Following his award-winning film "Black Hawk Down," Ridley Scott’s new Netflix docuseries revisits the Battle of Mogadishu with firsthand accounts from those who lived it. Here’s what happened.
Malian Army late Saturday confirmed that insurgents killed at least 25 civilians and injured 13 others in an ambush of a military-escorted convoy near northeastern city of Gao on Friday.
At least 50 people were killed near the northeastern city of Gao in Mali after armed assailants ambushed their convoy and its army escort. The attackers were said to have struck near the village ...
Feb 8 (Reuters) - More than 50 people were killed near Mali's northeastern city of Gao on Friday after armed assailants ambushed their convoy and its army escort, a local official and residents said.
BAMAKO — Mali's army vowed Saturday to track down the "terrorists" responsible for a deadly attack on a large convoy en route to a gold mine. Soldiers and Wagner mercenaries were escorting a group of ...
An Ontario court has upheld a decision made by the Ontario Civilian Police Commission in the case of a Windsor officer who was found guilty of discreditable conduct over a $50 donation to convoy ...
“Surviving Black Hawk Down” is a three-part series, starting Monday, that tells stories of soldiers and civilians who survived the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu in Somalia, where approximately 100 ...
The series retells the story of the Battle of Mogadishu, which took place in Somalia in October 1993 and is widely known for the Black Hawk Down incident. Set against a backdrop of the Somali ...
The expression Black Hawk Down, the title of a Hollywood film, has become shorthand for a 1993 US military disaster in ...
Surviving Black Hawk Down, a three-part docuseries on Netflix, revisits the events of the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu through the voices of those who lived it. Unlike Ridley Scott’s 2001 war film ...
The footage shot by Ahmed Mohamed Hassan was the first the world saw of the battle in Mogadishu He did not know it on that quiet Sunday morning, but prominent cameraman Ahmed Mohamed Hassan ...
Ahmed always carried his camera, knowing that in Mogadishu anything could happen at any moment. He instinctively began documenting the unfolding chaos and headed towards the heart of the battle.