-
Japan's Mitoma injured as World Cup looms
-
Eurovision fever hits host city Vienna
-
Cannes Film Festival: what to watch out for
-
Fearing return to war, Iran conservationists shore up damaged heritage sites
-
Coach Umaga says Pasifika uncertainty is taking a toll on players
-
Fervent and fake: High-glam AI avatars boost Trump ahead of midterms
-
Legal whiplash over abortion pill undermines care, say providers
-
Who's a good boy? AI can't replace doggie actors, director says
-
Omar Garcia Harfuch: 'Mexico's Batman' -- and possible presidential hopeful
-
Fitzpatrick storms into lead at PGA Truist Championship
-
Dubois climbs off the canvas to become two-time world heavyweight champion
-
Iran's Guards threaten US Mideast sites as Trump awaits Tehran response
-
Cavaliers top Pistons to trim deficit in NBA playoff series
-
Iran's Guards threaten US sites as Trump waits for Tehran response
-
Bastia crowd trouble delays Le Mans Ligue 1 promotion party
-
Japan, Qatar drawn together in Asian Cup finals
-
Dupont inspires Toulouse past Toulon, Montauban relegated from Top 14
-
Sevilla strike late to boost survival hopes, Celta edge Atletico
-
Brazil court suspends law aimed at reducing Bolsonaro sentence
-
Militia kill at least 69 in NE DR Congo: local, security sources
-
Defending champ Jeeno retains lead at Mizuho Americas Open
-
At least 8 killed as Israel pounds Lebanon despite truce
-
Messi on target as Miami swat Toronto
-
Kane penalty miss as Olise rescues Bayern to pile pressure on Wolfsburg
-
Guardiola salutes Doku after Man City star dazzles in win over Brentford
-
Sinner opens Italian Open account, Sabalenka suffers shock early exit
-
Atlanta Braves legend Cox dies: team
-
Man City keep title race alive, Liverpool frustrated by Chelsea
-
Venezuela leader to go to The Hague on first trip outside Caribbean
-
Man City beat Brentford to close gap on leaders Arsenal
-
Rashid Khan bowls Gujarat to 77-run win over Rajasthan
-
Champions Inter thump Lazio in cup final warm up
-
Piccardo quadruple relegates Montauban from Top 14
-
Sabalenka suffers early Italian Open exit ahead of Sinner bow
-
Indonesia rescuers retrieve hiker's body after volcanic eruption
-
Magyar takes over as Hungary's prime minister, closing Orban era
-
Leipzig seal Champions League berth in Bundesliga
-
Liverpool frustrated by Chelsea draw, Man Utd held at Sunderland
-
Leipzig seal Champions League berth
-
Hadjar revels in old-school car and fan adoration
-
Martin surges to MotoGP sprint win as Marquez breaks foot at Le Mans
-
Vingegaard shows intent on Giro climb as Silva takes pink
-
Liverpool will be a 'different team' next season, says Slot
-
Magyar sworn in as Hungary's 'regime change' PM
-
Martin surges to MotoGP sprint victory at Le Mans
-
Paolini's Italian Open title defence ends ahead of Sinner bow
-
Liverpool limp towards Champions League with Chelsea draw
-
Abbas takes five wickets to put Pakistan ahead in Bangladesh Test
-
UK's Starmer vows to 'listen to voters' after election drubbing
-
Putin chides NATO in speech at scaled-back Victory Day parade
Australia yields to Turkey in standoff over next climate summit
Australia has conceded defeat in a bruising diplomatic struggle over hosting rights to next year's UN climate summit, with Turkey prevailing despite holding a much weaker hand.
Exactly who presides over the blockbuster global event is still in play, but Australia's long-running campaign to bring COP31 to Adelaide is over.
"Obviously, it would be great if Australia could have it all. But we can't have it all," said a dejected Chris Bowen, Australia's climate minister, in Brazil where this year's climate talks rumble on.
Just two days earlier in the rainforest city of Belem, where the unresolved standoff with Turkey risked a spat on the world stage, Bowen declared confidently: "We're in it to win it."
But despite its bid enjoying overwhelming support, Australia could not get around a quirk of the UN system -- that consensus is required to win hosting rights.
Turkey refused to withdraw, leading to a tug-of-war in Belem that tested Brazil's insistence that global climate solidarity was alive and well.
Without one side backing down, or another arrangement being made, COP31 would default to Germany, which hosts the UN climate body's offices -- something many wanted to avoid, not least the Germans themselves.
A highly-unusual alternative was brokered: Turkey would host the 200-nation summit, but Australia would steer the marathon negotiations.
"I know some people will be disappointed in that outcome," said Bowen but "significant concessions are what's required when you try to find consensus."
- Turkey triumph -
It is a major coup for President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has pursued an assertive, go-between diplomacy that positioned Turkey as a mediator in conflicts from Ukraine to Gaza and the Horn of Africa.
The summit will be held in the Mediterranean resort city of Antalya, where Turkey already hosts a major diplomatic forum every January that serves to showcase the soft power image that Ankara wants to project.
COP summits attract world leaders, business executives, and tens of thousands of visitors, and hosting the gala events has become a point of prestige.
Rival COP-hosting bids are not unprecedented, but none had ever come down to the wire like this.
Turkey insisted it had a competitive bid, despite lacking the numbers behind Australia, which had pledged to co-host with climate vulnerable Pacific Island nations.
Under COP rules, hosting duties rotate through five blocs and in 2026 that fell to the Western European and Other States -- two dozen mostly European countries but also Turkey, Australia and Canada, among others.
On Thursday, at a meeting to break the impasse, Turkish diplomats stood together alone some distance from the other representatives, with both groups entering the room through different doors.
The meeting was chaired by German state secretary for the environment Jochen Flasbarth, who told AFP the co-hosting proposal was "innovative" and he did not hear opposition to it.
But it had yet to be put in writing -- and only then would he reconvene the group to make a decision.
- 'Disappointed' -
But close observers said it was unlikely Australia could accept anything other than the COP31 presidency -- and hard to imagine Turkey would not agree to the terms.
"It would seem remarkable that a country that had no supporters other than themselves in the regional group that decides would be able to both walk away with physical hosting of the COP, as well as the all-important presidency," said a diplomatic source close to the discussions.
Simon Bradshaw from Greenpeace Australia Pacific, told AFP that "whatever the venue, whatever the arrangement, the task remains the same: phasing out fossil fuels and ending deforestation."
But the mood was less upbeat in the Pacific Island region, where rising seas and extreme weather threatens the very survival of many small island states.
"We are all not happy. And disappointed it's ended up like this," Papua New Guinea's Foreign Minister Justin Tkatchenko told AFP as the news broke.
jmi-np-fo-ia/des
G.Stevens--AMWN