
-
Brewing crisis: java-loving NY confronts soaring coffee costs
-
Exiled dissident encourages Cubans to stay and fight
-
US court bars NSO Group from installing spyware on WhatsApp
-
Quartararo grabs pole at Australian MotoGP as Alex Marquez crashes
-
64 South Koreans held in Cambodia return home under arrest
-
Upbeat Norris hopes for strong race
-
Verstappen takes pole for sprint race, keeps pressure on McLaren duo
-
Hamas gives Israel another hostage body, vows to return rest
-
John Bolton: national security hawk turned Trump foe
-
New Red Bull boss says team can power Verstappen to fifth title
-
Trump tells Zelensky to 'make a deal' as Tomahawk plea misfires
-
Loss of title caps downfall of UK's Prince Andrew
-
Argentine peso drops against dollar despite US backing
-
Trump says Venezuela's Maduro offered 'everything' to ease tensions
-
US stocks bounce back as Trump softens China trade tone
-
PSG fightback denies Strasbourg in six-goal Ligue 1 thriller
-
Cowboys' Diggs in concussion protocol after home accident
-
Teen Nakai leads favourite Sakamoto at Grand Prix de France
-
UK's disgraced Prince Andrew gives up royal title
-
Hamas to give Israel another hostage body, vows to return rest
-
Norris shunt repercussions 'minor', says McLaren boss
-
Norris on top in sizzling Austin GP practice
-
In Argentine farm town, Milei mania fizzles
-
Trump says too soon for Tomahawks in talks with Zelensky
-
US Treasury chief to meet China counterpart as tensions flare
-
UK's Prince Andrew says giving up royal title
-
Trump suggests too soon for Tomahawks in talks with Zelensky
-
UK govt aims to reverse ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans at Villa game
-
South Africa storm past Sri Lanka in rain-hit World Cup encounter
-
King Charles III to pray with pope during Vatican visit next week
-
Zelensky meets Trump to push for Tomahawk missiles
-
Sign of internal shakeup as Georgia raids home of ex-PM, others
-
US Fed official urges caution but says could back October cut
-
Gazans return to damaged mosques for first post-truce Friday prayers
-
Trump foe John Bolton pleads not guilty to mishandling classified info
-
Most US nuke workers to be sent home as shutdown bites
-
Two dead in stampede at Kenya funeral for opposition leader Odinga
-
US Treasury chief to speak with China counterpart as tensions flare
-
Stocks slide even as fears over banks, trade war ease
-
Postecoglou defiant despite Forest slump
-
US sinks international deal on decarbonising ships
-
Zelensky to push for Tomahawk missiles in Trump meeting
-
Amorim wants sense of urgency at Man Utd despite Ratcliffe backing
-
Turkish experts await Israeli go ahead to help recover bodies in Gaza
-
France tries Algerian woman for rape and murder of 12-year-old girl
-
US stocks rise as fears over banks, trade war ease
-
Temporary Afghanistan-Pakistan ceasefire expires, next step unclear
-
Report calls French massacre of WWII African riflemen premeditated, covered up
-
In Brazil, Michelle Bolsonaro leaves it to God, and Jair
-
Guardiola has 'unfinished business' at Man City

Army colonel to be sworn in as Madagascar president
Madagascar is set Friday to swear in an army colonel as president, just days after a military power grab that sent President Andry Rajoelina fleeing and raised international alarm about a new coup on the island.
The country's highest court was expected to formalise the appointment of Colonel Michael Randrianirina in a ceremony at 9:00 am (06H00 GMT), capping a dramatic week in which Rajoelina was impeached for desertion of duty on Tuesday, with the military stepping in.
Amid international criticism, including from the United Nations, Randrianirina denied he had initiated a coup, pointing to the constitutional court's backing of his new role.
The 51-year-old commander of the CAPSAT unit has pledged elections in 18 to 24 months and told local media that consultations were under way to appoint a consensus prime minister.
"Madagascar has not chosen a military regime," he told reporters Thursday.
"The government belongs to civilians. The presidential council is also composed of military and civilians," he said.
Rajoelina's camp has condemned the constitutional court's support of the CAPSAT commander as riddled with procedural illegalities that risked destabilising the former French colony.
It has insisted that Rajoelina remain leader and was working to find solutions to the problems dogging the impoverished island, including power cuts that sparked a youth-led protest movement on September 25.
Government forces were accused of a harsh crackdown on the protesters, with many reported dead or wounded, until CAPSAT announced on October 11 that it would refuse orders to shoot on them.
The statement was a turning point in the uprising, with the unit hailed by the protest movement, which is now expecting a role in the new set-up.
- Escape, hiding -
Rajoelina's office confirmed in a statement late Wednesday that he fled the country the same weekend CAPSAT stood behind the protesters, saying he feared for his life. He did not reveal his whereabouts.
Media reports said the 51-year-old was evacuated on Sunday aboard a French military plane that took him to the French island of Reunion from where he travelled to Dubai.
Madagascar is the latest of several former French colonies to have fallen under military control since 2020, after coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Gabon and Guinea.
It is the third military transition in Madagascar since independence from France in 1960, following coups in 1972 and in 2009.
The country, off Mozambique, is one of the poorest in the world, despite an abundance of natural resources and a rich biodiversity.
About 80 percent of its roughly 32 million people live in poverty, according to the World Bank's benchmark.
Rajoelina's escape is the third time a Malagasy head of state has left the country after being ousted. Didier Ratsiraka fled to France in 2002 after post-electoral violence and Marc Ravalomanana went to South Africa in 2009.
The African Union and regional SADC bloc said they would send fact-finding missions to the island and called for constitutional democracy to be upheld.
"The transition is now underway. We call for the full involvement of civilians in the ongoing process," French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said Thursday.
"The mobilisation of Madagascar's youth must be fully heard to build a sustainable, peaceful, and calm solution," he told reporters during a visit to Nigeria.
P.Santos--AMWN