- Fire at Turkey ski resort hotel kills 10, injures 32
- Israel-Hamas truce holding though Trump doubts it will last
- Trump takes US reins with flurry of executive orders
- Zverev beats Paul and a feather to reach Melbourne semis
- Celtics crush Warriors, Cavs cruise past Suns
- South Korea's suspended president attends impeachment hearing
- Badosa almost quit tennis last year, now she's in Australian Open semi
- Trump 'not confident' Gaza deal will hold
- Ohio State holds off Notre Dame to clinch US college football crown
- Gauff 'not completely crushed' by Melbourne quarter-final loss
- 'Too hard': Vietnam's factory workers return to country life
- China, EU, Ukraine leaders take Davos stage under Trump shadow
- Love and rights: Thailand's same-sex marriage milestone
- Gauff stunned as Djokovic, Alcaraz square up in Melbourne blockbuster
- Trump 2.0 boosts interest in Davos: World Economic Forum chief
- EU's legal weapon facing the heat from US big tech
- 6.0-magnitude earthquake shakes Taiwan
- Trump vows to take Panama Canal, urges Putin to make Ukraine deal
- Emotional Badosa stuns Gauff to reach Australian Open semi-finals
- Trump's climate retreat shines light on green leaders
- S.Korea's suspended president to attend impeachment hearing
- Trump signs order to pull US from WHO, citing funding disparities
- Trump grants pardons to 1,500 US Capitol rioters
- Asian markets swing as Trump revives tariff fears on taking office
- Facing Trump and Musk, EU lawmakers seek sure footing
- Trump unleashes first day blitz with promise of new 'golden age'
- Starry Sundance fest moves ahead in wake of LA fires
- Brazil drought lights a fire under global coffee prices
- Trump's climate retreat shines light on other green leaders
- Trump declares national emergency, troop deployments at Mexico border
- Revitalised Man City confident for PSG 'final': Guardiola
- Conceicao demands more hunger as AC Milan eye Champions League top eight
- Mbappe dispels doubts before crucial Real Madrid Champions League clash
- The global forces sending coffee prices skyward
- Trump leaves Paris climate agreement, doubles down on fossil fuels
- Trump decrees end of diversity programs, LGBTQ protections
- 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
- Argo CEO Change
- 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
Brazil storm death toll passes 200: police
The death toll from flash floods and landslides caused by torrential rain in the Brazilian city of Petropolis has surpassed 200, authorities said Wednesday, as they continue to recover bodies more than a week after the storm.
Around 51 people are still missing, but that number is expected to go down as bodies are identified and families are reunited, police said.
Among the 204 bodies recovered, 188 had been identified as of Wednesday, Rio de Janeiro police said.
Some 800 people were being housed in emergency shelters after the deluge left their homes damaged or destroyed.
The February 15 downpour turned streets in the picturesque tourist town north of Rio de Janeiro into violent rivers, the water taking cars, trees and soil along with it.
Officials are still waging a massive clean-up operation to clear the mud, rubble and stranded vehicles strewn around Petropolis, a city of 300,000 people that was the 19th-century summer capital of the Brazilian empire.
The storm, which dropped more than a month's worth of rain in a few hours, is now the deadliest in the city's history.
In the past three months, approximately 250 people have died in severe storms in Brazil.
Experts say the violent rains are being made worse by climate change.
W.Stewart--AT