
-
New Zealand qualify for World Cup but Chris Wood injured
-
S. Korea authorities deploy choppers, troops to battle wildfire
-
Ingebrigtsen Sr in the dock for abuse of Olympic champ
-
West Bank Palestinians in 'extremely precarious' situation: MSF
-
'We got distracted,' says Italian star after bizarre keeper blunder
-
Brazil's Lula to build trade ties on Japan state visit
-
Ferrari despair, Lawson axe, upbeat Albon: Chinese GP talking points
-
Jimenez at the double as Mexico down Panama
-
Mozambique leader meets opposition chief to reset relations
-
South Korea court reinstates impeached PM Han as acting president
-
Asian markets fluctuate as traders prepare for 'Liberation Day'
-
Australian army gets battle-tested US long-range missiles
-
Poch backing US to come good at World Cup after Nations woe
-
Keys and Andreeva crash out of Miami Open
-
US-Russia talks on Ukraine to begin in Saudi Arabia
-
Indigenous leaders end world voyage with prayer for nature
-
Does "vibe coding" make everyone a programmer?
-
Hijacking news: Fake media sites sow Ukraine disinformation
-
Trump's US migrant hunt spares no one from deportation
-
'Love is in the air': Woods confirms Vanessa Trump romance
-
Australia rewrites plan to host 2032 Brisbane Games
-
Emotional Eala credits family for rise up WTA ranks
-
France arrests young man for suspected attack on rabbi
-
Canada down US to claim third in Nations League
-
Spain edge Netherlands on penalties, set up France Nations League semi-final
-
Portugal beat Denmark in thrilling Nations League quarter-final
-
France beat Croatia on penalties to reach Nations League semi-finals
-
Spain oust Netherlands on penalties to reach Nations League semis
-
Cavs snap four-game NBA skid by beating Jazz as Pistons win
-
Hovland ends PGA title drought with Valspar victory as Thomas fades
-
Germany survive Italy scare to make Nations League semi-finals
-
Spain's Palou wins IndyCar Thermal Club title
-
Aussie Open champ Keys crashes out to Filipino teenager
-
English football 'best in world', says Latvia boss ahead of Wembley clash
-
Hamas source says Israeli strike kills Hamas official in Gaza hospital
-
Austrian Feurstein wins men's World Cup super-G finale
-
Israel cabinet votes no confidence in attorney general
-
Swiatek into last 16 again, Dimitrov advances in Miami
-
Big-hitting Hyderabad, rock-steady Chennai register IPL wins
-
Russell stars as English Premiership rugby leaders Bath beat Gloucester
-
Vonn takes first comeback podium as Gut-Behrami wins World Cup super-G title
-
England begin Women's Six Nations title defence with dominant win over Italy
-
Ravindra, Noor help Chennai down Mumbai in IPL blockbuster
-
New 'Snow White' tops N.America box office despite grumpy reviews
-
Under threat from Trump, Canada calls snap elections for April 28
-
Aubameyang World Cup brace boosts Gabon and sinks Kenya
-
Istanbul's Imamoglu defiant after government suspends him as mayor
-
Tuchel speaks to Rashford and Foden after ineffective England displays
-
Duterte confident has 'no case' to answer at ICC: daughter
-
France's Dassault says upping Rafale warplane output

'Surf and turf' protest in Spain against factory, mine
Thousands of people on boats and on land staged a "surf and turf" protest in northwest Spain on Saturday against a planned textile factory and the reopening of a copper mine.
Protesters in the coastal city of A Pobra do Caraminal, in Spain's Galicia region, decried what they said were the environmental risks posed by both facilities.
Organisers -- who termed the rally a "surf and turf" protest -- said they had suspicions about the plans by Portuguese company Altri to build a factory to make lyocell, a semi-synthetic textile.
They said they feared it was just cover to build a cellulose plant that would pollute the region's Ulloa River and its Arousa Estuary.
The site of the factory is in Palas de Rei, close to a section of the Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage route used by hundreds of thousands of people every year.
The organisers -- calling themselves the Platform for the Defence of the Arousa Estuary -- said they also opposed the planned reopening of an open-cast copper mine in Touro, just east of the city of Santiago de Compostela. The mine was closed in 1986.
Manoel Santos, a regional representative for Greenpeace, said the Altri textile factory "could spell the death of the Arousa Estuary".
Galicia's regional government has declared the factory to be ecologically viable.
A spokeswoman for Greenfiber, Altri's subsidiary in charge of the project, denied any pollution risk. She told Galician public television that the factory "scrupulously respects all EU environmental rules".
L.Henrique--PC