
-
US tariffs hit Central Europe, Balkans growth: Europe bank
-
No truce in India-Pakistan disinformation war
-
Japan rugby tightens eligibility rules on foreign-born players
-
Knicks leave Celtics on brink, Warriors facing exit
-
Urban temps turning cities into 'ovens,' UN Chief Heat Officer warns
-
Cummins, Hazlewood, Green return in Australia's WTC final squad
-
Scientists in Mexico develop tortilla for people with no fridge
-
Jaded young Chinese reset lives with rural 'retirement'
-
Brilliant Brunson and Knicks leave Celtics on brink
-
China's Xi slams 'bullying' as Beijing hosts LatAm leaders
-
Trump heads to the Gulf eyeing deals amid diplomatic offensive
-
Taiwanese war drama 'wake-up call' to Chinese invasion threat
-
UN aviation agency finds Russia responsible for 2014 downing of airliner over Ukraine
-
Most Asian markets extend rally in glow of China-US truce
-
Kim Kardashian to testify in Paris multi-million-dollar robbery trial
-
Verdict due in Depardieu sexual assault case
-
'Unlimited power': Testimony against Sean Combs tells of lurid violence
-
Inner workings of AI an enigma - even to its creators
-
Market Logic Software and Alchemy-RX Announce Strategic Partnership to Accelerate Transformation of Insights to Growth
-
Air Force One: iconic jet gets the Trump treatment
-
Hollywood studios and unions call on Trump to offer tax breaks
-
Forest striker Awoniyi rushed to hospital for abdominal surgery: reports
-
Rain soaks first practice day at PGA Championship
-
Progressive influencer tells of detention at US airport
-
Rapper Tory Lanez attacked in US prison: authorities
-
Trump announces drug price cut with swipe at Europe
-
Hollywood stars condemn Gaza 'genocide' on eve of Cannes Festival
-
McIlroy looks to the future after post-Masters thrill ride
-
Sinner set for first Italian Open test, Sabalenka marches on
-
Son wants Europa glory to 'complete' Spurs career
-
Trump mulls joining Ukraine talks in Turkey, Kremlin silent on Putin
-
US, China agree to slash tariffs as Trump says will speak to Xi
-
Spanish rider Landa returns home for 'long recovery' after Giro crash
-
Kurdish militant group PKK ends decades of armed struggle
-
Trump says would be 'stupid' to reject Qatari Air Force One gift
-
Uruguay's ex-president Mujica receiving palliative care: wife
-
Remainder of IPL to be held between May 17-June 3 after ceasefire
-
Hamas frees US-Israeli hostage
-
Trump defends resettling white South Africans as refugees in US
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs was 'coercive and criminal,' jury hears
-
Nazi files found in champagne crates in Argentine court basement
-
Myanmar junta airstrike kills 22 at school: witnesses
-
Ground-breaking Grand National winner Blackmore retires
-
Trump heads on major Middle East tour
-
Nepal holds tribute for disappearing glacier
-
Sinner eases into Italian Open last 16, Osaka dumped out
-
Real Madrid duo Vinicius, Vazquez injured
-
Opening statements start in Sean 'Diddy' Combs trial
-
Snow cover of Swiss glaciers below average this year: study
-
Jihadist attack kills 'several dozen' in Burkina Faso

Germany slams Russian 'lies' on Ukraine in WWII commemoration
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Thursday criticised Russia's "historical lies" over the Ukraine war, as he marked the Nazi defeat that ended World War II in Europe 80 years ago.
Steinmeier's speech to parliament expressed gratitude to the Allied soldiers and resistance movements who, "with all their strength and at great sacrifice", defeated Nazi Germany.
He also praised the Soviet Red Army -- in which Russian and Ukrainian troops fought side-by-side -- for their role in the Nazis' defeat, noting it had liberated the Auschwitz concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.
"We do not forget this," Steinmeier told the Bundestag, during a sombre commemoration on the May 8 anniversary of Nazi Germany's unconditional surrender to the Allies.
"But precisely because of this, we firmly oppose the Kremlin's historical lies today," he added.
Russia has cast its three-year offensive against Ukraine as a fight against "neo-Nazis" and has channelled its own wartime legacy to try to justify the war.
But Steinmeier went on: "The war against Ukraine is not a continuation of the fight against fascism.
"(President Vladimir) Putin's war of aggression, his campaign against a free, democratic country, has nothing in common with the fight against Nazi tyranny in World War II."
Steinmeier's speech received lengthy applause from MPs, although many from the far-right AfD -- now the biggest opposition party after coming second in February elections -- did not join in.
Others in the West and Kyiv, including independent experts, have also rejected Moscow's narratives.
Germany has been a key backer of Kyiv in its fight against Moscow. Russia's ambassador to Berlin was not invited to Thursday's commemoration, which was being marked with a public holiday in the capital.
- 'Extremist forces' -
Moscow is on Friday set to hold a large Victory Day parade to mark the anniversary of the Nazis' defeat.
During his 25 years in power, Putin has elevated May 9 to Russia's most important public holiday, using it to champion his army as defenders against fascism.
Steinmeier also said it was a "shock of unprecedented proportions" that the United States was "turning its back on" the international, rules-based order which Washington had helped to forge.
Even such an old democracy "can quickly be endangered when the judiciary is disregarded, the separation of powers is undermined and academic freedom is attacked," he said.
Europe has been rattled by US President Donald Trump's return to office, and is particularly fearful that his administration is no longer committed to helping protect the continent.
Steinmeier expressed fears about "extremist forces" gaining strength in Germany, following the AfD's recent electoral success.
He did not mention the party by name but noted that such forces "mock the institutions of democracy and those who represent them".
Steinmeier's speech recalled former president Richard von Weizsaecker's watershed address in 1985 when he became the first to call on Germans to remember May 8 not as a day of defeat, but one of liberation from Nazi tyranny.
Nevertheless, Thursday's commemoration was not taking place in "calm certainty," Steinmeier stressed.
"Today we no longer need to ask -- did May 8 liberate us?", he said. "But we must ask -- how can we remain free?"
X.Matos--PC