
-
Brazil hopes Amazon summit can unite world for climate action
-
Nobel economist warns of AI dangers
-
Kane available to face Latvia as England aim to book World Cup place
-
Madagascar on edge as embattled president's address delayed
-
Trump calls Italian PM 'beautiful' at Gaza summit
-
Historic World Cup qualification for Cape Verde islanders
-
Lyles and McLaughlin Levrone nominated for World Athletics awards
-
Embattled Madagascar president delays national address, again
-
California enacts first US law requiring AI chatbot safety measures
-
SpaceX to launch Starship test flight Monday
-
Trump hails 'tremendous day for Middle East' as leaders sign Gaza declaration
-
Eurovision organisers push back Israel decision to December
-
Italy's Gattuso 'very happy' at Gaza peace deal ahead of World Cup qualifier with Israel
-
Macron slams French opposition for fuelling political 'chaos'
-
Wall Street stocks bounce after Trump-fuelled slide
-
Woody Allen says world 'drearier' without ex-partner Diane Keaton
-
Celebrations in Madagascar streets ahead of embattled president's address
-
England's Millie Bright retires from international football
-
Freed Israeli hostages hug loved ones in tears of joy
-
'Historic dawn': Trump takes victory lap in Israel
-
'New birth': Palestinians freed from Israeli jails return to loved ones
-
Wall Street stocks rebound after Trump-fuelled slide
-
Trump says 'nightmare' for Israelis, Palestinians over
-
Stay still and don't wear yellow: UK filmmakers on working with hawks
-
Trump urges pardon for Netanyahu over 'cigars and champagne'
-
IMF meetings to start under fresh cloud of US-China trade tensions
-
Noman derails South Africa to 216-6 in first Pakistan Test
-
Two men charged with prison murder of Lostprophets singer
-
Five killed as Pakistan police clear anti-Israel protest site
-
India close in on Test series sweep despite West Indies fightback
-
Europe cannot let US, China be 'technological leaders': Nobel laureate Aghion
-
Landmark Lagos exhibition celebrates 'King of Afrobeat' Fela Kuti
-
European stocks rebound after Trump-fuelled slide
-
Trio wins economics Nobel for work on tech-driven growth
-
Israel welcomes last 20 surviving hostages
-
India sense Test series clean sweep despite West Indies fightback
-
Hundreds celebrate in Madagascar as president due to address nation
-
Paris Masters prepares for bow on 'second biggest court in world'
-
South Africa 112-2 after Noman's double strike in Pakistan Test
-
Campbell, Hope hit tons as West Indies lead by 91 against India
-
Hamas hands over surviving Israeli hostages
-
China detains prominent 'underground' pastor in crackdown
-
Ancelotti ready to make World Cup history with Brazil
-
Muthusamy takes six as Pakistan collapse to 378, South Africa 10-0
-
Muthusamy takes three wickets in an over as Pakistan 378 all out
-
Tears, joy in Israel as Hamas hands over first hostages
-
Campbell hits maiden Test ton as West Indies defy India
-
Hamas begins handing over Israeli hostages
-
River boat users pay heavy price for DR Congo's dearth of roads
-
From waste to runway: Kenyan designers transform used clothes into art

Storm Haikui heads to China after double landfall in Taiwan
Typhoon Haikui toppled hundreds of trees, damaged coastal roads and dumped torrential rains across Taiwan Monday before it weakened into a severe storm and headed for southern China.
Haikui had initially appeared to depart the island but made a second landfall early Monday in southwest Kaohsiung, before it was downgraded to a severe tropical storm as it moved out into the Taiwan Strait.
There were no reports of deaths, but destruction was seen in coastal Taitung, a mountainous county in lesser-populated eastern Taiwan where the storm directly hit the day before.
"I've lived here for so long and I have never seen such wind gusts," said Chen Hai-feng, 55, a village chief in Taitung's Donghe township, where he was with an early-morning work crew removing trees from a road.
Although Haikui is considered to be less severe than previous storms, Chen said it felt more powerful.
"It came straight through us."
Workers carefully manoeuvred diggers to move downed tree branches and electrical wiring that had snapped and splayed across the rain-drenched road.
Further north in coastal Changbin township, workers ferried massive concrete blocks to a coastal highway that had partially collapsed from the force of waves slamming into it, hoping they would absorb the impact.
Heavy orange-coloured barriers were placed near the edge to prevent cars from skidding over on the slippery roads.
Haikui -- the first typhoon landfall in Taiwan in four years -- forced the evacuation of more than 7,000 people across the island, particularly from landslide-prone mountainous regions. Hundreds of flights were cancelled and businesses were closed.
More than 217,000 households temporarily lost power through Sunday and overnight. By midday Monday, 11,000 homes still had no electricity, while schools and businesses remained closed in 14 cities as torrential rain bucketed down.
A forecaster with Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau said Haikui initially appeared to track away from the island and out to sea but made a second landfall in Kaohsiung at around 4:00 am (2000 GMT Sunday).
During the night "the centre of the typhoon was almost circling" the port city, but as it moved along the coastline "the structure of the typhoon is damaged by the terrain and gradually weakens", she said.
By mid-day, the storm had moved southwest of Taiwan's outlying island of Penghu, but was still bringing torrential rain and strong winds to the south and northeast.
In picturesque Hualien county, waterfalls cascaded down the lush cliffs along Taiwan's east coast, while market vendors in Keelung -- a northern port city surrounded by mountains -- braved the rain to sell fruit to raincoat-clad shoppers.
In Kaohsiung, the local government reported hundreds of toppled trees and flooding in dozens of locations, although the situation was easing as the storm departed and the weather conditions improved.
Nearly 80 people suffered injuries during the typhoon, according to authorities, though they were minor -- mostly due to fallen trees and car accidents.
A.Jones--AMWN