
-
Medvedev tops Paul to reach quarter-finals at rainy Indian Wells
-
Thailand sacks senior cop over illicit gambling, fraud
-
Pakistan launches 'full-scale' operation to free train hostages
-
What to know about Manus, China's latest AI assistant
-
Ukraine's Svitolina feels the love in US after Trump-Zelensky dust up
-
US tariffs of 25% on steel, aluminum imports take effect
-
Trove of dinosaur footprints found at Australian school
-
Mongolia's children choke in toxic pollution
-
Rubio heads to Canada as Trump wages trade war
-
South Korean pastor vows revolt against Yoon's impeachment
-
Pakistan to launch 'full-scale' operation to free train hostages
-
Syria determined to 'prevent unlawful revenge' says fact-finding committee
-
Most Asian stocks drop as Trump trade policy sows uncertainty
-
Morocco fights measles outbreak amid vaccine misinformation
-
Garland stars as comeback Cavs bag 15th straight with defeat of Nets
-
Hamilton eyes dream Ferrari start as F1 revs up in Melbourne
-
Talk of the town: Iconic covers of the New Yorker magazine
-
The New Yorker, a US institution, celebrates 100 years of goings on
-
Cuban kids resist reggaeton, one verse at a time
-
NASA fires chief scientist, more Trump cuts to come
-
Denmark's Rune ready to break out of tennis doldrums
-
Transformed PSG make statement by ousting Liverpool from Champions League
-
PSG down Liverpool on penalties in Champions League, Bayern thrash Leverkusen
-
Liverpool 'ran out of luck' against PSG, says Slot
-
Swiatek surges into quarter-finals at rainy Indian Wells, Rune tops Tsitsipas
-
PSG stun Liverpool on penalties to make Champions League quarters
-
PSG beat Liverpool on penalties to reach Champions League quarter-finals
-
Inter cruise into Champions League quarters and titanic Bayern clash
-
Trump has 'bolstered' PGA-LIV reunification talks: Monahan
-
Kane leads Bayern past Leverkusen into Champions League last eight
-
Defending champ Swiatek surges into quarter-finals at rainy Indian Wells
-
Piastri signs long-term extension with McLaren
-
Trump talks up Tesla in White House show of support for Musk
-
US trades barbs with Canada as steel, aluminum tariffs loom
-
Oil companies greet Trump return, muted on tariffs
-
Italian defence firm Leonardo to boost capacity amid geopolitical risks
-
Over 100 hostages freed in deadly Pakistan train siege
-
Ukraine backs 30-day ceasefire as US ends aid freeze
-
Swiatek powers into Indian Wells quarter-finals
-
Tiger Woods has surgery for ruptured Achilles tendon
-
Trump burnishes Tesla at White House in show of support for Musk
-
Macron urges allies to plan 'credible security guarantees' for Ukraine
-
Yamal, Raphinha fire Barca past Benfica into Champions League last eight
-
Trump may rethink plans to double Canada steel, aluminum tariffs
-
Maradona medical team on trial for 'horror theater' of his death
-
UK makes manslaughter arrest of ship captain over North Sea crash
-
Ukraine backs US proposal for 30-day ceasefire in war with Russia
-
Mitrovic misses AFC Champions League clash due to irregular heart beat
-
Trump's 'The Apprentice' re-runs hit Amazon
-
Dozens freed, hundreds still held hostage in deadly Pakistan train siege

Fate of Ukraine's Soledar uncertain as Wagner claims control
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday fighting was still raging in a key eastern frontline city that a Russian mercenary group earlier said it controlled, as Moscow announced a new military commander in Ukraine.
The fate of Soledar in eastern Ukraine was uncertain after Russian group Wagner claimed it controlled the gateway town -- but the Kremlin cautioned against declaring victory prematurely.
And in his daily address, Zelensky insisted that the front was "holding".
"The terrorist state and its propagandists are trying to pretend" to have achieved some successes in Soledar, Zelensky said, "but the fighting continues".
Both Moscow and Kyiv have said the battle for Soledar has been long and brutal. If it did fall to Moscow's forces, that would mark Russia's first significant territorial gain in Ukraine in months.
The war-battered salt mining town in the eastern Donetsk region lies some 15 kilometres (nine miles) from Bakhmut, a larger urban hub that Russia has been trying to seize.
The head of Wagner group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, claimed Wednesday that his forces had "taken control of the whole territory of Soledar" while "urban battles" were fought in the city centre.
Russian state news agency RIA Novosti published a photo it said had been taken in the salt mines of Soledar showing Prigozhin with armed fighters.
The Ukrainian military said the pictures were taken elsewhere.
And the Russian defence ministry urged caution, saying it was best to wait for "official announcements".
On the road between Bakhmut and the city of Sloviansk further west, a wounded Ukrainian soldier waiting to be evacuated said fighting in Soledar was the toughest his brigade has seen.
But "nobody is planning to give up the city," the 27-year-old, who goes by the nom de guerre Bober (Beaver), told AFP.
- New Russian commander -
Moscow meanwhile announced it had put army chief of staff Valery Gerasimov in charge of the Ukraine conflict.
Sergei Surovikin -- the commander of Russia's forces in Ukraine for the past three months -- will become Gerasimov's deputy, the defence ministry announced Wednesday.
Analysts say that the competing statements around Soledar point to in-fighting among the Russian forces, who have been trying to capture the whole of Ukraine's eastern Donbas region since failing to take Kyiv last year.
Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhaylo Podolyak told AFP he believed Russia was suffering "enormous" losses in the battle for the town, but conceded that the Ukrainian side was also seeing casualties.
The fighting there and in neighbouring Bakhmut is the "bloodiest" of the war so far, he said.
Earlier this week Zelensky said Soledar had been flattened by fighting and that everything was "completely destroyed."
On Wednesday, the president also said he had visited the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, near the border with EU member Poland, for talks on coordination and "border protection" -- including the situation on Ukraine's northern frontier with Belarus.
A close ally of Moscow, Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko allowed Russian troops to use his country as a launchpad for their invasion in February.
- Poland willing to send tanks -
After Belarus announced the establishment of a joint force with Moscow in the autumn, there had been fears of a frontline opening in the north. The fighting is currently concentrated in the east and south.
In the southern region of Kherson on Wednesday, an exploding Russian shell started a fire at a maternity ward.
"A powerful blast wave knocked out windows in the children's ward and damaged one of the doctors' offices," regional governor Yaroslav Yanushevych said, adding that one employee was injured.
In the east, Russian strikes targeted Ukraine's second city Kharkiv on Tuesday, in the wake of a surprise visit by German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock.
Baerbock vowed further German support for Kyiv but her Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba, who accompanied her, said Berlin's refusal to send Kyiv battle tanks was costing lives.
Separately, Poland's President Andrzej Duda said Wednesday Warsaw was ready to send Leopard tanks to Ukraine, but "within an international coalition".
K.Thomson--BTB