
-
Hamas fires at Tel Aviv in first riposte to deadly Israel assault
-
Protests resume as Istanbul mayor spends first night in custody
-
Roma's Dybala to undergo surgery on thigh injury, season over
-
Battle for Khartoum wrecks key Sudan oil refinery
-
European leaders and military brass meet over Ukraine peace plans
-
'More in the tank', vows Duplantis as he edges to century mark
-
Hill leads tributes to 'irreverent, crazy' Eddie Jordan
-
Australia edge closer to World Cup with 5-1 thrashing of Indonesia
-
Boxing receives official IOC thumbs-up for Los Angeles Games
-
US denies entry to French scientist over 'hateful' messages
-
Stock markets retreat on revised US economic outlook
-
Philippine officials deny coordinating Duterte arrest with ICC
-
Upbeat Hamilton says Ferrari 'can close the gap' on McLaren
-
Chelsea complete double signing of Quenda and Essugo
-
Albon excited by possibility of future Thailand F1 race
-
Race to become Olympics supremo on a knife edge
-
Eddie Jordan, the Dublin bank clerk who gave Michael Schumacher his F1 debut
-
Hong Kong's embattled CK Hutchison says profits down in 2024
-
Godard's 'Breathless' script set to be auctioned
-
Istanbul's mayor still held as new rally called
-
What is dark energy? One of science's great mysteries, explained
-
Former F1 team owner Eddie Jordan dies aged 76
-
Europe games industry on edge as 'Assassin's Creed' hits shelves
-
Hadjar thanks 'classy guys' Anthony and Lewis Hamilton after debut disaster
-
Most markets track Wall St gains as Fed soothes tariff fears
-
Mercedes' Russell says McLaren 'should win every race'
-
China footballer dies on eve of 19th birthday after head injury in Spain
-
Iran frees Frenchman after nearly 900-day prison ordeal
-
Norris says McLaren does not 'suit at all' his driving style
-
China says acted 'in accordance with the law' after 4 Canadians executed
-
'Some won't survive': US cuts threaten S.Africa's young HIV patients
-
Europe shifts gears for the Trump era
-
Most Asian markets track Wall St gains as Fed soothes tariff fears
-
Spain eyes boom in 'neglected' strategic mining sector
-
Return of the alpha male: Why toxic masculinity is gaining prominence
-
A year on, survivors still haunted by Russia's Crocus attack
-
Chinese youth footballer dies after head injury in Spain
-
Iran frees French citizen after prison ordeal: Macron
-
Kohli targets lucky 18 as 13-year-old set to make IPL history
-
US happiness sinks as more Americans eat alone: survey
-
Doncic leads Lakers romp over Nuggets, Kings upset Cavs
-
'Musky' marsupial could solve hopping kangaroo mystery
-
Leipzig's Henrichs focused on 'small goals' in return from horror injury
-
Bach ranks with IOC presidential greats Samaranch and de Coubertin: experts
-
Ganna carries Italian hopes for Milan-San Remo as Pogacar prepares his assault
-
Insults and acceptance: being trans in rural France
-
'It was beautiful': Mount Kenya's glaciers melting away
-
Swedish govt holds talks on countering rising food prices
-
Young Chinese women find virtual love in 'Deepspace'
-
Most Asian markets track Wall St rally after Fed rate signals

Argentina's Milei wins Congress green light for new IMF loan
Argentina's Congress on Wednesday gave President Javier Milei the green light to reach a new IMF loan agreement, on top of the $44 billion Buenos Aires already owes the lender.
Milei asked lawmakers on March 11 to approve a new 10-year loan to boost the central bank's foreign currency reserves and cover looming debt payments.
The amount of the prospective loan to South America's second-biggest economy -- which has been bailed out by the International Monetary Fund 22 times, despite several debt defaults -- has not yet been disclosed.
Under a 2021 law, Argentina's president must seek authorization from both houses of Congress to take money from the IMF, but only needs support from one to proceed.
With 129 votes in favor to 108 against and six abstentions in the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house, Milei now has a free hand to finalize the agreement.
Milei's small libertarian party is in a minority in Congress but has formed ad hoc alliances to push through its cost-cutting agenda.
The vote on the IMF loan took place as thousands of protesters gathered near the legislature to protest Milei's draconian austerity measures and his negotiations with the IMF.
The demonstration was bigger but more peaceful than protests last week by pensioners and football fans that left 45 people injured.
Milei says the new IMF loan will allow the government to pay off its debts to the central bank and help "exterminate" inflation, the country's eternal bugbear.
Argentina has one of the highest inflation rates in the world.
But since Milei took office in December 2023 and began slashing public spending, price rises have slowed considerably, though poverty levels have risen.
Inflation fell from 211 percent year-on-year at the end of 2023 to 66 percent currently.
The government began talks with the IMF in November on a new "extended fund facility" (EFF) to replace an agreement in place since 2022.
The EFF serves to refinance Argentina's debt, to help it pay off the $44-billion loan negotiated under center-right president Mauricio Macri in 2018.
The loan was the biggest ever granted by the IMF.
M.O.Allen--AT