
-
Blow for Merz as he misses majority in first vote for chancellor
-
Putin gears up for 'grandest' Victory Day amid Ukraine conflict
-
Cardinals to move into Vatican on eve of conclave
-
Romania names interim premier as turmoil deepens
-
DoorDash agrees £2.9 billion takeover of Deliveroo
-
Dollar recovers some losses, stocks mixed as traders eye tariff deals
-
Hamas says no point in further Gaza truce talks
-
'Aussiewood' courts Hollywood as Trump film tariffs loom
-
How a privately owned city in Kenya took on corrupt officials
-
Ozempic slimming craze sweeps Kosovo despite side effects
-
Drone strikes rock Port Sudan in third day of attacks
-
US President Trump and Canada's Carney set for high-stakes meeting
-
Philips turns in a profit but China, tariffs weigh
-
Drones hit Port Sudan airport in third day of attacks
-
Australian mushroom murder suspect rejected help preparing meal: witness
-
Jokic-inspired Nuggets stun Thunder, Knicks down Celtics
-
India's woman fighter pilot trailblazer eyes space
-
'Shared dream': China celebrates Zhao's world snooker breakthrough
-
Wait for Vatican white smoke fires up social media
-
Sinner leading the charge in golden era for Italian tennis
-
Donnarumma stands tall on PSG's Champions League run
-
Dollar recovers some losses, stocks gain as traders eye tariff deals
-
US aid cuts push Bangladesh's health sector to the edge
-
Prayers, pride in Philippine papal contender's hometown
-
Germany's Merz to launch new govt in times of Trump turbulence
-
Brunson sparks Knicks in comeback win over Celtics
-
All roads lead to Rome Open for Sinner after doping ban
-
French Resistance members reunited 80 years after end of WWII
-
Arsenal must 'stick together' in PSG showdown: Odegaard
-
New Zealand PM proposes banning under-16s from social media
-
OMP Achieves Top Two Rankings in Four Use Cases in the 2025 Gartner Critical Capabilities for Supply Chain Planning Solutions Report
-
Boditech Med and SphingoTec Announce Launch of AFIAS penKid(R) Assay for Kidney Function Diagnostics
-
Agronomics Limited - Meatable and TruMeat Forge Alliance
-
Pulsar Helium Announces Results of 2025 Annual General and Special Meeting of Shareholders
-
Helium One Global Ltd - Jackson-2 Well Drilled to TD & Free Gas Confirmed
-
Evotec SE Reports Q1 2025 results: Paving the Way for 2025 Growth in Soft Market Environment
-
Rihanna reveals third pregnancy on Met Gala night
-
Trump orders curb on virus research he blames for Covid pandemic
-
'Makes no sense': Hollywood shocked by Trump's film tariffs announcement
-
First day of jury selection wraps in Sean Combs sex crimes trial
-
Dominican Republic reports sharp rise in Haitian migrant deportations
-
Mennonite communities raise hackles in Peruvian Amazon
-
Dominican Republican reports sharp rise in Haitian migrant deportations
-
Stars shine at Met Gala, showcasing Black dandyism
-
Ireland captain Doris doubtful for Lions tour due to shoulder injury
-
Pentagon chief orders 20% cut in number of top officers
-
'New superstar' Zhao's world title heralds Chinese snooker revolution
-
OpenAI abandons plan to become for-profit company
-
Ford sees $1.5 bn tariff hit this year, suspends 2025 forecast
-
Snooker star Zhao: from ban to Chinese sporting history

Ukrainians mourn Sumy strike victims as Russia denies targeting civilians
Residents of the Ukrainian city of Sumy on Monday grieved the victims of one of the deadliest attacks of the war as Russia denied targeting civilians and US President Donald Trump resumed his onslaught against Ukraine's leader.
A day after two missiles killed at least 35 people, people laid flowers beside a destroyed university building as workers dug through the rubble.
"We used to walk here all the time," said Igor Koloshchuk, stood by the makeshift memorial with his wife Tetyana.
"We came to pay our respects," Tetyana said, adding she felt "shock, incomprehension, and probably hatred."
Authorities said the dead included two boys aged 11 and 17. But Russia said its missiles hit a meeting of army commanders, accusing Ukraine of using civilians as a "human shield".
Russia's attack drew international condemnation.
The US president -- who is pushing for a ceasefire -- called it a "horrible thing" and a "mistake" by Russia's President Vladimir Putin, but also targeted Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Trump -- who had a blazing White House row with Zelensky six weeks ago -- said the Ukrainian leader shared the blame for "millions of people dead" with Putin, who ordered the February 2022 invasion, and former US president Joe Biden.
"Let's say Putin number one, but let's say Biden, who had no idea what the hell he was doing, number two, and Zelensky," Trump said during a meeting with El Salvador's president.
Zelensky was "always looking to purchase missiles", Trump said.
"When you start a war, you got to know that you can win the war," Trump said. "You don't start a war against somebody that's 20 times your size, and then hope that people give you some missiles."
-- Russia rejects blame --
Commenting on the Sumy strike for the first time, Russia's defence ministry said its army launched two ballistic Iskander-M missiles at "the place of a meeting of command staff", claiming to have killed 60 Ukrainian soldiers.
The Kremlin denied targeting civilians or making any kind of "mistake".
"Our army hits only military and military-related targets," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
The defence ministry appeared to concede there were civilian casualties, but blamed Ukraine.
"The Kyiv regime continues to use the Ukrainian population as a human shield, placing military facilities and holding events with the participation of soldiers in the centre of a densely populated city," the ministry said.
Russia has made similar accusations during the war.
Conservative independent estimates say however that thousands of civilians have died as Russian missiles have hit Ukrainian apartment blocks, hospitals, schools, train stations and other civilian areas.
"Only completely deranged scum can do something like this," Zelensky said of the Sumy strikes Sunday.
- 'Mountains of corpses' -
Sumy's residents recalled the horror of the strikes.
"It was chaos. There were mountains of corpses," recalled Artem Selianyn, a combat medic, who ran from his home to help, despite his family's flat being severely damaged in the attack.
The 47-year-old said one of the first victims he treated was a young woman working at a mobile coffee shop who was bleeding from an artery after her leg was hit by shrapnel.
"My shoes were covered in blood. I haven't cleaned them yet, it's the blood of the wounded," he said.
Kyiv said the attacks showed that Russia had no intention of halting its invasion, after Putin last month rejected a US call for a ceasefire.
Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff held talks with Putin in Saint Petersburg on Friday that the Kremlin on Monday called "extremely helpful and very effective".
Ukraine's European allies strongly condemned the Russian attack however.
France's foreign ministry said the attack -- along with another this month that killed nine children and nine adults in Kryvyi Rig -- constituted "war crimes".
Germany's chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz also described the attack as "a serious war crime".
- 'Further escalation' -
The Kremlin criticised Merz for saying he was open to supplying Ukraine with Taurus missiles.
"He is agitating on the side of toughening his position and in favour of various steps that can -- and will -- inevitably lead to a further escalation of the Ukraine situation," Peskov said.
While Trump again criticised Zelensky, a senior official in Kyiv told AFP that Ukraine-US talks in Washington last week on a proposed mineral deal had gone "constructively".
Separate Russian strikes Monday on the northeastern region of Kharkiv killed four elderly residents, officials said. Russia said Ukrainian drone strikes on border villages in the Kursk region killed three people.
S.Gregor--AMWN