
-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Charles and Camilla visit Dante's tomb, Byzantine mosaics
-
OpenAI countersues Musk as feud deepens
-
Global plastic recycling rates 'stagnant' at under 10%: study
-
Miuccia Prada's path from activist to top designer
-
Pope in surprise St Peter's visit a day after meeting King Charles
-
Wall Street rally fizzles as tariff worries resurface
-
US consumer inflation cools in March on falling gas prices
-
Cannes Festival: Films in competition
-
Cartier exhibition to bedazzle London crowds
-
Shanghai finance workers worry after front-row seat to tariff turmoil
-
Charles and Camilla visit tomb of Dante, Italy's greatest poet
-
EU halts counter-tariffs but no pause in US-China trade war
-
Scarlett Johansson to star at Cannes as festival unveils line-up
-
Trump tariffs weigh on Germany as institutes cut forecasts
-
Stocks zoom higher as Trump delays painful tariffs
-
Vatican releases image of Charles, Camilla meeting pope
-
Taiwan's TSMC says first quarter revenue up 42 percent
-
Vietnam says it will start trade talks with United States
-
Expo 2025 in Japan: five things to know
-
Trump's tariff pause gives market relief, but China trade war intensifies
-
Papua New Guinea lifts ban on forest carbon credits
-
Asian stocks crack higher as Trump delays painful tariffs
-
Cannes to unveil film selection under pressure over industry abuse
-
Companies keen to start deep-sea mining off Norway
-
China consumer prices slump for second straight month: data
-
Amazon satellite launch scrubbed due to weather
-
US stocks soar on Trump tariff reversal, oil prices jump
-
Author of explosive Meta memoir stars at US Senate hearing
-
King Charles addresses Italian parliament, greets pope on visit to Rome
-
Trump stuns with tariff backtrack but punishes China
-
Strength in numbers: Latin America urges unity in face of Trump tariffs
-
Volkswagen says first-quarter profits impacted by Trump tariffs
-
Herd of animal puppets treks from Africa to Europe in climate action
-
Amazon to launch first batch of satellites rivaling Musk
-
Pentagon chief in Panama vows to counter China 'threat'
-
Trump's NASA chief pick says will 'prioritize' Mars mission
-
Trump tells US to 'be cool' as China, EU strike back
-
Delta to trim capacity in light of weakening travel demand
-
French group gets death threats over renaming of 'Negresse' district
-
Trump trade war escalates as China, EU counterattack
-
Stocks volatile, oil plunges as trade war cranks higher
-
US Treasury chief defends tariffs, warns against aligning with China
-
Beijing consumers mull spending habits as 'worrying' tariffs kick in
-
Tata Steel to cut jobs at Dutch plant by 15%
-
Tata Steel to cut jobs at Dutch plant by 15 pct
-
China hawk Peter Navarro has Trump's ear
-
How tariffs in the EU work
-
'Catastrophe': Volkswagen town rattled by Trump trade war
-
Race to save Sweden's 17th century warship in preservation project
RBGPF | -12.83% | 60.27 | $ | |
RYCEF | -1.88% | 9.03 | $ | |
VOD | -2.14% | 8.4 | $ | |
CMSC | -1.44% | 22.28 | $ | |
NGG | -0.72% | 64.745 | $ | |
SCS | -4.74% | 10.13 | $ | |
RIO | -2.64% | 54.18 | $ | |
BP | -6.59% | 26.175 | $ | |
GSK | -4.55% | 32.98 | $ | |
BTI | -0.87% | 39.865 | $ | |
CMSD | -1.52% | 22.41 | $ | |
RELX | -0.85% | 48.13 | $ | |
BCC | -5.5% | 93.305 | $ | |
AZN | -4.75% | 63.735 | $ | |
JRI | -2.18% | 11.734 | $ | |
BCE | -0.89% | 20.815 | $ |

Postmen deliver the goods on Ukraine's home front
There is war raging in Ukraine but the postmasters in the western city of Lviv promise to keep making deliveries.
Parcels may be rattled on roads pockmarked by shell blasts, delayed at sandbag checkpoints, and held static during overnight curfews pierced by wailing air raid sirens.
But Volodymyr Shved and Anatoliy Goretsky -- who manage the Nova Poshta courier company in Lviv -- insist parcels will arrive at their destination.
"The only places we aren't working is where the bombs are falling, at the moment they're falling," said 39-year-old Shved.
"When the alarms go off we stop, but when they are silent we go back to work."
- The war at home -
Since Russia invaded Ukraine three weeks ago the pro-Western country has moved onto a war footing.
Thousands of soldiers have been mobilised and cities have been fortified on the orders of President Volodymyr Zelensky, who addresses the nation in military fatigues.
The "home front" of Ukraine has also been transformed, as civilian life pivots to buttress the war effort and usher aid to refugees fleeing conflict zones.
Lviv, which is located 70 kilometres (45 miles) from the border with Poland, was initially largely spared military strikes from Russian forces.
But the cavernous Nova Poshta warehouse on the northern outskirts has nevertheless been transformed by the demands of war.
The workforce has slimmed by more than half. Just 22 work here with most of the rest called up for combat.
The hub once sorted one million parcels a day, mainly for online shoppers.
Now the 100,000 daily parcels are mostly food, medicine and clothing -- care packages criss-crossing conflict-riven Ukraine.
- Pasta and military boots -
A cursory glance at rusted red cargo trolleys reveals pasta noodles and military boots nestled among anonymous cardboard packages.
Ninety mechanised lines hurl them along a conveyor belt through a yawning red scanner, sorting them for onward travel.
Shved said the only day this process paused was February 24 -- when Russia invaded -- as a grip of panic passed across Ukraine.
"Over the next few days we realised the company is one of the few that can keep people united," he said. "That's why we decided to regroup."
Now the postal trucks are guided by a backroom team mapping "safe routes to pass aside warfare", he explained.
They account for infrastructure hobbled by Russian airstrikes and Ukrainian checkpoints manned by twitchy recruits.
Nova Poshta once made deliveries anywhere in Ukraine within 24 hours. Now it takes between four and six days.
Nevertheless "we do our best to deliver every package to its final destination", pledged Shved.
On a wall in the front office a caricature of Russian President Vladimir Putin is daubed on a whiteboard.
Though far from most battles, combat is clearly on employees' minds.
"Many of our workers are on the frontline and many are still working here," said 42-year-old Goretsky, wearing a red down jacket.
"It's also a frontline."
- Outgoing aid -
Shved and Goretsky say parcels are still arriving from the frontline cities of Kyiv and Kharkiv.
But despite their upbeat mood, parts of the nation are now cut off.
The last shipment from Mariupol arrived one week ago. The strategic port city has been hammered by Russian artillery with reports of horrific casualties.
And nationwide, just 25 percent of the Nova Poshta offices are still open for business.
But a second shed behind the private post facility is where the main focus of their work now lies.
Around 90 percent of freight passing through the facility is now humanitarian aid -- gathered and sorted at the Lviv way station for incoming refugees or eastbound distribution.
There are towering pallets of noodles from the Lithuanian Red Cross, blood-clotting trauma bandages from the French Protection Civile and cans of drinking water stamped with a heart symbol.
Men perched on freight-pushing buggies scoot across the sheened floor, shunting aid crates into piles.
Standing among boxed donations, Andriy Kovalyov, 38, is itemising assorted medication.
After fleeing his home in Kyiv, Kovalyov now volunteers for the health ministry using his pharmaceutical expertise.
"I had the choice between going to the army, which I'm not trained to do... or this," he said, gesturing at his makeshift workplace.
"I hope this helps."
P.Kolisnyk--CPN