- McTominay keeps Napoli top in Serie A with Torino winner
- Man Utd boss Amorim earns first Premier League win, Chelsea climb to third place
- Romanians vote as far right hopes for breakthrough
- US ski star Shiffrin has puncture wound, 'severe muscle trauma' after crash
- White House says 'not there yet' on Gaza ceasefire and hostage deal
- VW's German workers to strike from Monday
- Zelensky says Ukraine needs arms, NATO invite before Russia talks
- World chess champ Ding, teen challenger even after six games
- Indigenous groups call for health protections in plastic deal
- Divided plastic pollution negotiators call for more time
- Georgia PM rules out re-run of contested vote
- Serbia denies behind Kosovo blast, says attack aimed at Belgrade
- Syria's second city slips from government control: monitor
- Harry Kane sidelined with hamstring tear
- Centre-right parties set to hold power in Ireland
- Social Democrats set to overtake ruling party in Iceland snap election
- Afghanistan must participate in future climate talks: Taliban
- India's Jay Shah starts term as world cricket boss
- Bangladesh court quashes convictions for grenade attack on ex-PM
- With Angola trip, Biden fulfills his promise to visit sub-Saharan Africa
- Romanians return to the polls with far right hoping to gain ground
- New EU chiefs visit Kyiv on first day of mandate
- 'Lethal Weapon' Johnston and Shin Ji-yai win Australian Open titles
- Poland border fence divides officials and rights groups
- Near Chechnya, tracing the life of a Georgian-Ukrainian soldier
- For Georgia's opposition, protest is the cure for melancholy
- Kayaker 'stable' after leg amputated in Australian river rescue
- Durant and Booker lead NBA Suns over Warriors
- Stokes fit for second New Zealand Test despite injury scare
- 'Red carpet treatment': Taiwan's Lai feted during US stop on Pacific trip
- Glittering dreams: India's big push for solar power
- Trump announces loyalist Kash Patel as choice to lead FBI
- The farm fires helping to fuel India's deadly air
- Philippine Eagle hatchling dies in conservation setback
- Red Bulls reach MLS Cup final with win over Orlando
- Debutant Bethell leads England to eight-wicket win over New Zealand
- Turmoil overshadows Romania vote as far right hopes to gain ground
- Nations warn of 'obstruction' at plastic talks
- Driver in Australia finds deadly tiger snake on her leg
- Malaysia's jailed ex-PM Najib to argue appeal for house arrest
- US wine merchants urge exclusions from blanket tariffs
- Mitchell's 84 sets England 104 target to beat New Zealand
- Australian PM ready to 'engage' with Musk on social media teen ban
- Ten-man Botafogo win Copa Libertadores
- Russell on pole as Verstappen given grid penalty for Qatar Grand Prix
- Brazil's ten-man Botafogo win Copa Libertadores
- Shiffrin to miss Killington slalom after race fall
- Las Palmas stun Barca on 125th anniversary, Atletico rout Valladolid
- Flat PSG drop points in Nantes draw
- In-form Atletico hammer Valladolid as Griezmann nets stunner
Yemen's president transfers power to new leadership council
Yemen's president announced Thursday he is handing his powers to a new leadership council, in a major shake-up in the coalition battling Huthi rebels as a fragile ceasefire takes hold.
"I irreversibly delegate to this presidential leadership council my full powers," President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi said in a televised statement early Thursday, the final day of peace talks held in the Saudi capital Riyadh.
Hadi's internationally recognised government has been locked in conflict with Iran-backed Huthi rebels who control the capital Sanaa and most of the north despite a Saudi-led intervention launched in 2015.
A United Nations-brokered truce that took effect on Saturday -- the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan -- has offered a glimmer of hope in the conflict which has triggered what the UN describes as the world's worst humanitarian crisis.
The truce came as the peace talks were unfolding in Riyadh without the participation of the Huthis, who refused to attend talks on "enemy" territory.
Some analysts had cast doubt on what the negotiations could achieve in the absence of the Huthis, but Thursday's news may help the sometimes fractious coalition battling the rebels to speak with one voice in any future peace negotiations.
Hadi also announced he had sacked Vice President Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar.
The new council will consist of eight members and be led by Rashad al-Alimi, a former interior minister and adviser to Hadi.
Hadi said it would "negotiate with the Huthis to reach a ceasefire all over Yemen and sit at the negotiating table to reach a final political solution."
Hadi has been based in Saudi Arabia since fleeing to the kingdom in 2015 as rebel forces closed in on his last redoubt, the southern port city of Aden.
- A 'new page'? -
The formation of the council represents "the most consequential shift in the inner workings of the anti-Huthi bloc since the war began", Peter Salisbury, senior Yemen analyst for the International Crisis Group, said on Twitter.
But he cautioned that implementing the arrangement would be "complicated to say the least."
Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, met the council and said he hoped for a "new page" in Yemen, footage aired by state media showed.
Saudi Arabia said it welcomed Hadi's announcement and pledged $3 billion in aid and support, some of it to be paid by the United Arab Emirates.
Yemen's 30 million people are in dire need of assistance.
A UN donors' conference this month raised less than a third of its $4.27 billion target, prompting dark warnings for a country where 80 percent of the population depends on aid.
The UN special envoy for Yemen, Hans Grundberg, said Wednesday that there had been a "significant reduction of violence" since the truce took effect but both sides have accused each other of minor "breaches" of the ceasefire.
M.A.Vaz--PC