
-
Italy's Sorrentino embraces doubt in euthanasia film at Venice
-
Trump urges criminal charges against George Soros, son
-
Wildfires pile pressure on Spanish PM
-
Stock markets mixed ahead of Nvidia earnings
-
Football's loss as hurdles sensation Tinch eyes Tokyo worlds
-
Pakistan blows up dam embankment as it braces for flood surge
-
Lego posts record sales, sees market share growing further: CEO
-
France overlook Ekitike for World Cup qualifiers, Akliouche called up
-
Rain no obstacle, Lyles insists ahead of Diamond League finals
-
Almodovar urges Spain cut ties with Israel over Gaza
-
Macron gives 'full support' to embattled PM as crisis looms in France
-
Stock markets diverge awaiting Nvidia earnings
-
German cabinet agrees steps to boost army recruitment
-
Denmark summons US diplomat over Greenland 'interference'
-
German factory outfitters warn of 'crisis' from US tariffs
-
Israel ups pressure on Gaza City as Trump eyes post-war plan
-
Floods, landslides kill at least 30 in India's Jammu region
-
Former player comes out as bisexual in Australian Rules first
-
Indian spin great Ashwin calls time on IPL career
-
India faces world football ban for second time in three years
-
Globetrotter Herzog to get special Venice award
-
'Old things work': Argentines giving new life to e-waste
-
Showtime for Venice Film Festival, with monsters, aliens, Clooney and Roberts
-
Thai woman jailed for 43 years for lese-majeste freed
-
What is swatting? Shooting hoaxes target campuses across US
-
Row over Bosnia's Jewish treasure raising funds for Gaza
-
Police search Australian bush for gunman after two officers killed
-
NZ rugby player who suffered multiple concussions dies aged 39
-
Former Australian Rules player comes out as bisexual in first
-
French, German, Polish leaders to visit Moldova in show of force in face of Russia
-
US tariffs on Indian goods double to 50% over Russian oil purchases
-
Feudal warlord statue beheaded in Japan
-
Tokyo logs record 10 days of 35C or more
-
Sinner, Swiatek romp through at US Open as Gauff struggles
-
Brazil to face South Korea, Japan in World Cup build-up
-
Asian markets diverge with eyes on Nvidia earnings
-
Osaka out to recapture sparkle at US Open
-
China's rulers push party role before WWII anniversary
-
Pakistan's monsoon misery: nature's fury, man's mistake
-
SpaceX answers critics with successful Starship test flight
-
Nightlife falls silent as Ecuador's narco gangs take charge
-
Unnamed skeletons? US museum at center of ethical debate
-
France returns skull of beheaded king to Madagascar
-
SpaceX's Starship megarocket launches on latest test flight
-
Formerra Appointed Distributor for Italy's Epaflex TPU Lines in the UK & Ireland
-
US restaurant chain Cracker Barrel cracks, revives old logo
-
Brazil's Bolsonaro placed under 24-hour watch ahead of coup trial verdict
-
Taylor-Travis love story: 5 things to know
-
Sports world congratulates Swift and Kelce on engagement
-
Wolves inflict more woe on West Ham, Leeds crash out League Cup

Taliban arrest IS 'mastermind' of Afghan mosque attack: police
Taliban forces have arrested a suspected Islamic State militant who planned a bomb attack that killed at least 12 worshippers at a Shiite mosque in Afghanistan, police said on Friday.
IS claimed the bomb blast that tore through the Seh Dokan mosque during midday prayers in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif on Thursday.
The attack also wounded 58 people.
Balkh province's police spokesman Asif Waziri said Abdul Hamid Sangaryar was a key operative of IS.
"He was the mastermind of yesterday's attack on the mosque," Waziri told AFP. The interior ministry also reported the arrest of Sangaryar, an Afghan national.
"He played a key role in several attacks in the past and had repeatedly managed to escape, but this time we arrested him in a special operation," Waziri said.
IS also claimed a separate bomb attack in another northern city of Kunduz on Thursday that killed four people and wounded 18 people.
The group has taken responsibility for deadly attacks in Afghanistan, often against Shiite targets, even as the number of bombings have fallen since the Taliban seized power in August last year.
Shiite Afghans are mostly from the ethnic Hazara community and make up between 10 and 20 percent of the country's 38 million people. They have long been the target of the IS, who consider them heretics.
Earlier this week, at least six people were killed in twin blasts that hit a boys' school in a Shiite neighbourhood of Kabul.
No group has so far claimed that attack.
Taliban officials insist their forces have defeated IS, but analysts say the jihadist group is a key security challenge.
The Taliban have regularly raided suspected IS hideouts, especially in eastern Nangarhar province -- a bastion of the Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K), the local wing of the jihadist group.
The biggest ideological difference between the two Sunni Islamist groups is that the Taliban sought only an Afghanistan free of foreign forces, whereas IS wants an Islamic caliphate stretching from Turkey to Pakistan and beyond.
D.Schneider--BTB