
-
Sinner swamps Auger-Aliassime in Cincinnati power display
-
California to change election maps to counter Texas, governor says
-
Apple Watch gets revamped blood oxygen feature
-
Trump vows not to be intimidated ahead of Putin summit
-
Dueling interests for Trump and Putin at Alaska summit
-
Global plastic pollution treaty talks in a 'haze'
-
Bristol sign Wales wing Rees-Zammit after NFL dream ends
-
Gauff cruises into Cincinnati quarter-final with Paolini
-
Apple rejects Musk claim of App Store bias
-
Searchers seek missing after deadly Italy migrant shipwreck
-
Air Canada cancels flights over strike threat
-
Trump turns history on head with Putin invitation to key US base
-
Gauff dominates Bronzetti to reach Cincinnati last eight
-
UN warns Russia, Israel of conflict sex crimes listing risk
-
Flood kills 46 in Indian Kashmir mountain village
-
Germany sacks rail chief with train network in crisis
-
Trump says Putin summit could fail, promises Ukraine say
-
Lyles v Thompson in re-run of Olympic 100m final in Silesia
-
LA 2028 to sell venue name rights in Olympic first
-
Solomon Islands says China not influencing diplomatic decisions
-
Flood kills 37 in Indian Kashmir mountain village
-
US stocks drop as producer inflation surges
-
Greenpeace stages Anish Kapoor art protest on UK gas platform
-
US producer inflation highest in three years in July
-
Greek firefighters beat back wildfires
-
Serbia's political crisis escalates into clashes
-
Australia recall O'Connor to face champions South Africa
-
Kremlin says Putin, Trump to hold 'one-on-one' talks in Alaska
-
Stocks diverge as bitcoin hits record high
-
Spain suffers third wildfire death, Greece beats back flames
-
Liverpool 'agree deal' for Parma prospect Leoni
-
Foreign NGOs say new Israeli rules keep them from delivering Gaza aid
-
Japan's grand tea master Sen Genshitsu dies at 102: reports
-
Water shortages plague Beirut as low rainfall compounds woes
-
Germany's Thyssenkrupp cuts targets as US tariffs weigh
-
Brady didn't understand football, says Rooney after 'work ethic' jibe
-
Greek firefighters make progress against wildfires
-
UK economy slows less than feared after tariffs
-
Markets mixed as bitcoin hits new high
-
PSG begin French title defence as Pogba returns home and Paris FC step up
-
At least 40 dead in Sudan's worst cholera outbreak in years: MSF
-
Zelensky in London to meet PM ahead of US-Russia summit
-
French dictionary gets bad rap over Congolese banana leaf dish
-
Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia
-
Last chance saloon for global plastic pollution treaty
-
India to bid for Commonwealth Games as part of Olympic push
-
North Korea denies removing border loudspeakers
-
Despite risks, residents fight to protect Russian national park
-
Asian markets mixed as bitcoin surges to new high
-
War-weary Ukrainians find solace by frontline lake

Medicine Prize opens Nobel week clouded by war
Breast cancer discoveries and mRNA vaccines are seen as possible winners when the Nobel Medicine Prize kicks off a week of winner announcements on Monday, with this year's awards held under the shadow of war in Europe.
Established more than 120 years ago before Europe was ravaged by two world wars, the Nobel prizes will celebrate those who have "conferred the greatest benefit on mankind" after a year marked by bloodshed and devastation in Ukraine.
The Medicine Prize will be announced around 11:30 am (0930 GMT) in Stockholm on Monday, followed by the awards for physics on Tuesday, chemistry on Wednesday and literature on Thursday.
The Peace Prize, the most highly anticipated of the awards and the only one announced in Oslo, will follow on Friday, with the Economics Prize wrapping things up on October 10.
For medicine, one woman's name keeps popping up among prize watchers: US geneticist Mary-Claire King, who in 1990 discovered the BRCA1 gene responsible for a hereditary form of breast cancer.
She could be honoured together with oncologists Dennis Slamon of the United States and Germany's Axel Ullrich for their research, which led to the development of the breast cancer drug Herceptin.
However, if the jury were to break with its tradition of honouring decades-old research, another woman could be well placed for her role in fighting the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Male domination -
Already honoured by almost all other major medicine prizes, Hungarian-born Katalin Kariko could win for her pioneering research which led directly to the first mRNA vaccines to fight Covid-19, made by Pfizer and Moderna.
"There's not only the direct benefit that it gave us to fight the pandemic, it's also the first in a series of very promising applications using this technology," Nobel watcher Ulrika Bjorksten, the head of Swedish public radio's science service, told AFP.
Kariko could be honoured together with her collaborator Drew Weissman of the United States and Pieter Cullis of Canada.
Last year, the prize went to US researchers David Julius and Ardem Patapoutian for their discoveries on human receptors for temperature and touch.
David Pendlebury, who heads the closely watched Clarivate analytics group which lists dozens of possible winners for the Nobel science prizes, said his money was on King and Slamon this year.
But he also mentioned Hong Kong molecular biologist Yuk Ming Dennis Lo, who pioneered the development of non-invasive prenatal testing.
He also developed a new method of detecting cancer early using just a few drops of blood, dubbed liquid biopsies.
With a simple blood draw "you can determine all kinds of possible problems and diseases", Pendlebury said.
Male researchers based in the United States have overwhelmingly dominated the Nobel science prizes through the years.
The various prize committees have insisted they are trying to recognise women's achievements, but say many of the top discoveries were made decades ago when fewer women were involved in high-level research.
Last year, 12 men and one woman won Nobel Prizes, with all of the science nods going to men.
- Anti-Putin prizes? -
For the Literature Prize on Thursday, literary critics told AFP they thought the Swedish Academy may go for a more mainstream author this year, after selecting lesser-known writers the past two years.
Last year, Tanzanian author Abdulrazak Gurnah won, while US poet Louise Gluck was crowned in 2020.
US novelist Joyce Carol Oates, France's Annie Ernaux and Maryse Conde, Russia's Lyudmila Ulitskaya and Canada's Margaret Atwood have all been cited as potential laureates if the committee has its eyes on a woman.
Online betting sites however have France's Michel Houellebecq as the favourite, ahead of British author Salman Rushdie, who was the victim of an attempted murder attack in August.
But it is the Peace Prize that is expected to hold special significance this year.
After Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov won the prize last year together with his Philippine colleague Maria Ressa in the name of freedom of expression, will the Norwegian Nobel Committee award another anti-Putin prize after Moscow's invasion of Ukraine?
Not since World War II has a conflict raged between two countries so close to Oslo.
The International Criminal Court, tasked with investigating war crimes in Ukraine, and the International Court of Justice -- both based in The Hague -- have been mentioned as possible laureates this year.
So have jailed Russian dissident Alexei Navalny and Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya.
If the committee were to focus on the climate crisis, experts tipped Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, possibly together with British environmentalist David Attenborough or other activists such as Sudan's Nisreen Elsaim and Ghana's Chibeze Ezekiel.
bur-map-aco-phy/po/imm
W.Lapointe--BTB