
-
Does "vibe coding" make everyone a programmer?
-
France's Dassault says upping Rafale warplane output
-
Pakistan charges Baloch activist with 'terrorism'
-
Pope returns home from hospital, thanks faithful
-
Tired-looking pope leaves hospital, thanks faithful
-
Chinese premier calls for 'dialogue' as US senator visits Beijing
-
China says to pursue 'correct' path of globalisation as trade woes mount
-
'Surf and turf' protest in Spain against factory, mine
-
Appeal of Vietnam death row tycoon to begin in separate case
-
Pro-Trump senator set to meet Chinese premier
-
Venezuelan migrant dreams of US national amputee soccer stardom
-
Prospect of copper mine reopening revives tensions in Panama
-
AI startup Perplexity confirms interest to buy TikTok
-
Trump admits Musk 'susceptible' on China
-
Jaguar looks to woo younger, richer drivers with $160,000 Type 00
-
Trump admits Musk 'susceptible' on China amid secret war plan row
-
Heathrow closure could cost millions, disrupt flights for days
-
EU tariffs not a deterrent, says Chinese EV maker XPeng
-
Trump suggests Tesla vandals be jailed in El Salvador
-
Russian central bank holds key rate at two-decade high
-
Namibia inaugurates its first woman president
-
Markets skid into weekend as trade fears cast a pall
-
Court rules against K-pop group NewJeans in contract dispute
-
Turkish clinics vie for UK medical tourists' custom in London
-
London's Heathrow: Europe's biggest airport
-
In Washington, glum residents struggle with Trump return
-
Japan core inflation slows to 3% in Feburary
-
Trump's call for AI deregulation gets strong backing from Big Tech
-
Italian paper prints fully-AI edition, but not to 'kill' journalism
-
In US Northwest, South Cascade is where glacier science grew up
-
Japan's core inflation rate slows to 3% in Feburary
-
Has US Education Dept impeded students? False claims by conservatives
-
Chinese electric car maker BYD aims for Europe boost
-
US refuses water request for Mexico in new battleline
-
Infants remember more than you think, new study reveals
-
Explosive Meta memoir tops US best-seller list
-
Swiss cut rates again over global economic 'uncertainty'
-
US existing home sales beat expectations in February
-
Greenpeace $660mn damages ruling shocks global NGOs
-
Oxygen detected in most distant galaxy: 'astonished' astronomers
-
BoE warns on 'economic uncertainty' as rate held
-
US denies entry to French scientist over 'hateful' messages
-
Hong Kong's embattled CK Hutchison says profits down in 2024
-
What is dark energy? One of science's great mysteries, explained
-
Most markets track Wall St gains as Fed soothes tariff fears
-
Europe shifts gears for the Trump era
-
Return of the alpha male: Why toxic masculinity is gaining prominence
-
'Musky' marsupial could solve hopping kangaroo mystery
-
Insults and acceptance: being trans in rural France
-
'It was beautiful': Mount Kenya's glaciers melting away

'Surf and turf' protest in Spain against factory, mine
Thousands of people on boats and on land staged a "surf and turf" protest in northwest Spain on Saturday against a planned textile factory and the reopening of a copper mine.
Protesters in the coastal city of A Pobra do Caraminal, in Spain's Galicia region, decried what they said were the environmental risks posed by both facilities.
Organisers -- who termed the rally a "surf and turf" protest -- said they had suspicions about the plans by Portuguese company Altri to build a factory to make lyocell, a semi-synthetic textile.
They said they feared it was just cover to build a cellulose plant that would pollute the region's Ulloa River and its Arousa Estuary.
The site of the factory is in Palas de Rei, close to a section of the Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage route used by hundreds of thousands of people every year.
The organisers -- calling themselves the Platform for the Defence of the Arousa Estuary -- said they also opposed the planned reopening of an open-cast copper mine in Touro, just east of the city of Santiago de Compostela. The mine was closed in 1986.
Manoel Santos, a regional representative for Greenpeace, said the Altri textile factory "could spell the death of the Arousa Estuary".
Galicia's regional government has declared the factory to be ecologically viable.
A spokeswoman for Greenfiber, Altri's subsidiary in charge of the project, denied any pollution risk. She told Galician public television that the factory "scrupulously respects all EU environmental rules".
M.Davis--CPN