- Moody's cuts France outlook, opening door to credit downgrade
- Drone sparks fire on Kyiv residential building, one dead
- Gaza ministry says two children die in hospital in Israeli raid
- Wood brace fires Forest as Leicester boss Cooper loses reunion
- Dodgers draw on Bryant's 'Mamba mentality' for World Series
- 'Fascist' row overshadows glitzy night on US campaign trail
- Modern art museum breathes new life into downtown Warsaw
- Russell tops crash-hit Mexico GP practice
- Fils, Shelton set for friendly fire in Basel semi-finals
- Internet blackout hits Mozambique capital after election protests
- Yankees, Dodgers poised for World Series blockbuster
- 'Catfish' predator who drove US girl to suicide jailed for life in N.Ireland
- NASA astronaut hospitalized after return from ISS
- Biden apologizes for Native American boarding school atrocities
- Mexico rules out designating drug violence as 'terrorism'
- Emery wants no let-up from Aston Villa
- Boeing exploring sale of space business: report
- G20 affirms commitment to transition from fossil fuels
- Shami misses India's tour of Australia as Easwaran named as potential Rohit cover
- BHP, Vale agree to pay $30bn damages for Brazil dam disaster
- 75 sickened as McDonald's severe E. Coli outbreak expands
- Turkmenistan's 'Gateway to Hell' lit gas pit faces closure
- Kickboxing takes Senegal by storm despite tight funds
- Waymo ramps up robotaxi push with $5.6 bn in funding
- Elon Musk all-in for Trump as Moscow denies secret Putin talks
- Covid lessons learned? UN summit mulls plan for healthy planet, and humans
- Borthwick unveils new contracts for leading England players
- Sexual assault scandal rocks Spain's 'most feminist' govt
- France must make 'credible' progress on deficit: finance minister
- Stock markets diverge going into weekend
- BHP, Vale agree to pay $30bn compensation for Brazil dam disaster
- Verstappen says 'definitely' his intention to remain at Red Bull
- Mbappe can launch Madrid career in first Clasico
- A monumental dump and Obama the rapper: an offbeat US campaign week
- Biden to apologize for abusive Native American boarding schools
- Pressure is part of manager's life, says troubled West Ham boss Lopetegui
- Gaza ministry says Israel forces detaining hundreds at hospital
- Hirscher confirms return from retirement at World Cup opener
- IMF raises concerns about effects of Sudan conflict on neighbors
- Seoul slams Russian treaty with N. Korea, Zelensky urges 'tangible pressure'
- De Zerbi hails Greenwood as Marseille await Paris Saint-Germain
- Under-fire Ten Hag blames injuries for derailing Man Utd
- Wounded Arsenal must show 'ruthless mentality' against Liverpool: Arteta
- Howe challenges Newcastle stars to step up
- UK's Labour govt prepares to unveil its first budget
- New Zealand eye history after Santner's 7-53 in India Test
- Guardiola backs Man City's Foden to emerge from slump
- England reeling at 24-3 after gritty Shakeel century
- Pakistan judicial reforms see next top judge passed over
- Germany promises more visas for Indians during Scholz visit
Internet blackout hits Mozambique capital after election protests
Mozambique's capital Maputo on Friday suffered a mobile internet blackout after protests against the re-election of the ruling Frelimo party descended into violence.
Protests erupted on Thursday with hundreds of opposition supporters rejecting what they called a ballot "stolen" by a "corrupt" electoral commission in favour of the party which has ruled since 1975.
The commission had on Thursday announced Frelimo candidate Daniel Chapo as the winner of the October 9 election with 71 percent of the vote, sparking a furious reaction from the opposition.
Further sporadic demonstrations sprang up on Friday in the capital, where streets were littered with broken glass, burnt tyres and other debris.
Internet outages across various mobile carriers struck Maputo, although home access was not affected, according to AFP reporters
"We can confirm a near-total disruption to mobile internet connectivity in Mozambique" starting around noon local time (1000 GMT) that was "likely to limit coverage of events on the ground", internet outage monitor Netblocks told AFP.
Chapo, a 47-year-old former provincial governor with no experience in national government, was little known before his surprise nomination as Frelimo's candidate. He will take over from President Filipe Nyusi in January.
- Opposition contests result -
Opposition leader Venancio Mondlane -- who has declared himself the winner, claimed irregularities and urged demonstrations -- officially won just over 20 percent.
"We absolutely reject these results," said Mondlane, during a Facebook live broadcast Thursday evening.
"They do not reflect the will of the people," he added, calling the political situation in the southern African country "rotten, doctored and fake".
Rioters on Thursday set fire to tyres to block avenues in Maputo and destroyed Frelimo's election billboards.
Some threw stones at riot police, who fired tear gas to disperse them, an AFP reporter saw.
European Union election observers on Friday condemned "the violent dispersal of demonstrators and the political violence", urging "all parties to refrain from violence".
They warned in a statement that Thursday's announcement of the results "has not dispelled" concerns over the vote count and urged "maximum transparency" from electoral authorities.
- 'Leeches' -
In the northern city of Nampula, one person died in clashes between law enforcement and protesters, police said, as protests struck several other cities overnight.
"This country must be led by Venancio," one protester in Maputo, who declined to give his name, told AFP.
"We did not vote for these leeches, we did not vote for this man," he said, referring to the triumphant Chapo. "We are tired of all this."
An EU poll observer mission earlier this month noted "net favouritism" in favour of Frelimo.
EU officials have noted "irregularities during counting and unjustified alteration of election results at polling station and district level".
They also stressed that the numbers did not "add up" across about a third of recounts.
More than 17 million out of a population of 33 million were called to vote on October 9.
That figure was surprising as the median age of Mozambicans is 17 and the legal voting age is 18, experts said.
A total of 104 percent of the adult population of voting age was registered on electoral rolls, the EU mission said.
Chapo, 47, will be the first president not to have fought in the 16-year civil war between Frelimo and Renamo that ended in 1992 after claiming around a million lives.
While Renamo has traditionally been the main opposition group, the emergence of Mondlane and the Podemos party was a novel development in this election.
F.Schneider--AMWN