- Slot gets first taste of Liverpool pressure after honeymoon period
- Rahm wins LIV Golf Chicago and 2024 individual crown
- Environmental activist who feared for life killed in Honduras
- Spain's Alex Palou wins third IndyCar season title
- Late Meafou try gives Toulouse victory over La Rochelle in Top 14
- Trump safe after apparent assassination attempt, person in custody
- Americans endure long wait for coveted Solheim Cup win
- Saints crush Cowboys in another big early-season NFL win
- Yamal brace as Barca perfect march on, Atletico triumph
- Gallagher, Alvarez get first Atletico goals in confident Valencia win
- In-form Napoli top Serie A after Inter stumble at Monza
- Pettersen proud but unsure of Europe captain return after loss
- Mini dresses and the 'great British prom': LFW revisits the classics
- 'I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT' Trump posts on social media
- Trump is 'safe following gunshots in his vicinity': campaign
- United States beats Europe to win first Solheim Cup since 2017
- United States defeats Europe to win Solheim Cup
- Napoli top Serie A after stormy Cagliari win
- Environmental activist killed in Honduras
- Newcastle strike back to win at Wolves
- 'I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT' Trump tweets
- Ghostly 'Beetlejuice' again rules, topping N.America box office
- 'The Life of Chuck' wins top prize at Toronto film fest
- Yamal bags brace as Barca take Girona revenge
- Fabre eyes ninth Arc win after Sosie sparkles in trials
- Doubles win for Djokovic secures Serbia's Davis Cup status
- Rain washes out England-Australia T20 series finale
- Lookman fires Atalanta past Fiorentina ahead of Arsenal clash
- Red Bull boss blames Sainz for crash with Perez Horner blames Sainz for crash with Perez
- Hamas official says group has 'high ability' to continue Gaza war despite losses
- Union says talks with Boeing to resume Tuesday
- Gabriel strikes as Arsenal hit wasteful Spurs with sucker punch
- French hit detective show comes to US with 'High Potential'
- Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury dies aged 76
- Historic private astronaut mission ends with splashdown off Florida
- Cool Piastri wins in Baku as McLaren topple Red Bull in teams' title race
- Czech city awaits the inevitable as floodwave looms
- McLaren's Piastri wins Azerbaijan Grand Prix thriller
- Death toll rises as storm lashes central, eastern Europe
- Olympic champion Axelsen cruises to first Hong Kong Open title
- Yemeni rebel missile hits central Israel in rare attack
- Deal with pilots averts strike at Air Canada
- Eight migrants die in Channel crossing attempt
- Endangered pygmy hippo goes viral from Thai zoo
- Virus-hit Cristiano Ronaldo to miss Asian Champions League opener
- UK foreign minister Lammy plays down Putin threats
- Several dead, missing as storm lashes eastern and central Europe
- Army says missile from Yemen fell in central Israel
- Japan to face Fiji in Pacific final after romping past Samoa
- Trees felled by Tropical Storm Bebinca kill six in Philippines
Iranians pay homage to poet Ebtehaj, dead at 94
Hundreds of Iranians attended a funeral service in Tehran on Friday for the country's best-known contemporary poet, Hushang Ebtehaj, who died earlier this month aged 94.
Ebtehaj, whose Persian pen name was Sayeh (the Shadow), shot to fame composing lyrical poems themed on love and solitude, as well as reflections on the struggles and upsides of life in Iran.
He died of kidney failure in Germany and his remains were transferred to his home country ahead of Friday's service, which was attended by a crowd of officials, artists and admirers.
He was a founder member of the Iranian Writers' Association (IWA), established in 1968.
Long close to Tudeh, Iran's Communist party, he resigned from state radio after a 1978 massacre perpetrated by the then shah's security forces.
After the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Ebtehaj was arrested along with several members of Tudeh, and the party was banned.
From the late 1980s, he flitted between Tehran and Cologne, where he lived a modest life with his family.
After a short ceremony, attendees followed his coffin while a recording of him reciting one of his poems was broadcast.
"Sayeh has finally returned to his land," Ebtehaj's daughter Yalda told the crowd, noting that her father "kept repeating that he wished to return to his people".
In a message, Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi praised the poet for "his role in the rich treasure of Persian literature" and for his "anti-arrogance" poems, a reference to the US in Iranian government parlance.
He is due to be buried Saturday in gardens in his home city of Rasht.
C.Meier--BTB