-
Trump hopes India-Pakistan clashes end 'very quickly'
-
Frattesi shoots Inter into Champions League final after Barcelona epic
-
India launches strikes on Pakistan, Islamabad vows retaliation
-
India launches strikes on Pakistan as Islamabad vows retaliation
-
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
'It's all ruined': Friends, relatives face Indonesia quake trauma
Iwan Gunawan was forced to leave his gravely injured wife buried under rubble to run outside and save his daughter after a strong earthquake rocked Indonesia's largest province.
As he rushed to pull the girl from under debris, a wall fell on the fish trader leaving him unable to breathe.
"I kept chanting 'God save me'. I tried to protect my daughter and I tried to be strong," he said.
"I wanted to save my wife too, but if I insisted we all would have died."
The tremor that killed 252 people near the worst-hit town of Cianjur on Monday ripped families and friends from one another in a few seconds and forced people to make gut-wrenching decisions in the moment.
Roofs and walls caved in on locals without notice while landslides on the town's undulating hills wiped out vehicles and buried residents.
Standing in front of his destroyed home the next day, Gunawan wiped a tear from his eye as he recalled the death of his wife.
"It's all ruined," said the 41-year-old resident of Ciputri village in West Java.
Moments later two men brought his daughter on a stretcher and laid her down in front of the house next door. Gunawan rushed over to console her as she whimpered in pain.
"Dad is here now, don't cry," he told her, kissing her forehead.
- 'Still traumatised' -
Aprizal Mulyadi woke up on a normal Monday to study at his Islamic boarding school.
Hours later he was being pulled from the rubble and mourning a close friend who sacrificed his life to save him.
The 14-year-old's legs were trapped under concrete as the room collapsed around him.
Twelve-year-old Muhammad Zulfikar performed the ultimate act of friendship, pulling Mulyadi alive from the carnage. Then, as he went to help another friend, the roof fell in and buried him.
"I could not help him because my legs and back were injured. When he was trapped, he told me to go and save myself," he said, sitting on a tarpaulin behind the damaged school.
"I am still traumatised, I could not sleep because I kept thinking about what happened," he added, grabbing his ankle, which was still swollen and bleeding from the crush of debris.
- 'I am devastated' -
The rescue mission carried on into Tuesday to find those trapped by the disaster while residents tried to retrieve their pets and belongings.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo visited the area and offered some compensation for those whose homes were destroyed.
Others offered prayers at funerals and burials around the town, choking back tears.
For some, none of that seemed to matter in comparison with the trauma.
Gunawan began to sob as he remembered the day before the quake, when his wife was cooking local staple cassava in the kitchen for the family.
"I am devastated. My house is destroyed and I lost my wife," he said, choking on tears.
"God please grant me strength."
P.M.Smith--AMWN