
-
US judge sets June 23 trial date over Boeing crashes
-
S. Africa take big World Cup lead, but may lose points over Mokoena
-
Zimbabwe moves army chief to sports docket
-
Stocks edge out gains as fears ease over next Trump tariffs
-
'In my heart' - Malinin defends figure skating world title in wake of tragedy
-
Trump downplays firestorm over leaked Yemen air strike chat
-
Turkey protesters fill streets, defying crackdown
-
Roma's Dybala undergoes surgery on thigh injury
-
US VP to visit Greenland as Trump ups pressure
-
What is Signal and is it secure?
-
Political football as Iran reach World Cup while Australia, Saudis stay alive
-
Brignone claims World Cup giant slalom title as Gut-Behrami wins finale
-
UK artist Grayson Perry indulges playful side in new show
-
Swiatek gets extra security after harassment
-
Tuchel says Maguire 'will always be in contention' for England
-
Iran book World Cup spot as Australia, Saudis keep hopes alive
-
Iran qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
Big bucks Iyer leads Punjab to win over Gujarat in IPL
-
'Spider-Man,' 'Harry Potter' producers hired for new 007 film
-
Trump, intel chiefs dismiss chat breach
-
Boko Haram fighters kill 20 Cameroonian troops: sources
-
Bolsonaro headed 'criminal organization' to stay in power, court told
-
Istanbul court jails 7 journalists as protesters fill streets
-
Vernon takes Tour of Catalonia sprint as teen Brennan keeps lead
-
Stocks meander as fears ease over next Trump tariffs
-
Ex-Man City player Barton gets suspended jail term for assaulting wife
-
UK judge slams Paddington Bear statue vandals
-
Back in the pink: Senegal salt lake gets its colour back
-
Robinson crashes out of World Cup giant slalom, Brignone eyes season title
-
French art expert on trial over forged furniture at Versailles
-
'An Italian miracle': Controversial Winter Olympics track slides into action
-
On US visit, Estonia warns of Putin 'upper hand' through talks
-
Australia, Saudis keep World Cup hopes alive as S. Korea stutter again
-
Temple burned, UNESCO village evacuated as South Korea wildfires spread
-
Lesotho's king warns nation will reel from Trump cuts
-
SpaceX rocket fuel makes stunning swirl in European sky
-
US says Russia, Ukraine agree to end Black Sea military action
-
EU unveils critical material projects to cut China dependence
-
UK watchdog concerned Oasis fans 'misled' into buying costly tickets
-
Barcelona basilica narrows down search for artist to design facade
-
Brazil judges weigh whether to put Bolsonaro on trial for 'coup'
-
Faux gras? Scientists craft 'more ethical' version of French delicacy
-
Turkish court jails 7 journalists after anti-Erdogan protests
-
Trump brushes off Yemen chat breach as a 'glitch'
-
Stocks up as fears ease over next Trump tariffs
-
Real Madrid making progress on Alexander-Arnold transfer: reports
-
Depardieu denies 'groping' women in France sex abuse trial
-
Olympic champion Ingebrigtsen testifies against father in abuse trial
-
No Ukraine deal after US-Russia Saudi talks
-
France to auction superyacht seized in money-laundering case

UK court cuts longest jail terms on activists, rejects 10 appeals
A British court on Friday reduced some of the heaviest jail terms imposed on climate activists for their high-profile protests, but threw out appeals from 10 others to have their prison sentences overturned.
The groups Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion have in recent years carried out spectacular, often disruptive protests, including stopping London's busy traffic and targetting famous places and paintings, as part of their campaign to highlight climate change.
But last July, five activists were stunned after being sentenced to between four and five years in prison for planning in an online call to block the M25 motorway around London, a key transport link for the capital.
They were among 16 activists who appealed their jail terms before the Court of Appeal in London in January.
In the 44-page ruling on Friday, Lady Chief Justice Sue Carr cut the heaviest jail term of five years imposed on Roger Hallam, 58, a co-founder of Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion, for the conspiracy.
Carr and two other judges reduced it to four years saying the original term was "manifestly excessive".
Two other co-accused in that case had their sentences shortened from four years to three, with two others seeing their four-year terms reduced to 30 months.
One of the oldest activists, Gaie Delap, 78, also saw her sentence shortened from 20 to 18 months, for scaling one of the gantries on the M25.
As Carr read the ruling, about 20 activists stood up and turned around to reveal they were wearing T-shirts emblazoned with the words "Corruption in Court" on the back.
- Tomato soup -
The 16 activists also included two women who threw tomato soup on Vincent van Gogh's "Sunflowers" painting at London's National Gallery. Their sentences of 20 months and two years were upheld in Friday's ruling.
The complainants' lawyer Danny Friedman said in January that the collective prison terms of between 15 months to five years were "the highest of their kind in modern British history".
The activists "did what they did out of sacrifice" and were acting in the "best interests of the public, the planet and future generations," he said, asking for the jail terms to be reduced or quashed
And another lawyer for the group, Raj Chada, said Friday that they might now take the case to the Supreme Court.
Prosecutors had argued the sentences had been merited as "all of these applicants went so far beyond what was reasonable".
Their actions also presented an "extreme danger" to the public and to themselves, they said.
The hearing has been closely watched amid fears that peaceful protest risks being stifled in Britain.
And NGOs and activists have warned the case could have far-reaching implications for future protests.
"Despite some modest reductions, these sentences are still unprecedented and they still have no place in a democracy that upholds the right to protest," said Greenpeace co-executive director Areeba Hamid.
Friends of the Earth lawyer Katie de Kauwe said in a statement the group was "pleased" some of the sentences had been reduced.
She said the group welcomed that Friday's ruling and stressed that "sentencing for peaceful protest needs to factor in both the defendant's conscientious motivation, and protections afforded under the European Convention of Human Rights."
- Stonehenge, Darwin's tomb -
She added "ultimately however, we believe that locking up those motivated by their genuine concern for the climate crisis is neither right nor makes any sense".
Just Stop Oil and Extinction Rebellion launched their protests to fight the use of fossil fuels, which scientists say are causing global warming and climate change.
But the groups, which are urging the government to ban fossil fuel use by 2030, have attracted criticism over their eye-catching methods.
Other cases are still before the courts, including charges brought against two Just Stop Oil members accused of throwing orange paint powder over the stone megaliths of Stonehenge, as well as two activists charged with spray-painting the tomb of naturalist Charles Darwin in Westminster Abbey.
The country's previous Conservative government took a hostile stance towards disruptive direct action, and passed laws toughening punishments for such offences.
Y.Aukaiv--AMWN