
-
EU antiques import clampdown could gut trade, warn dealers
-
Gauff fights past Keys to book French Open semi-final spot
-
EVs boost German auto sales, Tesla falls again
-
Stocks extend gains despite US steel tariffs
-
EU gives Bulgaria green light to adopt euro in 2026
-
US-backed group suspends Gaza aid operations
-
Beijing slams Rubio 'attack' on China after Tiananmen Square remarks
-
Trump says deal with Xi 'extremely hard' as steel tariffs double
-
Ex-Fiji captain Nayacalevu has 'no regrets' over Test retirement
-
Aicha Macky, Niger's taboo-breaking filmmaker
-
Kohli dedicates IPL title to fans ahead of homecoming celebrations
-
Trump says 'extremely hard' to do deal with Xi as steel tariffs double
-
Iran's Khamenei says US nuclear proposal against national interest
-
Gaza aid sites shut, as Israel issues 'combat zones' warning
-
200,000 Afghans left Pakistan since deportations renewed
-
Kohli dedicates IPL title to fans ahead of homecoming victory parade
-
China calls Rubio's comments on Tiananmen Square crackdown an 'attack'
-
Million-plus pilgrims begin hajj under blazing sun
-
Stocks build on gains after jobs data, Seoul surges on Lee's win
-
Marsh back to lead Australia in West Indies T20s
-
US labor unions fight to contain AI disruption
-
French singer Nicole Croisille, of 'A Man and a Woman' fame, dies at 88: agent
-
Scientists long ago envisioned the end of climate cooperation
-
Japan births in 2024 fell below 700,000 for first time
-
Taiwan's Lai, Rubio vow to 'never forget' Tiananmen victims
-
Crusaders seek to rebuild dynasty as Super Rugby finals begin
-
High-cost loans, Trump turmoil hurting Africa, says G20 panel chief
-
Five things to know about the St Catherine monastery in Egypt's Sinai
-
Sweden tries sole surviving jihadist over Jordan pilot burnt to death
-
US-backed Gaza aid centres to close temporarily after 27 killed
-
Kohli does it at last, teenage star wows: five IPL storylines
-
Stead to exit after seven years as Black Caps search for new coach
-
US doubles steel, aluminum tariffs as OECD ministers gather
-
Between freedom and restrictions, Syrians navigate new reality
-
Australian murder suspect says lethal lunch may have contained 'foraged' mushrooms
-
South Korea's new leader vows to 'heal wounds' with nuclear-armed North
-
Asian stocks track Wall St up after jobs data, Seoul surges on Lee win
-
Million-plus pilgrims to begin hajj under blazing sun
-
Vietnam scraps two-child limit as birth rate declines
-
Three Salvadoran ex-military convicted of wartime killings of Dutch reporters
-
Coral frozen in time throws lifeline for Great Barrier Reef
-
Spain target 'enormously important' Nations League defence
-
Djokovic and Sinner chase French Open semis as underdogs look for upsets
-
Israel army says shelling Syria after projectiles launched
-
South Korea's President Lee takes power after sweeping election win
-
'The sea rejuvenates you': Cuban seniors defy aging by diving in
-
'Impossible dream' of death row inmate and Catalan jazz artist collab
-
Canada's reopened cod fishery on shaky ground
-
Ledecky wins 800m crown as US swim championships begin
-
Zimbabwe to cull elephants and distribute meat to people
CMSC | 0.23% | 22.12 | $ | |
BCC | 2.85% | 87.6 | $ | |
RIO | -1.24% | 58.85 | $ | |
NGG | -0.84% | 71.33 | $ | |
SCS | 3.14% | 10.52 | $ | |
RBGPF | -2.22% | 67.5 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.42% | 22.16 | $ | |
JRI | 0.34% | 12.96 | $ | |
RYCEF | 1.29% | 12.035 | $ | |
BTI | 2.05% | 46.34 | $ | |
RELX | -0.96% | 54.06 | $ | |
GSK | -2.95% | 40.46 | $ | |
BCE | -1.55% | 21.94 | $ | |
VOD | -0.97% | 10.3 | $ | |
BP | -0.02% | 29.56 | $ | |
AZN | -0.15% | 71.82 | $ |

Several dozen hurt in days of unrest in Sweden
Several days of unrest in Sweden, sparked by a far-right group's burning of the Koran, have injured at least 40 people, police said on Monday, calling for more resources to deal with the violence.
More Muslim countries meanwhile protested the burning of their religion's holy book.
Protests have turned violent in several cities since Thursday, leaving 26 police officers and 14 civilians injured, police said at a press conference on Monday. About 20 police vehicles were burned or damaged.
Officials in several Muslim countries condemned the move that sparked the protests: the burning of the holy book by the leader of the anti-immigration and anti-Islam group Hard Line, the Danish-Swedish politician Rasmus Paludan.
Aiming to drum up support ahead of September elections, he has declared a "tour" of Sweden, planning to visit cities and towns with large Muslim populations with the intent of burning copies of the Koran as the faithful mark the holy month of Ramadan.
Paludan intends to stand in the September poll but does not yet have the necessary signatures to secure his candidacy.
Clashes with police have erupted during protests against the group since Thursday evening, starting in the cities Linkoping and Norrkoping.
They spread to the city of Malmo, where Paludan burned a Koran on Saturday. A school was set alight during a second night of unrest Saturday-Sunday.
- 'Too few of us' -
Police said they believed the violence was targeted at their officers.
National police chief Anders Thornberg said rioters had "tried to kill police officers.
"Criminals have profited from the situation to show violence toward society, without any link to the demonstrations," he told journalists Monday.
"There are too few of us. We have grown, but we have not grown at the same pace as the problems at the heart of society," he added, calling for more resources for the police.
As protesters burned cars and lobbed rocks at the police in Sunday's clashes, officers responded, head of police special forces Jonas Hysing said.
"Some 200 participants were violent and the police had to respond with arms in legitimate self-defence," he said.
Police had earlier said officers had wounded three people after firing warning shots during Sunday's "riot" in the city of Norrkoping. Eight people were arrested there and 18 in the neighbouring city of Linkoping.
Police special operations commander Jonas Hysing told the press conference that officers had acted in self-defence.
Iraq's foreign ministry said on Sunday it had summoned the Swedish charge d'affaires in Baghdad.
It warned the affair could have "serious repercussions" on "relations between Sweden and Muslims in general, both Muslim and Arab countries and Muslim communities in Europe".
Saudi Arabia's official news agency said the kingdom has "condemned the agitations of certain extremists in Sweden and their provocations against Muslims".
And the Turkish foreign ministry denounced "hesitation to prevent provocative and Islamophobic acts... under the cover of freedom of expression".
A demonstration was held outside the Swedish embassy in Tehran.
A.Rodriguezv--AMWN