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Iran demands transit fees in yuan, stablecoins for Strait of Hormuz passage
03-04-2026 02:45 HKT

It seemed the tanker driver was trying to avoid a motorcyclist when the truck flipped on Tuesday. Onlookers rushed to the scene with buckets to collect gasoline as fuel drained toward a nearby pile of smoldering trash.
By then, hours after the blast, buildings and overturned vehicles still smoked as firefighters covered bodies in sheets and loaded them on a truck.
Prime Minister Ariel Henry, himself a physician, visited there as bandage-encased victims suffered amid a shortage of health workers and medical supplies in an impoverished nation of 11 million that has been bombarded by disasters in recent months: riots, a wave of kidnappings, an earthquake that killed more than 2,200 people and the July 7 assassination of the president.
Henry sought to console a man on the hospital's floor because of a lack of beds.He promised more help in the form of field hospitals and a contingent of medical professionals.
But minutes after he left the facility five more people died and about 15 victims were taken by air to hospitals in the capital, Port-au-Prince.Haitians for months have been scrambling to find gasoline amid shortages that have shuttered filling stations, seen fuel prices soaring and forced businesses to close.
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