
-
Dodgers pitching icon Kershaw to retire - club
-
Eagles seek answers against Rams in battle of NFL unbeatens
-
Afghanistan crash out of Asia Cup after six-wicket loss to Sri Lanka
-
EU states agree broad UN emissions target avoiding 'embarrassment'
-
US regulator sues Ticketmaster over 'illegal' ticket schemes
-
US small businesses slam Trump tariffs as legal fight proceeds
-
All smiles as Melania and Kate meet kids in first public event
-
EU states agree 'face-saving' broad UN emissions-cutting target
-
Madonna to release new album next year
-
Colombian court issues first sentences for ex-soldiers over civilian killings
-
Chip-maker Nvidia takes stake in rival Intel
-
Putin has let me down, says Trump at end of UK state visit
-
Melania's hat, Epstein's ghost: takeaways from Trump's UK visit
-
UN Security Council to vote on Iran nuclear sanctions Friday
-
AI-backed robot painting aims to boost artist income
-
Israel bombards Gaza City, army says four soldiers killed
-
Former Barca presidents deny corruption at ref scandal court appearance
-
Canada, Mexico leaders meet amid US tariff war
-
Mass rallies, disruptions in France on day of anger against Macron
-
Piastri says team orders clarified at McLaren
-
'Box office' McLaughlin-Levrone -- rarely seen but worth the wait
-
Stocks rise on Nvidia-Intel deal, Fed rate cut
-
US medical panel insists it's 'pro-vaccine'
-
Trump says Putin has 'let me down' as UK state visit ends
-
IMF proposes US Treasury official as second-in-command
-
McLaughlin-Levrone mulls Olympic 400m double after silencing doubters
-
McLaughlin-Levrone steals the show at worlds, Botswana take men's one-lap gold
-
Clashes, disruption in France on day of anger against Macron
-
Mitchell defends England's 'route-one' tactics at Rugby World Cup
-
Antonelli vows to bounce back from Wolff criticism
-
Mourinho appointed at Benfica as he returns to Portugal
-
McLaughlin-Levrone powers to 400m world gold in second fastest time ever
-
Costs of Russian, Chinese cyberattacks on German firms on rise: report
-
Stock markets rise after Nvidia's Intel deal, Fed rate cut
-
McLaughlin-Levrone nears world record as she wins women's world 400m gold
-
Australian teen Gout hungry for more after worlds exit
-
Trump, Starmer sign tech deal to seal 'unbreakable bond'
-
Lyles, Tebogo sail into world 200m final but Gout out
-
Tennis legend Bjorn Borg reveals cocaine use in memoir
-
Clashes, disruption in France on day of anti-Macron 'anger'
-
Hodgkinson settles nerves in Tokyo after injury doubts
-
Coventry praises Milan-Cortina venue progress as IOC executives meet in Milan
-
Jaden Smith at Louboutin stirs fresh 'nepo-baby' fashion debate
-
Bank of England holds rate as inflation stays high
-
Tough topics top Trump-Starmer talks after regal welcome
-
Toulon's Jaminet eager to return for France after racist video
-
Gold medallists Kipyegon, Chebet line up 5,000m clash for world double
-
London Fashion Week hopes to usher in new era with leadership change
-
Benfica negotiating with Mourinho to be new coach
-
Deliveroo CEO to step down following DoorDash takeover

Daughters scale Argentine peak, retrieve dead mountaineer dad's photos
Two daughters of an Argentine mountaineer who died on an icy peak 40 years ago, have retrieved his backpack from the spot -- finding camera film inside that allowed them a glimpse of some of his final experiences.
Guillermo Vieiro was 44 when he died in 1985 while descending Argentina's Tupungato lava dome, one of the highest peaks in the Americas.
Then last year, his backpack was spotted on a slope by mountaineer Gabriela Cavallaro, who examined it and contacted Vieiro's daughters Guadalupe, 40, and Azul, 44.
In February this year, the three set out with four other guides and two filmmakers on an 11-day journey to recover the bag from an altitude of about 6,100 meters (20,000 feet) -- close to the summit of the 6,600-meter volcanic peak.
"In my family, the word 'mountain' was always forbidden. My mother wants nothing to do with the discovery of this backpack. It's a family that has been broken by grief, by the void," Azul, who was just four years old when her father died, told AFP.
"It all seemed crazy to me, and I didn't want to go back to the volcano where he had died. But as the months went by... I started to loosen up, and began thinking: 'Why not?'"
Inside the backpack, the women found a jacket, a sleeping bag, a water bottle, aspirin, Vitamin C tablets, a set of knives and two rolls of film that had belonged to their father.
"Spiritually, it felt like a greeting, like: 'I'm still here, I exist. You're not alone'," Azul recounted.
- Mountaineering history -
The experience also allowed her to learn more about a man she never got a chance to know.
"My mother never really told us who he was. We knew he had died in the mountains and that he was a mountaineer, but not much more than that. So, it was like rediscovering his story, like saying, wait... we have a father who had a life, a history. So it was like discovering him all over again."
Photos taken from other film found inside the same backpack by Cavallaro a year earlier, showed that Vieiro and his partner Leonardo Rabal, 20, had been the first climbers to reach the top of Tupungato from its eastern side -- the most challenging route.
"That slope has never been scaled again," Cavallaro, who lives at the foot of Tupungato in the city by the same name, told AFP.
"What they (Vieiro and Rabal) accomplished has real historical value in Argentine and international mountaineering," she added.
The bodies of Vieiro and Rabal were recovered shortly after they died.
Azul and her sister said they would donate their father's belongings in an attempt to share a "piece of Argentine mountaineering history" with others.
U.AlSharif--SF-PST