
-
England's Kildunne getting extra kick at World Cup
-
Norris bounces back to top final Baku practice
-
'Shocked, devastated': Gaza City assault leaves Palestinians traumatised, scrambling
-
Macron takes risk with Palestinian statehood recognition
-
Swiatek shrugs off double duty to reach Korea Open
-
Zelensky says will meet Trump next week as Russia intensifies attacks
-
Triple Olympic heptathlon champion Nafissatou Thiam drops out at worlds
-
Third soccer player killed in Ecuador in September
-
Europe lead Team World 3-1 after Laver Cup Day 1
-
Australia telco outage leaves three dead
-
LA pitching icon Kershaw feels the love in last Dodger Stadium start
-
Bumper harvest falls flat for Italy's Asti vineyards
-
Israel boycott calls spread as celebs and artists speak out
-
Elderly British couple to fly home after release by Taliban
-
Fonseca claws back point for Team World in Laver Cup
-
Pitching icon Kershaw feels the love in last Dodger Stadium start
-
Donald says Europe ready to handle US Ryder Cup pressure
-
Bradley: Ryder Cup's Scheffler like NBA's Jordan or NFL's Brady
-
Trump adds intensity to USA-Europe Ryder Cup showdown
-
Hodgkinson, Mahuchikh headline final day of Tokyo worlds
-
Trump hits H-1B visas, a tech industry favorite, with $100,000 fee
-
Pogacar challenge delights Evenepoel for Rwanda world championships
-
How much progress has been made against Alzheimer's disease?
-
Europe takes Laver Cup lead as Alcaraz waits in wings
-
Central Park horse-drawn carriages face ride into the sunset
-
Schmelzel, Katsu share LPGA NW Arkansas Championship lead
-
Perez strikes double world gold with second race walk victory
-
Malawi ruling party claims tampering in vote count
-
UN chief says world should not be intimidated by Israel
-
UN chief warns 1.5C warming goal at risk of 'collapsing'
-
Canada coach Rouet only has eyes for World Cup glory after dethroning New Zealand
-
Trump-backed panel sows doubt over Covid-19 shots
-
Germany World Cup winner Boateng announces retirement
-
US stocks end at records again as Trump and Xi talk
-
Bayeux Tapestry leaves museum for first time since 1983 before UK loan
-
Canada end New Zealand's reign as world champions with superb semi-final win
-
Trump to welcome Turkey's Erdogan, sees end to warplane row
-
Canada bars Irish rap band Kneecap from entering
-
Argentina's Milei says 'political panic' rattling markets
-
Colombia slams 'excessive' US military buildup, warns against Venezuela intervention
-
India beat valiant Oman in Asia Cup T20
-
International treaty protecting world's oceans to take effect
-
Porsche slows electric shift, prompting VW profit warning
-
Venezuela accuses US of waging 'undeclared war'
-
Hamilton beaming after Ferrari 1-2 in Baku practice as McLaren struggle
-
Kenya's only breastmilk bank, lifeline for premature babies
-
Hard-working Paolini prolongs Italy's BJK Cup title defence
-
Kenya's Sawe targets Berlin record to salute Kipchoge and Kiptum
-
Painting stripes on cows to lizards' pizza pick: Ig Nobel winners
-
England's Matthews ready for another 'battle' with France in World Cup semi-final

Now 48, man becomes 140th 'stolen grandchild' tracked in Argentina
Nearly five decades after he was born in a dictatorship-era detention center and snatched from his mother, a Buenos Aires man has become the 140th person identified as one of Argentina's hundreds of "stolen grandchildren."
DNA tests confirmed the birth identity of the 48-year-old introduced by the Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo activist group Monday simply as "Grandchild No. 140."
The group has worked for decades to trace the whereabouts of young activist women who were arrested and "disappeared" by Argentina's 1976-1983 military dictatorship, and the now-adult babies they bore in captivity.
Nearly 500 infants are believed to have been taken, many given to childless people close to a dictatorship keen to have them raised as regime loyalists.
The identity of "Grandchild No. 140" was not revealed at a press conference held by the Grandmothers to announce the happy breakthrough.
But among those present was his older sister, Adriana Metz Romero, who works with the Grandmothers and tearfully told reporters she could not wait to meet her sibling in person.
"Now I know where my brother is!" she said, sitting with a black-and-white photo of their parents: Graciela Alicia Romero and Raul Eugenio Metz, left-wing activists snatched by authorities in December 1976.
Romero was 24 years old, mother to a one-year-old daughter, and five months pregnant at the time, according to the Grandmothers.
She gave birth to a son on April 17, 1977 while held at a clandestine detention center known as "La Escuelita" in the port city of Bahia Blanca.
She was tortured there, according to witness testimony. Neither Romero nor Metz was heard from again.
The Grandmothers said Romero's long-lost son was finally found thanks to an anonymous tip.
"We decided to call him to find out if he would agree to a DNA test. He agreed, and it was confirmed that he is my brother," said Metz Romero, who has had initial contact with him via video call.
She was herself raised by her grandparents.
- 'Right to identity' -
Founded in 1977, the Grandmothers group takes its name from the Plaza de Mayo square in Buenos Aires where women defied the dictatorship to hold protests demanding information on the whereabouts of their loved ones.
Rights groups say about 30,000 people died or disappeared under the brutal rule, though Argentina's current libertarian President Javier Milei has claimed the number was lower.
The Grandmothers have accused Milei of defunding their research in his quest to slash public spending.
In June, the group went to court to demand protections for the National Genetic Data Bank -- which helped in this case but has been left largely "paralyzed" by budget cuts, according to the Grandmothers.
Leader Estela de Carlotto, herself reunited with a lost grandson decades after her pregnant daughter disappeared, made another appeal for support Monday.
"Thanks to perseverance and constant work... they (stolen grandchildren) will continue to appear, but the search cannot be done alone," she said at the "Space for Memory," a former torture center converted into a memorial site in the capital.
"It was the state itself, through state terrorism, that facilitated the abduction of these children, so it must now facilitate the search for them," said the 94-year-old.
"These 300 people who still need to be found are part of our society and must be able to exercise their right to identity," she added.
S.Spengler--VB