
-
South Korea births rose last year on surge in marriage
-
'45 seconds!': Oscar nominees urged to tighten speeches as gala looms
-
Lakers' Doncic makes triple-double in winning reunion with Dallas
-
Football Australia slams 'unacceptable' remarks about Matildas by radio host
-
Trump to convene first cabinet meeting, including Musk
-
Gaza ceasefire talks back on track after prisoner agreement
-
South Korea birth rate rose last year, first time in a decade
-
Jordi Cruyff joins Kluivert as Indonesia target World Cup berth
-
Cavaliers and Celtics extend winning streaks in NBA
-
Most Asian markets rebound as Hong Kong tech rally resumes
-
Australian says 'wasn't nice' sitting with corpse on long-haul flight
-
Under pressure, EU to take axe to green rules
-
Shunned by US, Europe courts India over trade and security
-
Balls and parades to fete Jane Austen's 250th birthday
-
BP to unveil strategy shakeup amid energy transition
-
Trump to sell 'gold card' US visas for $5 million
-
Former Brazil president Dilma Rousseff hospitalized in China
-
'Extreme brutality': UN, aid groups warn Haiti unrest soaring
-
Nauru sells citizenship to fund climate change mitigation
-
Private US company set for second Moon landing attempt
-
India's vast Hindu festival draws to an end
-
New cocktails shake up Oscar night
-
Leading rare earths miner sees profits fall as prices sag
-
White House takes control of picking media who cover Trump
-
Chile declares state of emergency after massive blackout
-
French surgeon's sex abuse was 'atomic bomb' for family, says son
-
Deal back on to exchange Palestinian prisoners for Israeli hostage bodies
-
Eight sentenced to death for 2013 murder of Tunisia opposition leader
-
Man Utd must avoid recruitment mistakes of the past, says Amorim
-
Tesla sinks below $1 tn market value as European auto sales slump
-
US to probe need for tariffs on copper imports
-
Postecoglou backs 'elite' Son after Tottenham star's slump
-
Guardiola says De Bruyne will be 'honest' over Man City future
-
France, Germany on song in Women's Nations League
-
Ukraine agrees on US minerals deal, seeking Trump support
-
Atletico hold Barca in crazy eight-goal Copa del Rey semi first leg
-
Messi fined by MLS over confrontation
-
Chelsea thrash Southampton, Villa beaten by Palace in race for Champions League
-
Chelsea climb to fourth after routing Saints
-
France's most-wanted in custody after extradition from Romania
-
Former Brazil president Dilma Roussef hospitalized in China
-
Ukraine has agreed on terms of minerals deal with US: official
-
Paint them white: how Brazil is keeping trains on track
-
Judge blocks Trump's refugee admissions halt
-
Syria conference lays out post-Assad priorities, but Kurds not invited
-
Japan's ANA to purchase mega-order of 77 new jets
-
US woman pleads guilty to plot to sell Elvis's Graceland estate
-
"Mes que una Cursa": Barcelona unveil 2026 Tour de France start
-
US hardens visa sanctions over Cuba medical program
-
Ailing pope 'critical but stable', Vatican says

Chile declares state of emergency after massive blackout
Chile on Tuesday declared a state of emergency and curfew across much of the country, including the capital Santiago, following a massive, rare blackout that left millions without power.
The worst blackout in the country in well over a decade caused transport chaos in the capital Santiago, where thousands of people were evacuated from the metro and people jostled to board overflowing buses.
The area without power stretches all the way from Arica in the long, narrow South American country's north to Los Lagos in the south, according to the Senapred disaster response agency -- an area home to over 90 percent of Chile's population of 20 million people.
More than five hours after the outage began, Interior Minister Carolina Toha announced a curfew from 10:00 pm (0100 GMT) until 6:00 am (0900 GMT)
Toha said the measure was part of a state of emergency declared by President Gabriel Boric which "aimed to guarantee the security of the population faced with the possibility that the outage lasts into the night."
- Attack ruled out -
Toha had earlier ruled out sabotage as the reason for the power loss, which began at 3:16 pm in the middle of the southern hemisphere summer.
"There is no reason to assume that this is an attack," she said, telling reporters it was more likely "a failure in the system's operation" and that the grid should be back up and running "in the coming hours.
The metro company, which transports 2.3 million passengers every day, said workers were deployed to all stations "to support safe evacuations."
Out-of-service traffic lights caused major gridlock, with some people having to walk for hours under a hot sun to reach their homes.
Shops and offices closed early.
"They let us leave work because of the power cut, but now I don't know how we will get home because all the buses are full," worker Maria Angelica Roman, 45, told AFP in Santiago.
"At the bank where I work, all operations had to stop," 25-year-old clerk Jonathan Macalupu said.
- Hanging in the air -
The Chilevision broadcaster showed video of people trapped on a mechanical ride several meters high at an amusement park in Santiago before being rescued.
An AFP photographer saw fire fighters rescue a distraught elderly woman, who had been trapped inside an elevator.
The country's hospital system and prisons were operating on emergency generators.
Boric overflew the capital by helicopter to assess the situation.
In the coastal city of Valparaiso, witnesses also reported shops and businesses closing early and traffic chaos.
Unlike Cuba, which has suffered several nationwide power outages in the past six months, Chile boasts one of the best power networks in South America and has not had a blackout this big in about 15 years.
In 2010, damage to a power plant in southern Chile plunged hundreds of thousands of people into darkness for several hours.
That outage happened a month after a massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake killed more than 500 people and rocked the national power grid.
A.Jones--AMWN