
-
Post Malone wraps Coachella with genre-fluid performance
-
Flawless Oscar, Max flounders: Bahrain Grand Prix talking points
-
UK govt races against time to keep steel furnaces running
-
Meta faces landmark US antitrust trial
-
Stocks rise on electronics tariffs exemption, gold hits new high
-
Helicopter company that ran deadly New York tour shuts down
-
Hungary set to restrict constitutional rights in 'Easter cleanup'
-
Post Malone primed to close out Coachella
-
Katy Perry set to roar into space on all-female flight
-
Xi warns protectionism 'leads nowhere' as he arrives in Vietnam
-
Trump hosts El Salvador's Bukele, key ally in anti-migrant push
-
Trump spotlight divides S.Africa's Afrikaners
-
South Korea's ex-president denies insurrection at criminal trial
-
World leaders slam deadly Russian strike on Ukraine
-
Chinese exports soared in March ahead of Trump's 'Liberation Day'
-
'We can get it' - Emery eyes Champions League comeback against PSG
-
Perfect Piastri puts McLaren in driving seat
-
Flick has Barcelona on cusp of return to European elite
-
Noboa wins Ecuador presidential runoff, rival claims fraud
-
China's exports beat forecast in March despite trade war woes
-
Solar park boom threatens Spain's centuries-old olive trees
-
Trump tariff rollercoaster complicates ECB rate call
-
Asian stocks rise on electronics tariffs exemption, gold hits new high
-
South Korea's ex-president attends first day of criminal trial
-
Nobel Literature Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa dies in Peru
-
A coffin for Pol Pot's memory, 50 years after Phnom Penh's fall
-
McIlroy in no mood to talk on the way to Masters win: DeChambeau
-
Vargas Llosa, last of Latin America's literary golden generation
-
Incumbent Noboa wins Ecuador presidential runoff
-
Rollercoaster carries McIlroy to Masters glory at last
-
German archive where victims of the Nazis come back to life
-
From deadly rave to recovery: Israeli study examines MDMA's effect on trauma
-
McIlroy rides luck of the Irish to overcome Masters
-
Xi warns protectionism 'leads nowhere' as starts SE Asia tour
-
Brazil ex-president Bolsonaro surgery ends 'with success'
-
Ten birdies not enough as Rose falls to McIlroy in Masters playoff
-
Post Malone and Megan Thee Stallion primed to close out Coachella
-
Zelensky urges Trump to visit Ukraine to see war devastation: CBS
-
Trump warns no country 'off the hook' on tariffs
-
Incumbent Noboa leads Ecuador presidential runoff
-
Genflow Biosciences PLC Announces Launch of AI-Powered Partnership
-
McIlroy completes career Grand Slam with emotional Masters playoff win
-
Harden bags 39 as Clippers edge Warriors to clinch play-off spot
-
Trump downplays tariffs walk-back, says no country 'off the hook'
-
Polls close in Ecuador's razor-tight presidential runoff
-
USA, Japan win to qualify for BJK Cup finals
-
Russian missile strike on Ukraine city kills 34
-
Lyon close in on Champions League, Saint-Etienne snatch draw
-
McIlroy leads by four as Masters back-nine battle begins
-
Lazio and Roma share derby spoils as Atalanta relaunch Champions League bid

Canada truckers block new border crossing, fuel copycat protests
Trucker-led protests against coronavirus restrictions in Canada shut down a new US border crossing on Thursday, as copycat movements gathered steam as far afield as Europe and New Zealand.
The border blockades have already impacted business, with the key Ambassador Bridge linking Ontario and Detroit shut for several days -- and major automakers forced to cut back production at several plants as a result.
A second crossing in the western province of Alberta has been blocked for days, and on Thursday protesters closed down a third -- in central Manitoba.
Citing supply shortages, Ford said it was forced to slow production at factories in Canada, while some Stellantis factories in the United States and Canada halted work Wednesday evening, and Toyota said its plants were also hit.
With Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warning the two-week-long protests are threatening Canada's economy, rallies inspired by the trucker movement have sprung up in other countries around the world, from New Zealand to France and Belgium.
An anti-vaccine protest turned ugly Thursday in Wellington, with police clashing with demonstrators in the grounds of parliament and more than 120 people arrested.
In France, thousands inspired by the Canadian truckers planned to converge Friday evening on Paris, with some aiming to move onwards to Brussels.
Paris police moved to prevent the demonstration, saying they would ban so-called "Freedom Convoys" and would stop roads from being blocked, threatening hefty fines or jail.
Belgian authorities vowed similar action.
Canada's self-styled "Freedom Convoy" began last month in the country's west -- launched in anger at requirements that truckers either be vaccinated, or test and isolate, when crossing the US-Canada border.
Having occupied the capital Ottawa for two weeks, the trucker-led protesters have caused significant economic disruption by shutting down the Ambassador suspension bridge -- a trade corridor used daily by more than 40,000 commuters and tourists, and trucks carrying US$323 million worth of goods on average.
Trudeau has warned the border blockades are unacceptable and vowed to "do everything to bring them to an end."
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki meanwhile said US officials were "in very close contact" with Canadian border agencies, voicing concern about the impact on the US economy and "a risk to supply chains, to the auto industry."
- 'Canadian pride' -
Canadian and American chambers of commerce and industry associations have likewise demanded the Ambassador Bridge be cleared.
"As our economies emerge from the impacts of the pandemic we cannot allow any group to undermine the cross-border trade," the groups said in a joint statement.
Canada's public safety minister, Marco Mendicino, warned of "serious dangers for the economy" and called on protesters to "go home!"
Presumably eager to stop the movement spreading further at home, several provinces including Alberta, Quebec and Saskatchewan this week announced a gradual lifting or loosening of Covid-19 restrictions.
A court has already ordered the truckers to stop the incessant honking that has upset residents in Ottawa and made sleep difficult.
And on Wednesday, Ottawa police warned protesters they could face criminal charges and their trucks could be seized if they continue their "unlawful" clogging of downtown streets.
But the atmosphere on the streets of the capital remained one of defiance and celebration.
Dennis Elgie, a curling ice technician who came from Toronto to join the protest, called the movement "fantastic."
"I've never seen Canadian pride like this," he told AFP Thursday. "This is history."
"I think people have taken the freedom that we had."
Some 400 vehicles are still camped on Parliament Hill below Trudeau's offices, against a backdrop of barbecues, campfires and music.
"We're not going anywhere," said trucker John Deelstra, smiling from behind the wheel of his big rig, which has been there since day one.
Planted not far away, Ontario trucker Lloyd Brubacher offered up the same resolve.
"I'm not going anywhere," he told AFP.
K.Hill--AT