-
All-in on AI: what TikTok creator ByteDance did next
-
Canada PM visits memorial for mass shooting victims as new details emerge
-
Healthy Ohtani has Cy Young Award in sights
-
One of Lima's top beaches to close Sunday over pollution
-
'Nothing is impossible': Shaidorov shocks favourite Malinin to make history
-
Malinin wilts at Olympics as Heraskevych loses ban appeal
-
Bhatia joins Hisatsune in Pebble Beach lead as Fowler surges
-
Malinin meltdown hands Shaidorov Olympic men's figure skating gold
-
Top seed Fritz makes ATP Dallas semis with fantastic finish
-
Patriots star receiver Diggs pleads not guilty to assault charges
-
Havana refinery fire under control as Cuba battles fuel shortages
-
Peru Congress to debate impeachment of interim president on Tuesday
-
Snowboard veteran James targets 2030 Games after Olympic heartbreak
-
Costa Rica digs up mastodon, giant sloth bones in major archaeological find
-
Trump says change of power in Iran would be 'best thing'
-
Ukrainian skeleton racer Heraskevych loses appeal against Olympic ban
-
Paris police shoot dead knife man at Arc de Triomphe
-
Japan's Totsuka wins Olympic halfpipe thriller to deny James elusive gold
-
Canada's PM due in mass shooting town as new details emerge
-
Neto treble fires Chelsea's FA Cup rout of Hull
-
Arbitrator rules NFL union 'report cards' must stay private
-
Dortmund thump Mainz to close in on Bayern
-
WHO sets out concerns over US vaccine trial in G.Bissau
-
Skeleton racer Weston wins Olympic gold for Britain
-
Ex-CNN anchor pleads not guilty to charges from US church protest
-
Berlin premiere for pic on jazz piano legend Bill Evans
-
Fire at refinery in Havana as Cuba battles fuel shortages
-
A Friday night concert in Kyiv to 'warm souls'
-
PSG stunned by rampant Rennes, giving Lens chance to move top
-
Japan's Totsuka wins Olympic halfpipe thriller as James misses out on gold
-
Indian writer Roy pulls out of Berlin Film Festival over Gaza row
-
Conflicts turning on civilians, warns Red Cross chief
-
Europe calls for US reset at security talks
-
Peru leader under investigation for influence peddling
-
Rising star Mboko sets up Qatar Open final against Muchova
-
Canada PM to mourn with grieving town, new details emerge on shooter
-
US waives Venezuela oil sanctions as Trump says expects to visit
-
NBA star Chris Paul retires at age 40 after 21 seasons
-
WTO chief urges China to shift on trade surplus
-
Vonn hoping to return to USA after fourth surgery on broken leg
-
Trump sending second aircraft carrier to pile pressure on Iran
-
Heraskevych loses Olympics disqualification appeal, Malinin eyes second gold
-
Mercedes have 'taken a step back': Russell
-
Madagascar cyclone death toll rises to 40, water, power still out
-
Earl says England inspired by last year's Calcutta Cup
-
USA romp past Dutch in T20 World Cup to keep Super Eight hopes alive
-
De Minaur scraps past local legend van de Zandschulp
-
Ukrainian Heraskevych loses appeal against Olympics disqualification
-
Ghana rallies round traditional tunic after foreign mockery
-
Forest set to hire former Wolves boss Pereira: reports
Vuelta hit by protests again, Bernal wins stage
Stage 16 of the Vuelta a Espana was shortened by eight kilometres on Tuesday because of a "big protest" close to the finish, race organisers said.
Pro-Palestinian protests have affected several stages of cycling's third-biggest grand tour, with stage 11 neutralised before the finish in Bilbao last week with no winner declared due to demonstrators disrupting the run-in.
This time there was a finish line quickly set up by race organisers, with Egan Bernal crossing it first ahead of Mikel Landa, with Brieuc Rolland third.
Two-time Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard retains his general classification lead, 48 seconds up on Joao Almeida.
Tuesday's stage had been due to run 168 kilometres from Poio to Castro de Herville, before it was shortened.
Spanish cyclist Javier Romo abandoned the race during stage 16 just days after a crash amid a disturbance caused by a pro-Palestinian protestor.
The 26-year-old Movistar rider fell in Sunday's 15th stage when a protestor emerged from bushes, lunged towards cyclists and slipped, with a police officer running from the other side of the road to try and intercept him.
In the confusion, Romo fell from his bicycle and then appeared to run after the protestor before returning to his bike and finishing the stage.
On Tuesday morning before starting Romo said he had suffered "only bruises" from the incident but was "not feeling very well, mentally or physically".
In further disruption, a tree was discovered lying across the road at the foot of the penultimate categorised climb up to Alto de Prado, pictures on social media showed.
Organisers cleared the road long before cyclists arrived to the area.
Protestors are mainly targeting the Israel-Premier Tech team, owned by Israeli-Canadian property developer Sylvan Adams.
The team is a private outfit and not a state team but was last week hailed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for continuing to compete at the Vuelta despite the vehement protests.
The governments of Spain and Israel have been increasingly at loggerheads over the war in Gaza, which Madrid has described as a genocide.
Israel launched its Gaza offensive in October 2023 in retaliation for an unprecedented cross-border attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.
Israel's bombardment has killed at least 64,605 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations says are reliable.
On Wednesday stage 17 takes riders 143 kilometres from El Barco de Valdeorras to the Alto de El Morredero in Ponferrada.
J.Pereira--PC