- EV sales hit record in UK but still behind target
- AI expected to star at CES gadget extravaganza
- Brazil says 2024 was its hottest year on record
- Soldier in Vegas Tesla blast suffered PTSD, no 'terror' link: FBI
- Microsoft expects to spend $80 bn on AI this fiscal year
- Man arrested for supplying drugs to Liam Payne: Argentine police
- Breeding success: London zoo counts its animals one-by-one
- Biden blocks US Steel sale to Japan's Nippon Steel
- Wall Street stocks bounce higher, Europe retreats
- Neil Young says he will play Glastonbury after all
- Biden blocks US-Japan steel deal
- British novelist David Lodge dies aged 89
- Indonesia says 2024 was hottest year on record
- Indian duo self-immolate in Bhopal waste protest
- Indian food delivery app rolls out ambulance service
- European stock markets retreat after positive start to year
- UK electricity cleanest on record in 2024: study
- Biden to block US-Japan steel deal: US media
- Thai PM declares millions in watches and bags among $400 mn assets
- China says 'determined' to open up to world in 2025
- Asian shares rise defying slow Wall Street start to 2025
- 'Emilia Perez' heads into Golden Globes as strong favorite
- 'You need to be happy': graffiti encourages Cuban self-reflection
- Disaster-hit Chilean park sows seeds of fire resistance
- Mixed day for global stocks as dollar pushes higher
- Nick Clegg leaves Meta global policy team
- Tesla reports lower 2024 auto deliveries, missing forecast
- Meghan Markle's lifestyle show to premiere Jan 15 on Netflix
- Wall Street lifts spirits after Asia starts year in red
- UK's biggest dinosaur footprint site uncovered
- Most UK doctors suffer from 'compassion fatigue': poll
- Secret lab developing UK's first quantum clock: defence ministry
- US mulls new restrictions on Chinese drones
- Wall Street dons early green after Asia starts year in red
- Stock markets begin new year with losses
- Sales surge in 2024 for Chinese EV giant BYD
- Asian stocks begin year on cautious note
- Blooming hard: Taiwan's persimmon growers struggle
- Asia stocks begin year on cautious note
- Cosmetic surgery aficionado Jocelyne Wildenstein dies aged 79: partner
- Power restored to most of Puerto Rico: utility
- Tintin, Popeye, Hemingway among US copyrights expiring in 2025
- Finnish police probing seven sailors over cut cables
- End of Russian gas via Ukraine sparks unease in eastern Europe
- Island-wide blackout hits Puerto Rico on New Year's Eve
- Musk flummoxes internet with 'Kekius Maximus' persona
- US stocks slip as European markets ring out year with gains
- Syria's de facto leader meets minority Christians
- Panama marks canal handover anniversary in shadow of Trump threat
- US, European stock markets look to ring out year with gains
Morocco rescuers dig for boy trapped in well
Moroccans waited anxiously Thursday as authorities said a dramatic operation to rescue a young boy trapped in a deep well for over two days was nearing its end.
The five-year-old, named as Rayan, fell down the narrow 32-metre (100-foot) deep well on Tuesday evening in his home village near Bab Berred in the rural northern province of Chefchaouen, local media said.
"The child's rescue is approaching," government spokesman Mustapha Baitas said Thursday. "Our hearts are with the family, and we are praying that he will back with them as soon as possible."
The shaft was too narrow for rescuers to reach the bottom, so heavy diggers were dispatched to dig a hole alongside it.
Relief operations intensified as darkness fell for a third night with the boy deep down in the well, with diggers clawing out dirt under floodlights.
Rescuers reported they had dug down some 24 meters, but that around six metres still remained to reach the child.
The MAP news agency said rescuers had been able to send him oxygen and water via pipes.
Rayan's father told Le360 news website he had been repairing the well when the boy fell into it.
Lead rescuer Abdelhabi Temrani told Al Oula television that the diameter of the well was less than 45 centimetres.
Baitas said the nature of the soil meant it was too dangerous to try to widen the hole, meaning major excavations around it were the only solution.
The drama has sparked an outpouring of sympathy online, with the Arabic hashtag #SaveRayan going viral across the North African region, including in neighbouring Algeria.
Moroccan footballer and PSG star Achraf Hakimi mentioned the rescue efforts on social media, alongside emojis of a broken heart and hands together in prayer.
The boy's fate has also attracted crowds of people to the site of the operation, putting pressure on rescuers operating in "difficult conditions", Baitas said.
"We call on citizens to let the rescuers do their job and save this child," he said.
Authorities have also prepared a helicopter to take the child to hospital once he is extracted, national news channel 2M said.
M.Mendoza--CPN