-
Saudi chases AI ambitions with homegrown firm pitched to global investors
-
Russia batters Ukraine energy sites with deadly aerial strikes
-
Stocks diverge as investors digest Trump-Xi talks, earnings
-
'Better to go to prison': Israeli ultra-Orthodox rally against army service
-
Bublik downs fourth seed Fritz to reach Paris Masters quarters
-
UN climate fund posts record year as chief defends loans
-
Man Utd must ignore outside noise to go in 'right direction', says Wilcox
-
G7 to launch 'alliance' countering China's critical mineral dominance
-
Wallaby boss Schmidt wary of Ford's 'triple threat'
-
Swedish hate-crime trial shines light on far-right 'fitness clubs'
-
Trump call for nuclear tests sows confusion
-
Chinese EV giant BYD says Q3 profit down 33%
-
ECB holds rates steady with eurozone more resilient
-
Independent Macau media outlet says it will close by December
-
Shares in Jeep-maker Stellantis slump despite rising sales
-
Shelton beats Rublev to reach Paris Masters last eight
-
Trump stirs tensions with surprise order to test nuclear weapons
-
S.Africa court rules ANC leader Luthuli was killed in apartheid 'assault'
-
Stocks slide as investors digest Trump-Xi talks, earnings
-
No GDP data released as US shutdown bites
-
PSG's injured Doue to miss Bayern match, out for several weeks
-
Litchfield ton guides Australia to 338 in World Cup semis
-
S.Africa court rules ANC leader Luthuli killed in apartheid 'assault'
-
With inflation under control, ECB holds rates steady again
-
Nigerian designer embraces 'clashes' and 'chaos' at Lagos Fashion Week
-
Nissan says expects $1.8 bn operational loss in 2025-26
-
Italy court stalls Sicily bridge, triggers PM fury
-
Marseille midfielder Nadir stable after on-pitch collapse
-
Saudis turned down Messi stint ahead of 2026 World Cup, says official
-
Novo Nordisk launches bidding war with Pfizer for obesity drugmaker Metsera
-
Universal says struck first licensing deal for AI music
-
France arrests five new suspects over Louvre heist: prosecutor
-
Stocks fall as investors eye Trump-Xi talks, earnings
-
Record Vietnam floods kill 10, turn streets into canals
-
Trump orders US to start nuclear weapons testing
-
'Significant' Xi, Trump talks win cautious optimism in China
-
French justice minister visits jailed former president Sarkozy
-
Eurozone growth beats expectations in third quarter
-
Bali trial begins for 3 accused of Australian's murder
-
Dutch election a photo finish between far-right, centrists
-
IOC removes Saudi Arabia as host of inaugural Esports Olympics
-
Russia batters Ukraine energy sites, killing two
-
Shell's net profit jumps despite lower oil prices
-
Pakistani security source says Afghanistan talks 'likely' to resume
-
Fentanyl, beans and Ukraine: takeaways from Trump-Xi's 'great meeting'
-
Asia markets fluctuate as investors examine Trump-Xi talks
-
Branson's Virgin moves closer to launching Eurostar rival
-
Russia hits Ukraine energy sites, killing one, wounding children
-
Asia markets fluctuate as investors mull Trump-Xi talks
-
Trump, Xi ease fight on tariffs, rare earths
| JRI | 0.14% | 13.85 | $ | |
| CMSC | -0.48% | 24.125 | $ | |
| SCS | 0.87% | 16.1 | $ | |
| BCC | -0.09% | 70.27 | $ | |
| BCE | -0.99% | 23.26 | $ | |
| RIO | -0.71% | 72.065 | $ | |
| RYCEF | 0.32% | 15.45 | $ | |
| RBGPF | 0% | 79 | $ | |
| NGG | 0.51% | 75.94 | $ | |
| BTI | -0.63% | 51.396 | $ | |
| GSK | 2.24% | 46.982 | $ | |
| AZN | 0.63% | 82.75 | $ | |
| RELX | -0.45% | 44.49 | $ | |
| CMSD | -0.12% | 24.53 | $ | |
| VOD | 0.53% | 11.964 | $ | |
| BP | -0.16% | 35.145 | $ |
Corsican nationalist buried after killing that inflamed island
Hundreds of mourners turned out Friday for the funeral of a Corsican nationalist whose violent death in prison has turned him into a martyr for some despite his murder conviction.
Yvan Colonna, a former goat herder on the French Mediterranean island, was announced dead Monday after being strangled and attacked in prison on March 2.
The 61-year-old was serving a life sentence for the murder of a senior French official in 1998, but he is seen as a hero by some for his role in the violent struggle for independence for the island which lies less than 200 kilometres (120 miles) south of the mainland.
"He represents the fight for Corsica," Ange Amati, who campaigned for his release, told AFP Friday ahead of the funeral. "We know Yvan, we know that nothing was proved, he was innocent in all of this."
Colonna's murder in prison by an Islamic extremist outraged many Corsicans and has galvanised the local pro-autonomy or nationalist movement, which has battled for decades for greater freedom or independence from Paris.
After several nights of rioting in early March, the government made a surprise offer of talks about increasing the island's autonomy in a move welcomed by the dominant political group on the island, Femu a Corsica.
But public displays of support for Colonna, including the lowering of flags on the regional government building Tuesday and vigils attended by thousands, have created unease on the mainland where Colonna is remembered simply as the killer of local prefect Claude Erignac.
The decision to lower the flag in tribute was "a sort of insult to the Erignac family, the French state and the representatives of the state," Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said Thursday.
- Tributes -
Colonna's funeral took place in his ancestral home in Cargese, a village on the rugged western coast of the island, which is famed for its mountains and pristine coastline, as well as its role as the birthplace of Napoleon.
Hundreds of well-wishers walked behind his casket as it was brought to a local church, with the pro-autonomy leader of the Corsican regional council, Gilles Simeoni, and the suspected former head of the violent pro-independence militant group FLNC, Charles Pieri, also in attendance.
Simeoni called for flags to be lowered again and suggested a minute of silence during the afternoon.
A banner reading "Killer French State" was also unfurled in the centre of Cargese, reflecting anger over how Colonna had been attacked while behind bars and repeated refusals by prison authorities to transfer him to a jail in Corsica.
An estimated 4,000 people had lined the streets Wednesday evening after his body arrived by plane in the nearby city of Ajaccio, many burning flares and flying the black-and-white Corsican flag.
Despite his insistence he was innocent and the campaign to free him, Colonna was tried and convicted three times for murdering Erignac by shooting him in the head at point-blank range as he headed to a theatre performance with his wife.
He went on the run after the killing before being arrested four years later when police tracked him down to a remote mountainous area in the island's south.
The group warned after the attack on Colonna that it could resume its fight if Paris remained in a state of "contemptuous denial".
"The death in the way it happened, in prison, for Yvan Colonna was an offence," Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure told RTL radio Thursday.
"But to make him into a hero, to give the impression that he is a model for the young generations, is a scandal," he said.
pr-mc-ol-adp/tgb
A.AlHaj--SF-PST