- Schareina wins penultimate bike stage but Sanders on course for Dakar victory
- Pope Francis bruises arm in fall at Vatican
- Arsenal optimistic in Premier League title race: Raya
- EU announces 120 mn euros in Gaza aid after ceasefire
- Patients dying in corridors as UK hospital standards 'collapse': report
- Sinner roars back in Melbourne as Swiatek sets up Raducanu clash
- 'Nervous' teen star Fonseca out of Australian Open after thriller
- Nepal's top court bars infrastructure in protected areas
- Stock markets jump as inflation worries ease
- Sinner drops rare set en route to Australian Open third round
- China to probe US chips over dumping, subsidies
- Israel accuses Hamas of backtracking on fragile ceasefire deal
- Chinese apps including TikTok hit by privacy complaints in Europe
- Blasts in Kyiv as UK's Starmer visits to ink '100-year' accord
- Hong Kong mogul Jimmy Lai grilled over US, Taiwan ties
- Pakistan, West Indies seek to improve from Test Championship lows
- Trauma and tragedy in the City of Angels: covering the LA fires
- Spain raises flag at Damascus embassy after 12-year closure
- Teen star Fonseca out of Australian Open in five-set thriller
- Travel agencies say North Korea reopens border city to tourism
- India's outcast toilet cleaners keeping Hindu festival going
- Apple loses top spot in China smartphone sales to local rivals
- Sri Lanka signs landmark $3.7 bn deal with Chinese state oil giant
- 'I had 10 minutes': Lys makes most of Australian Open second chance
- Spanish FM raises flag at Damascus embassy after 12-year closure
- Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket blasts into orbit for first time
- UK economy rebounds but headwinds remain for govt
- Rice fields turned into art in northern Thailand
- Stocks follow Wall St higher on welcome US inflation data
- South Korea's president arrest: what happens next?
- Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket blasts off in first launch, reaches orbit
- Chinese give guarded welcome to spending subsidies
- World Bank plans $20 bn payout for Pakistan over coming decade
- Indian Bollywood star Saif Ali Khan stabbed in burglary
- Taiwan's TSMC says net profit rose 57% in fourth quarter
- India achieves 'historic' space docking mission
- South Korea's Yoon avoids fresh questioning after dramatic arrest
- Olympic push for kho kho, India's ancient tag sport
- Dangerous Fritz sets up Monfils clash at Australian Open
- AFP photographer's search for his mother in the Nazi camps
- Life after the unthinkable: Shoah survivors who began again in Israel
- Israeli cabinet to vote on Gaza ceasefire deal
- Jabeur finds it 'hard to breathe' as asthma flares up in Melbourne
- Swiatek powers on as Sinner, Medevedev top men's Melbourne bill
- Nintendo rumour mill in overdrive over new Switch
- Biden warns of Trump 'oligarchy' in dark farewell speech
- Superb Swiatek sets up Raducanu showdown at Australian Open
- Asian stocks follow Wall St higher on welcome US inflation data
- Toyota arm Hino makes deal to settle emission fraud case
- Fire-wrecked Los Angeles gets a break as winds drop
Record heat warning as forest fires rage in Spain and Portugal
Temperatures are expected to hit 44 degrees Centigrade (111 Fahrenheit) in Spain and Portugal on Wednesday as the two countries boil under their third heatwave of the summer.
With huge forest fires raging across southern Portugal for the fifth successive day, Spain's weather service warned that the average temperature across the country could hit a 70-year record.
"This will probably be the hottest five August days in 73 years," said AEMET, the state meteorological agency, with almost the whole country under red weather alerts.
Winds and extreme heat are also driving fires that have devastated 15,000 hectares of trees in neighbouring Portugal over the past few days.
The biggest blazes are in the southern Odemira region, where more than 1,500 people have been evacuated with the fires reaching the Algarve, a hugely popular tourist destination.
But firefighters tackling the wildfires said they were bringing them under control Wednesday, with a fall in temperatures and greater humidity at the coast helping stem the spread as hot air moves east.
Experts say the recurring heatwaves, which have been getting longer and more intense, are a consequence of climate change.
The Iberian Peninsula is bearing the brunt of climate change in Europe, with droughts and wildfires becoming more and more common.
Spanish firefighters were using up to a dozen water bombers to slow the spread of the flames around Valencia de Alcantara in Extremadura close to the border with Portugal.
"We evacuated our clients to a hotel in Alcantara," said Joaquin Dieguez, the owner of a holiday cottage. "But we are really worried because we have an enormous forest here with century-old oak trees. It's awful," he added.
First estimations suggest that 350 hectares of trees have gone up in smoke. The blaze comes after 573 hectares were destroyed in wildfires in Portbou in Catalonia in the northeast, with 450 acres of trees lost by another fire near Bonares in Andalusia in the south.
O.Norris--AMWN