
-
Alpine shock as F1 team principal Oakes resigns
-
Merz elected German chancellor after surprise setback
-
Gujarat edge Mumbai in last-ball thriller to top IPL table
-
Israel's plan for Gaza draws international criticism
-
SpaceX gets US approval to launch more Starship flights from Texas
-
Alpine F1 team principal Oakes resigns
-
Colombia's desert north feels the pain of Trump's cuts
-
Arsenal determined 'to make a statement' against PSG in Champions League semi-final
-
Top US court allows Trump's ban on trans troops to take effect
-
Whole lotta legal argument: Led Zeppelin guitarist Page sued
-
US, Yemen's Huthis agree ceasefire: mediator Oman
-
Johnson receives special invite to PGA Championship
-
Trump says US should to stop 'subsidizing' Canada as trade talks continue
-
Indian PM vows to stop waters key to rival Pakistan
-
Thousands demonstrate in Panama over deal with US military
-
Canada 'never for sale', Carney tells Trump
-
Vatican readies for conclave lockdown
-
Championship club Watford sack manager Cleverley
-
New German leader Merz stumbles out of the blocks
-
'Wagatha Christie': Vardy and Rooney settle on legal costs
-
Defending Rome champion Zverev blames burn out on poor run of form
-
No signs of US recession, Treasury Secretary says
-
Israel pummels Yemen airport in reprisal against Huthis
-
Swiatek struggling with 'perfectionism' ahead of Rome
-
Germany's Merz elected chancellor after surprise setback
-
Ukraine fires drones on Moscow days before WWII parade
-
EU proposes ending all Russian gas imports by 2027
-
UK, India strike trade deal amid US tariff blitz
-
Move over Met Ball. For fashion wow head to the Vatican
-
Stocks retreat as traders cautious before Fed rates call
-
EDF complaint blocks Czech-Korean nuclear deal
-
Germany's Merz faces new vote for chancellor after surprise loss
-
US trade deficit hit fresh record before new Trump tariffs
-
US Fed starts rate meeting under cloud of tariff uncertainty
-
Trump's Aberdeen course to host revived Scottish Championship
-
Argentina's 1978 World Cup winner Galvan dies
-
French lawmakers want Dreyfus promoted 130 years after scandal
-
AFP Gaza photographers shortlisted for Pulitzer Prize
-
Cristiano Ronaldo's eldest son called up by Portugal Under-15s
-
Stocks diverge as traders await Fed rates meeting
-
Tesla sales fall again in Germany as drivers steer clear of Musk
-
Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood says shows cancelled after 'credible threats'
-
Hamas says Gaza truce talks pointless as Israel wages 'hunger war'
-
Aussie cycling star Ewan announces shock retirement
-
Blow for Germany's Merz as he loses first-round vote for chancellor
-
EU to lay out plan to cut last Russian gas supplies
-
Food delivery app DoorDash agrees to buy peer Deliveroo
-
Zhao's world championship win will take snooker to 'another level': sport's chief
-
Ukraine fires drones on Moscow days before Red Square parade
-
Blow for Merz as he misses majority in first vote for chancellor

Spain pensioner held over Ukraine embassy, PM letter bombs
Spanish police arrested a pensioner Wednesday on suspicion he sent letter bombs targeting the prime minister and the Ukrainian embassy, authorities said.
The 74-year-old Spanish citizen was taken into custody in Miranda de Ebro in northern Spain with investigators searching his home where he was thought to have made six letter bombs, police and the interior ministry said.
Masked police stood on guard outside the property as officers with sniffer dogs searched the interior, Spanish TV footage showed.
"This person was very active on social networks and according to National Police investigators, he has technical and computer expertise," an interior ministry statement said.
"Although it is presumed that the detainee made and sent the explosive devices alone, the police do not rule out the participation or influence of other people."
Nobody was killed by the six letter bombs sent in late November and early December to various sites in Spain, but a Ukrainian embassy employee was lightly injured while opening one of the packages.
Letters were sent to the official residence of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, to Spain's defence ministry and to an air base near Madrid from which Spain has sent weapons to Ukraine.
Also targeted was a military equipment firm in the northeastern city of Zaragoza which makes grenade launchers that Spain has sent to Ukraine.
After its Madrid embassy was targeted, Kyiv ramped up security at its embassies around the world.
- Paramilitary training -
The arrest came after a weekend report in the New York Times which said Russian military intelligence officers had "directed" associates of a white supremacist militant group based in Russia to carry out the campaign in Spain.
US officials told the newspaper that the Russian officers who directed the campaign appeared intent on "keeping European governments off guard" and "may be testing out proxy groups in the event Moscow decides to escalate a conflict".
Investigators suspect the Russian Imperial Movement (RIM), a radical group with members and associates across Europe, is behind the letter bomb campaign.
The group -- which is designated a global terrorist organisation by the United States -- is believed to have ties to Russian intelligence agencies.
"Important members of the group have been in Spain, and the police there have tracked its ties with far-right Spanish organisations," the newspaper said.
According to Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation, RIM "maintains contacts with neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups across Europe".
"The group has provided paramilitary training to Russian nationals and members of like-minded organisations from other countries at its facilities in St. Petersburg," it added.
- 'Terrorist methods' -
After the embassy attack, Ukraine's ambassador to Spain, Serhii Pohoreltsev, appeared to point the finger at Russia.
"We are well aware of the terrorist methods of the aggressor country," he told Spanish public television on November 30 just hours after the incident.
Russia's embassy to Spain condemned the letter bomb campaign.
After congratulating police on the arrest, Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said investigators were "looking at all possibilities".
Private television La Sexta, which first broke the news of the pensioner's arrest, said the suspect was a former local authority employee in Vitoria, a town in northern Spain, who lived alone.
Following the letter bomb campaign, Spain's National Court opened an investigation into "terrorism".
In addition to sending arms to Ukraine in its fight against Russia's nearly year-long war, Spain is also training Ukrainian troops as part of a European Union programme and providing humanitarian aid.
Ch.Havering--AMWN