
-
Alcaraz plays Nishikori in Roland Garros opener as Swiatek gets tough draw
-
Modric to leave Real Madrid after Club World Cup
-
Austria's Eurovision winner wants 2026 edition 'without Israel'
-
Zhang Weili confident of UFC's future in China as Fight Night announced
-
Stock markets fall as Trump tax cuts clear House
-
Courting controversy, Irish rap trio Kneecap face legal action
-
Dutch FM says supports "as free as possible" international trade
-
Paul Mescal says new gay romance film no 'Brokeback Mountain'
-
France detains 55 men in paedophile ring crackdown
-
Alcaraz gets Nishikori in Roland Garros opener as Sinner faces Frenchman
-
Vatican's diplomatic arm eyes return to fore with Ukraine talks
-
Els and Goosen: Golfers dragged into Trump's ambush of S.Africa leader
-
Merz warns of Russia threat, vows to defend NATO allies on Lithuania visit
-
UK court gives govt green light to reach Chagos Islands deal
-
England openers share unbeaten century stand in lone Zimbabwe Test
-
UK net migration in 2024 fell by half to 431,000
-
Norway parts ways with three ski jumping officials amid cheating probe
-
Arteta accepts Arsenal need 'firepower' in the transfer market
-
Zhang Weili keen to wow home crowd at first mainland post-Covid UFC event
-
Romanian court rejects far-right candidate's election appeal
-
Israel issues evacuation warning for parts of Gaza
-
EU parliament backs Russian fertiliser tax opposed by farmers
-
UK court reviews Chagos Islands deal after last-minute legal block
-
Stocks, oil prices retreat on US debt worries
-
Spain probes organised crime link in murder of ex-Ukraine MP
-
Jewish museum shooting suspect mistaken for victim: witnesses
-
Merz warns of Russia threat in visit to NATO's eastern flank
-
Garnacho unsure of Man Utd future after Europa League final snub
-
EU ready to tax Russian fertilisers from July
-
Zimbabwe bowl against England in one-off Test
-
Irish rappers Kneecap deny Hezbollah support after terror charge
-
'Hurt': Leningrad Siege survivor, 84, charged over peace placard
-
Rudiger and Musiala absent but Ter Stegen returns for Germany Nations League
-
Japan shows off futuristic 'railgun' at defence expo
-
Sifting through the rubble of Pakistan-India conflict
-
Norway film starring Elle Fanning gets 19-minute Cannes ovation
-
UK court orders last-minute review of Chagos Islands deal
-
Fernandes offers to leave Man Utd to help club rebuild
-
Stocks track Wall St sell-off as US deficit fears grow
-
'Serious' accident at North Korea warship launch: state media
-
Massive floods strand over 50,000 in eastern Australia
-
Deminers comb Belgian countryside for remnants of Great War
-
Somalia climate shocks and aid cuts create perfect storm
-
Ads pressured to evolve as AI changes Google search
-
Merz to visit Lithuania as Germany helps bolster NATO's eastern flank
-
Two Israeli embassy staff shot dead outside Jewish museum in Washington
-
Two Israeli staff shot dead outside Jewish museum in Washington
-
India's mother tongue teaching spells reading success
-
German far-right voters don't deserve empathy, says director Akin
-
EU ready to tax Russian fertilisers as early as July
RIO | -0.86% | 61.45 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.23% | 22 | $ | |
SCS | 0.3% | 10.04 | $ | |
NGG | -1.25% | 72.66 | $ | |
JRI | -0.83% | 12.615 | $ | |
RBGPF | 6.25% | 67.2 | $ | |
BCC | -0.5% | 86.895 | $ | |
BCE | -0.46% | 21.371 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.09% | 10.91 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.18% | 21.75 | $ | |
RELX | -0.64% | 54.75 | $ | |
BTI | -0.82% | 44.1 | $ | |
VOD | 0.81% | 10.505 | $ | |
GSK | -0.33% | 38.415 | $ | |
AZN | -0.04% | 69.65 | $ | |
BP | -0.89% | 28.625 | $ |

Sifting through the rubble of Pakistan-India conflict
Two weeks after Pakistan and India's most intense military clashes in decades, clearance teams along the border comb through fields for unexploded shells so residents can safely build back from the rubble of their homes.
Around 70 people, mostly Pakistanis, were killed in the four-day conflict that spread beyond divided Kashmir, over which the neighbours have fought three major wars.
The military confrontation -- involving intense tit-for-tat drone, missile, aerial combat and artillery exchanges -- came to an abrupt end after US President Donald Trump announced a surprise ceasefire, which is still holding.
On the Pakistan side of Kashmir, 500 buildings were damaged or destroyed -- including nearly 50 in the picturesque Neelum Valley, where two people were killed.
"There is a possibility that there are unexploded shells still embedded in the ground," said local official Muhammad Kamran, who has been helping clear educational institutions near the border.
Unexploded ordnance dating from conflicts past killed several children in 2021 and 2022 in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
- 'We are brave' -
Headmaster Muhammad Zubair follows a mine detector into a classroom of his high school in the valley where a writing on a whiteboard standing in the debris reads "we are brave" in English.
"Although the fighting has stopped, people still hold so much fear and anxiety," he told AFP.
"Despite calling them back to school, children are not showing up."
Abdul Rasheed, a power department official, said he worked "day and night" to repair power lines damaged by Indian firing.
Over the years, investment in roads has helped to create a modest tourism sector in the Neelum Valley, attracting Pakistanis who come to marvel at the Himalayan mountains.
Hotels reopened on Monday, but they remain deserted in the middle of peak season.
Alif Jan, 76, who has lived through multiple clashes between the two sides, is yet to call her grandchildren back to her border village after sending them away during the latest hostilities.
"It was a very difficult time. It was like doomsday had arrived," she said.
The children were sent to Pakistan-held Kashmir's main city of Muzaffarabad, usually safe but this time targeted with an Indian air strike.
- Waiting for compensation -
Jan wants to be certain the fighting doesn't resume and that she has enough to feed them before they eventually return.
In a schoolyard, she collects a 20-kilogram (45-pound) bag of flour, a can of oil, and some medicine from a local NGO.
Thousands of other families are still waiting to be relocated or compensated for damage.
"We have identified 5,000 families," said Fawad Aslam, the programme manager of local aid group.
"Our first priority is families who suffered direct damage, while the second priority is those who were forced to migrate -- people who had to leave their homes and are now living in camps or temporary shelters."
For 25-year-old Numan Butt whose brother was killed by shrapnel, the aid is little consolation.
"This conflict keeps coming upon us; this oppression is ongoing," he told AFP.
"It is a good thing that they have agreed to peace, but the brother I have lost will never come back."
F.Dubois--AMWN