
-
Combs's ex Cassie returns to witness stand
-
Thai tycoon surrenders over deadly skyscraper collapse
-
Howe warns Newcastle to keep focus as they close on Champions League spot
-
Russia, Ukraine hold first peace talks since 2022
-
Stock markets calmer as trade rally eases
-
Global acute hunger hits new high, 2025 outlook 'bleak': UN-backed report
-
Nantes' Mohamed cites 'origins and faith' for skipping anti-homophobia match
-
Russia, Ukraine hold first talks since 2022
-
APEC says 'concerned' over challenges to global trade
-
Iran, European powers hold nuclear talks in Turkey
-
More Hollywood stars join protest letter over Gaza 'genocide'
-
France star Dupont invests in American rugby
-
India asks IMF to reconsider Pakistan programme over 'terror funding'
-
Russia, Ukraine to meet for first talks since 2022
-
Trump says many in Gaza are 'starving'
-
Umerov: 'Wonder' dealmaker from Crimea leading Ukraine peace talks
-
Australia's Starc opts out of return to IPL: reports
-
APEC says 'concerned' over challanges to global trade
-
Coach Chaabani wishes Berkane were not CAF Cup final favourites
-
Eurovision in numbers
-
Eurovision comes full circle, showing changing times
-
Salman Rushdie attacker faces sentencing
-
Influencer's murder shows dark side of Mexican social media fame
-
Russia and Ukraine to meet in Istanbul, but expectations low
-
'He's killing us': Cannes dealmakers hate Trump's big Hollywood idea
-
Last Champions League place, relegation to be decided in Ligue 1 finale
-
De Bruyne seeks fitting Man City farewell in FA Cup final
-
Crystal Palace go for glory as Man City seek salvation in FA Cup final
-
Napoli's first match point as Scudetto race reaches climax
-
Dortmund hope to take 'final step' in unlikely top-four rescue act
-
Raisuqe death to 'motivate' Castres in Top 14 season run-in
-
Eurovision favourite KAJ shines spotlight on Finland's Swedish- speaking minority
-
'Serious problem': Afghan capital losing race against water shortages
-
Jokic, Strawther star as Nuggets down Thunder to tie series
-
Buttler to leave extended IPL early for England duty
-
Asian markets stagger into weekend as trade rally runs out of legs
-
US singer Chris Brown charged with assault in Britain
-
YouTube star MrBeast upsets Mexican officials with temple videos
-
Take-Two earnings boost delayed along with 'GTA VI'
-
Independence hero assassin's calligraphy breaking auction records in Seoul
-
Trump caps Gulf tour in Abu Dhabi with dizzying investment pledges
-
Iran, European powers to hold nuclear talks in Turkey
-
Opposition leader vows 'empty' polling stations for Venezuelan legislative vote
-
Venezuelan Vegas birdies five of last six to grab PGA lead
-
Nose cone glitch wipes Australian rocket launch
-
Curry 'excited' by Warriors future despite playoff exit
-
Bionoid Pharma, Inc. Rebrands as AI Maverick Intel, Inc. to Reflect Strategic Shift Toward AI-Driven Innovation
-
Snipp Interactive Reports Financial Results for Q4 And Fiscal 2024, Announces Conference Call on May 20, 2025, And Management Changes
-
EIA Evaluation Process for the Penco Module Advances to Next Phase
-
Abrams Towing Wins 2025 Consumer Choice Award for Towing Services in Toronto Central

Pakistan police guard Christian area after mob attack over 'blasphemy'
Police guarded a Christian neighbourhood in Pakistan on Thursday, after hundreds of people fled a Muslim mob that rampaged through the streets over alleged blasphemy.
Homes and churches were burned and ransacked by a crowd of hundreds that tore through the streets in Jaranwala, on the outskirts of the industrial city of Faisalabad, on Wednesday.
Police said more than 120 people had been arrested over the violence and that officers were searching for two Christian brothers accused of desecrating the Koran.
"Children, women and old people were running. Some were running barefoot and some fled in rickshaws. There was chaos everywhere," said Pastor Javed Bhatti, one of the few Christians who had returned to survey the damage.
The crowds were ordered to protest by Muslim clerics who used mosque loudspeakers to spread news of the allegations.
At least four churches and a dozen houses and shops were burned and ransacked, their broken contents strewn across the streets, according to an AFP team at the scene.
Muslims living in the predominantly Christian area gave shelter to their neighbours and pinned Koranic verses to the doors of Christian homes to prevent them from being targeted, residents of both faiths told AFP.
Locals said hundreds of people have fled the area to stay with relatives and have yet to return out of caution.
"All the Christians have left their homes and taken refuge here and there," Fayaz Masih Khokhar, a Christian man who had travelled from nearby Lahore to show solidarity with the community told AFP.
- 'Systematic, violent' -
On Thursday, government officials condemned the violence, while small protests were held in several cities calling for Christians to be protected.
"The current sad situation in the country demands that the leadership and religious figures of all religions and faiths play their key and fundamental role in safeguarding national unity," the Bishop of Lahore, Nadeem Kamran, said in a statement.
Punjab caretaker Chief Minister Mohsin Naqvi expressed solidarity with Christians, adding that they would be compensated for their losses.
The provincial government has announced an inquiry into the violence.
Christians, who make up around two percent of the population, occupy one of the lowest rungs in Pakistani society and are frequently targeted with spurious blasphemy allegations.
Blasphemy is an incendiary charge in deeply conservative, Muslim-majority Pakistan, where even unproven allegations of insulting Islam and its Prophet Mohammed can provoke death at the hands of vigilantes.
Islamist right-wing leaders and political parties across Pakistan frequently rally around the issue.
Politicians have been assassinated, lawyers murdered and students lynched over accusations of blasphemy.
"The frequency and scale of such attacks -- which are systematic, violent and often uncontainable -- appear to have increased in recent years," the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said.
"Not only has the state failed to protect its religious minorities, but it has also allowed the far right to permeate and fester within society and politics."
In one of Pakistan's most high-profile cases, Christian woman Asia Bibi was at the centre of a decade-long blasphemy row, which eventually saw her death sentence overturned and ended with her fleeing the country.
Her case sparked violent demonstrations and high-profile assassinations while spotlighting religious extremism across wide sections of Pakistani society.
US State Department spokesman Vedant Patel said that while the United States backed free expression, "violence or the threat of violence is never an acceptable form of expression".
Pakistan's newly appointed caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said on X that "stern action would be taken against those who violate law and target minorities".
O.Norris--AMWN