The following is a list of notable deaths in November 2024.

Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:

  • Name, age, country of citizenship at birth, subsequent country of citizenship (if applicable), reason for notability, cause of death (if known), and reference.

November 2024

1

  • Rohit Bal, 63, Indian fashion designer, heart attack.
  • Marcel Bédard, 84, Canadian politician, mayor of Beauport (1970–1980), Quebec MNA (1973–1976).
  • Kulada Kumar Bhattacharya, 91, Indian radio artist, actor (Raamdhenu, Maj Rati Keteki) and director, pneumonia and heart problems.
  • William B. Bridges, 89, American engineer and inventor.
  • Morten Stig Christensen, 65, Danish Olympic handball player (1976, 1980, 1984) and sports administrator.
  • Diane Coleman, 71, American lawyer and disability rights advocate, sepsis.
  • Bibek Debroy, 69, Indian economist.
  • João Scognamiglio Clá Dias, 85, Brazilian Roman Catholic priest and religious writer, founder of the Heralds of the Gospel.
  • Alastair Down, 68, English journalist (Sporting Life, Racing Post) and broadcaster (Channel 4 Racing).
  • Fantick, 69, Brazilian footballer (Botafogo, Portuguesa), pancreatic cancer.
  • Guruprasad, 52, Indian film director (Eddelu Manjunatha, Mata, Director's Special), suicide by hanging.
  • Chuck Haytaian, 86, American politician, member (1982–1996) and speaker (1992–1996) of the New Jersey General Assembly.
  • Faye Leung, 92, Canadian businesswoman.
  • Fay Marles, 98, Australian public servant and academic administrator, member of the VEOHRC (1977–1987) and chancellor of the University of Melbourne (2001–2005).
  • Richard Bernard Moore, 59, American convicted murderer, execution by lethal injection.
  • Camilo Mortágua, 90, Portuguese antifascist militant, participant in the Santa Maria hijacking.
  • Abderrahmane Mostefa, 76, Algerian documentary filmmaker, photographer and journalist.
  • Kanji Nishio, 89, Japanese literary scholar.
  • Peter Oloo-Aringo, 83, Kenyan politician, MP (1974–1988, 1997–2002).
  • Luiz Onmura, 64, Brazilian judoka, Olympic bronze medallist (1984), squamous-cell carcinoma.
  • Peanut, c. 7, American eastern gray squirrel, Instagram subject, euthanasia.
  • Alexander Pines, 79, American chemist.
  • Abdul Al-Rahim Ghulam Rabbani, 56–57, Pakistani Guantanamo Bay detainee.
  • Ida G. Ruben, 95, American politician, member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1975–1987) and Senate (1987–2007).
  • Michael Ruse, 84, British-born Canadian philosopher of science.
  • Zaal Samadashvili, 71, Georgian writer.
  • Juan José Sebreli, 93, Argentine sociologist, essayist and philosopher.
  • Gianpaolo Silvestri, 70, Italian journalist and politician, senator (2006–2008).
  • Tommy Smith, 76, American baseball player (Cleveland Indians, Seattle Mariners).

2

  • Mirta Acuña de Baravalle, 99, Argentine human rights activist, co-founder of Mothers of Plaza de Mayo and Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo.
  • Wolfgang Börnsen, 82, German politician, MP (1987–2013).
  • Cassius, Australian saltwater crocodile, largest crocodile in captivity. (death announced on this date)
  • Annie Choong, 90, Malaysian Olympic sprinter (1956), complications from dementia.
  • Yaakov Cohen, 66, Moroccan-born Israeli actor, comedian, and stand-up artist, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Mack Daughtry, 78, American basketball player (Carolina Cougars, Harlem Globetrotters, Wilkes-Barre Barons).
  • Janey Godley, 63, Scottish stand-up comedian and writer, ovarian cancer.
  • Len Green, 88, English footballer (Darlington).
  • Tomasz Gruszecki, 78, Polish economist and politician.
  • Jonathan Haze, 95, American actor (The Little Shop of Horrors, The Terror, It Conquered the World).
  • Darrel Janz, 83, Canadian newscaster (CFCN-TV).
  • William B. Jensen, 76, American chemist and chemical historian.
  • Dub Jones, 99, American football player (Miami Seahawks, Brooklyn Dodgers, Cleveland Browns) and coach.
  • Kamala, 49, Sri Lankan Asian elephant, euthanized.
  • Alain Madalle, 87, French politician, deputy (1993–1997).
  • Hippolyte Piroux, 94, French farmer and writer.
  • Clement Quartey, 86, Ghanaian boxer, Olympic silver medallist (1960).
  • Alan Rachins, 82, American actor (L.A. Law, Dharma & Greg, Showgirls), heart failure.
  • Seo Sang-hong, 75, South Korean lawyer and judge, chief secretary of the constitutional court (2005–2007).
  • Paul Stephenson, 87, British community worker and civil rights activist (Bristol Bus Boycott), complications from dementia.
  • Amos Utuama, 77, Nigerian politician, deputy governor of Delta State (2007–2015).
  • Henry Wynn, 79, British statistician, cancer.

3

  • Flint Breckinridge, 64, American politician, member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives (1993–1997).
  • Louis Cane, 80, French painter and sculptor.
  • Stephanie Chasteen, 52, American physicist, glioblastoma.
  • Abderrazak Cheraït, 86–87, Tunisian writer and politician, mayor of Tozeur (1995–2008), deputy (2014–2019).
  • Paul Engelen, 75, British make-up artist (Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, Game of Thrones, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein), cancer.
  • Huckleberry Fox, 50, American actor (Terms of Endearment, Misunderstood, The Blue Yonder), prostate cancer.
  • John Gottschalk, 81, American businessman, CEO and publisher of Omaha World-Herald (1989–2008) and president of the Boy Scouts of America (2008–2010).
  • Quincy Jones, 91, American Hall of Fame record producer (Thriller, "We Are the World"), composer ("Soul Bossa Nova"), and arranger, 28-time Grammy winner, pancreatic cancer.
  • Andy Leek, 66, English musician (Dexys Midnight Runners), songwriter and poet, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Mark Lifman, 57, South African businessman, shot.
  • Helena Luke, Indian actress (Judaai, Mere Saath Chal, Ek Naya Rishta).
  • Dina Mariana, 59, Indonesian singer and actress.
  • Kathleen McGee, 43, Canadian comedian and columnist (BeatRoute), colon cancer.
  • Jean McLane, 98, American politician, member of the Montana House of Representatives (1977–1979, 1981–1983).
  • Mandisa Monakali, 64, South African women's and children's rights activist.
  • Herby Moreau, 56, Canadian journalist.
  • Primi Nécega, 94, Spanish author.
  • Ed de Noorlander, 79, Dutch Olympic decathlete (1968).
  • Eric Rimmington, 98, English painter.
  • Van Ritshie, 80, American voice-over artist and radio host.
  • Maita Sanchez, 55, Filipino actress (Sa Dulo ng Baril, Batas ng Lansangan) and politician, mayor of Pagsanjan (2010–2019), endometrial cancer.
  • Peter Schnell, 88, German lawyer and politician, member of the Landtag of Bavaria (1966–1972) and mayor of Ingolstadt (1972–2002).
  • Gurjant Singh, 91, Indian politician, four-time Rajasthan MLA.
  • Joseph Slogan, 93, Canadian politician, MP (1958–1965).
  • Marcel Tassy, 91, French politician, deputy (1978–1981).
  • Birutė Žilytė-Steponavičienė, 94, Lithuanian graphic artist, book illustrator, and painter.

4

  • Kristian Antila, 44, Finnish ice hockey player (Ilves, Porin Ässät, Luleå HF).
  • Mamadou Moustapha Ba, 59, Senegalese politician, minister of economy and finance (2022–2024).
  • Barbara T. Bowman, 96, American education activist, heart failure.
  • Jonathan Brostoff, 41, American politician, member of the Wisconsin State Assembly (2015–2022) and Milwaukee Common Council (since 2022), suicide.
  • Daniel Ceppi, 73, Swiss comics artist.
  • Gary Cormack, 74, Canadian wheelchair curler, Paralympic champion (2006).
  • Sarah Cunningham, 31, British painter. (body discovered on this date)
  • Janet Douglas, 81, English historian.
  • Sir Christopher Drewry, 77, British military officer, commander of ARRC (2000–2002), cancer.
  • Charlie Evans, 76, American football player (New York Giants, Washington Redskins).
  • Don Ferrarese, 95, American baseball player (Baltimore Orioles, Cleveland Indians, Philadelphia Phillies).
  • Kiki Håkansson, 95, Swedish model and beauty queen, Miss World winner (1951).
  • David Hill, 76, British political adviser, Downing Street director of communications (2003–2007), pneumonia.
  • Jim Hoagland, 84, American journalist (The Washington Post), Pulitzer Prize winner (1971, 1991), stroke.
  • Jimmy Holley, 80, American politician, member of the Alabama House of Representatives (1974–1994) and Senate (1998–2022).
  • Henryk Kocój, 93, Polish historian.
  • Andrzej Krzesiński, 97, Polish Olympic athlete (1960).
  • Miguel Ledo, 34, Spanish footballer (SD Logroñés), leukemia.
  • Victor A. Lundy, 101, American modernist architect (Warm Mineral Springs Motel).
  • Johnny Madsen, 73, Danish singer.
  • Bernard Marcus, 95, American businessman, co-founder and chairman of Home Depot.
  • David Maxwell, 81, American politician, member of the Iowa House of Representatives (2013–2023).
  • Heorhiy Mozer, 84, Ukrainian politician, MP (1994–1998).
  • Tyka Nelson, 64, American singer.
  • Rudolf Nieuwenhuys, 97, Dutch neuroanatomist.
  • Olivera Nikolova, 88, Macedonian author.
  • William C. Norris, 98, American air force major general.
  • James Penton, 92, Canadian historian and author.
  • Ursula Preuhs, 93, German politician, Hamburg MP (1986–1997).
  • Agnaldo Rayol, 86, Brazilian singer and actor, complications from a fall.
  • Robin Renwick, Baron Renwick of Clifton, 86, British diplomat and life peer, ambassador to the United States (1991–1995), lung disease.
  • Albert Schmidt, 73, German politician, MP (1994–2005).
  • Renato Serio, 78, Italian composer (Alone in the Dark, The Pumaman, Innocence and Desire).
  • Murray Sinclair, 73, Canadian First Nations lawyer, judge and politician, senator (2016–2021), chancellor of Queen's University (2021–2024).
  • Benedykt Suchecki, 79, Polish politician, MP (2001–2005).
  • Jim Webber, 84, Australian politician, mayor of the City of Rockhampton (1982–1991).
  • Betty Wei, 94, Chinese-born American historian and writer.
  • Kenroy Williams, 40, Barbadian cricketer (national team, Jamaica national team), cancer.

5

  • Félicie Affolter, 98, Swiss psychologist and psychotherapist.
  • Pavel Anisimov, 77, Russian politician, senator (1997–2001).
  • Naresh Yadav Ateli, 61, Indian politician, Haryana MLA (2005–2009).
  • Ben Baldanza, 62, American economist and airline executive (Spirit Airlines), complications from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
  • Manjari Bhargava, 68, Indian diver, brain cancer.
  • Ruby Bute, 81, Saint Martinois artist and poet.
  • Marise Chamberlain, 88, New Zealand Hall of Fame middle-distance runner, Olympic bronze medalist (1964).
  • Joseph R. D'Cruz, 83, Pakistani-born Canadian academic.
  • Parvati Devi, 90, Indian royal and politician, MP (1977–1980).
  • Eileen Diss, 93, British set designer.
  • Elwood Edwards, 74, American voice actor (America Online), complications from a stroke.
  • David P. Farrington, 80, British criminologist, forensic psychologist, and academic.
  • Andrzej Hachuła, 64, Polish Olympic ice hockey player (1984).
  • Sir Henry Keswick, 86, British businessman (Jardine Matheson).
  • Taoreed Lagbaja, 56, Nigerian military officer, chief of army staff (since 2023).
  • Volodymyr Matvieiev, 81, Ukrainian politician, people's deputy (1990–1994, 1998–2006, 2007–2012).
  • Asot Michael, 54, Antiguan politician, MP (since 2004), stabbed.
  • William O'Gara, 92, American politician, member of the Maine House of Representatives (1985–1997) and Senate (1997–2003).
  • Evelyne de Pontbriand, 73, French winemaker, cancer.
  • Nestor Rateș, 91, Romanian-American writer and journalist (Radio Free Europe).
  • Jerry Reitman, 86, American author, businessman, and executive.
  • Reddi Satyanarayana, 99, Indian politician, Andhra Pradesh MLA (1983–2004).
  • Sharda Sinha, 72, Indian folk and classical singer.
  • Dave Stephens, 95, Australian Olympic athlete (1956).
  • Charlie Turner, 79, American football player (Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Edmonton Eskimos, Winnipeg Blue Bombers).
  • Mick Waters, 81, Irish hurler (Blackrock, Cork).
  • Sytze van der Zee, 85, Dutch writer and journalist (Het Parool), lung cancer.

6

  • Dorothy Allison, 75, American writer (Bastard Out of Carolina), cancer.
  • Johannes Beutler, 91, German theologian and priest.
  • Don Bosseler, 88, American football player (Washington Redskins).
  • Christopher Bruell, 81, American philosopher.
  • John Cannan, 70, British convicted murderer and rapist.
  • Ivan Zvonimir Čičak, 77, Croatian dissident and politician (Croatian Spring), president of the Croatian Helsinki Committee (1993–1998, since 2009).
  • John Dempsey, 78, English-Irish football player (Fulham, Chelsea, Ireland national team) and manager, lung cancer.
  • Wolt Fabrycky, 91, American systems engineer.
  • Josep Ferrer Sala, 99, Spanish wine executive, president of Freixenet (1978–1999).
  • Charles Geerts, 81, Dutch businessman and brothel owner.
  • Christian Godard, 92, French cartoonist (The Vagabond of Limbo), cancer.
  • Pablo León Hakimian, 70, Egyptian Armenian Catholic hierarch, eparch of San Gregorio de Narek en Buenos Aires (since 2018) and Latin America and Mexico (since 2018).
  • Maximilian Heidenreich, 57, German football player (Hannover 96, SC Freiburg) and manager (Freiburger FC), bowel cancer.
  • Alice Hudson, 77, American librarian and cartographic curator.
  • Syed Shah Khusro Hussaini, 79, Indian scholar and educator.
  • Philippe Nkiere Keana, 86, Congolese Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Bondo (1992–2005) and Inongo (2005–2018).
  • Pavel Klimenko, 47, Russian major general.
  • Anna Lo, 74, Northern Irish politician, MLA (2007–2016).
  • K. Malaisamy, 87, Indian politician, MP (1999–2014).
  • Sir John Nott, 92, British politician, MP (1966–1983) and defence secretary (1981–1983).
  • Phyllis O'Donnell, 87, Australian surfer.
  • Madeleine Riffaud, 100, French Resistance member, poet, and war correspondent (L'Humanité).
  • Fabio Sartor, 70, Italian actor (Phantom of Death, The Passion of the Christ, La ladra).
  • Yigal Shilon, 78, Israeli television host and prankster.
  • Daniel Spoerri, 94, Swiss visual artist and writer.
  • Tony Todd, 69, American actor (Candyman, Platoon, Final Destination).
  • Vojtěch Vašíček, 68, Czech pentathlete, Paralympic champion (1992).
  • Eka Vogelnik, 78, Slovene illustrator, designer, and puppeteer.

7

  • Selçuk Ayhan, 71, Turkish engineer and politician, MP (2007–2011), hyperglycemia.
  • Dinanath Batra, 94, Indian educationist.
  • Jürgen Becker, 92, German poet, prose writer and radio play author.
  • Ben Herbstreit, 10, American assistance dog, cancer.
  • Ivan Charota, 72, Belarusian literary critic, cultural historian and translator.
  • Nitin Chauhaan, 35, Indian actor (Dadagiri, MTV Splitsvilla 5, Zindagi Dot Com), suicide.
  • Phil Cohen, 81, British cultural theorist, urban ethnographer and writer. (body discovered on this date)
  • Walter Dahn, 70, German painter, photographer, and sound artist.
  • Bruce Degen, 79, American illustrator (The Magic School Bus), pancreatic cancer.
  • Louis Edward Gelineau, 96, American Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Providence (1972–1997).
  • Sir Bom Gillies, 99, New Zealand soldier, last surviving member of the Māori Battalion.
  • John C. Hartigan, 67, American visual effects artist (Kill Bill, Hawaii Five-0, Click).
  • Arent M. Henriksen, 78, Norwegian politician, MP (1973–1977, 1981–1989).
  • Ana Maria Lajusticia, 100, Spanish biochemist and nutritionist.
  • Sergio Los, 90, Italian architect and educator.
  • Lui Che-woo, 95, Hong Kong property developer, founder of Galaxy Entertainment Group and K. Wah International.
  • Joseph T. Maguire, 98, American politician, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1977–1979).
  • Éden Pedroso, 81, Brazilian politician, Rio Grande do Sul MLA (1987–1991), deputy (1991–1995).
  • John Phiri, 75, Zambian politician.
  • Cédric Plançon, 55, French Olympic weightlifter (1992, 1996).
  • James Rawson, 59, British table tennis player, Paralympic champion (1992). (death announced on this date)
  • Jacques Renoir, 81, French photographer and cinematographer.
  • Scorpio Jr., 58, Mexican professional wrestler (CMLL).
  • Pim Sierks, 92, Dutch airline pilot (1974 French Embassy attack in The Hague).
  • Shreegopal Vyas, 92, Indian politician, MP (2006–2012).
  • Kathleen Watkins, 90, Irish broadcaster, actress (Insurrection), and harpist.

8

  • Asbjørn Agerschou, 76, Danish seminary teacher and politician, MP (1981–1990).
  • Jesús Ares, 90, Spanish footballer (Langreo, Salamanca, Celta Vigo).
  • A. Cornelius Baker, 63, American HIV/AIDS activist, atherosclerosis.
  • Betty Bausch-Polak, 105, Dutch Holocaust survivor.
  • Musafir Ram Bhardwaj, 94, Indian musician.
  • George Bohanon, 87, American jazz trombonist.
  • Jack Boul, 97, American artist and teacher.
  • James Buskey, 87, American politician, member of the Alabama House of Representatives (1976–2018).
  • Farid Chenoune, 75, French fashion historian and sociologist, cancer.
  • Stanisław Chiliński, 68, Polish Olympic wrestler (1980).
  • Michael Eitan, 80, Israeli politician, MK (1984–2013), minister of science (1997–1998) and government service (2009–2013).
  • Aud Voss Eriksen, 87, Norwegian politician, deputy member of the Storting (1981–1993).
  • Kazimierz Ferenc, 80, Polish architect and politician, voivode of Rzeszów (1990–1994).
  • Fernando Fragata, 58, Portuguese film director (Backlight, Sorte Nula).
  • Eugen Gerritz, 89, German politician, member of the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia (1980–1995).
  • José Botafogo Gonçalves, 89, Brazilian lawyer, diplomat, and politician, minister of industry, commerce and tourism (1998–1999), respiratory failure.
  • Geneviève Grad, 80, French actress (The Troops of St. Tropez), cancer.
  • Charles Herring, 79, American politician, member of the Louisiana House of Representatives (1988–1992).
  • Roz Hervey, 58, Australian dancer and choreographer, assisted suicide.
  • Harald Holz, 94, German philosopher, theologian, and mathematician.
  • Rumen Ivanov, 51, Bulgarian footballer (Etar V. Tarnovo, Botev Plovdiv, Aarau), heart attack.
  • Gabriel Kney, 94, Canadian pipe organ builder.
  • Marty Kuehnert, 78, American baseball executive (Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles).
  • Billy Lawless, 73, Irish politician and businessman, senator (2016–2020).
  • George Lehmann, 83, American basketball player (St. Louis/Atlanta Hawks, New York Nets).
  • Peter Loukianoff, 76, American Russian Orthodox prelate.
  • Rachid Mekhloufi, 88, Algerian football player (Saint-Étienne, France national team) and manager (national team).
  • Helle Meri, 75, Estonian actress and socialite, first lady (1992–2001).
  • Elizabeth Nunez, 80, American novelist (Anna In-Between), stroke.
  • Titinga Frédéric Pacéré, 80, Burkinabé solicitor, writer, and poet.
  • Jerry M. Patterson, 90, American politician, member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1975–1985).
  • K. Selvaraj, 66, Indian politician, member of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly (1991–1996), cardiac arrest.
  • Trevor Sorbie, 75, British celebrity hairdresser, bowel cancer.
  • June Spencer, 105, English actress (The Archers).
  • Virginia Stroud, 73, American Cherokee painter.
  • Arthur R. Thompson, 85–86, American activist, CEO of the John Birch Society (2005–2020). (death announced on this date)
  • Brian Wheeler, 62, American basketball announcer (Portland Trail Blazers).

9

  • Hassan Akesbi, 89, Moroccan footballer (Nîmes, Reims, national team).
  • Bobby Allison, 86, American Hall of Fame racing driver, NASCAR Cup Series champion (1983) and three-time Daytona 500 winner.
  • Morihisa Aoki, 85, Japanese diplomat, ambassador to Peru (1994–1997).
  • Masao Arai, 75, Japanese wrestler, Olympic bronze medallist (1976).
  • Salim Ayyash, 61, Lebanese Hezbollah militant, airstrike.
  • Yiannis Boutaris, 82, Greek winemaker and politician, mayor of Thessaloniki (2011–2019).
  • Arturo Carsetti, 84, Italian philosopher of science.
  • Lou Donaldson, 98, American jazz saxophonist, pneumonia.
  • Patricia H. Foss, 98, American politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (1984–1992).
  • Edith Franke, 82, German politician, member of the Landtag of Saxony (2009–2014).
  • Felice D. Gaer, 78, American human rights activist, metastatic breast cancer.
  • Delhi Ganesh, 80, Indian actor (Kaatru Veliyidai, Muni, Pattina Pravesam).
  • José Garrido, 64, Portuguese football player (Benfica, Boavista) and manager (Al-Nasr).
  • Judith Jamison, 81, American dancer and choreographer.
  • Ella Jenkins, 100, American singer-songwriter.
  • James Patrick Keleher, 93, American Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Belleville (1984–1993) and archbishop of Kansas City (1993–2005).
  • Anil Kumar, 83, Indian physicist.
  • Lee Shi-yoon, 89, South Korean lawyer and judge, justice of the Constitutional Court (1988–1993).
  • Pedro Machete, 59, Portuguese judge, justice (2012–2023) and vice-president (2021–2023) of the Constitutional Court, cancer.
  • Viesturs Meijers, 56, Latvian chess grandmaster.
  • J. Reginald Murphy, 90, American business executive and journalist (The Atlanta Constitution, The Baltimore Sun).
  • Ram Narayan, 96, Indian sarangi player.
  • Valeria Narbikova, 66, Russian writer.
  • Günter Rixe, 85, German politician, MP (1987–1998).
  • Rudolf Trauner Jr., 70, Austrian businessman and politician, member of the Landtag of Upper Austria (1991–1997).
  • Jean-Marie Untaani Compaoré, 91, Burkinabè Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Ouagadougou (1973–1979), bishop of Fada N'Gourma (1979–1995) and archbishop of Ouagadougou (1995–2009).
  • Vyacheslav Uzelkov, 45, Ukrainian heavyweight boxer.
  • George Wilkins, 90, American composer.

10

  • Mohammad Ibrahim Abu Senna, 87, Egyptian poet.
  • Barbara Aland, 87, German theologian.
  • Rex Blundell, 82, Australian cricketer (South Australia).
  • Charles A. Burney, 94, British archaeologist.
  • Paul Caponigro, 91, American photographer, heart failure.
  • Mary Pat Clarke, 83, American politician, member of the Baltimore City Council (1975–1983, 2004–2020).
  • Tim Crow, 86, British psychiatrist and researcher, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Inés Fernández Moreno, 77, Argentine novelist.
  • Sandra Gilbert, 87, American literary critic (The Madwoman in the Attic) and poet, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
  • Derrick Grant, 86, Scottish rugby union player (Hawick, national team).
  • James W. Harris, 92, American linguist and professor.
  • Michael Hogan, 56, Irish hurler (Birr, Offaly).
  • Sir Maurice Johnston, 95, British army officer.
  • Pepe Justicia, 64, Spanish flamenco guitarist.
  • Dick Kercher, 92, American football player (Detroit Lions).
  • Karl Koepfer, 90, American football player (Detroit Lions).
  • Walfrid Kujala, 99, American flutist.
  • John LaBarge, 72, American politician, member of the Vermont House of Representatives (1993–2003).
  • Abdelkader Lecheheb, 70, Moroccan diplomat and footballer (USM d'Oujda, MC Oujda, national team), ambassador to Russia (2008–2019).
  • Dallas Long, 84, American shot putter, Olympic champion (1964), complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • João Omar Macagnan, 81, Brazilian politician, Santa Catarina MLA (1987–1988, 1999–2003), mayor of Itajaí (1989–1992).
  • Mahendra Singh Mewar, 83, Indian politician, MP (1989–1991).
  • Arnold Oss, 96, American ice hockey player, Olympic silver medalist (1952).
  • Peng Chenliang, 30, Chinese soldier, shot. (death announced on this date)
  • Helmut Pflugradt, 75, German politician, member of the Bürgerschaft of Bremen (1975–2009).
  • William Radice, 73, British poet, writer, and translator, cancer.
  • Stanley Rensch, 84, Surinamese Maroon and human rights activist, denounced the Moiwana massacre.
  • Gary Smyth, 60, Northern Irish loyalist paramilitary, heart attack.
  • Indra Soundar Rajan, 65, Indian author.
  • Tim Sullivan, 76, American science fiction author, heart failure.
  • Michel Sy, 94, French politician, deputy (1960–1962).
  • Noel Tierney, 82, Irish Gaelic footballer (Galway).

11

  • Marco Angulo, 22, Ecuadorian footballer (LDU Quito, Independiente del Valle, national team), injuries sustained in a traffic collision.
  • Frank Auerbach, 93, German-British painter.
  • Ray Baxter, 84, Australian footballer (Footscray).
  • Marie Benešová, 76, Czech politician and lawyer, minister of justice (2013–2014, 2019–2021).
  • Harvey Burnett, 29, Scottish rugby league player (London Broncos, Oxford Rugby League, national team), cancer.
  • René Djian, 97, French Olympic middle-distance runner (1952, 1956).
  • Gerry Faust, 89, American football coach (Notre Dame Fighting Irish, Akron Zips).
  • Gloria Fox, 82, American politician, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1987–2017).
  • Ubayd Haider, 25, Fijian boxer, brain haemorrhage.
  • Richard D. James, 88, American production designer (Star Trek) and art director (Local Hero, Silkwood), complications from an infection.
  • R. Sharath Jois, 53, Indian yoga instructor, heart attack.
  • Jan Kiedrowicz, 64, Polish chess grandmaster.
  • Clay Foster Lee Jr., 94, American Methodist bishop.
  • Sir Peter Mason, 78, British businessman, chairman of Thames Water (2006–2017).
  • Papa Noël Nedule, 83, Congolese guitarist.
  • Manfred Niekisch, 73, German biologist.
  • Kenneth Oliver, 79, American politician, member of Baltimore County Council (2002–2014).
  • John Peaslee, 73, American television writer and producer (Coach, According to Jim, Liv and Maddie).
  • Ivica Rajković, 89, Croatian cinematographer.
  • Gillian Riley, 80, English food writer and historian.
  • John Robinson, 89, American football coach (USC Trojans, Los Angeles Rams), pneumonia.
  • Dmitry Sukharev, 94, Russian biologist, poet, and bard.
  • Coşkun Taş, 89, Turkish footballer (Beşiktaş, 1. FC Köln, national team).
  • Carolina Valdivia, 46, Chilean politician, minister of foreign affairs (2022), pancreatic cancer.

12

  • Naoyuki Agawa, 73, Japanese academic and attorney.
  • Bendiks H. Arnesen, 73, Norwegian politician, MP (1997–2013).
  • Gift Atulewa, 38, Nigerian footballer (Bayelsa United, Ocean Boys, Warri Wolves), heart failure.
  • Saïd Ben Mustapha, 86, Tunisian politician and diplomat, minister of foreign affairs (1997–1999).
  • Bronislaw Bernacki, 80, Ukrainian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Odesa-Simferopol (2002–2020).
  • Ani Bitenc, 90, Slovene translator.
  • Agnes Buen Garnås, 78, Norwegian singer.
  • Joanne Chory, 69, American plant biologist and geneticist, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • Dana Devine, American-born Canadian immunologist.
  • Johnny Duhan, 74, Irish singer-songwriter ("The Voyage"), drowned.
  • Michalis Ganas, 80, Greek poet.
  • Barrie Gavin, 89, British film and television director.
  • Roy Haynes, 99, American jazz drummer.
  • John Horgan, 65, Canadian politician and diplomat, premier of British Columbia (2017–2022) and ambassador to Germany (since 2023), thyroid cancer.
  • Michael Hübner, 65, German sprint track cyclist, six-time world champion.
  • Morgan Jenness, 72, American freelance dramaturg.
  • Fred Kessler, 84, American politician and judge, member of the Wisconsin State Assembly (1961–1972, 2005–2019), cancer.
  • Kitanofuji Katsuaki, 82, Japanese sumo wrestler.
  • Helmut Koch, 92, German mathematician.
  • Helen Kleinbort Krauze, 99, Polish-born Mexican journalist (Novedades de México).
  • Radivoje Krivokapić, 71, Serbian handball player (1976 Olympics, RK Partizan, Yugoslavia national team), heart attack.
  • Thomas E. Kurtz, 96, American mathematician and computer scientist, co-developer of the BASIC programming language, sepsis.
  • Liang Guanglie, 83, Chinese army general and politician, minister of national defense (2008–2013) and head of the Joint Staff Department (2002–2007).
  • Bent Mejding, 87, Danish actor (Matador, We Shall Overcome, 1864), pneumonia.
  • Eddie Millar, 86, Australian rules footballer (Collingwood).
  • Manoj Mitra, 85, Indian actor (Banchharamer Bagaan, Ghare Baire, Ganashatru), director, and playwright.
  • Camay Calloway Murphy, 97, American educator.
  • Jean Nallit, 101, French Resistance member.
  • Helmut Nonn, 91, German Olympic field hockey player (1956, 1960).
  • Kalambay Otepa, 76, Congolese footballer (TP Mazembe, Zaire national team).
  • M. T. Padma, 81, Indian politician, Kerala MLA (1987–1991).
  • Silviu Prigoană, 60, Romanian businessman and politician, deputy (2008–2012), heart attack.
  • Erwin David Rabhan, 98, American businessman.
  • Mohammad Ali Salamat, 43, Iranian alleged rapist, executed.
  • Song Jae-rim, 39, South Korean actor (The Idle Mermaid, Our Gap-soon, Goodbye Mr. Black) and model, suicide.
  • Giorgos Valavanidis, 50, Greek basketball player (PAOK, M.E.N.T.), heart attack.
  • Vardis Vardinogiannis, 90, Greek shipping and oil executive, chairman of Motor Oil Hellas and Vegas Oil and Gas.
  • Timothy West, 90, English actor (Hedda, EastEnders) and television presenter (Great Canal Journeys).
  • Shreenarayan Yadav, 88–89, Indian politician, Bihar MLA (1977–2020).
  • Eiji Yanagisawa, 57, Japanese voice actor (Baki the Grappler, Code Geass, Digimon Frontier), intracerebral hemorrhage.
  • Lindsay Yeo, 78, New Zealand radio broadcaster (2ZB).
  • František Zvardoň, 75, Czech writer and photographer.

13

  • Teodoro Buhain, 87, Filipino Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Manila (1983–2003).
  • Michał Dąbrowski, 38, Polish fencer, Paralympic silver and bronze medalist (2024), bile duct cancer.
  • Daim Zainuddin, 86, Malaysian politician, minister of finance (1984–1991, 1999–2001), MP (1982–2004).
  • Ricky Dandan, 62, Filipino basketball coach (UP Fighting Maroons, Columbian Dyip), renal cancer.
  • Trond Eliassen, 102, Norwegian architect (Norwegian Maritime Museum).
  • Franco Ferrarotti, 98, Italian sociologist and politician, deputy (1959–1963).
  • Raj Gauthaman, 74, Indian literary scholar.
  • Ken Gill, 76, English rugby league player (Salford Red Devils, national team).
  • John Hambrick, 79, American politician, member of the Nevada Assembly (2008–2020), cancer.
  • Bobby Harris, 83, American politician, member of the Georgia House of Representatives (1985–1995).
  • Dan Hennessey, 82, Canadian voice actor (Care Bears, Inspector Gadget, X-Men: The Animated Series), complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • John Indi, 70, Zimbabwean actor (Mandela, Incident at Victoria Falls).
  • Junaedi, 57, Indonesian bureaucrat, regent of Thousand Islands (since 2020).
  • Begum Rosy Kabir, 73, Bangladeshi politician, MP (2005–2006), liver disease.
  • Hashem Kolahi, 68, Iranian Olympic wrestler (1976).
  • Miodrag Kostić, 65, Serbian businessman, founder of MK Group.
  • Spencer Lawton, 81, American district attorney, heart disease.
  • Doireann MacDermott, 100, Irish translator, writer and academic.
  • John Skeffington, 14th Viscount Massereene, 84, British peer, member of the House of Lords (1992–1999), sepsis and pneumonia.
  • Brian Maxine, 86, English wrestler and cabaret artist, British welterweight (1969–1971) and middleweight champion (1971).
  • Adolfo Moran, 70–71, Spanish architect.
  • Rampilla Narasayamma, 99, Indian freedom fighter.
  • Theodore Olson, 84, American lawyer, U.S. solicitor general (2001–2004), stroke.
  • Paul Peters, 82, Dutch politician, senator (2007–2011).
  • Kianush Sanjari, 42, Iranian journalist and activist (VOA-PNN, IHRDC, IHR), suicide.
  • Ken Shorter, 74, Australian actor (Stone, You Can't See 'round Corners, Dragonslayer).
  • Luis Soares, 60, Portuguese-French Olympic long-distance runner (1992).
  • Paul Staes, 78, Belgian politician, MEP (1984–1994), senator (1995–1999).
  • Shel Talmy, 87, American record producer ("You Really Got Me", "My Generation", "Friday on My Mind"), complications from a stroke.
  • Shuntarō Tanikawa, 92, Japanese poet and translator.
  • Luis Ernesto Tapia, 80, Panamanian footballer (Alianza, national team), heart attack.
  • Samuelu Teo, 66, Tuvaluan politician, acting governor-general (2021), MP (1998–2006, 2015–2024).
  • Elizabeth Kridl Valkenier, 98, Polish-American art historian.
  • Alexei Zimin, 52, Russian chef, television presenter, and restaurateur.

14

  • Jacques Adélaïde-Merlande, 91, French historian.
  • Tommy Alverson, 74, American country singer-songwriter, liver cancer.
  • Greg Bialecki, 64, American attorney.
  • Vadim Brovtsev, 55, Russian businessman and politician, prime minister (2009–2012) and acting president of South Ossetia (2011–2012), heart attack.
  • Dennis Bryon, 75, Welsh drummer (Amen Corner, Bee Gees).
  • Harischandra Chavan, 72, Indian politician, member of the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly (1995–1999) and of the Lok Sabha (2004–2019).
  • Dervilla M. X. Donnelly, 94, Irish chemist and academic.
  • Michel Elkoubi, 77, French racing driver. (death announced on this date)
  • Vic Flick, 87, English studio guitarist ("James Bond Theme"), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Keith Hepworth, 82, English rugby league player (Castleford, Leeds, Hull F.C.) and coach.
  • Shōhei Hino, 75, Japanese actor (Eijanaika, The Boy and the Heron, Emperor) and singer.
  • John Hodges, 87, Australian politician, MP (1974–1983, 1984–1987), minister of immigration and etnic affairs (1982–1983).
  • Aashish Khan, 84, Indian classical musician.
  • William J. Lavery, 86, American politician and jurist, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1967–1971), judge of the Connecticut Appellate Court (1989–2007).
  • Max Freitas Mauro, 87, Brazilian doctor and politician, deputy (1979–1987, 1999–2003), governor of Espírito Santo (1987–1991).
  • Alberto Monaci, 83, Italian politician, deputy (1987–1992).
  • Matti Päts, 91, Estonian civil servant and politician, MP (1992–1995).
  • Peter Sinfield, 80, English lyricist ("21st Century Schizoid Man", "I Believe in Father Christmas"), musician (King Crimson), and record producer.
  • Frances Strong, 93, American politician, member of the Alabama Senate (1983–1986).
  • Andrzej Sykta, 84, Polish footballer (Wisła Kraków, Motor Lublin, national team).
  • Pavel Traubner, 83, Slovak neurologist.
  • Igor Volke, 74, Estonian ufologist.
  • Saburo Yokomizo, 84, Japanese Olympic middle-distance runner (1964), liver cancer.
  • Kadyr Yusupov, 72, Uzbek diplomat.

15

  • Salwa Abu Khadra, 95, Palestinian politician.
  • Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud, 86, Somaliland politician, president (2010–2017), minister of finance (1997–1999) and MP (1993–1996).
  • Graham Bailey, 104, English footballer (Huddersfield Town, Sheffield United).
  • Frank Bentley, 90, English Anglican clergyman, archdeacon of Worcester (1984–1999), heart failure.
  • Helen Ginger Berrigan, 76, American jurist, judge (since 1994) and chief judge (2001–2008) of the U.S. District Court for Eastern Louisiana.
  • Trygve Bornø, 82, Norwegian football player (Skeid, national team) and official, secretary general of the Norwegian Football Federation (1983–1985, 1996–1999).
  • Celeste Caeiro, 91, Portuguese pacifist (Carnation Revolution), respiratory failure.
  • Don Carter, 88, Canadian ice hockey player (Greensboro Generals).
  • Robert Cohen, 86, American playwright.
  • Robert Dixon, 103, American World War II veteran, last surviving Buffalo Soldier.
  • Elvstroem, 24, Australian Thoroughbred racehorse.
  • Al Ferrara, 84, American baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers, San Diego Padres, Cincinnati Reds), pneumonia.
  • Tom Forrestall, 88, Canadian realist painter.
  • Ibrahim Saad, 78, Malaysian politician, MP (1995–1999).
  • Romualds Kalsons, 88, Latvian composer.
  • Béla Károlyi, 82, Hungarian-American Hall of Fame gymnastics coach.
  • Jon Kenny, 66, Irish comedian and actor (The Banshees of Inisherin, Les Misérables, Father Ted), heart attack.
  • Eileen Kramer, 110, Australian dancer and choreographer.
  • István Nemere, 80, Hungarian novelist, heart attack.
  • Richard Mulgan, 84, New Zealand political scientist.
  • Sir Robin Nicholson, 90, British metallurgist, chief scientific adviser (1982–1985).
  • Michael Osei, 53, Ghanaian football player (Asante Kotoko, national team) and manager (Bibiani Gold Stars).
  • Dick Packer, 90, American soccer player (Uhrik Truckers, 1956 Olympics).
  • Pausi Jefridin, 49, Malaysian drug trafficker, hanged.
  • Roslan Bakar, 53, Singaporean drug trafficker, hanged.
  • Suresh Sangaiah, Indian filmmaker (Oru Kidayin Karunai Manu, Sathiya Sothanai), liver failure.
  • Frank Schäffer, 72, German footballer (Borussia Mönchengladbach, SpVgg Ludwigsburg).
  • Sönke Sönksen, 86, German equestrian, Olympic silver medalist (1976).
  • Paul Teal, 35, American actor (One Tree Hill, Deep Water, The Staircase), cancer.
  • Patricia Thomson, 86, Australian cricket player (national team). (death announced on this date)
  • Yuriko, Princess Mikasa, 101, Japanese royal, stroke and pneumonia.
  • Ugo Zorco, 86, Italian Olympic field hockey player (1960).

16

  • Richard V. Allen, 88, American public servant, national security advisor (1981–1982).
  • Tommy Andersson, 60, Swedish footballer (Halmstad).
  • S. Atan, 75, Singaporean-born Malaysian music composer.
  • Ilyas Ahmed Bilour, 84, Pakistani politician, senator (2012–2018), kidney disease.
  • Cathy Cade, 82, American photographer.
  • Penny Chuter, 82, British rower.
  • Coloso Colosetti, 76, Argentine professional wrestler (NWA, CMLL).
  • Peter Cowley, 69, British businessman, cancer.
  • William S. Crismore, 91, American politician, member of the Montana Senate (1995–2003).
  • Dejan Despić, 94, Serbian classical composer, author, and music theoretician.
  • Mikhail Eremets, 75, Belarusian physicist and chemist.
  • Mohammad Fazlul Karim, 81, Bangladeshi jurist, chief justice (2010).
  • Edward J. FitzSimons, 84, American politician and attorney, mayor of Mettawa, Illinois (1981–1991).
  • Sergey Govorushko, 69, Russian geographer.
  • Esther Haywood, 84, American politician, member of the Missouri House of Representatives (2001–2009).
  • John Hine, 86, British Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Southwark (2001–2016).
  • Denise Holstein, 97, French author.
  • Howard Hughes, British podcaster, radio presenter and journalist (BBC Radio Berkshire, Capital London). (death announced on this date)
  • Hamid Merakchi, 48, Algerian footballer (Gençlerbirliği, MC Alger, national team).
  • Robert M. Miller, 97, American equine behaviorist and veterinarian.
  • Nara Ramamurthy Naidu, 72, Indian politician, Andhra Pradesh MLA (1994–1999).
  • Vladlen Naumenko, 77, Ukrainian footballer (FC Avanhard Ternopil, FC Sudnobudivnyk Mykolaiv) and coach (MFC Mykolaiv).
  • Hans Nilsson, 83, Swedish footballer (Djurgården, national team).
  • Zhenis Nurgaliyev, 62, Kazakh agronomist and politician, senator (2010–2023).
  • Eunice Parsons, 108, American modernist artist.
  • Jiří Pospíšil, 75, Czech politician and psychologist, senator (1996–2012).
  • Frank Robson, 78, English-born Finnish singer.
  • Jay David Saks, 79, American music producer.
  • Jerome Sattler, 93, American clinical psychologist.
  • Vladimir Shklyarov, 39, Russian ballet dancer, fall.
  • Sir Lady Java, 82, American drag performer and transgender rights activist.
  • Svetlana Svetlichnaya, 84, Russian actress (The Diamond Arm, Anna Pavlova, Goddess: How I fell in Love).
  • Pat Koch Thaler, 92, American educator, assisted suicide.
  • Olav Thon, 101, Norwegian businessman and philanthropist.
  • Joseph Tsang Mang Kin, 86, Mauritian poet, political scientist, and biographer.
  • Javier de Villota, 82, Spanish painter.
  • Gerry Weil, 85, Austrian-born Venezuelan jazz musician.
  • Clifton R. Wharton Jr., 98, American academic and diplomat, deputy secretary of state (1993), cancer.

17

  • Mohammad Afif, 64–65, Lebanese Hezbollah spokesperson, airstrike.
  • Khaled Ahmed, 81, Pakistani journalist.
  • Paulo Alexandre, 93, Portuguese singer.
  • Honorio Bórquez, 77, Chilean Olympic boxer (1968).
  • Bernard Chiarelli, 90, French footballer (Valenciennes, Lille, national team).
  • Choi Jae-uk, 84, South Korean politician, MP (1988–1996), minister of environment (1998–1999).
  • Muazzez İlmiye Çığ, 110, Turkish archaeologist.
  • Wesley Cox, 69, American basketball player (Golden State Warriors).
  • Daman Nath Dhungana, 83, Nepali politician, speaker of the House of Representatives (1991–1994).
  • Gerhard Dünnhaupt, 97, German bibliographer, literary historian and professor.
  • John Ray Godfrey, 80, American basketball player (Abilene Christian Wildcats).
  • Joachim Griese, 72, German sailor, Olympic silver medallist (1984).
  • Münci Kalayoğlu, 84, Turkish surgeon.
  • S. M. Khan, 67, Indian Information Service officer.
  • Jim Knaub, 68, American wheelchair marathon athlete and actor (The Man Who Loved Women), five-time Boston Marathon winner.
  • Eugeniusz Kubiak, 85, Polish Olympic rower (1964).
  • Vladimir Lyovkin, 57, Russian singer (Na Na).
  • Dmytro Maslovsky, 30, Ukrainian soldier, killed.
  • Charles Mullins, 92, American pediatric cardiologist.
  • Ehrhart Neubert, 84, German Evangelical priest and theologian.
  • Oh Hee-ok, 98, South Korean independence activist.
  • Vincenzo Perrone, 87, Italian entrepreneur and politician, deputy (1992–1994).
  • Orestes Rodríguez Vargas, 81, Peruvian chess grandmaster.
  • Viktor Samsonov, 83, Russian military officer, chief of the general staff (1996–1997).
  • Siaka Toumani Sangaré, 69, Malian civil servant and politician, president of the Independent National Electoral Commission of Guinea (2010–2011).
  • Artur Sarnat, 54, Polish footballer (Wisła Kraków, KSZO Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski, Kmita Zabierzów).
  • Allan Svensson, 73, Swedish actor (Svensson, Svensson, Vänner och fiender, Gåsmamman), prostate cancer.
  • Macoto Takahashi, 90, Japanese manga artist and painter, esophageal cancer.
  • Hugo Villaverde, 70, Argentine footballer (Colón de Santa Fe, Independiente, national team).
  • John Waiko, 79, Papua New Guinean historian, anthropologist, playwright, and politician.

18

  • Ken Battle, 77, Canadian social policy analyst.
  • Jordi Bonell, 66, Spanish jazz guitarist.
  • Fernando Carbone Campoverde, 65, Peruvian physician and politician, minister of health (2002–2003).
  • John Cartwright, 90, British politician, MP (1974–1992).
  • George Coulouris, 87, British computer scientist.
  • Uma Dasgupta, 84, Indian actress (Pather Panchali).
  • Michel Debout, 79, French doctor and politician, member of the Regional Council of Rhône-Alpes (1986–1998).
  • Samir Dey, 67, Indian politician, Odisha MLA (1995–2009), kidney infection and pneumonia.
  • Charles Dumont, 95, French singer and songwriter ("Non, je ne regrette rien").
  • Mike C. Frietze Jr., 97, American politician, member of the New Mexico House of Representatives (1965).
  • Arthur Frommer, 95, American travel writer, founder of Frommer's, pneumonia.
  • Vinod Gowda, 45, Indian Maoist insurgent, shot.
  • Junko Hori, 89, Japanese voice actress (Obake no Q-Tarō, Ninja Hattori-kun, Chimpui).
  • Emile Jansen, 64, Dutch actor (Winter in Wartime).
  • Jan Keizer, 84, Dutch football referee.
  • Karl Kohn, 98, Austrian-born American composer, teacher and pianist.
  • Amar Kudin, 32, Croatian-born Italian rugby union player (Fiamme Oro Rugby, Benetton Rugby, Rugby San Donà), traffic collision.
  • Bob Love, 81, American basketball player (Chicago Bulls), cancer.
  • Giridhar Malaviya, 88, Indian jurist and academic administrator, judge of the Allahabad High Court (1988–2001) and chancellor of Banaras Hindu University (since 2018).
  • Roy Megarry, 87, Northern Irish-born Canadian businessman and newspaper publisher (The Globe and Mail).
  • Manfred Ohrenstein, 99, German-born American lawyer and politician, member of the New York State Senate (1961–1994).
  • Tarmo Oja, 89, Estonian-born Swedish astronomer.
  • György Pauk, 88, Hungarian violinist, complications from a fall.
  • José Miguel Pérez García, 67, Spanish academic and politician, member of the Canarian Parliament (2011–2015), cancer.
  • Colin Petersen, 78, Australian drummer (Bee Gees, Humpy Bong) and actor (Smiley).
  • Nancy Petry, 93, Canadian artist.
  • Zakaria Pintoo, 81, Bangladeshi football player (Mohammedan SC, Pakistan national team, Bangladesh national team) and manager, multiple organ failure.
  • ʻAna Taufeʻulungaki, 78, Tongan politician, member of the Privy Council of Tonga (since 2022).
  • Mark Wildman, 88, English snooker and billiards player and commentator, WPBSA World Champion (1984).

19

  • Odile Bailleux, 84, French harpsichordist and organist.
  • Isla Bell, 19, Australian teenager, murdered. (body discovered on this date)
  • Patty Berg, 82, American politician, member of the California State Assembly (2002–2008).
  • Beyza Bilgin, 89, Turkish theologian.
  • Joe Birrell, 94, British Olympic hurdler (1948).
  • Cesare Bonizzi, 78, Italian Capuchin friar and heavy metal singer.
  • Tony Campolo, 89, American sociologist and Baptist minister, heart failure.
  • Chang Si-liang, 83, Taiwanese police officer, director-general of the National Police Agency (2003–2004).
  • Colin Chilvers, 79, English music video director ("Smooth Criminal") and special effects coordinator (Superman, X-Men).
  • Roy Christian, 81, New Zealand rugby league player (Auckland, national team) and church minister.
  • Don Cowan, 93, English footballer (Darlington).
  • Bernadette Després, 83, French illustrator.
  • András Fricsay, 82, German actor (The Conquest of the Citadel, The Aggression, Spider's Web) and director.
  • Graciela Susana, 71, Argentine tango singer.
  • Diva Gray, 72, American singer (Change, Chic).
  • Walter Korpi, 90, Swedish sociologist.
  • Lucas Moripe, 71, South African footballer (Pretoria Callies, Caroline Hill, Orlando Pirates).
  • Dirk Nuyts, 72, Belgian politician, mayor of Schilde (1995–2000).
  • Ron O'Brien, 86, American diving coach and author.
  • Donato Paduano, 75, Italian-born Canadian Olympic boxer (1968), complications from diabetes.
  • Ken Reid, 69, Northern Irish journalist and political editor (UTV).
  • Henk van Rooy, 76, Dutch footballer (Den Bosch, Roda JC Kerkrade, NAC Breda), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Saafir, 54, American rapper and actor (Menace II Society).
  • Vojo Stanić, 100, Montenegrin painter and sculptor.

20

  • José Luis Azcona Hermoso, 84, Spanish-born Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate, bishop of Marajó (1987–2016).
  • Celeste Barker, 64, South African politician, member of the Eastern Cape Provincial Legislature (2014–2019).
  • Ita Beausang, 88, Irish musicologist.
  • John Bernard, 87, Dutch meteorologist.
  • Marshall Brain, 63, American author (Manna), public speaker and entrepreneur, creator of HowStuffWorks.
  • Jean-Noël Carpentier, 54, French politician, deputy (2012–2017), lung cancer.
  • Bill Deal, 87, American politician, member of the Idaho House of Representatives (1991–2007).
  • John Faria, 87, American politician, member of the Rhode Island Senate (1971–1973).
  • Don Fuell, 85, American gridiron football player (Toronto Argonauts, Montreal Alouettes).
  • Rino Hansen, 54, Norwegian footballer (Moss, Fredrikstad), cancer.
  • Tommy Hart, 80, American football player (San Francisco 49ers, Chicago Bears, New Orleans Saints).
  • Ursula Haverbeck, 96, German neo-Nazi and convicted Holocaust denier.
  • J. Lawrence Irving, 89, American jurist, judge of U.S. District Court for Southern California (1982–1990).
  • Peter A. Loeb, 87, American mathematician.
  • Peter Maddocks, 96, English cartoonist (The Family-Ness, Penny Crayon, Jimbo and the Jet-Set).
  • Malkhaz Makharadze, 61, Georgian footballer (Dinamo Tbilisi, Guria, Dinamo Batumi).
  • Manousos Manousakis, 74, Greek film director (Cloudy Sunday), producer, and writer.
  • Ken McCulloch, 76, British hotelier, founder of the Malmaison and Dakota hotel chains.
  • Al McLean, 87, Canadian politician, member (1981–1999) and speaker (1995–1996) of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
  • Sir Kit McMahon, 97, Australian-born British banker, deputy governor of the Bank of England (1980–1986).
  • Flaviano Melo, 75, Brazilian civil engineer and politician, governor of Acre (1987–1990), senator (1991–1999), deputy (2007–2023), pneumonia.
  • Rasoul Mirmalek, 86, Iranian Olympic wrestler (1964).
  • Dahir Mohammed, 51, Ethiopian-born American soccer player (Long Island Rough Riders).
  • Andy Paley, 72, American musician (The Paley Brothers, The Modern Lovers), record producer, and composer (SpongeBob SquarePants), throat cancer.
  • Mike Pinera, 76, American guitarist (Blues Image, Iron Butterfly) and songwriter ("Ride Captain Ride"), liver failure.
  • Chad Posthumus, 33, Canadian basketball player (Winnipeg Sea Bears), brain aneurysm.
  • John Prescott, Baron Prescott, 86, British politician, deputy prime minister (1997–2007), MP (1970–2010), and member of the House of Lords (2010–2024), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • V. T. Rajshekar, 92, Indian journalist, founder of Dalit Voice.
  • Jodi Rell, 78, American politician, governor (2004–2011) and lieutenant governor (1995–2004) of Connecticut, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1985–1995).
  • Harry Schellenberg, 85, Canadian politician, Manitoba MLA (1993–1995, 1999–2007).
  • Mynever Shuteriqi, 100, Albanian writer and academician.
  • Michael P. Sullivan, 89, American attorney and businessman, President and CEO of Dairy Queen (1987–2001).
  • Manohar Tahasildar, 78, Indian politician, four-time Karnataka MLA.
  • Nub Tola, 28, Cambodian footballer (Nagaworld, Ministry of Interior FA, national team), suicide.
  • Paul Watson, 72, American musician, complications from Parkinson's disease.

21

  • H. S. Bedi, 78, Indian jurist, chief judge of the Bombay High Court (2006–2007) and judge of the Supreme Court (2007–2011).
  • Alice Brock, 83, American artist and restaurateur, inspiration for "Alice's Restaurant", chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
  • Peggy Caserta, 84, American businesswoman and memoirist.
  • Paul Matthews Cleveland, 93, American diplomat, ambassador to New Zealand (1986–1989) and Malaysia (1989–1992).
  • Barry Coley, 77, New Zealand cricketer (Wellington).
  • Gianfranco Dalla Barba, 67, Italian fencer and neurologist, Olympic champion (1984).
  • K. Terry Dornbush, 91, American diplomat, ambassador to the Netherlands (1994–1998).
  • Ronald Everson, 94, American politician, member of the Minnesota House of Representatives (1961–1971).
  • Pehr G. Gyllenhammar, 89, Swedish automotive industry executive, chairman and CEO of Volvo (1970–1994).
  • Marjan Kandus, 93, Slovene basketball player (AŠK Olimpija, Yugoslavia national team, 1960 Olympics). (death announced on this date)
  • Andrea Kékesy, 98, Hungarian figure skater, Olympic silver medallist (1948).
  • Manuel Lillo Torregrosa, 84, Spanish classical composer.
  • Vicente de la Mata, 80, Argentine footballer (Independiente, Veracruz, national team).
  • Meghanathan, 60, Indian actor (Asthram, Malappuram Haji Mahanaya Joji, The Godman), lung disease.
  • Mohammad Nazir, 78, Pakistani cricket player (Railways, Punjab University, national team) and umpire.
  • Laura Samuel, 48, British violinist, leiomyosarcoma.
  • Richard J. Scott, 86, Canadian jurist, chief justice of Manitoba (1990–2013).
  • Chandra Shekhar, 83, Indian politician, Uttarakhand MLA (2002–2007, 2012–2017), brain hemorrhage.
  • Esmail Shooshtari, 74–75, Iranian politician, minister of justice (1989–2005).
  • Richard J. Sklba, 89, American Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Milwaukee (1979–2010).
  • Ray Smith, 90, English footballer (Hull City, Peterborough United, Northampton Town).
  • Marc H. V. van Regenmortel, 89, Belgian virologist.
  • Kathleen Wharton, 41, New Zealand rugby league player (New Zealand Warriors, Māori All Stars, national team).
  • Don Young, 79, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs).

22

  • Helmut Abt, 99, German-born American astrophysicist.
  • Kenny Aird, 77, Scottish footballer (St Mirren, St Johnstone, Heart of Midlothian).
  • Médard Autsai Asenga, 82, Congolese politician, governor of Orientale Province (2007–2012), MNA (since 2012).
  • Norman Bodell, 86, English football player (Crewe Alexandra, Rochdale) and manager (Barrow).
  • Sandra Brown, 85, English cricketer (Surrey, national team).
  • Mercedes Bulnes, 74, Chilean lawyer and politician, deputy (since 2022).
  • Ali Musa Daqduq, 50s, Lebanese militant (Hezbollah), airstrike. (death announced on this date)
  • Peter Fenwick, 89, British neuropsychiatrist and neuropsychologist.
  • James Fleming, 80, English author and editor.
  • Jim Grant, 87, Canadian lawyer.
  • Bob Hattaway, 88, American politician, member of the Florida House of Representatives (1974–1982).
  • Janabil, 90, Chinese politician.
  • Neal Malicky, 90, American academic administrator.
  • Dragan Marković, 64, Serbian politician, mayor of Jagodina (2004–2012).
  • Richard W. Murphy, 95, American diplomat, four-time ambassador and assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern and South Asian affairs (1983–1989).
  • Omchery N. N. Pillai, 100, Indian playwright, novelist, and poet.
  • Dumitru Popescu, 96, Romanian politician, journalist, and novelist, member of the Great National Assembly (1965–1989).
  • Marianne Preger-Simon, 95, American dancer and choreographer.
  • Toni Price, 63, American country blues singer, brain aneurysm.
  • Rosman Abdullah, 55, Singaporean drug trafficker, hanged.
  • Kirk Schuring, 72, American politician, speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives (2018), member of the Ohio Senate (2003–2010, since 2019), pancreatic cancer.
  • Charles L. Scofield, 99, American politician, member of the North Dakota House of Representatives (1973–1980).
  • László Szabó, 78, Hungarian Olympic handball player (1972).
  • Cyndy Szekeres, 91, American children's author and illustrator.
  • Jörg Philipp Terhechte, 49, German legal scholar and academic.
  • Serge Vohor, 69, Vanuatuan politician, five-time prime minister.
  • Mark Withers, 77, American actor (Kaz, Days of Our Lives, Dynasty), pancreatic cancer.
  • Eduard Zehnder, 84, Swiss mathematician.

23

  • David Black, 88, Australian historian.
  • Rico Carty, 85, Dominican baseball player (Atlanta Braves, Cleveland Indians, Chicago Cubs).
  • Sharon Colyear, 69, British Olympic sprinter and hurdler (1984). (death announced on this date)
  • Gabriel Cotabiță, 69, Romanian singer, stroke.
  • John Delzoppo, 92, Australian politician, Victorian MLA (1982–1996).
  • Roberto José Dromi, 79, Argentine politician, minister of public works (1989–1991) and mayor of Mendoza (1981–1982).
  • Tetsuo Harada, 75, Japanese-born French painter and sculptor.
  • Fred R. Harris, 94, American politician, member of the U.S. Senate (1964–1973) and Oklahoma Senate (1957–1964).
  • Karel Holý, 68, Czech ice hockey player (Sparta Praha, Czechoslovakia national team, 1980 Olympics).
  • Helen Hughes, 95, New Zealand botanist, parliamentary commissioner for the environment (1987–1996).
  • Jean Jourden, 82, French road racing cyclist.
  • Walter Kaminsky, 83, German chemist.
  • Pavel Karmanov, 54, Russian composer.
  • Nikki Kaye, 44, New Zealand politician, MP (2008–2020), cancer.
  • Julio Medina, 91, Colombian actor (Zoot Suit, Ilona Arrives with the Rain).
  • Samaya Piriyeva, 79, Azerbaijani politician, MP (1995–1999).
  • Susan Pitt, 76, American Olympic swimmer (1964), glioblastoma.
  • Rajkumar Singhajit Singh, 93, Indian classical dancer.
  • Fred L. Smith, 83, American economist and political writer, founder of Competitive Enterprise Institute.
  • Walter King Stapleton, 90, American jurist, judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware (1970–1985) and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (since 1985).
  • Michael Villella, 84, American actor (The Slumber Party Massacre, Love Letters, Wild Orchid).
  • Wang Weilin, 67, Chinese television producer.
  • Chuck Woolery, 83, American game show host (Wheel of Fortune, Love Connection) and musician (The Avant-Garde).
  • Cynthia Zukas, 93, South African-born Zambian painter.

24

  • Ahmad Nawab, 92, Malaysian composer.
  • Urs Allemann, 76, Swiss writer and journalist (Theater heute, Basler Zeitung).
  • Barbara Taylor Bradford, 91, British-American novelist (A Woman of Substance, Hold the Dream).
  • Breyten Breytenbach, 85, South African writer, poet, and painter, fall.
  • Bob Bryar, 44, American drummer (My Chemical Romance).
  • Mohamed Chaker, 93, Tunisian lawyer and politician, minister of justice (1980–1984).
  • Helen Gallagher, 98, American actress (Hazel Flagg, Ryan's Hope, Pal Joey).
  • Jany Gastaldi, 76, French actress (Solemn Communion, Édith et Marcel, Mina Tannenbaum).
  • Charles Goodsell, 92, American academic and writer.
  • Mike Hasenfratz, 58, Canadian ice hockey referee.
  • Peggy Ann Jones, 85, English opera singer and actress.
  • Zvi Kogan, 28, Israeli-Moldovan rabbi, homicide. (body discovered on this date)
  • Yōji Kuri, 96, Japanese cartoonist and independent filmmaker.
  • Jos Lammertink, 66, Dutch road bicycle racer, respiratory failure.
  • José Lecaros, 73, Peruvian magistrate, justice (since 2007) and president of the Supreme Court and the Judiciary (2019–2021).
  • Elisa Lerner, 92, Venezuelan writer, recipient of the National Prize for Literature (1999).
  • Tarky Lombardi Jr., 95, American politician, member of the New York Senate (1967–1992).
  • Félix Manuel Pérez Miyares, 88, Spanish politician, minister of labour (1980–1981).
  • Colin Renfrew, Baron Renfrew of Kaimsthorn, 87, British archaeologist, academic and peer, member of the House of Lords (1991–2021).
  • Donald B. Robertson, 93, American politician, member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1971–1989).
  • Md. Ruhul Amin, 83, Bangladeshi jurist, chief justice (2007–2008).
  • Carl Runk, 88, American college lacrosse and football coach (Towson University).
  • Siegfried Thiele, 90, German composer.
  • Bruce Thompson, 59, American politician, Georgia labor commissioner (since 2023), member of the Georgia State Senate (2013–2023), pancreatic cancer.
  • Vishakha Tripathi, 75, Indian spiritual leader and philanthropist (Jagadguru Kripalu Parishat), traffic collision.
  • Jane Ward, 96, American Olympic volleyball player (1964, 1968).
  • Chia-ying Yeh, 100, Chinese-born Canadian poet and sinologist.
  • Joe Zuger, 84, American football player (Hamilton Tiger-Cats).

25

  • Pedro Agramunt, 73, Spanish politician, deputy (1989–1991), senator (2008–2019), and PACE president (2016–2017).
  • Miguel Ángel Ayuso Guixot, 72, Spanish Roman Catholic cardinal, president of the Dicastery for Interreligious Dialogue (since 2019).
  • Gianfranco Calligarich, 85, Italian novelist and screenwriter.
  • Amalia Ciardi Dupré, 89, Italian sculptor.
  • Odd Flattum, 82, Norwegian politician and sports official, mayor of Modum (1991–2007), president of the Norwegian Football Federation (1992–1996).
  • Gail Henley, 96, American baseball player (Pittsburgh Pirates).
  • Earl Holliman, 96, American actor (Police Woman, The Rainmaker, The Twilight Zone).
  • Sir Brian Jenkins, 88, British accountant and public servant, lord mayor of London (1991).
  • Hal Lindsey, 95, American evangelist and Christian writer (The Late Great Planet Earth).
  • Ernie McMillan, 86, American football player (St. Louis Cardinals, Green Bay Packers).
  • Jaroslav Jeroným Neduha, 79, Czech singer-songwriter.
  • Raimo Piltz, 86, Finnish television director.
  • Will Green Poindexter, 80, American politician, member of the Mississippi House of Representatives (1976–1993).
  • M. Jagannadha Rao, 88, Indian jurist, judge of the Supreme Court (1997–2000), chief judge of the Kerala High Court (1991–1994) and the Delhi High Court (1994–1997).
  • James F. Rea, 87, American politician, member of the Illinois House of Representatives (1979–1989) and Senate (1989–1999).
  • Harris Rosen, 85, American hotelier, investor, and philanthropist (Rosen Jewish Community Center), complications from surgery.
  • Shashi Ruia, 80, Indian conglomerate industry executive, co-founder of Essar Group.
  • Kuldip Singh, 92, Indian jurist, judge of the Supreme Court (1988–1996).
  • Eddie Stobart, 95, British businessman (Stobart).
  • Timotej, 73, Macedonian Orthodox prelate, heart disease.
  • John Tinniswood, 112, British supercentenarian, world's oldest man (since 2024).
  • Andries van Aarde, 73, South African theologian.
  • Lars Wistedt, 60, Swedish military officer and politician, MP (since 2022).

26

  • Jim Abrahams, 80, American film director and screenwriter (Airplane!, The Naked Gun, Hot Shots!), leukemia.
  • Mohammed Ahmed, 92, Ethiopian air travel executive.
  • Saiful Islam Alif, Bangladeshi lawyer, beaten.
  • Karin Baal, 84, German actress (Tired Theodore, Rosemary, Between Shanghai and St. Pauli).
  • Suchir Balaji, 26, American artificial intelligence researcher and whistleblower (OpenAI), suicide.
  • Victor Brombert, 101, German-born American scholar and World War II veteran (Ritchie Boys).
  • Shyamdev Roy Chaudhari, 85, Indian politician, Uttar Pradesh MLA (1989–2017).
  • Peter Cummins, 93, Australian actor (The Firm Man, The Removalists, Phoenix). (death announced on this date)
  • Birgitta Dahl, 87, Swedish politician, minister for energy (1982–1990), minister for the environment (1986–1991), speaker of the Riksdag (1994–2002), heart failure.
  • Jahangir Darvish, 91, Iranian architect (Takhti Stadium).
  • Gilles Devers, 68, French lawyer and academic.
  • Paul Dickenson, 74, English Olympic hammer thrower (1976, 1980) and sports commentator.
  • Gabriel Escarrer, 89, Spanish hotelier, founder of Meliá Hotels International.
  • Katinka Faragó, 87, Austrian-born Swedish film producer (Leningrad Cowboys Go America, Friends, Comrades) and production manager (Fanny and Alexander).
  • Jan Furtok, 62, Polish football player (GKS Katowice, Hamburger SV, national team) and manager.
  • Gemma Hussey, 86, Irish politician, TD (1982–1989), senator (1977–1982) and minister for education (1982–1986).
  • Brian Jackson, 91, English cricketer (Derbyshire).
  • Kulasekhar, 53, Indian lyricist.
  • Leah Kunkel, 76, American singer (The Coyote Sisters) and attorney.
  • André Lajoinie, 94, French politician, deputy (1978–1993, 1997–2002).
  • Maria Limanskaya, 100, Russian traffic controller.
  • Meisho Samson, 21, Japanese racehorse, heart failure.
  • Shalom Nagar, Yemeni-born Israeli prison guard, executioner of Adolf Eichmann.
  • Peng Tien-fu, 73, Taiwanese politician, member of the Legislative Yuan (2002–2008), member (1990–1998) and speaker (2000–2001) of the TPCC.
  • Nicolae Popa, 85, Romanian jurist, president of the High Court of Cassation and Justice (2004–2009).
  • M. Harunur Rashid, 84, Bangladeshi literary scholar, director general of Bangla Academy (1991–1995), cancer.
  • Pedro Orlando Reyes, 65, Cuban boxer, world amateur champion (1986).
  • Diana Ruiz, 32, Ecuadorian military pilot, plane crash.
  • Scott L. Schwartz, 65, American actor (Savate, Fire Down Below, Ocean's), stuntman and wrestler.
  • Malcolm Smith, 83, Canadian-American motorcycle racer, complications from Parkinson's disease.
  • C. S. Song, 95, Taiwanese academic and theologian.
  • Sivapatham Vittal, 83, Indian endrocrinologist.

27

  • Maria Alexandru, 84, Romanian table tennis player, world champion (1961, 1973, 1975).
  • Bill Brumsickle, 89, American politician, member of the Washington House of Representatives (1989–1997).
  • Joe Campbell, 89, American professional golfer.
  • Amandine Chazot, 33, French standup paddleboarder, cancer.
  • Oscar Feldman, 103, American attorney.
  • Tor Fosse, 58, Norwegian footballer (Bryne), cancer.
  • Artt Frank, 91, American jazz drummer and biographer (Chet Baker).
  • Georges Gilson, 95, French Roman Catholic prelate, auxiliary bishop of Paris (1976–1981), bishop of Le Mans (1981–1996) and archbishop of Sens (1996–2004).
  • Leonor González Mina, 90, Colombian singer and actress.
  • Thomas Hylland Eriksen, 62, Norwegian anthropologist.
  • Takashi Inoguchi, 80, Japanese international political scientist, injuries from a fire.
  • Mighty Inoue, 75, Japanese professional wrestler (AJPW, IWE) and referee, heart failure.
  • Fedde Jonkman, 83, Dutch politician, mayor of Rijnsburg (1985–1997) and Waddinxveen (1997–2004).
  • Bob Kelly, 97, American baseball player (Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Redlegs, Cleveland Indians).
  • Morgan Lofting, 84, American voice actress (G.I. Joe, Spider-Man, Star Blazers).
  • Angus Macfarlane, New Zealand education academic, Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand (since 2018).
  • Mary McGee, 87, American Hall of Fame motorcycle racer, complications from a stroke.
  • Faustine Ndugulile, 55, Tanzanian politician, MP (since 2010).
  • John Stanley Pottinger, 84, American novelist and lawyer, cancer.
  • Adam Somner, 57, American film producer and assistant director (Licorice Pizza, Blitz, West Side Story), anaplastic thyroid cancer.
  • Bengt-Arne Strömberg, 70, Swedish football player (GAIS) and coach (IF Elfsborg, IFK Norrköping).

28

  • Matthew Allin, 46, English cricketer (Devon).
  • Amiya Kumar Bagchi, 87–88, Indian political economist.
  • Bill Battle, 82, American football player (Alabama Crimson Tide), coach (Tennessee Volunteers) and executive, founder of the CLC.
  • James Beauregard-Smith, 81, Australian convicted murderer and rapist. (death announced on this date)
  • Renee Bornstein, 90, French-born British Holocaust survivor and writer, pancreatic cancer.
  • Roy Brown, 77, British businessman and engineer, chairman of GKN (2004–2012).
  • Ruth Butler, 93, American art historian.
  • Janine Connes, 98, French astronomer.
  • Lía Crucet, 72, Argentine singer, model and actress.
  • Jim Earthman, 90, American politician, member of the Texas House of Representatives (1969–1973).
  • Kenneth R. Grant, 83, American politician, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (1998–2000).
  • Tom Hughes, 101, Australian politician and barrister, MP (1963–1972), attorney-general (1969–1971).
  • Prince Johnson, 72, Liberian warlord and politician, senator (since 2006).
  • Ananda Krishnan, 86, Malaysian conglomerate industry executive, founder of Usaha Tegas and Astro Malaysia Holdings.
  • Raymond Maffiolo, 86, Swiss footballer (Servette, national team).
  • John McNamee, 83, Scottish footballer (Newcastle United, Hibernian, Blackburn Rovers). (death announced on this date)
  • Iván Parejo, 37, Spanish aerobic gymnast, world champion (2008).
  • Silvia Pinal, 93, Mexican actress (Maribel and the Strange Family, Viridiana, The Exterminating Angel), urinary tract infection.
  • Kioumars Pourhashemi, Iranian military general, shot.
  • Roeland Raes, 90, Belgian politician, senator (1991–2001).
  • Santanina Rasul, 94, Filipino politician, senator (1987–1995).
  • Joseph Serra, 84, American politician, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1993–2021).
  • Trent Zelazny, 48, American author, liver failure.

29

  • Morton I. Abramowitz, 91, American diplomat, assistant secretary of state (1985–1989) and ambassador to Thailand (1978–1981) and Turkey (1989–1991).
  • Tchinda Andrade, 45, Cape Verdean LGBT activist, subject of Tchindas.
  • David Arscott, 82, English author (The Frozen City) and historian.
  • Anna Banana, 84, Canadian artist.
  • Marshall Brickman, 85, American screenwriter (Annie Hall, Manhattan) and playwright (Jersey Boys), Oscar winner (1978).
  • Bert De Coninck, 75, Belgian singer and guitarist.
  • Bob Gable, 90, American politician.
  • Joseph T. Gormley Jr., 92, American politician, lawyer, and jurist, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1961–1962), Chief State's Attorney of Connecticut (1973–1978).
  • Dale Hamer, 87, American football official.
  • Will Cullen Hart, 53, American musician (The Olivia Tremor Control, Circulatory System), co-founder of Elephant 6.
  • Jan Hendrikx, 83, Dutch politician, Queen's commissioner of Overijssel (1988–2002), senator (2007–2011).
  • Josef Jelínek, 83, Czech footballer (Dukla Prague, VTŽ Chomutov, Czechoslovakia national team).
  • Tony Jian, 69, Taiwanese politician, member of the Legislative Yuan (2002–2005, 2010–2011), esophageal cancer.
  • Christian Juttner, 60, American actor (Return from Witch Mountain, I Wanna Hold Your Hand, The Swarm).
  • Larry McIntyre, 75, Canadian ice hockey player (Toronto Maple Leafs).
  • Thirman Milner, 91, American politician, mayor of Hartford, Connecticut (1981–1987), member of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1979–1981) and Senate (1993–1995).
  • Lance Morrow, 85, American writer and journalist, prostate cancer.
  • Eva Mosnáková, 95, Slovak human rights activist and Holocaust survivor.
  • Rafig Nasirov, 77, Azerbaijani sculptor.
  • Wayne Northrop, 77, American actor (Dynasty, Days of Our Lives, Port Charles), complications from Alzheimer's disease.
  • Antonio Romero, 69, Spanish politician, deputy (1989–1995) and senator (1986–1989).
  • Peter B. Teeley, 84, American political consultant and diplomat, ambassador to Canada (1992–1993), cancer.
  • Ian Trewhella, 79, Australian athlete, four-time Paralympic silver medalist (1980, 1984).
  • James E. Ulland, 82, American politician, member of the Minnesota House of Representatives (1969–1977) and Senate (1977–1985).
  • Peter Westbrook, 72, American fencer, Olympic bronze medalist (1984), liver cancer.

30

  • Steve Alaimo, 84, American singer ("Every Day I Have to Cry") and record producer, co-founder of TK Records.
  • Fernando Aspiazu, 89, Ecuadorian businessman (Emelec), minister of economy and finance (1979–1980).
  • Martin Benson, 87, American artistic director.
  • Lou Carnesecca, 99, American Hall of Fame basketball coach (New York Nets, St. John's Red Storm).
  • René Couanau, 88, French politician, deputy (1988–2012).
  • Susan Duncan, 72–73, Australian writer and editor (The Australian Women's Weekly, New Idea).
  • Eva Hermans-Kroot, 26, Dutch blogger, lung cancer.
  • Sir Gerald Hosker, 91, British lawyer and public servant, Procurator General and Treasury Solicitor (1992–1995).
  • Kanta Saroop Krishen, 95, Indian social worker.
  • Francis C. Marsano, 88, American politician, member of the Maine House of Representatives (1986–1992).
  • Prithwindra Mukherjee, 88, Indian author and researcher.
  • Howard W. Peak, 75, American politician, mayor of San Antonio (1997–2001).
  • Pepe Pinto, 95, Spanish football player (Barcelona, Real Valladolid) and manager (Girona).
  • Ryszard Poznakowski, 78, Polish musician, composer and arranger.
  • Qi Zhengjun, 100, Chinese army lieutenant general.
  • Ladislav Rygl Sr., 77, Czech Olympic Nordic combined skier (1968, 1972), world champion (1970).
  • Jeremy Seabrook, 85, British author and journalist.
  • Robert Skoglund, 88, American humorist, columnist, and radio personality (Maine Public Radio).
  • Donald H. Turner, 60, American politician, member of the Vermont House of Representatives (2007–2019), glioblastoma.
  • Nizoramo Zaripova, 101, Tajik politician, member of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union (1958–1966).

References

External links

  • List of November 2024 deaths at IMDb

2024 Deaths Websites Like Gael Pattie

Famous Deaths November 2024 Elie Janenna

Deaths In 2024 List Uk Rodie Chrysler

Deaths In 2024 En Wikipedia 2024 Robbi Margaret

Obituaries for Thursday (7th November 2024) Tipp Mid West Radio