
-
Celtic and Rangers seek Old Firm tonic for Champions League trauma
-
Aussie Rules player latest found with concussion-linked brain disease
-
Zelensky urges more Western pressure on Putin after deadly Russian attack
-
US ends tariff exemption for small packages shipped globally
-
Asia stocks mixed after Wall St hits new highs
-
Cash-strapped Taliban look to airspace for windfall
-
Biles' presence helps Gauff win US Open crying game
-
'Female power': Japan erotic art destigmatised in new exhibit
-
Olympic marathon champion Hassan opts for Sydney ahead of worlds
-
Atletico already playing catch-up after poor La Liga start
-
Lyon find cause for optimism after turbulent summer
-
Sinner on the march as tearful Gauff, Swiatek toil at US Open
-
Julia Roberts to make Venice debut in cancel culture drama
-
Big numbers set to remain a feature of Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Families lose hope for Salvadorans held in gang crackdown
-
Trump thumbs nose at decades of India courtship
-
Gauff wins crying game to reach US Open third round
-
Arsenal seek statement win at Liverpool, Amorim faces Burnley must-win
-
Cowboys trade Parsons to Packers in blockbuster NFL deal
-
Venezuela revives heroes with AI to spur reservists on US 'threat'
-
Solskjaer sacked by Besiktas after European flop
-
Froome to undergo surgery after breaking back in training crash
-
US targets Venezuela over 'Soles' cartel. Does it exist?
-
Coe hails 'overwhelming support' for gene testing ahead of Tokyo worlds
-
Solskjaer fired by Besiktas after Conference League failure, Palace squeeze through
-
Osaka slams Ostapenko rant in US Open 'racism' storm
-
US church shooter 'obsessed with idea of killing children'
-
US stocks reach new peaks as investors digest US GDP
-
US approves $825 mn missile sale to Ukraine
-
Rubio to visit Mexico, Ecuador next week to discuss migration, China: US
-
Lyles edges Tebogo in Zurich thriller in perfect Tokyo boost
-
Lyles trumps Tebogo in Zurich, Alfred shines
-
Arsenal optimistic about Havertz return after knee surgery
-
Pressure-free Wong relishing US Open adventure
-
RFK Jr bashes US health agency after its chief is sacked
-
Swiatek wobbles at US Open as Sinner targets third round
-
Alfred storms to 100m victory at Diamond League finals
-
Bison herds 'reawaken' Yellowstone's prairies
-
RFK Jr bashes US health agency after firing its chief
-
Swiatek labours into US Open third round
-
UN sets 2027 exit for Lebanon peacekeepers after Israeli strikes
-
Brazil police target network that siphoned billions from fuel sector
-
Liverpool and Man City face Real Madrid in Champions League, PSG get tough draw
-
'Strangest' dinosaur covered in spiked armoury: scientists
-
UN Security Council votes for Lebanon peacekeepers to leave in 2027
-
Badminton federation smoothes feathers ruffled by shuttlecock shortage
-
Luxury carmaker Lotus to slash UK jobs amid US tariffs
-
Small parcels in limbo as Trump moves to end US tariff exemption
-
Russian attack killing 19 in Kyiv unleashes international fury
-
UN chief condemns 'endless' Gaza horrors as Israel presses offensive

Israeli police say kill gunman who shot dead two in Tel Aviv
Israeli police said Friday they had shot dead a Palestinian gunman who had killed two people and wounded several others in Tel Aviv sparking an overnight manhunt, the latest in a surge of violence.
"We succeeded this morning... in eliminating the terrorist by exchange of fire," police commissioner Yaakov Shabtai said in a statement.
The attacker had shot at revellers at a bar on the busy Dizengoff Street in the coastal city of Tel Aviv just after 9:00pm (1800 GMT) Thursday, triggering chaos as people fled in panic.
The Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, and the Islamic Jihad, praised the attack.
Israel's Shin Bet security agency named the assailant as Raad Hazem, 28, from Jenin in the north of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Special forces found the attacker "hiding near a mosque in Jaffa", referring to the historically Arab quarter of Tel Aviv, according to the Shin Bet.
Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett praised the security forces for their response.
"We maintain maximum alertness, within Tel Aviv and throughout the country, for fear of further incidents or imitation attacks," Bennett said.
"Our war on murderous terrorism is long and hard. We will win."
- 'A nightmare' -
The Magen David Adom medical emergency service said 16 people had been taken to hospital, including "two dead, four seriously wounded," and adding it remained "on high alert".
Tel Aviv's Ichilov Hospital, which was treating eight people injured in the shooting, said Friday morning that one of the victims was "in critical condition with an immediate risk to his life".
Immediately after the attack, police had closed roads and ordered public transport shut down as they hunted for the suspect, with more than 1,000 officers and Israeli soldiers deployed.
Heavily armed forces roamed the streets lined with cocktail bars and fashion boutiques, as the city's normally bustling roads were emptied.
Noa Roberts, 21, who works at a bar across the street from the attack, said she heard dozens of bullets as terrified customers and staff scurried to shelter.
"We all ran in the back, it was so scary," Roberts said. "You hear real shooting, it was like a nightmare."
She said 50 people cowered for two hours until police told them they could leave.
"My boss has a gun and he joined the police to help them," she added.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken condemned the "terrorist attack" and said Washington stood with Israel "in the face of senseless terrorism and violence."
- 'High alert' -
On Thursday night, Islamic Jihad "welcomed" the attack as a "natural response" to Israel's "crimes", including a recent raid on the West Bank city of Jenin, where the alleged attacker was from.
One of its leaders, Yussef al-Hasainah, said: "It confirms that the resistance can penetrate the security system... and that the resistance will continue and that it is the best choice to deter the arrogant enemy".
The Hamas militant Islamist group that controls the Gaza Strip also praised the attack.
"Hamas congratulates the heroic operation... in the middle of so-called Tel Aviv, which led to the killing of a number of occupying soldiers and Zionist settlers," it said in a statement.
This was the fourth fatal attack in Israeli cities in two weeks, with 13 victims killed in the violence.
On March 29, a Palestinian gunman -- also from the Jenin area, like Raad Hazem who was killed on Friday -- opened fire with an M-16 assault rifle in Bnei Brak, a Jewish mostly ultra-Orthodox city near Tel Aviv.
He killed two Ukrainian men and two Israeli civilians. An Arab-Israeli officer died of wounds sustained in an ensuing gunfight that also killed the assailant.
In response to that attack, Israeli troops raided the northern West Bank, killing three fighters from Islamic Jihad in gun battles.
On March 22, a convicted Islamic State group sympathiser killed four Israelis in a stabbing and car-ramming spree in the southern city of Beersheba, before police killed the attacker, a Bedouin citizen of Israel.
The Tel Aviv attack also came with Israeli police on alert for the first Friday prayers of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan at Al-Aqsa Mosque in annexed east Jerusalem.
Last year, nightly demonstrations in Jerusalem and the Al-Aqsa compound escalated into 11 days of war between Israel and Hamas.
C.Kovalenko--BTB