- At Davos, EU vows pragmatism with Trump
- Gutsy Sabalenka beats Pavlyuchenkova, wind to reach Melbourne semis
- Sabalenka survives to set up Melbourne semi with 'emotional' Badosa
- China says committed to WHO, Paris climate deal after US pulls out
- Taut Munich Olympics thriller explores media and terror
- Musk says critics need 'better dirty tricks' after salute row
- 'Sucks always' as error-strewn Paul laments missed Melbourne chances
- Rain-triggered landslide kills 16 in Indonesia
- Zverev primed for 'very intense' Australian Open semi-final
- Pharrell pursues Paris landmark takeovers with Louvre show
- EV sales slip in Europe in 2024 in overall stable car market
- Afghan Taliban government announces prisoner swap with US
- Stuttering PSG face moment of truth in Champions League
- 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
German club Schalke remove Gazprom as shirt sponsor after Russian invasion
German football club Schalke 04 said Thursday it would remove Russian gas company Gazprom from its shirts, following the invasion of Ukraine.
"In light of the events, developments and escalation of the past days, FC Schalke 04 has decided to remove the logo of the main sponsor, Gazprom, from the shirts," the second division club said in a statement.
In place of the sponsor, players would carry the team name across their shirt, the club said, adding that the decision had been taken "after talks" with Gazprom's Germania subsidiary.
The Gelsenkirchen-based club, historically one of Germany's best supported teams, has been sponsored by Gazprom since 2007.
Earlier on Thursday, the club announced that Matthias Warnig, a Gazprom representative on the club's supervisory board would step back from his role.
Warnig is CEO of the holding company for the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia, approval for which was halted by the German government on Tuesday.
The company and the CEO personally were also targeted by US sanctions announced on Wednesday.
Warnig was previously a member of the Stasi secret police in communist East Germany, before becoming a gas executive after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
He had served on the supervisory board at Schalke since 2019.
Y.Baker--AT