-
Koeman steps down as Netherlands coach after World Cup exit
-
Valiant Serena beaten on Wimbledon return, Swiatek survives scare
-
Nasdaq ends best quarter in 6 years as yen extends drop against dollar
-
Serena beaten at Wimbledon in first singles match in four years
-
Zverev says Wimbledon hopes 'about me' despite open draw
-
Dutch football chiefs condemn online racism after World Cup exit
-
Lionel Scaloni: Argentina's mastermind marks 100 games in charge
-
Police hunt for Monaco bomber after Ukraine-born tycoon wounded
-
Mourinho's Real Madrid host Real Sociedad in La Liga opener
-
CIA boss compares cutting-edge AI to nuclear weapons
-
Football brings joy to Venezuelan kids displaced by quakes
-
'Any team can beat you', warns Ruiz as Spain seek end to World Cup woe
-
Haaland fires Norway into last 16 as France, Mexico look to advance
-
Venezuela quake survivors seek food, shelter as toll rises to nearly 2,000
-
Merkel unveils official portrait for German chancellery
-
Haaland scores winner to send Norway into last-16 Brazil clash
-
Canada crews battle northern wildfire after crash kills 3
-
US Treasury sanctions target alleged drug cartel-linked fuel smuggling ring
-
Portugal's Silva bides his time after being benched at World Cup
-
LeBron James to leave Lakers to play 24th NBA season
-
US stars relish soccer's primetime moment against Bosnia
-
Zverev wins in four sets to reach Wimbledon round two
-
Lampard extends Coventry stay after promotion to Premier League
-
Grimaldo realises goal of Atletico Madrid move from Leverkusen
-
Djokovic, Sinner aim to step up Wimbledon title chase
-
US Supreme Court lifts campaign spending restrictions ahead of midterms
-
Brook ready for "great honour" of succeeding Stokes as Test skipper
-
LeBron James to leave Lakers to play 24th NBA career
-
Taps run dry in Hungarian village as heatwave bites
-
Tens of millions swelter as heat wave blasts US
-
Venezuela quake survivors seek food, shelter amid risk of disease outbreaks
-
US Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to limit birthright citizenship
-
LeBron James to leave Lakers, continue NBA career - media reports
-
Gardner stars as Australia thrash the West Indies in Women's T20 World Cup semi-final
-
'Where is she?' The desperate search for Venezuela's missing
-
Former Barca teen star Fati seals permanent Monaco switch
-
No business as usual after shock World Cup exit, say German FA
-
German rail regulator backs Italian firm in competition spat
-
Pope appeals to Catholic traditionalists to avoid schism
-
Ancelotti shows Brazil his worth at World Cup but concerns remain
-
US Supreme Court upholds transgender sports bans
-
Stocks rise, yen at 40-year low against dollar
-
US Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to restrict birthright citizenship
-
Australia hold West Indies to 125-7 in World Cup semi-final
-
Serena set for remarkable Wimbledon return, Swiatek survives scare
-
Defending champ Swiatek survives scare to reach Wimbledon second round
-
Africa EV firm Spiro accused of torturing Uganda employees
-
US Supreme Court upholds state bans on transgender athletes in school
-
PSG's Portugal forward Ramos signs five-year AC Milan deal
-
Tourists soldier on in Rome despite heatwave
Shelling fails to shift last civilians from Kyiv's ghost suburb
Most of the citizens of Irpin, a once well-to-do commuter suburb of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, have fled the Russian army's bombardment.
The streets are dotted with rubble where Grad missiles have burst open high-rise apartment blocks and modest wood and brick bungalows.
Sometimes the empty streets are so silent that a woodpecker's tapping in a tall tree sounds more insistent than the distant guns.
But sometimes there is the roar of racks of Grad missiles and volleys of mortar shells being launched nearby.
It's more than Mykola Pustovit, 69, can take. He bursts into tears as he and his wife start the long walk to find relative safety in Kyiv.
They had hoped the frontline would move away from Irpin, "but now, after such bombing, it's unbearable".
In fact, the frontline has not shifted for days. By the reckoning of Ukrainian soldiers manning checkpoints in the town, maybe 20-30 percent of the district is in Russian hands.
The next suburb, Bucha, a few hundred metres further north, is already in the hands of the invading Russian army and violence is never far away.
As AFP reporters crossed a makeshift wooden bridge into Irpin early on Sunday, Ukrainian forces were shipping the corpses of three of their comrades back out.
Later in the day, a car carrying American journalists came under fire near a Ukrainian checkpoint, killing film-maker Brent Renaud and wounding photographer Juan Arredondo.
After the incident, Irpin's mayor Oleksandr Markushyn banned reporters from the town, but before the restriction came into place AFP found some civilians not ready to leave.
- 'This one bites' -
Iryna Morozova is clearly frightened, she raises her hands in surrender when AFP journalists approach, as if being held at gunpoint.
Her house is badly damaged, lying next to another that was all but demolished by an apparent missile hit. But the 54-year-old can't leave; who would feed her dogs?
She has the keys to a neighbour's house where three excitable puppies, a placid Golden Retriever and a nervous German Shepherd, confined and circling in a kennel, have a home.
"This one bites, we closed him up in the cage. We found him, he was scared and was shaking," she says of the distressed dog.
The others have the run of a garden, and play happily with visitors.
"They sleep there in the kitchen. They play during the day. How can you leave them?" Morozova asks.
The few remaining neighbours look out for one another and take food to the elderly, but Morozova is more worried about the pets.
"There's nothing left here," welling up in grief in front of a ruined home. "Now we collect stray animals and feed them, because people left them behind and moved away."
Another neighbour, 76-year-old Vera Tyskanova, retired to the once pleasant suburban street after a career as a train driver in the Tajik capital Dushanbe.
She has been without power since an air strike early in the war, late last month, and is also consoling herself by feeding neighbourhood strays.
"There's water, but no electricity. There's a fireplace in the part of the house which is not ruined ... I'm surviving," she laughs.
She may be putting a brave face on things, but just around the corner 84-year-old Mykola Karpovych -- who once drove a tractor in farmland near the then friendly Belarus border -- is bewildered.
"Where would I go? My legs and my hands hurt," he tells AFP.
"To leave? Where would I go? Shall we go to Kyiv? I won't go anywhere. What happens, happens. I'm too old."
H.Darwish--SF-PST