- Cuba to free over 550 prisoners after removal from US terror list
- Williams, Vine vie for season-opening Tour Down Under crown
- Maresca 'concerned' as Chelsea winless run stretches to five games
- 'Outstanding' Liverpool deserved more than Forest draw: Slot
- Guardiola laments Man City decision-making in Brentford collapse
- Marseille dumped out of French Cup on penalties
- Liverpool frustrated by Forest, Man City blow late lead at Brentford
- Djokovic, Sabalenka chase history as Australian Open hits round two
- Golf star Woods pledges support amid 'unimaginable loss' of LA fires
- Liverpool held by Forest, Man City blow late lead at Brentford
- Cuba to free 553 prisoners after removal from US terror list
- Leverkusen win to go one point behind Bayern, Kiel down Dortmund
- Jota rescues leaders Liverpool in Forest draw
- Title chasers Atalanta held by Juve, Milan hand Conceicao maiden Serie A win
- Man City blow late lead at Brentford, Chelsea held by Bournemouth
- Rast charges through on second run to win Flachau slalom
- Grimaldo scores as Leverkusen go one point behind Bayern, Dortmund lose
- Starbucks shift on non-paying visitors stirs debate in US
- Clashes as S. Korean investigators attempt to arrest President Yoon
- US, Japanese lunar landers set to launch on single rocket
- Boeing 2024 plane deliveries tumble on labor, safety woes
- US removes Cuba from state sponsors of terror list
- Argentine annual inflation nosedives, in boost for Milei
- S. Korea investigators arrive in new attempt to arrest President Yoon
- Pressure builds on Dortmund boss Sahin after loss at Kiel
- Meta to lay off 3,600 employees in performance-based cuts
- Venezuela restricts diplomats from 'hostile' European countries
- Trump's Pentagon pick grilled by senators as cabinet hearings begin
- From ban to buyout: What next for TikTok in the US?
- Lazio sack doc who performed far-right falconer's penis op: club owner
- Mexico hails $5 bn Amazon investment in face of Trump threats
- Venezuela restricts diplomats from France, Italy, Netherlands
- Aston Villa sign Dutch forward Malen from Dortmund
- Jesus suffers ACL injury as Arsenal eye January transfers
- MSNBC boss leaves ahead of Trump White House return
- Trump cabinet hearings start with controversial Pentagon pick
- Blinken proposes UN role, Palestinian state path in Gaza
- Panama Canal will 'remain' Panamanian: UN maritime chief
- Trump would have been convicted of election subversion: special counsel
- Stocks mixed as they track tariffs, inflation and earnings
- Amazon orders 200 Mercedes-Benz electric trucks
- Transnistria leader visited Moscow for energy talks: reports
- Amazon to invest over $5 bn in Mexico data center
- Klopp excited about Red Bull role as he dismisses return to management
- Lebanon's new PM says reaching out to all sides to save country
- Klopp hopeful Salah will agree new Liverpool deal
- US to ban smart cars containing Chinese tech
- Lindt chocolate to raise prices again this year
- UK finance minister, hit by market woes, stands firm on growth
- Spurs boss Postecoglou battles ongoing injury crisis ahead of Arsenal clash
Court rules German football clubs must pay police costs at 'high-risk' matches
Bundesliga clubs across Germany may be forced to cover the costs of police at certain 'high-risk' games, after a German court upheld a ruling in the city state of Bremen.
The federal constitutional court on Tuesday dismissed an appeal by the German Football Leagues (DFL) against the practice of asking clubs to pay additional police costs in 'high risk' games.
In 2015, the government in the state of Bremen handed club Werder Bremen a bill of around 400,000 euros ($410,100) relating to the home derby match with neighbouring Hamburg.
The DFL has waged a 10-year legal battle to have the fine overturned but suffered a series of legal defeats.
On Tuesday the Karlsruhe-based court dismissed the DFL's claim that the practice was unconstitutional.
While the ruling only applies to Bremen, one of Germany's 16 federal states, the decision is likely to have wide-ranging impacts, with other state governments considering following suit.
Police maintain a presence at matches in the professional leagues but around 50 games per year, usually derby fixtures or those with long-standing rivalries, are deemed higher risk.
Bremen's regional interior minister Ulrich Maeurer welcomed the decision and revealed the state had already billed Werder Bremen around two million euros over the past decade.
Recognising how the additional costs will cause a burden for clubs, Maeurer floated the idea of a DFL fund for police costs, an idea the governing body has rejected.
The DFL argued areas outside stadiums were the responsibility of the state and should be covered by tax revenue.
The German FA (DFB) on Tuesday said the ruling was "incorrect", saying it made clubs "liable for security costs in public areas over which they have no control".
Covering police costs could "threaten the existence" of smaller clubs, the DFB said, adding the ruling "does not improve fan security at all".
Tuesday's decision was also criticised by fan groups.
In a statement, fan organisation 'Unsere Kurve' said it was "shocked" at the decision and said German football contributed around 1.6 billion euros per season in tax revenue.
Spokesperson Thomas Kessen said the organisers of the Oktoberfest, Cologne Carnival and Berlin's New Years Eve celebrations should now pay police costs, "even if is doubtful whether we as a society would want this".
Y.Nakamura--AMWN