
-
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
-
Vine claims solo Vuelta stage six victory, Traen takes lead
-
Emma Stone stars in apocalyptic satire at Venice Film Festival
-
England skipper Aldcroft to miss rest of Women's Rugby World Cup pool phase
-
Norris sees others closing gap with dominant McLaren
-
UK govt seeks to overturn ban on housing migrants in hotel
-
Europe powers move to Iran sanctions 'snapback' over nuclear drive
-
Russian attack kills 18 in Kyiv, unleashes new international fury
-
'Ruins': Pakistan's Punjab reels from flood surge
-
Struggling Hamilton aims to rediscover the joy
-
Europe powers move to reimpose UN sanctions on Iran over nuclear drive
-
US Fed Governor Lisa Cook sues Trump over move to fire her
-
Froome hospitalised after training crash in France
-
Russian attack kills 17 in Kyiv, unleashes new internatioinal fury
-
Prince Harry to visit UK on anniversary of queen's death
-
'Something has to change', says Amorim after United humiliation
-
Stocks mixed after Nvidia record earnings
-
Actor Micheal Ward in UK court on rape charges
-
EU summons Russian envoy after mission damaged in Kyiv strike
-
Deadly Russian attack kills 15 in Kyiv, raising fears for peace talks
-
Swiss court rejects Islamic scholar Ramadan's rape conviction appeal
-
Russian attack kills 14 in Kyiv, including three children
-
Swiss economy set to slow due to US tariffs
-
Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai verdict to come 'in good time': judge
-
Swiss court rejects Tariq Ramadan rape conviction appeal
-
Asian markets mixed after Nvidia earnings
-
Rising Australian golfer makes comeback after losing sight in left eye
-
Scandal facing sister of Argentina's president: 3 things to know
-
Need a pee? Japan has QR code for that
-
Five things to know about Guyana
-
Guyana, emerging oil superpower, elects new leaders

On the trail of the dead in a Ukrainian village
There is a rhythm to the way the bodies are collected in the Ukrainian village of Andriivka.
A yellow question mark is sprayed on a home. The police arrive with a crew to dig out the shallow grave. Then the relatives are confronted with the remains of their kin.
Some are stoic and resigned -- the body is just the remnants and their loved one is long gone. Others dash to touch the corpse, as if trying to awake it from slumber.
On Monday, AFP saw the bodies of three men in civilian clothes exhumed from gardens in Andriivka, 33 kilometres (20 miles) west of the capital, Kyiv.
They were Ruslan Yaremchuk, 46, Leonid Bondarenko, 68, and Yuriy Kravchennia, 46, according to relatives, neighbours and ID documents.
A village official said three other bodies had already been excavated earlier in the day.
Andriivka -- home to around 2,000 before the war -- was occupied by invading Russian forces during their month-long northern offensive to take Kyiv.
All the men were buried by their fellow Ukrainians. But villagers say they were killed by Russians.
- Ruslan Yaremchuk -
They buried Yaremchuk in a garden behind a modest white cottage, his head pointing towards a rusted wheelbarrow.
Now the body, its arms spread high, is being pried from the earth again by a three-man team.
Yaremchuk's final outfit was a blue cableknit jumper, jeans and grey hiking boots. On his right hand is a handsome silver ring.
Neighbour Viktor Haniuk knew his first name only -- Ruslan -- but he buried him in this patch of green with the help of another local.
As the exhumation continues, nearby police scribe a report in the margins of a diploma that reveals his surname. Yaremchuk studied electrical engineering at the Kyiv Polytechnic Institute, it seems.
On the doorstep of the cottage are three open ration packs. As Russians swept in, the packs were airdropped for troops.
"This man went to steal them," says 42-year-old Haniuk. "Most likely he was shot for these rations."
He said his neighbour was shot "behind the ear". Yaremchuk is zipped inside a body bag and the police team continue their rounds.
- Leonid Bondarenko -
Next is Bondarenko. He was buried by the spring bulbs in the front plot of a pink cottage. There is a floral-wreathed cross above the makeshift grave. It marks the date he died -- March 6, 2022.
His body is parcelled in a patterned blue duvet. Three workers pull him out of the ground, revealing his blood-streaked head.
His son Oleksandr, 39, loiters outside the gates of the house with resigned unease.
His father was killed in shelling and a neighbour buried him a few days later.
"I don't know how we ordinary people are meant to respond to this. They destroyed the whole village," Oleksandr says.
His father's body is the fifth of the day so far and there are more still waiting to be tended.
"What am I supposed to feel when it's civilians, not soliders, who were killed?" asks 25-year-old police officer Artem Yeliseyev.
"Today we saw a man who was 30 and a man who was almost 70," he says.
"They are both murdered. It's difficult for me to talk about my feelings."
- Yuriy Kravchennia -
Kravchennia is in the ground past a wrecked home. As he is pulled from the earth, his wife Olesia howls with anguish from inside the ruins.
She peers over a garden fence and sees her husband -- wearing an orange and brown striped sweater -- tugged from the dirt, feet first.
His corpse has been covered by corrugated plastic and his face is an eerie pale green.
Olesia rushes to him but her legs give way and she is guided to a log. Yuriy was shot in the street with his hands up in surrender, she stammers through her grief.
"I'm hanging on. I'm hanging on. This is the 41st day he's been gone and I am crying. I can't go on without him."
Neighbour Tetiana Yermakova, 53, comes to comfort her.
She is also a widow. Her husband Igor, 54, is buried in the next-door garden. The women lean into each other in a prolonged embrace.
Igor was taken by Russian soldiers on March 2, his sister-in-law Ludmyla Oleksiyenko says. Two days later they found him out by the electrical pylons.
He had been messaging information about the Russian presence to other Ukrainians.
"They only said that there was somebody lying there. They said 'Go and see for yourself if it's yours'," 63-year-old Oleksiyenko recalls.
"His hands were tied with a rope," she says. "It was a thick rope. The hands were blue. Behind his back."
"We pulled it with my sister across the road to the garden here. We pulled the body because we needed to bury it. We dug the pit by ourselves, the two of us. There are no words to express that."
Now he is interred under an immense mound of mud in the back garden.
The Russians dumped the soil on the spot where he was buried when they dug a gaping trench, now littered with ammunition boxes.
His body will be the seventh of the day, if the villagers can find the strength to move the earth.
M.Ouellet--BTB