
-
Spaun grabs US Open lead with McIlroy, Woodland in the hunt
-
Dollar dives on Trump's new trade threat
-
Cunha completes 'dream' Manchester United move
-
Australia's Cummins rips through South Africa batting in WTC final
-
UN to vote on calling for Gaza ceasefire
-
Ukraine boycott world judo champs as Belarusians compete under flag
-
Trump hails troop deployment as California readies legal battle
-
London-bound plane with 242 on board crashes into doctors' housing in India
-
India plane crash: What we know so far
-
More arrests after third night of unrest in N. Ireland town
-
Hundreds of civilians were tortured by Wagner mercenaries in Mali: report
-
Spurs set to name Brentford boss Frank as new head coach: reports
-
Germany's BioNTech to buy CureVac to boost cancer research
-
Archaeologists find France's deepest shipwreck
-
Pakistan's Akram praises his statue amid social media flak
-
In Nigeria, the juntas are history, but street names live forever
-
Real Madrid 'only' team I'd have left Liverpool for: Alexander-Arnold
-
787 Dreamliner is Boeing's flagship long-distance plane
-
All Black Fainga'anuku eyeing Top 14 semis before New Zealand return
-
Wimbledon prize pot increases as players push for greater profit share
-
McIlroy pars, DeChambeau bogeys and Aberg leads as US Open begins
-
McKeown untouchable at Australian trials as Chalmers, Pallister shine
-
India and its vast booming aviation sector
-
Bavuma, Bedingham lead South Africa rally in WTC final against Australia
-
Stocks, dollar retreat on new Trump trade threat
-
Flames and smoke in aftermath of crashed India passenger jet
-
Ryanair says will fine 'disruptive passengers' 500 euros
-
Sri Lanka counts seven million crop-busting monkeys
-
Sundowns must adapt to less possession, warns coach Cardoso
-
Iran defies US on enrichment ahead of nuclear talks
-
March quake to drive 2.5% drop in Myanmar GDP, says World Bank
-
London-bound plane crashes in India with 242 on board
-
Disasters loom over South Asia with forecast of a hotter, wetter monsoon
-
Chinese woman detained over BTS Jungkook attempted break-in
-
Oman to host US-Iran nuclear talks on Sunday
-
UK economy shrinks in April as US tariffs kick in
-
Poland coach quits after Lewandowski boycott and World Cup qualifier loss
-
Israel says Hamas 'weaponising suffering in Gaza' as aid workers killed
-
Jones tells Japan to run wounded Wales 'off their feet' in the heat
-
Shares stumble after Trump's latest trade threat
-
Japan, China trade barbs over fighter jet manoeuvres
-
122 million forcibly displaced worldwide 'untenably high': UN
-
Niger-Benin border standoff deepens as trade collapse bites
-
Ethiopia's vast lake being pumped dry
-
EU crypto regulation hampered by national flaws
-
Nairobi startup's bid to be 'operating system for global South'
-
Netanyahu survives opposition bid to dissolve parliament
-
US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation says 5 members killed in Hamas attack
-
Resilient Mathurin stars in Pacers win
-
Scheffler chases back-to-back majors at US Open

ECB's Lagarde slams 'coercive trade policies' in Beijing visit
European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde warned Wednesday that "coercive trade policies" risked harming supply chains and the global economy, and called for a de-escalation of a tariff standoff that has wiped billions off markets.
Lagarde, one of the world's most influential central bankers, is visiting Beijing this week for talks with local counterparts on the Chinese economy and expanding cooperation.
Her visit came as high-level China-US talks in London ended with an agreement to lower tensions after US President Donald Trump launched his tariff blitz in April.
In a speech at the People's Bank of China -- the country's central bank -- she urged all parties to find solutions "even in the face of geopolitical differences".
Lagarde urged countries to protect the "multilateral framework" of international trade, which she said "so greatly benefited our economies".
"Coercive trade policies are far more likely to provoke retaliation and lead to outcomes that are mutually damaging," she added.
"All countries should examine how their structural and fiscal policies can be adjusted to reduce their own role in fuelling trade tensions," she said, calling for an end to "mutually damaging escalation of tensions".
She warned that protectionism risked "eroding the foundations of global prosperity".
Beijing and Brussels' trade policies have been slammed by Trump, who last month threatened to escalate tariffs on the European Union if it did not negotiate a swift deal.
China, meanwhile, has sought to improve shaky relations with the bloc as a counterpoint to Trump.
China and the European Union will host a summit next month marking 50 years since they established diplomatic ties.
The two sides will discuss setting minimum prices for Chinese electric vehicles in Europe and opening a "green channel" for rare earth exports to the 27-nation bloc, according to official statements.
O.Johnson--AMWN