we need to decide where do we spend our money. We’ve got such a high unemployment rate at this point in time that I believe that is where the money should go.”

More than 30% of the working-age population are unemployed – ranked by the World Bank as one of the worst jobless rates of any nation – and youth unemployment is even higher.

But economics is not the only basis on which name-change decisions have been made.

The need to address the inequities of the country’s past has been seen as vital.

Getty Images An aerial view of Shark Rock Pier in Gqeberha. The pier can be seen jutting out from the beach over a clear ocean.Getty Images

The Indian Ocean city of Gqeberha was known as Port Elizabeth until 2021

For instance, the name of former Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd, a key figure in implementing apartheid, has been removed from many places.

Other changes include the city of Port Elizabeth. Named after the wife of a 19th Century British official, it is now called Gqeberha, the Xhosa word for the river that runs through it. King William’s Town, after William IV, is now Qonce, also referring to a river.

Johannesburg’s international airport, once known as Jan Smuts – honouring a former prime minister – is now called OR Tambo, after the anti-apartheid leader and former president of the ANC.

Some cities, like the capital, Pretoria, have kept their monikers but the local government areas under which they come have been renamed.

Plenty of other renaming ideas have been floated, including changing the name of the Eastern Cape seaside town of Port Alfred, which commemorates Queen Victoria’s second son. Some have even suggested changing the country’s name to Azania.

Many of these proposals have divided public opinion, and to ensure that changes are not just made on a whim there is an extensive legal process that needs to be completed.

It is managed by the South African Geographical Names Council (SAGNC) and begins with an application either by individuals, communities or institutions to the body’s provincial branch.

The proposal is discussed and could lead to a public consultation. Once this has been concluded, the name-change plan is sent to the national office.

If it is thought to satisfy “all the requirements”, a recommendation will then be made to the sports, arts and culture minister for a final decision, SAGNC chairperson Dr Nkadimeng Mahosi told the BBC.

“What is happening here [in Mpumalanga’s legislature], does not go according to what the national act says… [and] is political point-scoring,” he said.

As a national landmark, and the fact that different government departments will need to have a say, Kruger is a unique case, Dr Mahosi added.

There are then several bureaucratic hurdles that need to be negotiated before the name Kruger ever disappears from tourism brochures.

But the debate has revealed the sensitivities that continue to exist around how to deal with the country’s past and the legacy of those who used to govern it.

More about South Africa from the BBC:

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

Diane Keaton’s subtle activism played a key role in preserving these iconic Los Angeles landmarks

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While Oscar-winning actor Diane Keaton was best known for roles in Woody Allen movies and the Godfather saga, she was also a vigorous defender of historic buildings.

People magazine reported Saturday that she passed away at the age of 79.

Keaton had served on the board of the Los Angeles Conservancy and as a trustee of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Her activism included efforts to save the Ennis House, an iconic 1920s residence in the Hollywood Hills that was designed by the famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

The Northridge earthquake in 1994 and heavy rains a decade later caused significant damage. The National Trust for Historic Preservation placed the house on its 2005 list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places.

It was partially restored by the nonprofit Ennis House Foundation, then was purchased and fully restored in 2011. According to the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, Keaton called on the Hollywood community to help save the house, which has been featured in numerous films, and eventually joined the Ennis House Foundation board.

The Ennis House designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in Los Angeles, California on November 18, 2012.

Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Keaton also fought to preserve the Century Plaza Hotel, which was built in the 1960s and also placed on the 11 Most Endangered Historic Places list in 2009.

The owners at the time proposed razing the hotel and replacing it with a mixed-use development, which Keaton said “is part of an uninspired assault on 1960s large-scale architecture in Los Angeles.”

But the city approved a project that preserved the hotel as the centerpiece. Rehabilitation began in 2016, and the hotel reopened in 2021, according to the Los Angeles Conservancy.

Efforts to save the 1920-era Ambassador Hotel, however, weren’t successful. An early symbol of the city’s development and the site of Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination, the hotel was demolished in 2005 to make way for the construction of a school.

In 2008, Keaton wrote an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times reflecting on the iconic hotel, her childhood memories there, and broader preservation lessons for the city.

“I’ll never understand why architecture is considered a second cousin to painting and film,” she said. “We’ve never been married to our romance with architecture. A building, unlike a canvas or a DVD, is a massive work of art with many diverse uses. We watch movies in buildings. We look at paintings on their walls. We pray in cathedrals. We live inside places we call homes. Home gives us faith in the belief of a well-lived life. When we tear down a building, we are wiping out lessons for the future. If we think of it that way, we will begin to understand the emotional impact of wasting the energy and resources used to build it in the first place.”

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3 Important Aspects of Daniel Ek’s Decision to Step Down as Spotify CEO That You May Have Overlooked

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MBW Explains is a series of analytical features in which we explore the context behind major music industry talking points – and suggest what might happen next. Only MBW+ subscribers have unlimited access to these articles. MBW Explains is supported by Reservoir.


Spotify is undergoing the largest shakeup in the company’s management history with the announcement that co-founder Daniel Ek will be stepping down from the role of CEO, and taking on the position of Executive Chairman.

Stepping into the CEO chair will be two veteran Spotify execs: Gustav Söderström, the company’s current Co-President and Chief Product and Technology Officer, and Alex Norström, Co-President and Chief Business Officer. They will take up their roles as co-CEOS on January 1, 2026.

For Ek, this marks the end of a 19-year stint at the head of the company he co-founded with Martin Lorentzon in 2006 in “a small makeshift office” in Stockholm, building it into what is today a $137 billion company.

Spotify’s stock price has taken a bit of a tumble since Ek’s announcement on September 30, dropping around 7.5% as of mid-day trading on the NYSE on October 9. That may be a reflection of the confidence that investors have in Ek as the driving force behind Spotify, and why Ek has gone to pains to stress that he is not leaving the company, and will continue to have an active hand in the business as a “European”-style Executive Chairman.

“Most investors may come at it from a US perspective, where [Chairman is] mostly a ceremonial role. In Europe, it isn’t. In fact, a Chairman is someone who’s quite active in the business, sometimes even represents the business externally to different stakeholders, like, for instance, governments or key partners,” Ek said on a recent investor call.

Ek walks away from the CEO role as one of the 10 richest people in Sweden, with Forbes estimating his fortune at $9.6 billion. Amid a massive run-up in Spotify’s stock over the past few years (at around $673 per share, it’s gone up about 8.5-fold since a bottom below $80 in late 2022), Ek has cashed in a significant amount of Spotify shares. By MBW’s estimates, he had sold nearly $808 million in Spotify stock as of this past May.

Where is that money going? No doubt at least some of it has ended up in Ek’s new business ventures.

Here are three key things you might have missed about Daniel Ek’s historic departure from the CEO role at Spotify.


1. Ek wants to build European ‘supercompanies’

If there’s a single reason why Ek may want to step away from the day-to-day management of Spotify, it may have to do with… all the other companies he’s involved with these days.

“I am often asked, ‘How do we build more Spotifys out of Europe?’” Ek wrote in a note to staff. “That’s why several years ago, I announced my intention to help create more of these supercompanies – companies that are developing new technologies to tackle some of the biggest challenges of our time.”

Ek is playing into a narrative that has been growing increasingly loud among Europe’s business leaders: That while the US and China are rapidly building new multinational companies, Europe is falling behind. Spotify is a rare exception, and that gives Ek the credibility needed to launch new “supercompanies.”

To that end, Ek founded investment firm Prima Materia with Shakil Khan in 2021, through which Ek has pledged to invest EUR €1 billion (USD $1.17 billion) in “moonshot” bets on European businesses focused on deep tech. Prima Materia bills itself as “a European company that builds and develops new companies for the long term.”


Credit: Neko Health press
A Neko Health clinic

One of the investments Ek has stressed the most is Neko Health, a medical tech startup that runs clinics offering body scans as preventative medicine. Ek wants to see it become “the Apple of healthcare.”

Earlier this year, Neko raised $260 million in new financing to expand its clinics to the United States. (Neko’s first clinic in London opened in September 2024.)

“The companies we compare ourselves with are the Apples or Teslas of the world, but we’re applying it to a very different domain, which is healthcare,” Ek said at the time.

“Several years ago, I announced my intention to help create more of these supercompanies – companies that are developing new technologies to tackle some of the biggest challenges of our time.”

Daniel Ek, Spotify

But some of Ek’s investments have proven controversial, most notably Prima Materia’s leading role in a €600 million ($700 million) Series D funding round into German defense firm Helsing. The company has sparked concerns over its joint project with Swedish aerospace company Saab to build an AI “combat agent” that can operate fighter jets.

That left a bitter taste in the mouths of many artists on Spotify, especially those who already considered the streaming service to be paying out what they see as low royalty rates on streams, cutting corners on mechanical royalties in the US, and (particularly irksome for some) paying Joe Rogan a huge sum for his podcast.

For some artists, it was the last straw. A number of them, including Sylvan Esso, Godspeed! You Black Emperor, Deerhoof and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have announced they’re pulling their music from Spotify.

Given this recent controversy, some media outlets suggested that Ek’s departure from the CEO role was linked to the Helsing PR headache. Which brings us to the next point…

2. It’s highly unlikely Ek is leaving the CEO role over his defense investments

While it might be tempting to conclude that Ek’s switch to Executive Chairman was a rearguard action designed to deflect criticism over the Helsing investment (which certainly makes for a colorful story), it seems unlikely that this is the case.

Since the announcement, Ek has stressed that this change in leadership has been slowly implemented over the past several years, ever since Norström and Söderström were given the title of Co-President in 2023.

“Since taking over as co-presidents in 2023 [Norström and Söderström] have really stepped up in a material way, taking much of the day-to-day responsibilities,” Ek said on a recent investor call.

“And as they’ve been growing, I’ve been handing them more and more of the tasks. So I feel like this is actually more of a natural reflection of how the company actually works and operates already.”

“This is actually more of a natural reflection of how the company actually works and operates already.”

Daniel Ek, Spotify

But don’t take Ek’s word for it: Music industry insiders who have high-level contact with Spotify have themselves noticed that Ek has recently been placing Norström and Söderström in the foreground.

“We were sensing it for a while,” an unnamed senior executive at a major record label told the Financial Times. “He’s been pushing those guys further and further in the front.”

The exec also suggested that Ek’s switch to Executive Chairman won’t make much of a difference in terms of Spotify’s leadership.

Norström and Söderström are “kind of like clones of him. They’re not founders, but the same kind of Swedish. These are guys he trusts and will ultimately be able to control.”

And it seems the artists boycotting Spotify agree on this point. According to an article at The Verge, few if any artists are giving up on their Spotify boycott as a result of the move.


3. Ek, Norström, and Söderström work so closely that they share an office

In stressing just how not-a-change this change will be, Spotify’s leadership team put on full display just how close a working relationship Ek has with the two incoming co-CEOs.

“Fun fact, we actually sit in the same room, the three of us,” Norström said on the investor call.

“People are very surprised when they see that, but that just has meant so much in terms of momentum and impact for us as a business. So for me and Gustav, this is not so much a change in direction. This is more doubling down on a setup that we think is working and it will increase pace even more.”


L-R: Gustav Söderström, Daniel Ek, Alex Norström

And though he didn’t make it entirely clear, it seems Ek plans to continue to keep an office with the two co-CEOs once they’re in place.

“I am still retaining an office here with Gustav and Alex sitting here,” Ek said. “Hopefully working on various types of problems with them.”

But lest an executive board chairman sharing an office with the company’s CEOs seem like overkill, Ek was quick to point out that Norström and Söderström will actually be Spotify’s CEOs.

“With all that said, I do want to make it clear… they’re in charge. They are the ones making the decision[s], but I will be there as a friend, a coach, a shared leader, whatever I’m needed to do for the day in making this happen.”


Reservoir (Nasdaq: RSVR) is a publicly traded, global independent music company with operations across music publishing, recorded music, and artist management. Music Business Worldwide

David Betlehem Wins Open Water World Cup 10k Gold in Italy; Fontaine Earns Overall High Point Title

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By Will Baxley on SwimSwam

2025 World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup – Stop 4

Capping off a successful year, David Betlehem roared home to win the 10k on the final stop of the 2025 Open Water World Cup. Logan Fontaine, who scored silver, topped the Cup’s overall standings.

Not allowing the sudden heavy rain mid-race to shake his psyche, Betlehem had the fastest final lap by splitting from the pack by taking a different line than previously. This, coupled with a surge in the final hundred meters, let the Hungarian to a three-second victory in 1:53:28.20.

Betlehem, who recently turned 22, has been a top name in open water swimming for a couple years now, particularly in shorter distances. Lately, however, he has found a winning stride in the 10k distance. The NC State Swimmer won the distance in the European Open Water Cup for the first time in September. Today, he added a World Cup title to his belt. Bethlehem enters 2026 a bigger contender in the distance than ever before.

With this swim, he also ascends to #1 on the world rankings, surpassing Florian Wellbrock.

For a second time in this year’s World Cup series, Logan Fontaine earned the 10k silver. This placing put him at the top of the overall standings. Fontaine keeps the trophy in France’s possession, as Marc Antoine Olivier won the title in 2024. Antoine-Olivier sits in second overall, with Italy’s Dario Verani in third.

With a home crowd cheering them on, Italy impressively occupied five of the top ten spots. Verani led the charge for his country, earning himself a bronze medal. His countrymates, Andrea Filadelli, Marcello Guidi, Domenico Acerenza, and Giuseppe Ilario.

China’s Ziyang Zhang stood as the lone non-European in yesterday’s top ten, coming in at 8th.

Antoine-Olivier, last year’s overall world cup winner, faded to 14th after taking a lead early in the race. Kristof Rasovszky, the reigning European Champion in the event, finished 44th, over three minutes behind his country mate Betlehem.

The entire 10k podium from the World Championships in Singapore – Florian Wellbrock, Gregorio Paltrinieri, and Kyle Lee – did not compete.

Video:

Read the full story on SwimSwam: David Betlehem Claims Open Water World Cup 10k Gold In Italy; Fontaine Gets Overall High Point

Yamaha’s Next-Generation Vehicles Revolutionize Mobility at Japanese Exhibition

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The Japan Mobility Show – which brings together major automakers to show off their upcoming vehicles in Tokyo each year – is still a couple of weeks away. Thankfully, we don’t have to wait until then to see what Yamaha’s got cooking, because it’s totally fire.

The company is bringing six new (or new-ish) concepts to the event, but perhaps the most striking of the bunch is the Motoroid:Λ. This is the evolution of a self-balancing motorcycle prototype Yamaha first revealed in 2017 with a futuristic design.

In its third avatar, the brand says the Motoroid:Λ is all about using reinforcement learning in virtual environments for even greater autonomous capabilities than it had envisioned in the second concept showcased in 2023.

The Motoroid is all about autonomous operation, and using reinforcement learning to train itself to travel through complex environments

Yamaha

“The model’s main features include optimized, organic movements generated through AI-based learning and a lightweight, durable exoskeleton engineered to withstand the trial-and-error impacts of the learning process,” reads the presser. “By venturing into the uncharted field of mobility mixed with reinforcement learning for motion control, Motoroid:Λ aims to redefine the world of two-wheeled vehicles and pioneer an entirely new future.”

I don't exactly know what Yamaha thinks the future of motorcycling will be like, but it's likely nothing like how we ride today
I don’t exactly know what Yamaha thinks the future of motorcycling will be like, but it’s likely nothing like how we ride today

Yamaha

While the earlier concepts were plenty wild, what’s especially compelling with this one is how it could potentially lift itself up to a standing position from falling flat on the floor, thanks to the stands on both sides below the chassis, and the articulating rear half that looks like it can twist along one axis.

That’s an interesting glimpse into what tomorrow’s bikes could be capable of. I wonder what that spells for the experience in the saddle for the next generation of riders, given that motorcycles are so much about engaging physically with the machine. Hopefully we’ll hear and see more about this from Yamaha closer to the show.

The Tricera concept looks equal parts elegant and exciting to ride
The Tricera concept looks equal parts elegant and exciting to ride

Yamaha

Wait, there’s more. Yamaha’s also thinking of what a three-wheel steering system could be like in an open-top electric autocycle, in a working prototype called the Tricera. I can only imagine how much fun this might be to ride, given how close you’re seated to the ground.

Sitting this low to the ground in the Tricera, you're certainly going to feel the acceleration
Sitting this low to the ground in the Tricera, you’re certainly going to feel the acceleration

Yamaha

There’s also the hydrogen-powered Buddy Porter Concept that’s being developed in partnership with Toyota. This scooter’s designed to cover over 60 miles (100 km) with two hydrogen tanks on board, and it seems ideal for intra-city shipping with its canopy and storage cubby.

Yamaha is developing this hydrogen-powered H2 Buddy Porter concept in partnership with Toyota
Yamaha is developing this hydrogen-powered H2 Buddy Porter concept in partnership with Toyota

Yamaha

It’s good to know Yamaha hasn’t shelved the Proto HEV, a series-parallel hybrid system scooter we saw back in February. This baby combines a combustion engine with an electric motor for more spirited performance.

This series-parallel hybrid scooter prototype packs an electric motor and a combustion engine that can work together to deliver more power on the road
This series-parallel hybrid scooter prototype packs an electric motor and a combustion engine that can work together to deliver more power on the road

Yamaha

There’s also the streetfighter-style Proto PHEV motorcycle, which will let you switch between full-electric or hybrid modes in the saddle.

With the Proto PHEV streetfighter, you can switch between riding in full EV or hybrid mode
With the Proto PHEV streetfighter, you can switch between riding in full EV or hybrid mode

Yamaha

If you’re more into sportsbikes, the Proto BEV might be more your speed. Yamaha says this one has track day performance in mind, with a large-capacity battery on board, along with simplified tech that should help riders spend less time fiddling with the dashboard, and more time burning rubber.

The Proto BEV is meant to unlock high performance riding with a large-capacity battery on board
The Proto BEV is meant to unlock high performance riding with a large-capacity battery on board

Yamaha

Lastly, how cool are these minimalist ebikes?

Yamaha has no right to keep the Y-00B: Base locked away from fans of minimalist ebikes
Yamaha has no right to keep the Y-00B: Base locked away from fans of minimalist ebikes

Yamaha

You’re looking at the Y-00B: Base above, and the arguably more compelling Y-00B: Bricolage below, which is modeled after Yamaha’s first-ever motorcycle, the elegant YA-1 from 1955.

I love that the Y-00B: Bricolage ebike looks straight out of the 50s with its sophisticated color scheme
I love that the Y-00B: Bricolage ebike looks straight out of the 50s with its sophisticated color scheme

Yamaha

We’ll keep an ear to the ground for word from the brand on whether any of these will go into production soon. Until then, feast your eyes on these other striking two-wheeler concepts from BMW, XYTE, and Ather Energy.

Source: Yamaha

Explosion at Tennessee explosives plant leaves no survivors | Breaking News

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Operations go from rescue to recovery as no survivors expected to be found, officials say.

Investigators do not expect to find any survivors at the scene of a blast at a Tennessee explosives company, officials say.

The explosion, which was felt for miles, destroyed a building at the headquarters of Accurate Energetic Systems early on Friday in Bucksnort, about an hour’s drive west of Nashville.

“More than 300 people have been through almost every square inch of this facility, and at this time, we’ve recovered no survivors,” Humphreys County Sheriff Chris Davis told reporters on Saturday. “It’s a great loss to our communities.”

Officials did not offer a precise death toll but have previously said 18 people were unaccounted for. Davis confirmed the operation had shifted from rescue to recovery and that investigators would use DNA testing to confirm the identities of those who died.

The factory made explosives for both military and demolition purposes.

Investigators, including agents from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, were still working to determine the cause of the explosion, officials said. The presence of explosives and other ordnance at the property has made searching the scene complicated.

In a statement, the company called the blast “a tragic accident”.

Davis said it could be days, weeks or even months before foul play is ruled out.

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Four people fatally shot following Mississippi football game

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Four people have been killed and 12 others injured, four critically, after a mass shooting in the US state of Mississippi.

The shooting happened at around midnight on the main street in Leland, a small town 120 miles (190km) north-east of the state capital Jackson, the small city’s Mayor John Lee told the BBC.

Four of the injured were airlifted to hospital, Lee added. No suspects were in custody, but a police manhunt was under way.

Leland was busier than usual on Friday with the local high school scheduled to play a football game to mark homecoming, an annual US tradition, usually in autumn, when former students are welcomed back to celebrate school spirit and community.

The mayor said that the shooting did not take place on the Leland High School campus.

“This is an event where we have held yearly for years and hadn’t had any incidents of this sort, ever,” Lee told BBC.

“And we’re a city that, not high crime and about 3,700 people. We all get along, and everybody knows everybody. So this is definitely a tragedy to us.”

The Leland Police Department is still investigating the incident and told the BBC it cannot share any further details at this time, including how many rounds were fired and what kind of gun was used. The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is helping the inquiry.

State Senator Derrick Simmons told the Associated Press that the scene was “very chaotic” after the gunfire erupted, as police and first responders rushed to the area “from all over”.

“People were just congregating and having a good time in the downtown of Leland,” Simmons told the AP.

Officials are asking for anyone with information about the “horrific” shooting to come forward, Simmons added.

A deadly shooting was also reported on Friday night in another small Mississippi town, Heidelberg, about 200 miles south-east of Leland.

That attack also happened during the town’s homecoming weekend, and claimed two lives, Heidelberg Police Chief Cornell White told the AP.

There is no indication the Leland and Heidelberg shootings were linked.

18 missing after Tennessee munitions plant blast, no survivors located

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No survivors found after Tennessee munitions plant blast left 18 missing