- France international Jegou resumes rugby after rape allegations
- Former Man Utd star Yorke named coach of Trinidad and Tobago
- Botswana's new president sworn in after historic election upset
- Death toll rises to 12 in Serbia train station roof collapse: minister
- US announces $425 mn in new Ukraine security aid
- Portraits of slain leaders watch out on Hezbollah's battered Beirut bastion
- Biden bites baby: a last week of US election oddities
- Wall Street bounces while oil prices climb on Middle East worries
- Emery says Villa are underdogs against Spurs
- Verstappen hit with five-place grid penalty at Brazilian Grand Prix
- South Carolina to execute Black man for shooting store clerk
- New Zealand captain Barrett says Marler has 'loaded gun' with haka jibe
- Kenya reintroduces tax reforms with new deputy president
- Crunch time for bruised Dortmund as Leipzig come to town
- Man City face injury 'emergency': Guardiola
- Sabalenka and Swiatek in No.1 showdown at WTA Finals
- For a blind runner, the New York marathon is about 'vibrations'
- Trump, Harris battle for Wisconsin amid blowback on violent rhetoric
- Zverev downs Tsitsipas to book place in semis of Paris Masters
- Amorim handed challenge of restoring glory days to Man Utd
- Wall Street bounces while oil prices gain on geopolitical fears
- New Zealand still the team to beat for England's Genge
- Kohli fails as India slump in chaotic 10 minutes in third Test
- Valencia MotoGP cancelled due to deadly floods
- Botswana opposition wins election in historic turnaround
- ExxonMobil profits dip as it gives back almost $10 bn to investors
- US hiring slowest since Biden took office, on strikes, hurricanes
- Gaza polio vaccinations to resume Saturday: WHO
- Spain flood deaths top 200, more troops join rescue
- Ruben Amorim: The new 'Special One'?
- India limp to 86-4 as spinners dominate in third Test
- Ruben Amorim named as new Manchester United manager
- Global stocks diverge, oil prices gain on geopolitical fears
- Arsenal 'right in the mix' in Premier League race, says Arteta
- North Korea says will stand by Russia until 'victory' in Ukraine
- Jadeja, Sundar help India bowl out New Zealand for 235 in third Test
- Slot on Liverpool learning curve
- Indonesia tribe's homeland at risk after losing final appeal: NGOs
- 'Brat' named word of the year by Collins dictionary
- Harris, Trump converge on Milwaukee as US election looms
- New Zealand 192-6 after Jadeja strikes for India in third Test
- Taiwan races to remove oil from grounded Chinese ship
- Bagnaia pips title rival Martin in Malaysian MotoGP practice
- On Belgian coast, fishing on horseback -- and saving a tradition
- French brushmakers stage 'comeback' with pivot to luxury market
- 'Recovery tool': theatre helps Ukrainian soldiers reintegrate
- Indonesia adds Google Pixel phones to ban list with iPhone 16
- US election race awaits employment data
- German law easing legal gender change comes into force
- Botswana leader concedes defeat after party drubbed in election
South Carolina to execute Black man for shooting store clerk
A Black man convicted by an all-white jury and sentenced to death for a killing he claims was in self-defense is to be executed in the US state of South Carolina on Friday.
Richard Moore, 59, is to be put to death by lethal injection at 6:00 pm (2200 GMT) at a prison in Columbia, the state capital, barring a last-minute grant of clemency from the governor.
Moore was sentenced to death in 2001 for the 1999 killing of James Mahoney, a white convenience store clerk, during what prosecutors said at trial was a robbery attempt.
Moore's lawyers deny he ever planned to rob the store.
He entered the store unarmed, they said, but got into an argument with Mahoney because he was 11 or 12 cents short of the money needed to make his purchase.
Mahoney allegedly pulled out two guns and Moore wrestled one away, shooting the store clerk to death while being wounded in the arm himself.
According to prosecutors, Moore stole $1,400 and went out to buy crack cocaine. He was arrested soon afterward.
Moore's lawyers said his death sentence was unfair and racially motivated.
"No other South Carolina death penalty case has involved an unarmed defendant who defended himself when the victim threatened him with a weapon," they said in a statement.
"Moore is not the 'worst of the worst' for whom the death penalty is supposed to be reserved," they added. "Instead, his death sentence is based on racial discrimination."
The prosecutor "had a history of seeking the death penalty only in cases involving white victims," Moore's lawyers said, and rejected all of the potential African Americans jurors during jury selection.
The Supreme Court on Thursday declined Moore's request for a stay of execution and his last hope is a clemency petition submitted to South Carolina's Republican governor, Henry McMaster.
Among those seeking clemency for Moore is Jon Ozmint, the former director of the South Carolina Department of Corrections.
"He's a changed man," Ozmint said in a video. "There's no question in my mind this would not have been a death penalty case in most states."
Moore also appeared in the clemency video, saying: "I hate that it happened. I wish I could go back and change it. I took someone's life. I broke the family of the deceased."
There have been 20 executions in the United States this year including one in South Carolina.
The death penalty has been abolished in 23 of the 50 US states, while six others -- Arizona, California, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Tennessee -- have moratoriums in place.
Ch.Kahalev--AMWN