- Trump says could impose 25% tariffs on Canada, Mexico on Feb 1
- Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial
- Musk raises eyebrows with salute gesture at Trump rally
- Trump signs pardons for 1,500 Capitol rioters
- Trump promises new US 'golden age' with blitz of presidential orders
- Rubio wins unanimous nod to be top US diplomat
- Trump says will sign pardons for Capitol rioters
- Rubio on track to take office quickly as US secretary of state
- Chelsea beat Wolves to return to Premier League top four
- 'Please let us in': Trump crackdown leaves migrants in tears
- Trump says to declare national emergency at border, use military
- Chelsea beat Wolves to climb back into Premier League top four
- 'Daddy's home': Trump diehards celebrate in icy Washington
- Trump vows new US 'golden age' as second term begins
- 'Extremely critical' risk as winds whip fire-weary Los Angeles
- Trump vows to plant flag on Mars, omits mention of Moon return
- Trump vows to 'tariff and tax' other countries
- Top-ranked Scheffler won't 'rush back' to golf after Christmas hand injury
- Trump vows to 'tariff and tax' on other countries
- Aston Villa ready for 'key' Monaco clash, says Emery
- Netanyahu vows to quash Gaza 'threat' on second day of truce
- Trump seeks to rename Denali, highest peak in N. America
- Trump vows US 'taking back' Panama Canal despite 'peacemaker' pledge
- 'Daddy's home': Trump fans flock to DC but watch inauguration on TV
- 'Dear friend': Nations react to Trump inauguration
- Melania Trump brings steely fashion game back to Washington
- Trump vows trade policy of 'tariff and tax' on other countries
- Trump sworn in as US president, promises 'golden age'
- Colombia vows 'war' as guerrilla violence kills 100
- Man City sign Uzbekistan defender Khusanov from Lens
- Trump says 'only two genders', will end diversity programs
- US to withdraw from Paris agreement, expand drilling
- Flick expecting Barca improvement at Benfica after Liga slump
- Trump says to declare national emergency, use military at Mexico border
- Tech billionaires take center stage at Trump inauguration
- Trump pledges 'golden age' on being sworn in as US president
- Global tourism recovered to pre-pandemic levels in 2024: UN
- Trump to end diversity programs, define two genders: official
- Job cuts report worries employees at Germany's Commerzbank
- Trump sworn in for second term vowing sweeping change
- Armani eyes 'beautiful comfort' at Milan fashion week
- Slot challenges Liverpool striker Nunez to prove he is elite
- Trump arrives for inauguration vowing sweeping change
- X and Facebook toughen EU pledge to combat hate speech
- With Trump inauguration indoors, supporters say 'winging it' but still thrilled
- 'Y.M.C.A.' journeys from gay anthem to Trump theme tune
- Hamilton begins 'new chapter' at Ferrari
- Trump, Biden head to Capitol for inauguration
- Numbers using 'QuitX' service swell before Trump inauguration
- French mother on trial accused of starving teen daughter to death
Israeli police scatter Palestinian protesters in Jerusalem
Israeli police on horseback scattered protesters Friday in the flashpoint east Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, where demonstrators poured in to support Palestinians facing eviction by Jewish settlers.
The scuffles there came alongside protests elsewhere in the occupied West Bank.
Tensions that erupted in Sheikh Jarrah last year -- as several Palestinian families faced eviction by settler groups -- in part sparked the May war between Israel and armed groups in the Gaza Strip.
In Jerusalem, Palestinian men had lain prayer rugs on the asphalt of a local street and carried out Islamic prayers. Later, activists who ended up numbering in the hundreds joined them to protest the looming evictions.
AFP reporters observed Israeli border police charging the protesters with horses after the activists refused to clear a road. Police described the incident as a "riot" and said "demonstrators did not listen to instructions of police".
An AFP photographer observed two people being detained. However, police said no arrests were reported.
Sheikh Jarrah has emerged as a symbol of Palestinian resistance against Israeli control of east Jerusalem.
Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed it, in a move not recognised by most of the international community. More than 200,000 Jewish Israelis live in east Jerusalem, which Palestinians claim as the capital of their future state.
Abdallah Grifat, 30, said he travelled from Nazareth in northern Israel to show his support.
"It's my duty as a Palestinian to stand here, with every other Palestinian who's struggling for their land," he told AFP. "We're standing for justice."
Palestinians also confronted Israeli forces in Hebron -- in the southern West Bank -- and in the northern West Bank's Beita.
In Beita, residents opposed to an Israeli outpost erected on village land used slingshots to hurl rocks at security forces who responded with what the army called "riot dispersal means."
The army said no troops were injured. Palestinians' official news agency Wafa said 23 Palestinians were hurt. An AFP photographer was wounded by a rubber bullet fired by Israeli forces.
Hamas, the Islamist rulers of the Gaza Strip, warned on Thursday that "violation of the red lines in Sheikh Jarrah" could "prepare the atmosphere for the next explosion."
Ch.P.Lewis--AT