- Young African players chase football 'dream' in Brazil
- Defeat to Trump prompts Democratic soul-searching
- Trump rides global wave of anti-incumbency
- First artwork by humanoid robot sells for $1.3m
- Power partly restored in Cuba after Hurricane Rafael
- NBA Lakers assign Bronny James to G-League squad
- Galatasaray down Spurs in Europa League, Man United end wait for win
- Dodgers pitcher Kershaw aims to be 'good as can be' after surgeries
- Global stocks mostly rise as Fed, Bank of England cut rates
- US Fed makes quarter point cut as Powell insists he would not quit
- Biden vows peaceful White House handover, Trump eyes Putin talks
- One Direction star took cocaine, alcohol, antidepressant before death
- F-15 fighters arrive in Middle East: US military
- Zelensky says 'unacceptable' to offer Russia concessions on Ukraine
- Undocumented immigrants in US 'terrified' as Trump returns
- US Fed chair says will not leave early if asked by Trump
- US town on alert after 43 monkeys escape research facility
- Thousands told to flee wildfire near Los Angeles
- Who will staff Trump's government? A look at top contenders
- MLS Union dump Curtin as head coach
- Galatasaray down Spurs to go top in Europa League
- George says England can still be rugby winners without Jones
- Emotions high as All Blacks eye top ranked Ireland's crown
- NATO warns of N. Korea threat in pitch to Trump on Ukraine
- US Fed cuts interest rates a quarter point after Trump victory
- What will Trump 2.0 mean for US tech?
- F1 drivers blast FIA chief's 'tone and language' in swearing row
- Unbeaten NFL Chiefs try to match best-ever start by downing Denver
- After Trump win, Orban basks in hosting European leaders
- Lights still out in Cuba after Hurricane Rafael
- Swiatek eliminated from WTA Finals, Krejcikova into semis
- Zelensky says 'unacceptable' to offer Putin concessions on Ukraine
- Mexico president says had 'very cordial' call with Trump
- World number two Swiatek eliminated from WTA Finals group stage
- Biden urges Americans to 'bring down temperature' after Trump win
- Diplomatic incident in French-owned Jerusalem church compound
- Submerged cemeteries pile pain on Spain flood survivors
- Equities rise as traders weigh Trump 2.0, rate cut prospects
- Dutch extradite mother of premature baby smuggled from France
- Former US national team coach Arena to guide MLS Earthquakes
- Fleetwood ties course record to grab lead in Abu Dhabi
- Milan's Morata a doubt for Cagliari clash with head trauma
- Sinner avoids rival Alcaraz in ATP Finals groups
- End in sight for 40-year renovation of giant Brussels courthouse
- Australia pick rugby league convert Suaalii to face England
- Private jet carbon emissions soar 46%: study
- Chinese rover finds signs of ancient ocean on Mars
- Ex-banker and Scholz ally: Germany's new finance minister
- Germany's Scholz pressed to call vote after coalition collapse
- Iran downplays Trump victory but wary of US policy change
Power partly restored in Cuba after Hurricane Rafael
Power was restored to parts of Cuba on Thursday a day after Hurricane Rafael swept over the island, leaving its 10 million inhabitants without electricity for the second time in a month.
Rafael, a Category 3 hurricane, ripped roofs from homes and bleachers from a baseball stadium as it barreled across the island, which was already reeling from a deadly storm last month.
The hurricane also caused a nationwide blackout, just two weeks after a power plant failure plunged the island into darkness for four days.
There were no reports of fatalities in the latest storm.
Nearly 250,000 people were evacuated from their homes before it hit, according to the authorities.
By Thursday afternoon, power had been restored "between the center and the east" of the island, President Miguel Diaz-Canel's office said.
The president visited affected parts of Havana, Artemisa and Mayabeque provinces, where plantain and yucca crops had been wiped out.
In the city of Havana, where 461 buildings partially or fully collapsed according to the authorities, residents used brooms, shovels and buckets to clear debris from the streets.
The highway from the capital west to the city of Artemisa was dotted with fallen electricity poles and trees.
In the town of Candelaria, around 24 miles (40 km) from where Rafael made landfall, 49-year-old housewife Lidia was in despair.
"Now, the hurricane is leaving and we have another blackout, meaning we won't have water," she said standing outside her house. "What are we going to cook? What water are we going to drink?"
Cuba has been suffering hours-long power cuts for months -- a symbol of the island's worst economic crisis since the fall of the Soviet Union, a key ally and financial backer, in the early 1990s.
The UN General Assembly last week renewed its long-standing call for the US to lift its six-decade trade embargo on the communist island.
P.Silva--AMWN