
-
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
-
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
-
Children's show 'Yo Gabba Gabba!' takes Coachella by storm
-
Fabio Grosso's Sassuolo return to Serie A after a year away
-
Red Bull reflect on 'bad' Bahrain weekend
-
WHO says child killed after Israel strike hits Gaza hospital
-
Trump advisor Navarro looks to cool spat with Musk
-
Moviegoers digging 'Minecraft Movie,' tops in N.America theaters
-
Paris Olympic torches, other memorabilia auctioned off
-
Ecuador votes in razor-tight presidential runoff
-
Kohli, Karn star as Bengaluru and Mumbai win in IPL
-
Amorim has no excuses for Man Utd's latest meltdown
-
McIlroy tees off in quest of Masters title and career Grand Slam
-
Marc Marquez survives brotherly shove to win Qatar MotoGP
-
Mumbai clinch thriller to end Delhi's winning streak
-
Electric Ekitike keeps Frankfurt on Champions League course
-
'Unusual' errors at fault for latest Spurs defeat, says Postecoglou
-
'It's up to them': Maresca won't plead for Chelsea fans' backing
-
Liverpool within touching distance of title, Man Utd thrashed by Newcastle
-
Van der Poel demands action after being hit in face by projectile at Paris-Roubaix
-
Barnes brace routs Man Utd as Newcastle rise to fourth place
-
McLaren's Piastri powers to 'mega' win in Bahrain

Peru's president ditches iconic hat and seeks image rebrand
Peruvian President Pedro Castillo has adopted a unique measure in a bid to lift his falling popularity and resolve a series of political crises: he has ditched his iconic white cowboy hat.
The hat has been an important feature of Castillo's humble rural-school teacher image that helped propel him to the presidency.
But for three days running this week, Castillo has appeared in public without his "sombrero."
Having been forced into a fourth cabinet reshuffle in just six months as president and with his disapproval rating hitting 60 percent, Castillo allegedly sought the advice of Saul Alanya, a leadership and self-improvement coach.
"I suspect that the image 'coach' advised him that he had to change and should start with the hat," political analyst Augusto Alvarez Rodrich told AFP.
"The problem is that he has taken off the hat but not the ideas that were beneath it."
Castillo has come under fire during his short presidency with critics blaming his political inexperience and lack of management skills for the instability of his successive cabinets.
The 52-year-old says he is the victim of a campaign by political opponents and some media actors to try to force him from power, hitting out at "anti-democratic attitudes of certain sectors that just want to destabilize the country."
In December, he survived an attempt at impeachment, but earlier this month a far-right party announced it would file a new motion to remove him.
Prosecutors are also investigating him and his associates in three separate graft cases.
Amidst the political turmoil, Castillo appears to have decided that the iconic headwear that contributed to his humble man-of-the-people image has got to go.
- 'Kidnapped' -
The hat was a prominent feature on the campaign trail, although it turned Castillo into the butt of jokes by his opponents and some sections of the press.
He was said to only ever remove it when entering church, and was even pictured wearing it at breakfast on election day last June, alongside his likewise sombrero-clad parents.
He wore it in cabinet meetings, in talks with foreign dignitaries and even at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
Peruvians saw their new president without his sombrero for the first time on Tuesday when swearing in his new cabinet, before subsequent hatless appearances on Wednesday and Thursday.
He had briefly been deprived of it last week when meeting Brazil's far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro, who stole it off his head while laughing and posing for pictures.
"Help me, Bolsonaro's kidnapped me," joked Castillo.
However, Castillo has not always been so attached to his sombrero.
He did not wear it when he first came to national prominence in 2017 as the leader of a striking teachers union.
Guido Bellido, a politician from Castillo's ruling Peru Libre (Free Peru) party, claimed last year that he was the one to suggest the hat would make a good political identity.
On the campaign trail, Castillo traveled to every corner of Peru wearing his hat and even sometimes riding on horseback.
He took part in election debates clad in his white hat, and so the legend was born.
- Luxury item -
Castillo's tall wide-brimmed straw hat is typical of those worn by peasants in his home region of Cajamarca, in northern Peru.
Worn by both men and women -- although it is less popular amongst younger generations -- it is known as a "bambamarquino" or "chotano" after the rural area of Chota in Cajamarca.
Each hat is handmade and it takes between three weeks and two months to complete.
Although intrinsically linked to humble peasants, the chotanos have recently become a luxury item, selling for as much as 4,000 soles ($1,000).
A.Clark--AT