
-
Schmidt admits Wallabies have mountain to climb against Lions
-
Israeli negotiators due in Qatar for Gaza truce talks
-
Last-gasp try saves 'massively relieved' Australia against Fiji
-
Last-gasp try saves Australia against Fiji
-
'Brilliant artist': Provocateur Demna takes on slumping Gucci
-
Cancelled Cold war-era football tie finally completed after 65 years
-
Israel army bulldozers plough through homes at West Bank camps
-
'Simple Buddhist monk' Dalai Lama marks landmark 90th birthday
-
Messi returns to MLS with spectacular double in Inter victory
-
Hiroshima teens relay atom bomb horror with art
-
Vietnam's laid-off communist officials face uncertain future
-
China's abandoned buildings draw urban explorers despite risks
-
'Into a void': Young US college graduates face employment crisis
-
Alcaraz faces reformed Rublev as Sabalenka eyes Wimbledon glory
-
In already precarious industry, US musicians struggle for health care
-
AI robots fill in for weed killers and farm hands
-
Jefferson-Wooden tops Alfred in Eugene 100m
-
Rookies provide bright spot for rusty All Blacks
-
Real Madrid ready for 'really big challenge' against PSG at Club World Cup
-
DEA Cannabis Poisoned, Zero Oversight-Massachusetts Lab Scandal: A Case Study in DEA's Regulatory Collapse
-
Formation Metals Expands Maiden Drill Program at the Advanced N2 Gold Project to Fully Funded 7,500 Metres
-
Kenya's Faith Kipyegon breaks women's 1,500m world record
-
Kenyans Chebet, Kipyegon light up Eugene Diamond League with world records
-
PSG set up Club World Cup semi clash with Mbappe's Real Madrid
-
Father's desperate search for daughter after deadly Texas flood
-
France make Euro 2025 statement against holders England as Miedema completes century
-
Former MLB White Sox pitcher Jenks dies aged 44
-
Mbappe on target as Real Madrid down Dortmund to reach Club World Cup semis
-
Ford inspires England to 'great' Argentina win on 100th cap
-
Israel agrees to Gaza truce talks
-
Ford inspires England to Argentina win on 100th cap
-
Kenya's Beatrice Chebet shatters women's 5,000m world record
-
Australian actor Julian McMahon dies, aged 56
-
France beat England at Euro 2025 as Miedema completes Dutch century
-
Shubman Gill, the 'Prince' who is now India's new cricket king
-
Iran's Khamenei makes first public appearance since Israel war: state media
-
Elon Musk says he has created a new US political party
-
Spain ruling party bars members from hiring sex workers
-
Modi and Milei meet in Argentina ahead of BRICS summit
-
BRICS nations voice 'serious concerns' over Trump tariffs
-
Erasmus hails brave, tough Italy after Springboks victory
-
Sinner equals Wimbledon mark for dominance in first three rounds
-
'Rarely been so angry': Bayern's Kompany seethes after Musiala injury
-
Wimbledon champion Krejcikova crashes out in tears, Djokovic reaches century
-
Trump to push Netanyahu for Gaza truce in crunch talks
-
Djokovic 100 not out, into fourth round at Wimbledon
-
Hamilton says 'understeer' cost him front row spot on British GP grid
-
Bangladesh hold nerve to level ODI series with Sri Lanka
-
Nine-man PSG beat Bayern to reach Club World Cup semis
-
Miedema completes century in Netherlands' thumping of Wales at Women's Euro 2025

UK says proposed pandemic treaty 'not acceptable'
A proposed World Health Organization treaty on preparing for future pandemics is currently "not acceptable" to Britain, a UK health minister said on Tuesday.
The WHO's 194 member states have spent two years trying to reach a landmark global agreement on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response following the devastation caused by Covid-19.
Despite showing a desire for commitments aimed at preventing another Covid-style disaster, big differences have emerged between country blocs on how to achieve them.
Nations decided to keep negotiating for another two weeks after their deadline passed on Friday without agreement.
"The current text is not acceptable to us, therefore unless the current text is changed and refined we will not be signing up," Conservative minister Andrew Stephenson told the UK parliament.
He said that Britain would only accept the accord "if they are firmly in the United Kingdom's national interest" and "respect our national sovereignty".
"Under no circumstances will we allow the WHO to have the power to mandate lockdowns, this would be unthinkable and has never been proposed.
"Protecting our sovereignty is a British red line," he added.
While general agreement has been found on some of the 37 articles -- without formally signing off on them -- the core aspects remain deadlocked.
They revolve around access to pathogens detected within countries and to pandemic-fighting products such as vaccines produced from that knowledge, and equitable distribution of counter-pandemic tests, treatments and jabs, along with the means to produce them.
Stephenson said it was "simply not true" that Britain would give away a fifth of its vaccines in a future pandemic under any deal.
"Of course we are a generous country. Companies may make their own choices to donate vaccines, but this would be and should be entirely their decision," he added.
A health spokesman for the main Labour opposition, tipped to win a general election due later this year, said his party "would not sign anything which would leave our population unprotected in the face of a novel disease".
Talks have been taking place behind closed doors in Geneva.
It is hoped that a deal can be sealed by the WHO's annual assembly, which opens on May 27.
L.Davis--AMWN