
-
Finished product Guirassy carrying Dortmund's hopes against Lille
-
'Beautiful' Champions League offers Arsenal chance to salvage season
-
Atletico hoping Alvarez can end Real Madrid heartbreak in Europe
-
Real Madrid's 'fantastic four' face Atletico test
-
Mikey Madison springs Oscar surprise for 'Anora'
-
Trump downplays 'worrying' over Putin rapprochement
-
Sean Baker: chronicler of sex work, Oscar winner
-
Asian markets climb on China fiscal hopes against Trump tariffs
-
Japan deploys nearly 1,700 firefighters to tackle forest blaze
-
Adrien Brody wins second Oscar for 'The Brutalist'
-
Model behaviour: India's anti-cruelty robot elephants
-
'I'm Still Here': Brazil faces past ghosts with Oscar triumph
-
Messi rests but Miami triumph in Texas
-
Pakistan's old English manners spell youth Scrabble success
-
SpaceX targeting Monday for next test of Starship megarocket
-
Zoe Saldana: from sci-fi blockbusters to Oscars glory
-
Trump's fentanyl tariffs hold wider political aims: analysts
-
'Vilified as boogeyman': Disinformation ensnares US trans pilot
-
'Flow', Latvia's trailblazing animation, wins Oscar
-
Kieran Culkin: from child actor to Oscar winner
-
Oscars begin as 'Anora,' 'Conclave' vie for top prize
-
Cavs rally to beat Blazers in overtime, push NBA win streak to 10 games
-
Oscars red carpet: 'Wicked,' white and lots of sparkle
-
Rio kicks off Carnival parades with Oscars glory on minds
-
Highsmith claims maiden PGA Tour win
-
Troubled Milan sunk at the last by Lazio as furious fans revolt
-
Stars gather for Oscars as 'Anora,' 'Conclave' vie for top prize
-
Pegula tops Kessler to capture first WTA title of 2025 in Austin
-
Gouiri, Greenwood fire Marseille to win over Nantes
-
Chile technical woes prompt latest Shakira concert postponement
-
Man Utd's goal should be Premier League glory again, says Amorim
-
US Republicans suggest Zelensky may have to step down
-
Palou begins 'three-peat' bid with victory at St. Petersburg
-
Man Utd crash out of FA Cup as Fulham win shoot-out
-
Europeans rally around Ukraine after Trump row
-
Chakravarthy gives India 'good headache' ahead of Champions Trophy semis
-
Newcastle consider appeal against Gordon red card
-
UN urges Israel to restore Gaza aid as Hamas sees 'coup' against truce
-
Pope's condition stable but complex
-
Blatter and Platini back in Swiss court in long-running legal saga
-
Barca thrash 10-man Real Sociedad to reclaim top spot
-
Chakravarthy stars as India set up Champions Trophy clash with Australia
-
Welbeck sinks Newcastle as Brighton reach FA Cup quarters
-
Israel suspends aid, strikes Gaza as Hamas sees 'coup' against truce
-
Kyiv's allies embrace Zelensky at crisis talks
-
Dele Alli makes Como squad debut for Roma clash
-
Kristoffersen completes weekend double with slalom victory
-
Iyer defies Henry to take India to 249-9 in Champions Trophy
-
Eight dead in India avalanche as rescue operation ends
-
Private US company aces lunar landing on first mission

Orsi takes office, returning Uruguay to leftist rule
Yamandu Orsi was sworn in Saturday as president of Uruguay, returning the South American country of 3.4 million to leftist governance after five years of predecessor Luis Lacalle Pou's center-right leadership.
Uruguay, one of Latin America's most prosperous and stable countries, on Saturday celebrated four decades of uninterrupted democracy.
"The good health of democracy is closely associated with the achievement of certain standards of well-being," Orsi, 57, said in a speech after his inauguration in Montevideo's Legislative Palace.
He also paid a warm tribute to his 89-year-old mentor, the beloved former president Jose "Pepe" Mujica, who campaigned for Orsi while battling esophageal cancer.
Elected to a five-year term, Orsi promised to protect Uruguay's economy, to address drug-related crime, and to pursue "sustainable and humane" development.
He is the ninth president since 1985, when a 13-year civil-military dictatorship -- blamed for the unexplained disappearances of hundreds of Uruguayans -- came to an end.
Effects from that period linger, Orsi said, adding that it was "essential to preserve the commitment to freedom, truth and justice."
There was a celebratory mood among Orsi supporters.
"We have been waiting for this for five years," 42-year-old Cecilia Riera told AFP. "The social situation in this country has fallen quite a bit, and so has security."
Orsi takes office with a 44 percent favorable opinion among voters, according to a poll by Opcion Consultores.
His swearing in was attended by delegates from more than 60 countries, and Orsi held bilateral meetings Friday with several leaders.
He also hosted the leaders of Brazil, Chile and Colombia, all leftists, at a barbecue.
Orsi will preside over a divided parliament, with his Broad Front coalition controlling only the Senate.
But analysts say his greatest problems may come from the coalition's internal tensions, testing his reputation as a talented negotiator.
Orsi will face pressure to meet social demands without increasing the budget deficit, at a time when sustained drought is cutting into growth estimates of three percent this year.
But fundamentally, said economist Arturo Porzecanski, "Orsi inherits an economy and a country whose fundamentals are very solid."
K.Brown--BTB