
-
Polls close as Bolivians look to the right for economic salvation
-
Amorim wants more after 'biggest' Man Utd win at Liverpool
-
Paris Louvre heist lays bare museum security complaints
-
Auger-Aliassime thanks new bride after lifting Brussels ATP title
-
Thieves steal French crown jewels from Louvre in daytime raid
-
Frank unable to explain Spurs' miserable home record
-
Man Utd stretch Liverpool losing streak to four games
-
'Black Phone 2' wins N. America box office
-
US announces attack on Colombia rebel group boat as Trump ends aid
-
Deila fired as head coach of MLS Atlanta United
-
Beleaguered Venezuela celebrates double canonization
-
Durant agrees to NBA Rockets two-year $90 mln extension: reports
-
Kenya buries long-time opposition leader Raila Odinga
-
Malinin wins men's figure skating at French Grand Prix
-
Robbers steal French crown jewels from Louvre
-
Ruud skips past Humbert for Stockholm 250 title
-
Spurs humbled at home again as Villa hit back
-
Trump says US to end aid to Colombia over drug production
-
Power tool-wielding robbers flee Louvre with 'priceless' jewels
-
Rovanperä win sets up sizzling world rally title battle
-
Israel and Hamas accuse each other of breaching Gaza truce amid strikes, clashes
-
Japan's world number 500 Kataoka qualifies for Masters, British Open
-
Bangladesh probes cause of massive, costly airport fire
-
Paz fires high-flying Como to historic win over Juve
-
Bolivians head to polls, looking to the right for economic salvation
-
French pair win ice dance at home figure skating Grand Prix
-
Rybakina storms back from a set down to win Ningbo Open
-
Red-hot Fleetwood wins in India to continue blistering form
-
Captain Marsh guides Australia to victory in rain-hit India ODI
-
Ex-Satanic priest among seven new saints created by Pope Leo
-
Power tool-wielding robbers flee Louvre with 'priceless' jewellery
-
North Korean soldier held by Seoul after crossing land border
-
Chainsaw-wielding robbers flee Louvre with jewellery
-
UK police 'looking into' claims Prince Andrew tried to smear accuser
-
India set Australia 131 to win in rain-hit ODI
-
Nuns, ex-Satanic priest among seven new saints created by Pope Leo
-
Limp Bizkit founding bassist Sam Rivers dies aged 48
-
Israel identifies dead hostage returned Saturday
-
Canada's Fernandez beats Valentova to win Japan Open
-
Bangladesh probes cause of massive airport fire
-
Kim Sei-young ends five-year LPGA win drought at BMW Championship
-
Growing India-Taliban ties anger neighbouring Pakistan
-
Ivory Coast 'returnees' rebuild lives at home
-
Publishers fight back against US book bans
-
Border order: Geneva schools kick out Swiss kids living in France
-
Spain's Fernandez 'cannot believe it' after maiden MotoGP win
-
Crisis-hit Bolivia looks to the right for economic salvation
-
Spain's Raul Fernandez surges to maiden MotoGP win in Australia
-
New deal puts Takaichi on track to be Japan's first woman PM: reports
-
Colombia accuses US of violating sovereignty in strike

Beleaguered Venezuela celebrates double canonization
Church bells rang out and fireworks burst in the sky Sunday as Venezuela -- mired in crisis -- welcomed the canonization of two of its people as saints.
Pope Leo XIV proclaimed seven new saints earlier in the day in the Vatican, including Jose Gregorio Hernandez Cisneros, a layman who died in 1919, whom the late Pope Francis called a "doctor close to the weakest."
Also from Venezuela was Maria Carmen Rendiles Martinez, a nun born without a left arm who overcame her disability to found the Congregation of the Servants of Jesus before her death in 1977. She is now the South American country's first female saint.
Some Venezuelans called this a "double blessing" for a country which has endured years of economic crisis marked by shortages of food and other basics, plus political repression under socialist President Nicolas Maduro.
Outside the Church of Our Lady of Candelaria in Caracas, thousands of people watched the canonization ceremony in Rome -- about dawn in Venezuela -- on a large screen.
They wrapped themselves in the Venezuelan flag, held balloons and wore T-shirts with the faces of the two new saints.
People screamed out, cried or laughed as a priest shouted, "Jose Gregorio and Sister Carmen Rendiles are now saints."
Yesenia Angulo, 63, called the canonization a blessing and a miracle.
"One's political persuasion does not matter. What we are going through does not matter," she told AFP.
"It is two saints in one day for a country that has come through a very difficult situation," said Angulo.
Both were approved by Pope Francis before he died in April and was succeeded by Pope Leo.
Hernandez, the doctor, was famous for treating people for free and sometimes giving them money to buy medicine. He died in 1919 at age 54 when he was hit by a car while on his way to see a patient.
Rendiles, the nun who overcame a disability, is less well known to Catholics in Venezuela.
Amid all the anticipation for the canonization, politics entered the fray.
Maduro, handpicked to succeed the socialist icon Hugo Chavez in 2013, is accused of running a repressive autocratic regime and of stealing the last election in 2024 to stay in power six more years.
In recent days, the Venezuelan Bishops Conference called on the Maduro government to mark the canonization by releasing political prisoners.
Cardinal Baltazar Porras of Venezuela, who was at the ceremony, said his country is facing "a morally unacceptable situation" and also called for the release of political prisoners.
With US warships deployed off the coast of Venezuela in a tense standoff, the government started referring to Hernandez as the "militia doctor."
It depicted him as eager to defend the country during a 1902 naval blockade by European powers and compared this to its training these days of civilian militia to fend off what it calls threats from the United States under President Donald Trump.
Murals, sculptures and other works depicting Hernandez have been inaugurated recently, including a large painting of his face on a wall in Petare, the biggest slum in Caracas.
B.Finley--AMWN