
-
Deliveroo CEO to step down following DoorDash takeover
-
Stock markets fluctuate after Fed rate cut
-
S. Korea prosecutors seek arrest of Unification Church leader
-
England star Kildunne fit for World Cup semi-final against France
-
Jimmy Kimmel show yanked after government pressure over Kirk comments
-
Trump's UK state visit turns to politics after regal welcome
-
Malnutrition causes unrecognised type of diabetes: experts
-
China critic Takaichi joins party race, could become Japan's first woman leader
-
New Picasso portrait unveiled at Paris auction house
-
Israeli tanks, jets bombard Gaza City as Palestinians flee
-
Major disruption hits France on day of anti-Macron 'anger'
-
Germany's Continental launches IPO of car parts unit
-
Messi, Inter Miami agree to extend contract beyond 2026: source
-
Cambodian PM accuses Thai forces of evicting civilians on border
-
Trump says designating Antifa 'a major terrorist organization'
-
Wallabies scrum-half Gordon back fit for Bledisloe Cup clashes
-
US vaccine panel to hold high-stakes policy meeting
-
In Nigeria's nightclubs, the bathroom selfie is king - or, rather, queen
-
Glitter and Soviet nostalgia: Russia revives Eurovision rival contest
-
EU seeks 'face-saving' deal on UN climate target
-
Busan film competition showcases Asian cinema's 'strength'
-
Senational Son bags first MLS hat-trick as LAFC beat Real Salt Lake
-
Title rivals Piastri, Norris bid to secure teams' crown for McLaren
-
Europe, Mediterranean coast saw record drought in August: AFP analysis of EU data
-
Australia unveils 'anti-climactic' new emissions cuts
-
Warholm and Bol headline hurdling royalty on Day 7 of Tokyo worlds
-
'Raped, jailed, tortured, left to die': the hell of being gay in Turkmenistan
-
Asian markets fluctuate after Fed cuts interest rates
-
Dodgers ponder using Ohtani as relief pitcher
-
US adversaries stoke Kirk conspiracy theories, researchers warn
-
Jimmy Kimmel show yanked after government pressure on Kirk comments
-
Canada confident of dethroning New Zealand in Women's World Cup semis
-
Australia vows to cut emissions by 62 to 70% by 2035
-
Top UN Gaza investigator hopeful Israeli leaders will be prosecuted
-
Japan seeks to ramp up Asian Games buzz with year to go
-
Judge weighs court's powers in Trump climate case
-
Australian scientists grapple with 'despicable' butterfly heist
-
US faces pressure in UN Security Council vote on Gaza
-
As media declines, gory Kirk video spreads on 'unrestrained' social sites
-
'I don't cry anymore': In US jail, Russian dissidents fear deportation
-
Jimmy Kimmel show off air 'indefinitely' after his Kirk comments
-
Meta expands AI glasses line in a bet on the future
-
Trump's UK state visit gets political after royal welcome
-
Pope Leo puts the brake on Church reforms
-
Jimmy Kimmel show off air 'indefinitely' after Charlie Kirk comments
-
Zomedica Expands TRUVIEW(R) and TRUFORMA(R) Intellectual Property Portfolio with Four Newly Issued U.S. Patents
-
Boiling Point Society Announces Digital Platform Upgrade Under Harlan Quenford Featuring Veyora AILegacyX
-
USA Sign Frame and Stake Introduces Biobased, Biodegradable Landscape Stakes Made from Verde Bioresins' PolyEarthylene(R)
-
EON Resources Inc. Reports Management and Directors Buy 411,000 Shares of EON Class A Common Stock This Week For a Total of 1,076,000 Shares in Third Quarter of 2025
-
Ovation Science and Skinvisible Pharmaceuticals Enhance Their Strategic Partnership in the Obesity Market with Innovative Cannabinoid Delivery Technology with New Developments and Patent Protection

Two dead, one missing as torrential rains lash Spain
Two people died and one was missing on Monday after heavy rains lashed Spain, triggering flash floods that forced the closure of Madrid metro lines and high-speed rail links.
The weekend storm affected almost the whole country, with the heaviest rains recorded on Sunday in the coastal provinces of Cadiz, Tarragona and Castello, according to state weather office Aemet.
Two people died in the province of Toledo as a result of the storm, the head of the regional government of Castilla La Mancha said, without giving details.
Spanish media said a man was found dead by police during a rescue attempt on a road near the town of Bargas while another man died as rescuers tried to reach him in the town of Casarrubios del Monte.
Emergency services were looking for a man who went missing after his car was swept away early on Monday by a swollen river in the rural area of Aldea del Fresno west of Madrid, a spokesman from Madrid's emergency services, Javier Chivite, told public television RTVE.
Firefighters found his 10-year-old son -- who was also in the car and was initially reported as missing -- on Monday on top of a tree, he added.
Emergency services had rescued the boy's mother and sister earlier in the day.
"The poor boy spent the night perched in a tree," the head of the regional government of Madrid, Isabel Diaz Ayuso, told reporters.
The family, who live in the Madrid suburb of Alcorcon, were staying at a holiday home they own in Aldea del Fresno when the storm hit. They took to the road because they became alarmed by the flash flooding, she added.
Several bridges collapsed in Aldea del Fresno and torrents of water swept away many cars, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.
- 'Behave with caution' -
On Sunday residents of the Madrid region received an emergency text accompanied by a loud alarm urging them not to use their vehicles and stay at home. It was the first time the authorities had used this mobile phone alert system.
Several theatres were closed and Sunday's football match between Atletico Madrid and Sevilla was suspended.
A number of metro lines were closed in Madrid on Monday morning due to flooding caused by heavy overnight rains.
High-speed rail links between Madrid and the southwestern region of Andalusia and the eastern coastal region of Valencia, which closed on Sunday, reopened on Monday although trains were running at slower speeds in some sections, railway operator Renfe said.
The heavy rainfall eased on Monday morning. Aemet lowered its alert level for the Madrid region to yellow from a maximum red alert on Sunday.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez thanked emergency services for their work and urged people to "continue to behave with caution".
The torrential weather comes after Spain endured an intense heatwave and persistent high temperatures in August.
Scientists warn that extreme weather such as heatwaves and storms is becoming more intense as a result of climate change.
O.Johnson--AMWN