
-
India name Shubman Gill as new Test captain before England series
-
'Seventh heaven': Tears and laughter as Ukrainian POWs return
-
German woman due in court after mass stabbing in Hamburg
-
Shubman Gill: Young 'Prince' leading India's post-Rohit, Kohli era
-
Suriname poised for cash inflow from newly discovered oil
-
India name Shubman Gill as new Test captain
-
Russia strikes Kyiv after first stage of major prisoner swap
-
Growing Arctic military presence worries Finland's reindeer herders
-
Venue dispute overshadows CAF Confederation Cup title decider
-
Thousands remain isolated as floods ease in eastern Australia
-
Rare wild cattle herded in Cambodia by helicopter
-
Doubt cast on claim of 'hints' of life on faraway planet
-
Japanese filmmaker Fukada casts queasy gaze on J-pop idols
-
Tennis's 'Big Three' reign unlikely to be repeated: Moya
-
At Roland Garros, the 'other' clay specialists have their work cut out
-
Forest chase Champions League dream as Liverpool party
-
Highlights from Cannes as film festival wraps up
-
Cannes closes with Iranian, Ukrainian films tipped for glory
-
Bae grabs lead but Wang makes charge in Mexican heat
-
UN chief says Gaza war in 'cruelest phase' as aid trucks looted
-
Winger Reece relishes Super Rugby try-scoring record
-
Griffin and Schmid share lead at Colonial
-
Venezuela opposition leader arrested ahead of tense election
-
US, Boeing reach deal to resolve MAX criminal case
-
Anthropic's Claude AI gets smarter -- and mischievious
-
Trump greenlights Nippon Steel 'partnership' with US Steel
-
German woman arrested after 17 stabbed at Hamburg station
-
Napoli back on top in Italy after sealing fourth Serie A crown
-
'Intense' Bath stay on track for treble with Challenge Cup glory
-
US Steel shares skyrocket after Trump greenlights Nippon 'partnership'
-
Napoli's key men in Serie A title triumph
-
Bath stay on track for treble with Challenge Cup glory
-
Conte's Napoli future uncertain even after Serie A title glory
-
McTominay steps out of United's shadow to become Napoli hero
-
Napoli claim fourth Serie A title as Inter fall short
-
UN expert says Guatemalan anti-corruption fighters persecuted
-
South Africa rescues all 260 miners stuck underground alive
-
Zimbabwe hundred hero Bennett says Trent Bridge 'war cries' remind him of home
-
Bearman handed 10-place Monaco grid penalty
-
After two setbacks, SpaceX could try to launch massive Starship next week
-
Billy Joel cancels concert dates over brain condition
-
Kardashian 'grateful' after Paris robbers convicted
-
Judge temporarily halts Trump block on foreign students at Harvard
-
Trump fires new 50% tariff threat at EU, targets smartphones
-
French-Brazilian photographer Sebastiao Salgado dies aged 81: French Academy of Fine Arts
-
Arsenal 'humble' but 'all-in' for women's Champions League final
-
UN expert calls for end of Gaza blockade in Cannes
-
Trump signs orders to boost US nuclear energy
-
US power company to pay $82.5m for California wildfire
-
Distrusting Argentines loath to bank their 'mattress dollars'

Ukraine war puts Indian diamond polishers out of work
India's huge diamond-polishing industry has furloughed around 250,000 of its roughly two million workers because of sanctions on Russia hitting supplies, a trade union said Thursday.
The South Asian nation cuts and polishes 90 percent of the world's diamonds, with Russian diamond miners such as Alrosa traditionally accounting for 30-40 percent of India's imported rough gems.
"This problem has started ever since the Russia-Ukraine war began," Ramesh Zilariya, president of the Diamond Workers' Union Gujarat, told AFP.
"Western countries like the United States and Europe have stopped accepting Russian diamonds that have been polished in India," he said.
Workers were furloughed this month in the western state of Gujarat, the main hub of the industry, Zilariya added, as companies struggle with cash flow and supply disruptions.
Traders say Russian supply has fallen short since Western sanctions forced Moscow out of the SWIFT cross-border payments system, plunging the supply chain into uncertainty.
"Supply is still disrupted and payments are mostly on hold," Sripal Dholakia, director at the All India Gem and Jewellery Domestic Council, told AFP.
Dholakia said imports from Russia are "not adequate" at present, and Indian traders are facing higher bank charges while making direct payments in rupees or rubles.
An industry pitch to the Indian government to make future payments via India's Unified Payments Interface system has gone unanswered.
India exported cut and polished diamonds worth $24 billion in the year ended March 31, data from the Gems and Jewellery Export Promotion Council showed.
Top export destinations included the United States, Hong Kong and the United Arab Emirates.
Many Western buyers are now refusing to accept diamonds sourced in Russia for fear of violating sanctions.
"They have started asking for a bill which specifies that the goods we are supplying are not Russian," a Mumbai-based jeweller told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Prices too have turned volatile.
"Fifteen to 20 percent instability is a big thing for us because we work on a margin of two to five percent... It becomes difficult," the jeweller said.
The Gujarat diamond union has asked the state government to provide financial aid and re-skilling training to out-of-work polishers to help tide over the crisis.
"(We) asked the government to support workers in the diamond industry because this issue is not going to be resolved in one month," Zilariya said.
"This issue will go on for at least five, six or seven months."
India has called for a cessation of violence but has stopped short of condemning Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
The two countries have historically had close ties, with Moscow supplying most of New Delhi's arms.
C.Garcia--AMWN