
-
Reel tensions: Trump film trade war looms over Cannes
-
Peru hopes local miracle gets recognition under new pope
-
Opening statements in Sean Combs trial expected Monday
-
Indian army reports 'first calm night' after Kashmir truce with Pakistan holds
-
As world heats up, UN cools itself the cool way: with water
-
Pacers push Cavs to brink in NBA playoffs, Thunder pull even with Nuggets
-
US, China to publish details of 'substantial' trade talks in Geneva
-
Asian markets rally after positive China-US trade talks
-
Indians buy 14 million ACs a year, and need many more
-
Election campaigning kicks off in South Korea
-
UK hosts European ministers for Ukraine talks after ceasefire ultimatum
-
Leo XIV gets down to business on first full week as pope
-
White at the double as Whitecaps fight back against LAFC
-
Trump hails Air Force One 'gift' after Qatari luxury jet reports
-
'Tool for grifters': AI deepfakes push bogus sexual cures
-
US and China to publish details of 'substantial' trade talks in Geneva
-
Chinese EV battery giant CATL aims to raise $4 bn in Hong Kong IPO
-
Kiwi Fox wins PGA Myrtle Beach title in playoff
-
Thunder edge Nuggets to level NBA playoff series
-
Straka holds firm to win PGA Tour's Truist Championship
-
Philippines heads to polls with Marcos-Duterte feud centre stage
-
Napoli give Inter Scudetto hope after being held by Genoa
-
US, China hail 'substantial progress' after trade talks in Geneva
-
Blessings but not tips from Pope Leo at Peru diner
-
Alcaraz, Zverev march into Italian Open last 16
-
US and China hail 'progress' after trade talks end in Geneva
-
Jeeno keeps cool to win LPGA's Americas Open
-
Hamas to release hostage as part of direct Gaza talks with US
-
Marvel's 'Thunderbolts*' retains top spot in N.America box office
-
Parade, protests kick off Eurovision Song Contest week
-
Forest owner Marinakis says Nuno row due to medical staff's error
-
Hamas officials say group held direct Gaza ceasefire talks with US
-
Zelensky offers to meet Putin in Turkey 'personally'
-
Inter beat Torino and downpour to move level with Napoli
-
'Not nice' to hear Alexander-Arnold booed by Liverpool fans: Robertson
-
'We'll defend better next season': Barca's Flick after wild Clasico win
-
Trump urges Ukraine to accept talks with Russia
-
Amorim warns Man Utd losing 'massive club' feeling after Hammers blow
-
Complaint filed over 'throat-slitting gesture' at Eurovision protests: Israeli broadcaster
-
Newcastle win top-five showdown with Chelsea, Arsenal rescue Liverpool draw
-
Departing Alonso says announcement on next move 'not far' away
-
Arsenal hit back to rescue valuable draw at Liverpool
-
Pakistan's Kashmiris return to homes, but keep bunkers stocked
-
Postecoglou hopeful over Kulusevski injury ahead of Spurs' Europa final
-
Washington hails 'substantive progress' after trade talks with China
-
Barca edge Real Madrid in thriller to move to brink of Liga title
-
Albanians vote in election seen as key test of EU path
-
Forest owner Marinakis confronts Nuno after draw deals Champions League blow
-
Dortmund thump Leverkusen to spoil Alonso's home farewell
-
Pedersen sprints back into Giro pink after mountain goat incident

Trenches and Molotov cocktails: Kyiv digs in for war
The young Ukrainian filmmaker stood over a trench with a rifle while his friends prepared Molotov cocktails. Kyiv's exhausted but defiant residents are digging in for war.
Three volunteer fighters in olive fatigues worked up a sweat a few steps away, positioning a piece of artillery onto a patch of grass separating two lanes of a big city road.
Electronic billboards around them flashed messages warning invading Russian soldiers that "instead of flowers, you will be greeted with bullets".
Filmmaker Andriy Ivanyuk took it all in with the confidence of a man yet to experience real combat and said the Russians were about to be taught a lesson they would not forget.
"The Russians know very well that our land is burning under their feet," Ivanyuk said.
Kyiv woke up from a 36-hour military curfew -- enforced by shoot-on-sight orders -- on Monday to prepare for the stalled Russian push on the Ukrainian capital.
The Western-backed government's battled-hardened soldiers are stretched to the limit at the front.
They are fighting Russia's well-armed forces near the Belarusian border in the north and Kremlin-annexed Crimea in the south.
- 'Flowers for their grave' -
Ukraine's war-scarred east has pitted Kyiv's troops against Russian-backed insurgent for eight years.
But the historic city of Kyiv is now being defended by its very residents -- from artists such as Ivanyuk to bank employee Viktor Rudnichenko.
Both are in their 30s and filled with smiles.
Both were living normal lives until Russia stunned the world and attacked Ukraine last Thursday.
And both are brimming with confidence.
"We will greet them with Molotov cocktails and bullets to the head, that's how we will greet them," Rudnichenko said.
"The only flowers they might get from us will be for their grave."
But bravado is intermixed with expressions of exhaustion and dread on Kyiv's quickly thinning streets.
- Bravado and exhaustion -
Groups of people were lugging their suitcases to the train station moments after the curfew lifted.
There were rumours that the city had organised two more evacuation trains.
Officials were unable to say how many of Kyiv's original three million residents had already fled.
But a large proportion of those who remained spent hours standing in queues that were forming outside the city's stores and kiosk in search of bread and cigarettes.
The city itself is gradually gaining the trappings of a conflict zone.
The booms of Grad missiles and mortar fire fell mostly silent while delegations from Moscow and Kyiv met for talks at the Belarus-Ukrainian border on the fifth day of the war.
But this only gave Kyiv's volunteer forces more time to roll out everything from furniture and tyres and to garbage bins to fortify checkpoints splitting the city into zones.
"Don't go on the grass," volunteer Oleksiy Vasylenko shouted at a passers-by as an air raid siren disturbed the still air.
"There could be explosives! We heard the Russian are hiding mines in the grass," the 27-year-old warned.
- 'Saboteurs' -
The air in Kyiv has been poisoned for days with suspicions that covert Russian units are already hiding in the capital and staging attacks.
The city issued a notice to drivers using Kyiv-registered phone numbers on Monday not to use bus lanes on the right hand of the road.
"If you drive in the bus lane you will be a saboteur and dealt with accordingly," the message from the city warned.
The checkpoints are manned by nervous and occasionally angry men who demand identity papers while pointing their Kalashnikovs at cars.
The pass code for easier passage is "Slava Ukraini" (Glory to Ukraine) -- the national salute despised deeply in the Kremlin and traditionally followed with the response: "Geroyam Slava" (Glory to the Heroes).
The day's new shift of volunteers bused to the trenches frequently exchanged the salute while milling about and preparing battle plans under a clear blue sky.
"There are enough people here to resist," said veterinarian Yuriy Gibalyuk,
"We will resist, the whole of Ukraine will resist, whether it is Kyiv, Lviv or Donetsk," the 50-year-old said.
Ch.Kahalev--AMWN