Soccer Fan Dies After Fall from VIP Section at Stadium Set to Host 2026 World Cup Opening Ceremony

A man fell to his death at Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on Saturday, March 28

People Banrote Stadium in Mexico CityCredit: Yuri CORTEZ / AFP via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The incident took place moments before Mexico and Portugal's friendly soccer match

  • Banorte Stadium is set to host the 2026 World Cup opening ceremony in June, after undergoing a $105 million renovation

A man has died at the newly renovated stadium, which is scheduled to host the 2026 World Cup opening ceremony this summer.

Moments before Mexico and Portugal's friendly match was set to begin at Mexico City's Banorte Stadium on Saturday, March 28, a man fell to his death from the VIP box, the Mexico City Prosecutor's Office (MCPO) said in astatement.

He is believed to have climbed the exterior of the venue while intoxicated as he tried to jump from the second-level box seats to the first level, before falling to the ground,Reutersreported, citing local authorities.

"According to the first reports, the events were recorded in the building's staging area, from where the person fell to the parking area, causing the loss of his life," said the MCPO in a translated statement shared onFacebook. "The CDMX Prosecutor's Office will continue investigations in a thorough manner and will keep the public informed as relevant progress is obtained."

Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on March 28Credit: Agustin Cuevas/Getty

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

"From the outset, ministerial, forensic, and investigative police personnel arrived at the scene to begin the corresponding procedures," the MCPO added on its website. "The area was secured, the crime scene was documented, and evidence was collected by experts specializing in criminalistics, photography, and forensic medicine."

Video surveillance and witness testimonies are being reviewed to determine how the incident unfolded.

Advertisement

"The legal autopsy protocol is underway, in order to establish with certainty the cause of death, as well as the physical condition of the person at the time of the fall," said the MCPO. "[We] will continue its investigations thoroughly and will keep the public informed as relevant progress is made…"

The deceased soccer fan has not been publicly identified at this time.

Portugal plays against Mexico in a friendly match at Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on March 28Credit: CARL DE SOUZA / AFP via Getty

The 2026 World Cup opening ceremony is scheduled to take place at Banorte Stadium on June 11. The upcoming tournament is being hosted by three countries for the first time in the U.S., Mexico and Canada.

The Banorte Stadium, previously known as Estadio Azteca Stadium, opened in May 1966 and is the fourth-largest soccer stadium in the world, seating 87,000 people, perTNT SportsandStadium DB.

The venue has been renovated ahead of the World Cup after receiving a $105 million loan from the bank Banorte, perESPN. In June, the stadium will become the first to host three World Cup finals, after hosting the 1970, 1986 and 2026 tournaments.

PEOPLE has reached out to the MCPO for further comment.

Read the original article onPeople

Soccer Fan Dies After Fall from VIP Section at Stadium Set to Host 2026 World Cup Opening Ceremony

A man fell to his death at Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on Saturday, March 28 NEED TO KNOW The incident took...
UConn is facing Duke with a Final Four on the line. It's a battle of blue-blood programs – if such a thing still exists

Back when he first came to town – back when some of his Big East peers derided his school as the Northwestern of the conference and questioned why Dave Gavitt even let them in – Jim Calhoun tried to solveUConn'sidentity crisis one misinformed person at a time.

CNN Sports UConn forward Tarris Reed Jr. dunks as Michigan State forward Cameron Ward defends during the first half in their Sweet 16 game on Friday. - Stephanie Scarbrough/AP

"No, it's UConn with a U,'' he would explain, "Not Yukon with a Y. We're not in Alaska.''

It is near unfathomable to imagine such issues today. To confuse UConn with anything other than the University of Connecticut would be akin to assuming Duke was merely some nobleman in England. The Huskies have won six national championships, crafting the cow patch in Storrs into a modern-day blueblood. No school – not Duke, not North Carolina, not Kansas, not Kentucky – has hoisted as many banners in the last 30 years as UConn.

Yet the man currently in charge of the kingdom, the one who has added two championships of his own to the university coffers, is struggling with the old vocabulary in this very modern-day college athletics world.

A blue-blood, Dan Hurley argues, isn't really a thing anymore.

"You can't get by on your brand anymore,'' Hurley said. "Players dreaming of having played here one day, none of these kids care about that anymore. None of the people close to them care about it because the majority of the people that are advising kids now are agents who are looking at it from a business perspective, or families that are not sentimental about any of this.''

It is an interesting thought, particularly here at the NCAA tournament's East Regional, where the Huskiesare getting ready to face the Blue Devils with a trip to the Final Four on the line.This is not an unfamiliar tap dance. The two have used each other as steppingstones en route to building themselves into what we used to call bluebloods. Of their nine meetings, four have come in the NCAA Tournament – an Elite Eight (1990), Sweet 16 (1991), a national championship game (1999), and a national semifinal (2004).

UConn head coach Dan Hurley prowls the sideline during a game earlier this season. - Aaron Gash/AP

As Duke rose under Mike Krzyzewski, the Blue Devils won the first two (with Hurley's big brother, Bobby) on their way to becoming the stick by which most other programs – including UConn – measured themselves.

But by 1999, Calhoun and grown Yukon into UConn and that year, the Huskies and Blue Devils traded the top spots in the polls for the better part of the season.

Still, old labels die hard and in the title game in St. Petersburg, Florida, Duke waltzed in as a 9.5-point favorite. It was the perfect bulletin-board fodder for Calhoun, who was still trying to elbow his way in with the big dogs.

He convinced his 1-seed Huskies that they were, in fact, underdogs so much so that when Trajon Langdon tripped trying to split two defenders to seal UConn's win, Husky guard Khalid El-Amin ran around the court screaming, 'We shocked the world!'

Hyperbole in the moment, perhaps, but a fair evaluation considering just where the program had come from.

Advertisement

Since then, though, no one has seen the Huskies as world shockers. The standard in Storrs is only excellence. A slight dip in performance (not to mention an NCAA investigation) cost Kevin Ollie his job, and the mission for Hurley was hardly unclear when he took the job eight seasons ago.

UConn now is pushing for its third Final Four in four years and, were Alex Karaban to win a third title, he would be the first player since Kareem and his UCLA teammates in the 1970s to accomplish the feat.

Alex Karaban shoots the ball over Jaxon Kohler of the Michigan State Spartans during their Sweet 16 showdown on Friday. - Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Asked then,if his team wasn't a blue-blood what was it,Hurley talked around his answer.

"We're one of the biggest places you could play college basketball. Listen, I think all things being equal – meaning NIL is in the ballpark – players would still want to go and play in the biggest places, for the coaches that are going to help them become better players, give them the best chance to play deep into this tournament, develop their career, have an incredible experience," Hurley said

Really this isn't a semantics debate – the death of the concept of the blue-blood – as much as it is a philosophical one. Is growing greatness in today's world easier than it was for Calhoun? That's really the question. Can money, in fact, change your bloodlines? Florida went from irrelevance to national title on the jet stream of well-funded transfers.

But it is also accusing an entire generation of wanting nothing of substance. It is the old man on the front porch yelling "get off my lawn," convinced that the whippersnappers don't get it because they have it too easy. To listen to players in this NCAA tournament – to really listen to them and not hear what you think you hear – is to hear players say they want to be coached.

They want to learn. They want to get better. They want excellence. Just because they want cash doesn't negate the rest.

And a handful of programs have earned the right to say that they offer it with regularity.

"I think a blue-blood is somebody that's earned it over time,'' said Michigan State coach Tom Izzo, who just finished his 28th consecutive NCAA tournament run. "What I've always looked for is consistency. If you can be consistent not over two years, four years, but 10 years, 15 years, I think you have the right to feel like that's the difference.''

Back when he first started, Calhoun used to give his players old, faded gray T-shirts on the first day of practice. The message was hardly subtle: They'd have to earn the good stuff.

The Huskies did. And so did UConn. Whether you want to call it a blue-blood or not.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

UConn is facing Duke with a Final Four on the line. It’s a battle of blue-blood programs – if such a thing still exists

Back when he first came to town – back when some of his Big East peers derided his school as the Northwestern of the conf...
Supreme Court fight over birthright citizenship threatens 'chaos' in proving newborns' status

Justice Brett Kavanaugh sounded like a fired-up prosecutor last year as he shot off a withering series of nuts-and-bolts questions about how President Donald Trump would carry out his plan to rewrite of theway birthright citizenship has been understoodin the United States for more than a century.

CNN Demonstrators rally outside the Supreme Court on May 15, 2025. - Matt McClain/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Would hospitals have to change the way they process newborns?Kavanaugh demanded. Would state governments have to do something different? How would federal officials determine citizenship if a birth certificate no longer sufficed?

"Federal officials will have to figure that out essentially," US Solicitor General D. John Sauer managed to say amid a fusillade of rapid-fire queries.

"How?" Kavanaugh pressed.

"So, you can imagine a number of ways —" Sauer began.

"Such as?" Kavanaugh interjected.

As theSupreme Court preparesto consider the merits of Trump's executive order ending birthright citizenship on Wednesday, most of the same practical questions Kavanaugh raised a year ago remain unanswered. Some of those questions speak to the bureaucratic nightmare that Americans — including US citizens — might face documenting a child's immigration status. Others go to the very heart of what it means to be a US citizen.

Most of the court's arguments this week will deal with the history of the 14th Amendment'scitizenship clause, which makes clear that "all persons born" in the United States who are "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" are citizens. Written arguments from both Trump and the groups challenging the policy focus heavily on what the framers meant by "subject to the jurisdiction" of the United States.

Buried beneath that theoretical debate is uncertainty about how Trump's order, which he signed on the first day of his second term, would be implemented if the 6-3 conservative Supreme Court lets it take effect. Kavanaugh's inquiries last year suggested not only that Trump's idea was radical, but that it might also be unworkable.

Federal agencies haverolled out a series of guidance documentsexplaining how people would apply for passports, Social Security numbers and safety-net programs under Trump's plan. But some of those materials have raised as many questions as they've answered.

If allowed to take effect, the policy would create "a tidal wave of legal confusion and chaos," predicted Jill Habig, the CEO of Public Rights Project, a nonprofit that provides legal support to state and local governments and that filed a brief in the case opposing the administration.

"This is the problem with trying to change hundreds of years of the constitutional text and precedent with what is essentially a memo," Habig said. "Every system that we have in this country to prove citizenship is typically based on just a birth certificate."

When the high court delved into birthright citizenship last year, it was dealing with a technical issue about whether courts could halt a presidential directive on a short-term basis while it considered its legality. In late June, the courtvoted 6-3 to limit the ability of lower courtsto block such policies on a nationwide basis under a widely used procedure at the time. But the court left the door open to other avenues to pause such policies — like class-action suits — andTrump's birthright order was put on holdagain days later.

But this time, the court will debate the legality of the order itself. A decision is expected by the end of June.

Barbara, a 35-year old pregnant asylum-seeker from Cuba, poses for a portrait in Louisville, Kentucky, on May 9, 2025. - Kevin Wurm/Reuters

Kavanaugh is often highly deferential during oral arguments, but his animated back-and-forth with Sauer offered a window into the thinking of a key vote in the court's conservative wing. Trump's second Supreme Court nominee regularly sides with the administration, and he was in dissent when the courtstruck down Trump's emergency tariffsearlier this year.

In response to the blistering inquiries, Sauer said at the time that federal agencies would seek documentation from the parents of newborns to demonstrate "legal presence in the country." For a person working in the US on a temporary basis, he said, the government could perhaps run a check on their name across government visa databases.

But that, Kavanaugh noted, meant the government would have to run checks on the parents of more than3.6 million babiesborn in the United States each year.

"For all the newborns?" Kavanaugh fired back. "Is that how it's going to work?"

Advertisement

Soil and blood

Trump has insisted the executive order is aimed at combatting "birth tourism," immigrants who come to the United States briefly for the purpose of having a child.

The 14th Amendment was adopted to grant citizenship to freed slaves and their children, the administration has said, not people temporarily in the country illegally. And only since the court handed down a landmark precedent upholding the idea of birthright citizenship in 1898, the government says, has a "latter-day misconception" of the clause's scope taken hold.

"That interpretation is untenable," the Department of Justice told the Supreme Court.

And, it says, it has "incentivized illegal entry into the United States and encouraged 'birth tourists' to travel to the United States solely to acquire citizenship for their children."

But if allowed to take effect, Trump's order would have an impact far beyond the people it ostensibly targets. Critics say it would fundamentally change the meaning of US citizenship from a concept that is tied to geography to one that is linked instead to parentage. And that, they say, is a sharp departure from what the founding generation had in mind.

"We shouldn't view this birthright citizenship question in isolation. We should view it as part of the American experiment and the repudiation of continental ideas of bloodlines and lineage," said Vikram Amar, a University of California, Davis, School of Law professor who has written extensively on the issue. "The whole American experiment is about basing your opportunities and your future on who you are and what you make of your own equality rather than which family and which bloodline you were born into."

After the Supreme Court ruled in the first birthright citizenship case last year, the Trump administration began making public aseries of guidance documentsexplaining the implementation of the order. Among those documents isone from the State Departmentthat explains how officials would "request original proof of parental citizenship or immigration status" to proceed with processing a passport application. To obtain a passport, in other words, a person born after the order took effect would need to document that their parents were citizens.

To obtain a Social Security number, the agency would first check its own database for parents' records. One problem with that approach is that the Social Security Administration itself has acknowledged for years thatpotentially millions of its immigration recordsare inaccurate, in part because the system relies on individuals to update their own records when their status changes.

"It's just not a system for demonstrating citizenship," Habig said. "It is a system for listing Social Security numbers, and that is not the same thing."

Lower courts touched only briefly on the practical considerations of implementing the order, which were important mainly for establishing that the people challenging Trump had standing to sue. In July, a San Francisco-based federal appeals court upheld a Seattle judge's ruling that blocked Trump's policy nationwide in a case brought by a group of Democratic-led states. A separate decision earlier that month by a New Hampshire judge barred enforcement of Trump's order against any babies who would be impacted by the policy in a class-action lawsuit.

Trump appealed both rulings to the Supreme Court, but the justices agreed to hear arguments in only the New Hampshire case.

Dealing with the Brits

Despite the anxieties that have cropped up over implementation the president's order, the Trump administration notes that plenty of other countries have a similar system in place. Sauer is likely to raise that point when he returns to the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

The early American view of birthright citizenship drew heavily from the United Kingdom's approach, which granted near-universal citizenship to babies born on English soil. But Trump's allies point out that changed in 1983 when the Brits abolished automatic birthright citizenship.

"Hardly any developed country retains a rule of citizenship that resembles the United States' current approach," the administration told the Supreme Court.

Critics counter that, in the case of the UK, Parliament enacted a law. Trump, by contrast, is attempting to change the meaning of birthright citizenship through executive order.

And several briefs point out that the experience in the UK was far from smooth. Some of the same concerns groups are raising before the Supreme Court today were previously experienced overseas. Caribbean immigrants who moved to the UK after World War II by invitation from the government, or their children, struggled to prove their citizenship status in whatbecame known as the Windrush scandal.

Under the 1983 law, those immigrants and their children were no longer able to prove citizenship with a birth certificate.

"The theory may have appeared simple but the practice was brutal," a group called Reprieve said of the UK experience in a brief submitted to the Supreme Court in February. "A system built on a bright-line rule gave way to one that bureaucracy could not administer, leaving people who had lived their whole lives as British unable to prove it on paper."

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Supreme Court fight over birthright citizenship threatens ‘chaos’ in proving newborns’ status

Justice Brett Kavanaugh sounded like a fired-up prosecutor last year as he shot off a withering series of nuts-and-bolts ...
North Korea conducts engine test for missile capable of targeting US mainland

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un observed a test of an upgradedsolid-fuel enginefor weapons capable of reaching the U.S. mainland, and called it a significant development boosting his country's strategic military arsenal, state media reported Sunday.

Associated Press This undated photo provided on March 29, 2026 by the North Korean government, shows what it says a solid-fuel engine test at an undisclosed place in North Korea. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be independently verified. Korean language watermark on image as provided by source reads: FILE - This photo provided by the North Korean government, its leader Kim Jong Un, center, claps hands as he was re-elected to the top post of the ruling Workers' Party, during the party's Congress in Pyongyang, on Feb. 22, 2026. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be independently verified. Korean language watermark on image as provided by source reads:

North Korea

While the test was in line with Kim's stated goal of acquiring more agile, hard-to-detect missiles targeting the U.S. and its allies, some experts speculate North Korea's claim may be an exaggeration. Missiles with built-in solid propellants are easier to move and conceal their launches than liquid-fuel weapons, which in general must be fueled before liftoffs and cannot last long.

The official Korean Central News Agency reported Kim watched the ground jet test of the engine using a composite carbon fiber material. It said the engine's maximum thrust is 2,500 kilonewtons, up from about 1,970 kilonewtons reported in a similar solid-fuelengine test in September.

KCNA reported the test was conducted as part of the country's five-year arms build-up meant to upgrade "strategic strike means," a term referring to nuclear-capable ballistic missiles and other weapons. Kim said the latest engine test had "great significance in putting the country's strategic military muscle on the highest level," according to KCNA. The agency did not say when or where the test occurred.

North Korea's report on the latest test could be "bluffing" as it didn't disclose some key information like the engine's total combustion time, said Lee Choon Geun, an honorary research fellow at South Korea's Science and Technology Policy Institute.

Advertisement

When North Korea reported about the previous engine test in September, it described it as the ninth and final ground test of a solid-fuel engine that it earlier said would be used for intercontinental ballistic missiles. Observers predicted at the time North Korea would soon test-launch an ICBM loaded with that engine, but it hasn't done so yet.

North Korea's solid-fuel engine program may be facing some delays or the country might have determined to develop a better engine, possibly with Russian assistance, Lee said. Cooperation between the countries hasdeepened in recent years, with the North sending troops and conventional weapons to support Russia'swar against Ukraine.

In recent years, North Korea has test-fired a variety of ICBMs demonstrating the potential range to reach the U.S. mainland, includingsolid-fuel ones.But some of North Korea's past claims about major weapons tests drewoutside skepticism. In 2024, North Korea claimed to have successfully test-launcheda multiwarhead missile, but South Korea quickly dismissed it as deception to cover up a failed launch.

Some foreign experts say North Korea still faces technological hurdles before it has a functioning ICBM, such as ensuring its warheads survive the harsh conditions of atmospheric reentry. But others dispute that assessment given the number of years the country has spent on its nuclear and missile programs.

Possession of more powerful and efficient solid-fuel engines would allow North Korea to build smaller ICBMs that can be launched from submarines or land-based mobile launch trucks, Lee said. Other observers say a push to increase the engine power is likely associated with efforts to place multiple warheads on a single missile to increase chances of defeating U.S. defenses.

North Korea has pushed hard to expand its nuclear arsenal since Kim'shigh-stakes diplomacywith U.S. President Donald Trump collapsed in 2019. In a ruling Workers' Party congress in February, Kim left open the door for dialogue with Trump but urged Washington to drop demands for the North's nuclear disarmament as a precondition for talks.

North Korea conducts engine test for missile capable of targeting US mainland

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un observed a test of an upgradedsolid-fuel enginefor weapons capa...
Aaron Judge dents an ambulance with second HR of season

Aaron Judge's home run impacted more than just the score in the New York Yankees' 3-1 win over the San Francisco Giants on Saturday.

Yahoo Sports

The reigning AL MVP clubbed his second homer of the season in the fifth inning off Giants reliever Ryan Borucki, propelling the ball 383 feet down the left field line at Oracle Park. Rather than a lucky fan, the ball landed on a sitting ambulance in the tunnel.

The ball, which left Judge's bat at 102.1 mph at a high launch angle, left a clear dent in the roof of the Giants-branded ambulance.

Advertisement

The homer gave the Yankees an insurance run they ended up not needing. After starting pitcher Will Warren exited the game in the fifth inning, relievers Brent Headrick, Jake Bird, Tim Hill and David Bednar combined to shut out the Giants over the final 4 2/3 innings.

Judge began the season on a negative note,picking up his first golden sombrero since 2024 on Opening Night, but recovered with a homer on Friday (while making some history with Giancarlo Stanton).

He is now 2-of-13 on the season with 2 homers and 7 strikeouts. It's an extreme collection of outcomes, which figures to even out in the coming weeks.

The Yankees won all three games to open the season, their third straight year doing so, and completed a sweep of the Giants. After an off day Sunday, they'll begin a three-game series against the Seattle Mariners in a potential ALCS preview.

Aaron Judge dents an ambulance with second HR of season

Aaron Judge's home run impacted more than just the score in the New York Yankees' 3-1 win over the San Francisco ...
Ukraine steps up attacks on Russian oil industry as Kremlin reaps export windfall

The Ukrainian military has stepped up attacks on Russia's energy infrastructure, as Moscow benefits from higher crude oil prices and some sanctions relief.

CNN Vantor collected new satellite imagery on March 27, 2026 of a large fire at the Ust-Luga oil terminal complex in northern Russia. - Satellite image ©2026 Vantor

Ukrainian drones have struck several Russian refineries and export terminals in the last week, accelerating a campaign that beganlast summerto target one of Russia's biggest revenue sources.

As the war in the Middle East and the surge in crude prices provide a windfall to the Kremlin, Kyiv has redoubled its efforts to hobble Russia's energy production.

The Ukrainian military claims to have carried out 10 major attacks this month on Russian energy infrastructure – some of the strikes deep inside Russia. The extent of the impact is unclear but Russia has mooted banning gasoline exports.

During a call with journalists on Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told CNN that Ukraine's long-range drones had become more effective.

The latest strike claimed by the Ukrainian military was early Saturday against a large Russian ⁠oil refinery in Yaroslavl, north-east of ⁠Moscow. The military said there was a direct hit on the refinery, followed by a fire.

Mikhail Evraev, the regional governor in Yaroslavl, acknowledged that several residential buildings and "a commercial facility" had been damaged, but said that more than 30 drones had been neutralized.

The Russian oil export terminal at Ust-Luga on the Baltic coast was attacked twice in the last week. Long-range drones "damaged oil-loading stands and a tank farm containing oil and petroleum products" early Friday, according to the Ukrainian Security Service.

Geolocated video showed a large fire at the port, and the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations warned residents in the nearby city of St. Petersburg of "air pollution" following the attacks.

"We responded to the strike on our energy infrastructure. We responded with a powerful strike, reducing the capabilities of Ust-Luga," Zelensky told CNN.

"40 percent of their capabilities remained at that facility" after the drone strikes, Zelensky said.

The nearby port of Primorsk was also attacked last week, and according to the Ukrainians fires at both ports were still visible Saturday.

A refinery in Saratov in southern Russia operated by state producer Rosneft was struck last weekend.

Advertisement

Before the Middle East conflict began and the Strait of Hormuz was effectively paralyzed, Russian crude traded at a substantial discount to other benchmarks on global markets.

Now it's sometimes commanding a premium, according to analysts. Russia has also benefited from the easing of some US sanctions. In an effort to calm oil markets, the US Treasury suspended sanctions on Russian crude already at sea earlier this month.

Zelensky again criticized the sanctions relief on Saturday, claiming that Russian intelligence was helping Iran target locations with satellite imagery.

"By lifting sanctions on the aggressor, who makes money every day, they are passing on relevant information regarding attacks" on allied bases in the region, Zelensky said.

Satellite imagery of a large fire at the Ust-Luga oil terminal complex in northern Russia <strong></strong>on March 27, 2026.  The imagery was collected by several of Vantor’s satellites and that provides different perspectives of the fires. - Satellite image ©2026 Vantor

Russia's state budget relies on oil earnings for at least one-third of its revenue, according to analysts. Those earnings may have doubled over the past month, they say.

As the Ukrainian strikes continue, the Russian government is poised to reintroduce a ban on gasoline exports, according to state news agency TASS.

It said the measure, which would take effect from next Wednesday, April 1, is being discussed by Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak and industry ministries and oil companies.

The government imposed a similar measure last September but lifted the ban in January.

Russian newspaper Kommersant said the ban would be reintroduced because the domestic market was being hurt as producers chased higher earnings from exporting gasoline.

But the paper also acknowledged what it called "unscheduled refinery maintenance" and the fires at Primorsk and Ust-Luga.

Zelensky said Saturday that Ukraine's attacks were in response to Russian strikes on its power infrastructure, which have caused widespread electricity outages this winter.

"Russia must stop striking our energy infrastructure. We will then not retaliate against it," he added.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Ukraine steps up attacks on Russian oil industry as Kremlin reaps export windfall

The Ukrainian military has stepped up attacks on Russia's energy infrastructure, as Moscow benefits from higher crude...
Persistent heat, fire danger possible this weekend for 47 million Americans

A large swath of the country is expected to face dangerous heat and fire weather conditions this weekend, forecasts show.

ABC News

The National Weather Service issued red flag warnings for more than 46 million Americans from the Great Plains to the Southeast on Saturday due to widespread critical fire weather danger.

MORE: Dangerous, unprecedented heat wave hits the West

The cold front that stretched for thousands of miles on Friday has ushered in a large dome of high pressure, drying out the air and kicking up winds.

The high winds, combined with dry ground fuels, will contribute to rapid wildfire growth and spread should one ignite.

ABC News - PHOTO: fire weather alerts map

Wind gusts in the Plains are expected to reach 30 to 60 mph on Saturday.

Gusty winds and dry conditions will also be in place from the Gulf Coast inland across the Southeast, including cities such as Lake Charles, Louisiana; Jackson, Mississippi; Birmingham, Alabama; Tallahassee, Florida; Charleston, South Carolina; and Asheville, North Carolina.

Much of these same regions are also experiencing some level of drought, which is the big driver for dry ground fuels.

ABC News - PHOTO: drought map

Meanwhile, a temperature roller coaster is expected in other parts of the country this weekend.

A cooldown has swept across the Midwest and Northeast following warm spring days earlier in the week.

MORE: Heat stroke vs. heat exhaustion: Safety tips as dangerous temperatures hit the West

Advertisement

Places in the Midwest and Northeast, like Chicago and New York City, will be noticeably cooler for Saturday, but will rebound to seasonable highs by the beginning of the new workweek.

In some regions, temperatures on Saturday will be at least 10 to 20 degrees cooler than Friday -- following record high temperatures on Wednesday and Thursday and seasonably warm temperatures on Friday -- forecasts show.

Adams County Fire Rescue - PHOTO: In this photo released on March 26, 2026, by the Adams County Fire Rescue, the Minor Fire is shown in Grant County, Nebraska.

On Friday, some regions in the mid-Atlantic broke or tied their daily record highs for March 27, including Savannah, Georgia, which reached 89 degrees Fahrenheit, and Columbia, South Carolina, which reached 88 degrees.

As March wraps up, a pattern change will bring likely warmer than normal temperatures for the eastern half of the nation and near normal temperatures for the western half for the beginning of April.

MORE: How to conserve energy during a heat wave

But record-shattering heat will continue in the Southeast, with no relief coming this weekend.

Friday saw another day of record-breaking temperatures.

Phoenix reached 102 degrees; Death Valley reached 101 degrees; and Tucson, Arizona, reached 98 degrees.

ABC News - PHOTO: weekend outlook map

Daily record highs are possible again this weekend for Las Vegas and Phoenix.

Between March 15 and March 26, more than 100 monthly records were broken or tied, and 700 daily records were broken or tied across the country, according to the National Weather Service.

Since March 1, there have been more than 1,100 daily records broken or tied across the nation.

Persistent heat, fire danger possible this weekend for 47 million Americans

A large swath of the country is expected to face dangerous heat and fire weather conditions this weekend, forecasts sh...

 

SnS MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com