Don Lemon arrested by federal authorities in connection with Minnesota church protest

Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal authorities on Thursday night in connection with a protest at a Minnesota church service earlier this month.

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Lemon, 59, and three others — Trahern Jeen Crews, Georgia Fort, and Jamael Lydell Lundy — were arrested "in connection with the coordinated attack on Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota," Attorney General Pam Bondi said in apost on Xon Friday.

The ex-CNN anchor's attorney, Abbe Lowell, said in a statement that Lemon was taken into custody by federal agents in Los Angeles, where he was covering the Grammy Awards.

"Instead of investigating the federal agents who killed two peaceful Minnesota protesters, the Trump Justice Department is devoting its time, attention and resources to this arrest, and that is the real indictment of wrongdoing in this case,' Lowell said. "This unprecedented attack on the First Amendment and transparent attempt to distract attention from the many crises facing this administration will not stand.

"Don will fight these charges vigorously and thoroughly in court," Lowell added.

The arrest of the one the country's most recognizable journalists is the latest development in the federal government's unprecedented immigration crackdown in Minneapolis, in which two U.S. citizens have been shot and killed.

Lemon was arrested by the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations in Beverly Hills at approximately midnight, according to a federal warrant issued in another district.

Details of the charges against the four were not immediately available. However, the Justice Departmentpromised to pursue chargesagainst Lemon after the independent journalist covered the protest at a church in St. Paul on Jan. 18.

A federal magistrate judge hadpreviously rejected a criminal complaintagainst Lemon. A source familiar with the matter, described Bondi as "enraged" by the decision.

Their arrests also follow the apprehension of three others—Nekima Levy Armstrong,Chauntyll Louisa AllenandWilliam Kelly —who disrupted the same church service in St. Paul.

Demonstrators gathered at the service because its pastor,David Easterwood, allegedly works for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The protesters say Easterwood is the acting director of an ICE field office in St. Paul.

The federal government cited the FACE Act to justify the arrest of the three protesters. The federal statute prohibits the use of force or intimidation to anyone trying to access reproductive services, but also contains provisions that cover houses of worship.

But the protesters were released after a federal judge found the Trump administration offered "no factual or legal support" to justify two of the arrests.

Prior to his arrest, Lemon said he stood by his reporting.

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"If this much time and energy is going to be spent manufacturing outrage, it would be far better used investigating the tragic death of Renee Nicole Good — the very issue that brought people into the streets in the first place," he said in a statement last week.

The federal government has sent 3,000 federal immigration agents to the Twin Cities over the last two months and arrested more than 3,000 undocumented immigrants, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Amid the crackdown,Renee Good, 37, andAlex Pretti, 37, were bothshot and killedby federal immigration authorities in separate confrontations, incensing large swaths of the nation.

The operation has alsotransformed daily life in the Twin Cities, with some residents protesting daily, patrolling the region's streets for immigration agents and delivering groceries to undocumented families who are afraid to leave their homes.

After initially doubling down and referring to both Good and Pretti as "domestic terrorists," Trump administration officials said they plan on reducing the number of agents in the state.

On Thursday, the administration also swapped out Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino for former Obama-staffer-turned-Trump-Border czar Tom Homan to oversee the immigration operation in the Twin Cities, dubbed Operation Metro Surge

Tom Homansaid at a press conferenceon Thursday that "no organization is perfect" and that administration officials, including the president, "have recognized that certain improvements could and should be made."

The Committee to Protect Journalists, a nonprofit that promotes press freedom worldwide, condemned Lemon's arrest.

"The arrest of journalist Don Lemon in connection with his reporting on a protest in Minnesota should alarm all Americans," Katherine Jacobsen, who works on the organization's U.S. efforts, said in a statement. "Instead of prioritizing accountability in the killings of two American citizens, the Trump administration is devoting its resources to arresting journalists."

CNN said in apost on Xthat Lemon's arrest "raises profoundly concerning questions about press freedom and the First Amendment."

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass also condemned Lemon's arrest and said in a statement she "reached out to the U.S. Attorney to check on Don Lemon's status."

"Let me be very clear — President Trump is not deescalating anything after the fatal shootings of U.S. citizens by federal agents," she said. "In fact, the arrest of Don Lemon and Georgia Fort demonstrates quite the opposite — he is escalating."

In its own post on X, the White House appeared to mock Lemon.

"When life gives you lemons..." the White House account wrote, coupled with a chain emoji and image of Lemon from inside the church.

Representatives for Lemon, Lemon's husband, Cities Church and the three others arrested did not immediately return requests for comment.

Don Lemon arrested by federal authorities in connection with Minnesota church protest

Former CNN anchor Don Lemon was arrested by federal authorities on Thursday night in connection with a protest at a Minne...
Mexico to seek diplomatic solution after US threatens Cuba oil tariffs

(Refiles to add dropped word in paragraph four)

MEXICO CITY, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum said on ​Friday her country would seek diplomatic solutions and ‌alternatives to help Cuba after the United States threatened tariffs on nations ‌that supply the Caribbean nation with oil.

"We need to know the scope because we don't want to put our country at risk in terms of tariffs," Sheinbaum said in a morning ⁠press conference, adding that ‌she had instructed her foreign minister to reach out to the U.S. State Department.

Mexico is one ‍of Cuba's only remaining suppliers of oil and its shipments are a lifeline for the island.

Sheinbaum said cutting off oil shipments could ​cause a serious humanitarian crisis in Cuba, affecting transportation and ‌key infrastructure including hospitals and electricity generation.

"Applying tariffs on countries that supply oil to Cuba could trigger a far-reaching humanitarian crisis, directly affecting hospitals, food and other basic services for the Cuban people, a situation that must be avoided," she ⁠said.

Sheinbaum did not say whether Mexico ​would cut shipments of oil or ​refined products to Cuba, which Sheinbaum said accounted for 1% of Mexico's production, but emphasized the ‍country is looking ⁠at alternatives to help the island.

U.S. President Donald Trump and Sheinbaum spoke on Thursday morning, hours before his ⁠administration announced the tariffs, but he did not mention the measures, she ‌said.

(Reporting by Sarah Morland and Adriana Barrera; Editing by ‌Kylie Madry and Emily Green)

Mexico to seek diplomatic solution after US threatens Cuba oil tariffs

(Refiles to add dropped word in paragraph four) MEXICO CITY, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Mexico's President Claudia S...
Confusion in Kyiv and Moscow after Trump says Putin agreed to pause attacks for a week

Confusion reigned Friday about whether RussianPresident Vladimir Putinhad agreed to halt strikes on Ukraine afterPresident Donald Trumpsaid he had personally asked him to stop attackingbecause of the "extraordinary cold."

NBC Universal Russian drone attack on Vilnyansk (Jose Colon / Anadolu via Getty Images)

Speaking at aCabinet meetingin the White House on Thursday, Trump said he asked Putin not to fire on Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, "and the various towns for a week and he agreed to do that."

Without elaborating on when the call with Putin took place, Trump said it was "very nice" that the Russian leader had agreed to his request. "A lot of people said, 'Don't waste the call. You're not going to get that,' and he did it and we're very happy that they did it," Trump said.

The Russian military continues to target civilian objects and civilians in Kherson during ongoing full-scale war against Ukraine. (Olexandr Kornyakov / Global Images Ukraine via Getty )

Trump did not say when the one-week period would begin and end for Ukraine, which has been hit with bitterly cold winter conditions that have brought hardship on the long-suffering population.

The White House did not respond to NBC News' request for clarification on when Putin would halt the strikes, whether Trump had agreed to anything in return and what the president would do if Russia started attacking again during the agreed break.

"As President Trump said, he asked President Putin to withhold strikes on Kyiv for one week amid extremely cold temperatures, and the Russian President agreed to do so," a spokesperson said in an email.

Kyiv and its surrounding region has been in the grip of a bitter cold snap since early this month, with overnight temperatures dipping to as low as minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 20 degrees Celsius). Although temperatures have warmed up in recent days, forecasters are predicting the mercury will plunge again next week.

Repeated Russian attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure have leftmillions of people in the dark and cold, despite best efforts to repair and restore power to the grid.

Although there were no strikes on the Kyiv region overnight, Ukraine's air force said Russia had fired a ballistic missile and launched more than 100 drones at the country with strikes recorded in 15 locations. Officials in five regions reported that several people had been killed and wounded.

Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Wednesday. (Maxim Shipenkov / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)

Russia's Defense Ministry said Friday it struck military targets inside Ukraine, including energy facilities used to support the army.

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But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed in a briefing with reporters that Trump had asked Putin to refrain from strikes on Kyiv for a week until Feb. 1 "in order to create favorable conditions for negotiations."

The mention of Feb. 1 added to the confusion since it is only two days away.

Peskov declined to say whether Putin had agreed to Trump's request when asked at least three times by reporters, but when pushed, he replied: "Yes, of course. It was a personal request from President Trump."

A building protected by sandbags against possible damage caused by air strikes in Kyiv on Thursday. (Sergei Gapon / AFP - Getty Images)

He would not elaborate on whether the hold on strikes would halt all attacks on Kyiv or just those on its energy infrastructure.

Peskov's comments have been interpreted differently by Russian state news agencies, which are usually relatively unified in their coverage of the Kremlin. RIA Novosti reported that Russia had agreed to refrain from strikes on Ukraine until Feb. 1. But Tass and Interfax said that Peskov refrained from answering questions about whether Putin agreed to Trump's request.

Russia's influential war bloggers also appeared to have been caught off guard, although most interpreted it as Moscow agreeing to a ceasefire.

Before Peskov's briefing,Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyywas quoted as saying there was "no official agreement on a ceasefire" in comments distributed by his office on Friday. "There has been no direct dialogue and no direct agreements on this matter between us and Russia," he added.

Zelenskyy said that Trump's request to Putin was "an initiative of the American side" and that Ukraine sees it as "an opportunity rather than an agreement."

But he insisted that Ukraine would support any de-escalation efforts. "If Russia does not strike our energy infrastructure — generation facilities or any other energy assets — we will not strike theirs," he said.

Trump's comments came days after thefirst trilateral meetingin Abu Dhabi between Ukraine, Russia and the U.S. Although no major breakthroughs were announced, the talks were widely seen as positive after months of stop-start diplomacy to bring the war to a close.

More talks are expected in the United Arab Emirates' capital on Sunday, but that could change because oftensions between the United States and Iran.

Confusion in Kyiv and Moscow after Trump says Putin agreed to pause attacks for a week

Confusion reigned Friday about whether RussianPresident Vladimir Putinhad agreed to halt strikes on Ukraine afterPresiden...
Iran's top diplomat says there are no plans for talks with the US

ISTANBUL (AP) — Iran's foreign minister announced Friday that his country is ready for dialogue to resolve tensions but that there are no concrete plans for talks with the United States — even as Tehran faces thethreat of U.S. military actionin response to the killing of peaceful demonstrators and over possible mass executions.

The minister, Abbas Araghchi, spoke in Istanbul where he arrived earlier in the day for talks with Turkish officials. Ankara has been working to reduce tensions in the wider region following threats of a possible U.S. military strike against Iran.

Iran hascracked down on nationwide protests, which began as demonstrations against the country's economic woes but broadened into a challenge to the Islamic Republic's theocracy. Activists say the crackdown has killed at least 6,479 people.

The U.S. military has movedthe USS Abraham Lincoln and several guided-missile destroyersinto the Middle Eeast but it remains unclear whether President Donald Trumpwill decide to use force.

Turkish PresidentRecep Tayyip Erdoganoffered during a telephone call with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian earlier on Friday to act as a "facilitator" between Iran and the U.S., according to his office.

Araghchi told reporters during a joint news conference with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan that Iran has no plans to "meet with the Americans."

"We are ready for fair and equitable negotiations," he said. "For such negotiations, arrangements must first be made, both regarding the form of the talks and the location of the talks, and about the topic of the talks."

"The Islamic Republic of Iran, just as it is ready for negotiations, it is also ready for war," Araghchi added.

Turkey opposes a military intervention against Iran, warning such an action would lead to regional instability.

"We are against resorting to military options to solve problems, and we do not believe that this will be very effective," Fidan said. "We advocate for negotiation and diplomacy."

Araghchi's visit came a day after the European United agreed tolist Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard as a "terrorist organization"over Tehran's bloody crackdown on protesters.

Araghchi on Wednesdayposted on X that Iran's military is prepared"with their fingers on the trigger" to respond to any attack, whether by land, air and sea.

He later, in another post on X, indirectly criticized the EU move against the Guard, saying that "several countries are presently attempting to avert the eruption of all-out war in our region. None of them are European."

Associated Press writer Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, contributed to this report.

Iran's top diplomat says there are no plans for talks with the US

ISTANBUL (AP) — Iran's foreign minister announced Friday that his country is ready for dialogue to resolve tensions b...
DHS ramps up surveillance in immigration raids, sweeping in citizens

Luis Martinez was on his way to work on a frigidMinneapolismorning when federal agents suddenly boxed him in, forcing the SUV he was driving to a dead stop in the middle of the street.

Masked agents rapped on the window, demanding Martinez produce his ID. Then one held his cellphone inches from Martinez's face and scanned his features, capturing the shape of his eyes, the curves of his lips, the exact quadrants of his cheeks.

All the while, the agent kept asking: Are you a U.S. citizen?

The encounter in a Minneapolis suburb this weekcaptures the tactics on displayin the Trump administration's immigration crackdown in Minnesota, which it describes as the largest of its kind and one that has drawn national scrutiny after federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens this month.

Across Minnesota and other states where the Department of Homeland Security has surged personnel, officials say enforcement efforts are targeted and focused on serious offenders. But photographs, videos and internal documents paint a different picture, showing agents leaning heavily on biometric surveillance and vast, interconnected databases — highlighting how a sprawling digital surveillance apparatus has become central to the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.

Civil liberties experts warn the expanding use of those systems riskssweeping up citizens and noncitizens alike, often with little transparency or meaningful oversight.

Over the past year, Homeland Security and other federal agencies have dramatically expanded their ability to collect, share and analyze people's personal data, thanks to a web of agreements with local, state, federal and international agencies, plus contracts with technology companies and data brokers. The databases include immigration and travel records, facial images and information drawn from vehicle databases.

In Martinez's case, the face scan didn't find a match and it wasn't until he produced his U.S. passport, which he said he carried for fear of such an encounter, that federal agents let him go.

"I had been telling people that here in Minnesota it's like a paradise for everybody, all the cultures are free here," he said. "But now people are running out of the state because of everything that is happening. It's terrifying. It's not safe anymore."

Together with other government surveillance data and systems, federal authorities can now monitor American cities at a scale that would have been difficult to imagine just a few years ago, advocates say. Agents can identify people on the street through facial recognition, trace their movements through license-plate readers and, in some cases, use commercially available phone-location data to reconstruct daily routines and associations.

When asked by The Associated Press about its expanding use of surveillance tools, the Department of Homeland Security said it would not disclose law enforcement sensitive methods.

"Employing various forms of technology in support of investigations and law enforcement activities aids in the arrest of criminal gang members, child sex offenders, murderers, drug dealers, identity thieves and more, all while respecting civil liberties and privacy interests," it said.

Dan Herman, a former Customs and Border Protection senior adviser in the Biden administration who now works at the Center for American Progress, said the government's access to facial recognition, other personal data and surveillance systems poses a threat to people's privacy rights and civil liberties without adequate checks.

"They have access to a tremendous amount of trade, travel, immigration and screening data. That's a significant and valuable national security asset, but there's a concern about the potential for abuse," Herman said. "Everyone should be very concerned about the potential that this data could be weaponized for improper purposes."

Facial recognition

On Wednesday, DHS disclosed online that it has been using a facial recognition app, Mobile Fortify, that it said uses "trusted source photos" to compare scans of people's faces that agents take to verify their identity. The app, which Customs and Border Protection said is made by the vendor NEC, uses facial comparison or fingerprint-matching systems.

The app was in operation for CBP and ICE before the immigration crackdown in the Los Angeles area in June, when website 404Media firstreported its existence.

In interactions observed by reporters and videos posted online, federal agents are rarely seen asking for consent before holding their cellphones to people's faces, and in some clips they continue scanning even after someone objects.

In two instances seen by an AP journalist near Columbia Heights, Minnesota, where immigration officials recently detained a 5-year-old boy and his father, masked agents held their phones a foot away from people's faces to capture their biometric details.

The technology resembles facial recognition systems used at airports, but unlike airport screenings, where travelers are typically notified and can sometimes opt out, Martinez said he was given no choice.

According to alawsuit filed against DHSby the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago this month, DHS has used Mobile Fortify in the field more than 100,000 times. The Department of Homeland Security told AP that Mobile Fortify supports "accurate identity and immigration-status verification during enforcement operations. It operates with a deliberately high-matching threshold," and uses only some immigration data.

Without federal guidelines for the use of facial recognition tools, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights warned in aSeptember 2024 reporttheir deployment raises concerns about accuracy, oversight, transparency, discrimination and access to justice.

Body-camera footage

Last year, the Trump administration scaled back a program to give Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials body cameras, but administration officials said some agents tied to the fatal shooting ofMinneapolis ICU nurse Alex Prettiwere wearing them and that footage is now being reviewed.

Gregory Bovino, who was the administration's top Border Patrol official charged with the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis until Monday, began wearing a bodycam in response to a judge's order late last year.

Body-camera video could help clarify events surrounding federal agents' killing of Pretti, who was filming immigration agents with his cellphone when they shot him in the back.

Administration officials shifted their tone afterindependent video footage emergedraising serious questions about some Trump officials' accusations that Pretti intended to harm agents.

Emerging technologies

Homeland Security and affiliated agencies are piloting and deploying more than 100artificial intelligencesystems, including some used in law enforcement activities, according to the department's disclosure Wednesday.

Congress last year authorized U.S. Customs and Border Protection to get more than $2.7 billion to build out border surveillance systems and add in AI and other emerging technologies.

In recent weeks, DHS requested more information from private industry on how technology companies and data providers can support their investigations and help identify people.

Meanwhile, longtime government contractor Palantir was paid $30 million to extend a contract to build a system designed to locate people flagged for deportation. On Wednesday, the Trump administration disclosed it's using Palantir's AI models to sift through immigration enforcement tips submitted to its tip line.

DHS has also been exploring partnerships with license-plate reader companies like Flock Safety to expand their tracking capabilities.

Rachel Levinson-Waldman, who directs the Brennan Center for Justice's Liberty and National Security Program, said more funding for government surveillance tools changes the landscape.

"We are developing these technologies for immigrant enforcement," she said. "Are we also going to expand it or wield it against U.S. citizens who are engaging in entirely lawful or protest activity?"

AP freelance photojournalist Adam Gray contributed to this report from Minneapolis.

Contact AP's global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org or https://www.ap.org/tips/

DHS ramps up surveillance in immigration raids, sweeping in citizens

Luis Martinez was on his way to work on a frigidMinneapolismorning when federal agents suddenly boxed him in, forcing the...
Emergency responders at the scene of the crash in Colorado Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office

Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office

NEED TO KNOW

  • Multiple members of a girls' hockey team were injured when their vehicle was struck while traveling to Denver, Colorado, on Thursday, Jan. 29

  • The driver of their sprinter van, believed to be one of the girls' fathers, died at the scene on Interstate 70

  • "We ask that you keep our hockey families in your prayers and that you give them time to sort through the details of this tragic event," said the Santa Clarita Flyers Hockey Club

Five children and three adults from a Santa Clarita girls' hockey team have been left injured after a snowplow struck their van in Colorado.

At around 8:53 a.m. local time on Thursday, Jan. 29, Colorado State Patrol responded to a fatal crash on eastbound I-70 at milepost 218, said the Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office in anews release.

The crash involved a Colorado Department of Transportation snowplow, a hockey team in a sprinter van, as well as two other passenger vehicles.

"Initial reports are that eight people, including five juveniles and three adults, were transported by ground ambulance to a local area hospital," said the Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office. "The driver of the sprinter van was declared deceased on scene."

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Emergency responders at the scene of the crash in Colorado Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office

Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office

The Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office said the Department of Transportation plow truck driver lost control while driving westbound on I-70.

"The plow truck traveled through the median, breaking through the cable rail and into the eastbound lanes," the authorities said. "The plow collided with a Toyota Tacoma that was traveling eastbound in the eastbound lanes."

"After impact, the Toyota went through the median and struck a BMW traveling westbound in the westbound lanes," they continued. "The plow continued eastbound and struck the sprinter van that was traveling eastbound in the eastbound lanes. After the impact, the sprinter van ended up down an embankment. The CDOT plow came to rest on the shoulder."

One child was airlifted to the hospital in critical condition, four children and three adults were also hospitalized via ambulance, theLos Angeles TimesandABC 7reported, citing Colorado State Patrol.

Prescott Littlefield, the president of the Santa Clarita Flyers Hockey Club said the injured are expected to recover.

"It's devastating. It hits home really hard for everybody," Littlefield told ABC 7.

There were reportedly no injuries sustained from occupants in the Toyota and BMW vehicles, the Sheriff's Office said in their news release.

Emergency responders at the scene of the crash in Colorado Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office

Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office

While the identity of the driver hasn't been made public, he was reportedly the father of one of the players, according to theLos Angeles Times.

The Santa Clarita Flyers Hockey Club shared a statement onInstagram, saying that, "Our 12AA Lady Flyers were on their way to Denver, Colorado, to participate in a WGHL weekend. We ask that you keep our hockey families in your prayers and that you give them time to sort through the details of this tragic event."

They added onFacebook, "We are devastated for the loss that our hockey family has experienced today. Our Lady Flyers have felt the love tonight, and would love to thank every single one of you that has reached out asking how you can help.

"The club has helped our Lady Flyer families put together a donation site to help with all of the upcoming expenses that the families will be facing," the club continued, linking to aGivebutter fundraiser. "Our hockey community is amazing and we thank you ahead of time for being willing to give what you can. We know that every little bit helps at this moment."

Littlefield told ABC 7 that the girls who are in good condition will go ahead with their tournament.

"The girls voted and those that can still play are going to go play tomorrow morning," he said. "They're going to gather together in the parking lot, walk into that building as a solid group and go out there and do what they have been working hard to do this entire season."

TheColorado State Patroland the Sheriff's Office confirmed that the eastbound I-70 has since reopened, but the investigation into the incident remains ongoing.

PEOPLE has contacted the Colorado State Patrol, Colorado Department of Public Safety and the Colorado Department of Transportation for further comment.

Read the original article onPeople

5 Children and 3 Adults from Girls' Hockey Team Injured After Snowplow Truck Loses Control and Hits Their Van

Clear Creek County Sheriff's Office NEED TO KNOW Multiple members of a girls' hockey team were injured when their vehicle was str...
At least 11 killed in crash between truck and taxi eNCA/Youtube

eNCA/Youtube

NEED TO KNOW

  • At least 11 people have died in a crash between a taxi bus and a truck in South Africa.

  • The truck was reportedly performing a U-turn at the time of the crash

  • Eight people also sustained critical injuries a spokesperson confirmed in a release

At least 11 people have died and multiple others have been seriously injured following a crash between a taxi bus and a truck in South Africa.

On Thursday, Jan. 29, the ALS Paramedics Medical Servicesconfirmedin a Facebook post that 11 people had died, including a child approximately 13 years of age, following the collision on the R102 near the city of Durban in the eastern KwaZulu-Natal province.

Eight people also sustained critical injuries with seven being rushed to local hospitals, the ALS spokesperson confirmed in anupdate.

The spokesperson went on to say that the taxi driver was also critically injured and remained "severely trapped in the wreckage," adding that emergency services were struggling to free him due to there being "no space from the front or the back to maneuver."

PEOPLE has contacted ALS Paramedics Medical Services and the South African Department of Transport for comment.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

In pictures shared by ALS, the truck and taxi could be seen crushed together on the side of the road.

Rescue workers at the scene of the crash Dinky Mkhize / AFP via Getty

Dinky Mkhize / AFP via Getty

"So the instruction has been given to this heavy duty tow-truck to try and pull the truck a bit forward," the spokesperson explained in the video release.

Provincial transport department official Siboniso Duma told theAssociated Pressthat witnesses claimed they saw the truck making a "U-turn resulting in a head-on collision."

Duma added that preliminary findings have suggested the truck was traveling illegally with worn tires. The taxi driver's licence had also expired in 2023.

The tragic incident comes weeks after a minibus and a truck collision resulted in the deaths of 14 school children near Johannesburg on Jan. 19, according to the Associated Press andSky News.

The 22-year-old driver was charged with 14 counts of murder.

Read the original article onPeople

At Least 11 Dead After Taxi Crashes Head-On with Truck Performing U-Turn on Highway

eNCA/Youtube NEED TO KNOW At least 11 people have died in a crash between a taxi bus and a truck in South Africa. The truck was reportedl...

 

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