
-
Hurricane Imelda bound for Bermuda as a Cat 2 storm
-
Supreme Court blocks Trump from immediately firing Fed governor
-
French navy boards Russia 'shadow fleet' ship: AFP
-
Canada blocks theme park from sending whales to China
-
Jonathan Anderson brings bold twist to Dior women in Paris debut
-
Deadly family drama shuts Oktoberfest for a day
-
Senate rejects plan to end US government shutdown
-
Troll-in-chief Trump mocks Democrats over shutdown
-
Supreme Court blocks Trump from immediately firing Fed Gov. Cook
-
Wall Street stocks shrug off start of US shutdown
-
Israel issues 'last' warning for Gazans to flee main city
-
Jonathan Anderson brings new twist to Dior women with Paris debut
-
India 'welcome' to collect trophy from me, says Asian cricket boss
-
Schwarzenegger's 'action hero' pope says don't give up on climate change
-
'I'm breathing again': Afghans relieved after internet restored
-
Shein picks France for its first permanent stores
-
Five survivors pulled from Indonesia school collapse as rescuers race against time
-
Deadly family drama in Munich briefly shuts Oktoberfest
-
Japanese trainer Saito hopes for better Arc experience second time round
-
'Normal' Sinner romps to 21st title but Swiatek stunned in Beijing
-
Stella McCartney takes on 'barbaric' feather industry
-
Mobile and internet restored across Afghanistan: AFP journalists
-
Wall Street stocks slide as US shutdown begins
-
US senators struggle for off-ramp as shutdown kicks in
-
Oktoberfest briefly closed by bomb threat, deadly family drama
-
Swiatek out with a whimper as Navarro stuns top seed in Beijing
-
Gaza aid flotilla defies Israeli 'intimidation tactics'
-
Meta defends ads model in 550-mn-euro data protection trial
-
Two pulled from Indonesia school collapse as rescuers race against time
-
Mobile and data networks return across Afghanistan: AFP journalists
-
Denmark warns EU over Russia 'hybrid war' as leaders talk defence
-
UK's Labour govt plans permanent fracking ban
-
Russia says situation at Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant under control
-
YouTube, platforms not cooperating enough on EU content disputes: report
-
EU eyes higher steel tariffs, taking page from US
-
Slot faces reality check at Liverpool as problems mount
-
European stocks rise, Wall St futures drop as US shutdown begins
-
Survivors still carry burden as Bali marks 2005 bombings
-
Thousands protest in Greece over 13-hour workday plans
-
Indigenous protest urges end to Colombia border violence
-
Torrential downpours kill nine in Ukraine's Odesa
-
Australia ease to six-wicket win in first New Zealand T20
-
France's Monfils announces retirement at end of 2026
-
'Normal' Sinner thrashes Tien in Beijing for 21st title
-
Survivor pulled from Indonesia school collapse as parents await news
-
Tennis schedule under renewed scrutiny as injuries, criticism mount
-
New player load guidelines hailed as 'landmark moment' for rugby
-
More ingredients for life discovered in ocean on Saturn moon
-
Germany's Oktoberfest closed by bomb threat
-
Spanish court opens 550-mn-euro Meta data protection trial

India 'welcome' to collect trophy from me, says Asian cricket boss
Asian Cricket Council chief Mohsin Naqvi, who also heads Pakistan's cricket board, said Wednesday that India are "welcome" to collect their Asia Cup trophy from his office in Dubai.
India defended their Asia Cup title by defeating Pakistan on Sunday, but refused to take the winning prize from Naqvi, who is also Pakistan's interior minister.
The Indian players instead celebrated retaining their regional crown by mimicking holding a trophy, and later skipper Suryakumar Yadav said they were denied the trophy.
"As ACC President, I was ready to hand over the trophy that very day and I am still ready now," Naqvi said on X.
"If they truly want it, they are welcome to come to the ACC office and collect it from me."
The regional tournament was dominated by political posturing between the players as the two rivals met three times and the final ended in high drama when the presentation was delayed by one hour.
The T20 tournament in the United Arab Emirates was the first time the Asian cricket giants had met since a deadly military conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbours in May.
Suryakumar refused to shake hands with Pakistan captain Salman Agha in their first meeting and the deadlock continued in the next two matches -- all won by India.
Players from both teams also resorted to signals and gestures aimed to mimic each other's military highs during the four-day conflict.
Both countries claimed victory in the conflict that killed more than 70 people in missile, drone and military fire on each side.
India and Pakistan only meet in cricket on neutral territory in international tournaments because of long-simmering tensions between the arch-rivals.
J.Saleh--SF-PST