
-
Rubio departs for whirlwind Asia trip overshadowed by tariffs
-
Rubio imposter used AI to message high-level officials, reports say
-
El Salvador says US has jurisdiction over detained migrants
-
More than 160 people still missing days after deadly Texas floods
-
Major US teachers union teams up with AI giants
-
Texas floods: Misinformation across political spectrum sows confusion
-
Trump holds fresh talks with Netanyahu to end Gaza 'tragedy'
-
US scraps shoe removal at airport screening
-
New Knicks coach Brown embracing 'high expectations'
-
King Charles, Macron laud new 'entente' on first day of French president's state visit
-
Joao Pedro brace sends Chelsea into Club World Cup final
-
US stocks mostly lower as Trump adds copper, pharma to tariff onslaught
-
Germany and Sweden reach Euro 2025 quarters with match to spare
-
King Charles, Macron stress unity on first day of French president's state visit
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs to be sentenced October 3
-
France wildfire shuts down Marseille airport, halts trains
-
Wimbledon champion Alcaraz challenges movie star Tom Holland to golf match
-
Mavs' Davis has surgery to repair detached retina: reports
-
Death toll in Texas floods climbs to 108, with more rain expected
-
Trump to hold fresh talks with Netanyahu to end Gaza 'tragedy'
-
NHL and players union ratify four-year contract extension
-
Alcaraz, Sabalenka take contrasting routes into Wimbledon semis
-
Fast facts on the Bayeux Tapestry
-
'We're AI,' popular indie rock band admits
-
Germany eye Euro 2025 quarters after Schueller downs Denmark
-
Trump says to set 50% copper tariff, no extension to August deadline
-
Imperious Alcaraz routs Norrie to reach Wimbledon semis
-
United Airlines to resume US service to Tel Aviv
-
Macron urges new era of Anglo-French unity in address to UK parliament
-
Anisimova into first Wimbledon semi-final as former teen star returns to spotlight
-
Trump accuses Putin of talking 'bullshit' on Ukraine
-
Sri Lanka crush Bangladesh by 99 runs to seal ODI series
-
England ignoring threat of Euros exit ahead of Dutch showdown: Wiegman
-
'Big adrenalin' propels Pogacar to Tour stage and 100th career win
-
Fritz reaches Wimbledon semis despite fresh line call blunder, Sabalenka advances
-
Pogacar wins Tour de France stage four for career century
-
Trump faces MAGA meltdown over Epstein reversal
-
Kisses, handshakes: British royals host friendly state visit for French president
-
Sabalenka battles back to reach Wimbledon semis
-
Sinner cancels Wimbledon practice hit after elbow injury
-
France wildfire shuts down Marseille airport
-
Thousands told to stay home as Spain forest fire rages
-
Trump says 'no extensions' to Aug 1 tariff deadline
-
Wimbledon line technology fails again as Fritz reaches semis
-
Rubio imposter used AI to message high-level officials: report
-
Kyiv, Moscow residents baffled by Trump's wavers on Ukraine aid
-
Archer can help England rattle impressive India, says Broad
-
Iconic Bayeux Tapestry to be loaned to Britain: French president
-
Lyles to make 200m return against Tebogo in Monaco
-
UK post office scandal may have caused 13 suicides: inquiry

Heat-struck Thai village hoists cartoon cat in desperate bid for rain
As millions across Southeast Asia suffer a blistering heatwave that is melting railway tracks, a Thai village resorted to an unusual method to seek rain: parading a Japanese cartoon cat.
Thailand has sweltered in recent weeks as the temperature climbs across the region, with experts saying climate change is making heatwaves more frequent, longer and more intense.
In the kingdom's central Nakhon Sawan province -- which has been without rain for months -- villagers in Phayuha Khiri District hoisted Japanese manga cat Doraemon to break the drought.
Sparkly dressed paraders bore a tinsel-decked cage containing the stuffed toy through the village while onlookers sprinkled it with water.
Theirs was a new take on an old dry season ritual known as "Hae Nang Meaw", literally, the parading of a female cat.
The well-known feline aversion to water means some link the animals to rainfall, with their furious meows after being drenched thought to summon precipitation.
Most villagers no longer use real cats, lifting Doraemon or HelloKitty dolls instead.
As Doraemon was paraded in Thailand's heartland on Tuesday, in the south, the searing heat buckled railway tracks in Nakhon Si Thammarat province.
Railway workers doused the rails with water to try to bend them back into shape after the mercury hit 41 degrees Celsius (105 Fahrenheit).
The State Railway of Thailand said the "extreme heat" was to blame for the tracks warping between Ron Phibun and Khao Chum Thong on April 30.
"Officials brought water and ice to cool down the rails," the statement said, with the tracks usable again after an hour-long dousing.
Deputy state railway governor Jaray Rungthani said engineers would be keeping a close eye in the coming days as temperatures remained high.
"All railway station managers will help passengers, and be ready to handle the heatwave situation based on the forecast," he said.
The heat gripping much of the region -- from Bangladesh to the Philippines -- has strained energy grids and forced millions of children to stay home as schools close.
While the El Nino phenomenon is helping drive this year's exceptionally warm weather, Asia is also warming faster than the global average, according to the UN's World Meteorological Organization.
Y.Kobayashi--AMWN