
-
Playmaker O'Connor to put sentiment aside when Crusaders meet Reds
-
'Eerie' sky, charred bodies: 80 years since Tokyo WWII firestorm
-
Once a crumbling relic of old Iran, brewery reborn as arts hub
-
Djokovic seeks Indian Wells resurgence with help from Murray
-
Musk's SpaceX faces new Starship setback
-
Trump signs executive order establishing 'Strategic Bitcoin Reserve'
-
Australian casino firm scrambles for cash to survive
-
NYC High Line architect Scofidio dead at 89
-
Musk's SpaceX faces setback with new Starship upper stage loss
-
Australians told 'prepare for worst' as tropical cyclone nears
-
Clark edges two clear at Arnold Palmer Invitational
-
Super cool: ATP sensation Fonseca learning to deal with demands of fame
-
Trump again casts doubt on his commitment to NATO
-
EU leaders agree defence boost as US announces new talks with Kyiv
-
48 killed in 'most violent' Syria unrest since Assad ouster: monitor
-
US and European stocks gyrate on tariffs and growth
-
Deja vu on the Moon: Private US spaceship again lands awkwardly
-
Brazilian teen Fonseca into Indian Wells second round
-
Abortion access under threat in Milei's Argentina
-
Trump backs off Mexico, Canada tariffs after market blowback
-
Trump car tariff pivot and Detroit's 'Big Three'
-
Man Utd draw in Spain in Europa League last 16 as Spurs beaten
-
California's Democratic governor says trans women in sports 'unfair'
-
Trump says Musk should use 'scalpel' not 'hatchet' in govt cuts
-
Goodall, Shatner to receive environmentalist awards from Sierra Club
-
Dingwall glad to be 'the glue' of England's back-line against Italy
-
Chelsea edge Copenhagen in Conference League last 16 first leg
-
Real Sociedad fight back to earn Man United draw in Europa League
-
Chunky canines: Study reveals dog obesity gene shared by humans
-
Europe rallies behind Zelensky as US announces new talks with Kyiv
-
Drop in US border crossings goes deeper than Trump
-
Guyana appeals to UN court as Venezuelan plans vote in disputed zone
-
Private US spaceship lands near Moon's south pole in uncertain condition
-
Saudi PIF to pay 'up to 12 months maternity leave' for tennis players
-
16 killed in 'most violent' Syria unrest since Assad ouster: monitor
-
Peru farmer confident ahead of German court battle with energy giant
-
US-Hamas talks complicate Gaza truce efforts: analysts
-
European rocket successfully carries out first commercial mission
-
SpaceX gears up for Starship launch as Musk controversy swirls
-
Trump backs off Mexico tariffs while Canada tensions simmer
-
Europe's new rocket blasts off on first commercial mission
-
SpaceX gearing up for Starship launch amid Musk controversy
-
Racked by violence, Haiti faces 'humanitarian catastrophe': MSF
-
Gisele Pelicot's daughter says has filed sex abuse case against father
-
New Zealand set for 'scrap' with India on slower pitch: Santner
-
US signals broader tariff reprieve for Canada, Mexico as trade gap grows
-
US to carry out first firing squad execution since 2010
-
Roy Ayers, godfather of neo-soul, dead at 84
-
ECB chief warns of 'risks all over' as rates cut again
-
Albania to shut down TikTok in coming days

Ukraine minister dives for cover as frontline heats up
Bent in a semi-crouch Ukraine's interior minister ran back from an exposed frontline position, as mortar shells crashed in the fields around him.
Just minutes earlier, Denys Monastyrsky had told reporters: "We are ready for any scenario at any time."
On Saturday, the scenario was a surprise mortar barrage after he met troops and inspected trenches and bunkers outside Novoluganske, in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine.
The message for the accompanying journalists was that Moscow-backed forces are stepping up attacks along the eight-year-old frontline, amid the growing menace of a full-scale Russian invasion.
But the threat was obvious.
As the minister, dressed in camouflage fatigues and a military helmet, walked back up an exposed road lined with abandoned vehicles, shells whistled through the air and exploded in nearby fields.
Monastyrsky, his escorts and reporters scrambled for cover before running back up the road to their vehicles. No one was hurt, and the official would later say that he thought the army, not he, was the target.
But the incident underlined the danger of escalation in a conflict that has already left 14,000 dead and could now, if US intelligence is to be believed, become an international war.
The separatist rebels across the frontline from the position visited by Monastyrsky accuse Kyiv of plotting an offensive to recapture the enclave they hold in parts of Donetsk and Lugansk.
- Minefields, abandoned homes -
But it is Ukraine which complains that it is under attack -- two soldiers were killed on Saturday -- and President Joe Biden says US intelligence indicates that Russia plans to invade.
One of the dead, 35-year-old Captain Anton Sidorov and father-of-three, was shot dead near Novoluganske, scene of the minister's shelling incident.
If the more than 150,000 Russian soldiers Kyiv and Washington say are massed on the border do launch an assault, they will have to pass through frontline communities like Novoluganske.
Andriy, a 26-year-old infantryman from the city of Kharkiv, is based here, and confirmed that the situation is "heating up".
"The situation is even worse than yesterday, they've been firing 152 mm heavy artillery," he told AFP. "There are wounded in several battalions."
There were 4,000 people in the town before the conflict erupted, isolated by potholed roads and now by minefields marked by little painted red posts.
Only three kilometres (less than two miles) from the rebel frontline, the town lives in a sort of no-man's land and many of the homes have been abandoned.
Elena Valerievna, the 50-year-old owner of a small grocers store, is less afraid to admit that recent days have been a trial.
"It's been a long time since there was such a bombardment," she said. "I wish there was peace, calm, tranquility. That's what I want, not war, but I fear that's impossible."
A.Ruiz--AT