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Starc, Rana shine as Delhi and Rajasthan register IPL wins
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Aftershocks rattle Myanmar as rescuers search for survivors
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Dortmund beat Mainz to keep Champions League hopes alive
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Rana, Hasaranga help Rajasthan to first season win in IPL
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Inter six points clear in Serie A after squeezing past Udinese
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What we know about Syria's new government
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Dortmund beat Mainz to keep European hopes alive
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Marmoush fires Man City into FA Cup semis after Haaland limps off
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'Working Man' tops N.America box office as 'Snow White' ticket sales melt
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Ajax down rivals PSV and close in on Eredivisie title
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Trump says 'very angry' with Putin over Ukraine
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Barca restore Liga lead in Girona romp
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Pedersen joins elite company with third Gent-Wevelgem win
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Trump says 'very angry' with Putin over Ukraine: NBC
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Mads Pedersen claims Gent-Wevelgem for third time
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Rashford double fires Villa into FA Cup semis
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Convalescing pope says illness is universal as misses another Angelus
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Starc bags five as Delhi beat Hyderabad in IPL
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European orbital rocket crashes after launch
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Chacarra claims Indian Open for first DP World Tour win
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Sudan paramilitary chief admits withdrawal from capital
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Argentina win first Hong Kong Sevens to mark new era at $3.85bn stadium
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Netanyahu offers Hamas leaders Gaza exit but demands group disarm
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Prince Harry charity rift blows up as chair makes fresh allegations
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Arsenal appoint Berta as sporting director
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Roglic claims Tour of Catalonia triumph with solo stage seven win
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Myanmar junta accused of air strike even after quake
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RB Leipzig fire coach Rose with top-four in doubt
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RSF paramilitary chief admits forces withdrew from Sudan capital
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Ito injury adds to Bayern's defensive woes
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Tears, prayers in search for monks trapped by Myanmar quake
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RB Leipzig fire coach Rose
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Beachcomber in France hunts fragments of migrant lives
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Iran police disperse pro-hijab protesters outside parliament
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Agents on alert as Springbok stars of tomorrow perform
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Myanmar quake: a nation unprepared for disaster
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In Turkey, new technologies reinforce repression
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Ukrainian museum moves to 'decolonise' history
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Ukraine accuses Russia of 'war crime' with military hospital strike
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Pentagon chief says US will ensure 'deterrence' across Taiwan Strait
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South Korean man cleaning gravesite suspected of starting wildfires: police
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'Something is rotten': Apple's AI strategy faces doubts
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Hudson's Bay Company: from fur trade to department store downfall
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Orban's food price cap takes aim at foreign retailers in Hungary
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AI-powered drones track down fires in German forests
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China, South Korea and Japan agree to strengthen free trade
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Morocco 'water highway' averts crisis in big cities but doubts over sustainability
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US, China raise the stakes in Panama Canal ports row
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American Malinin soars to second straight men's figure skating world title
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Aftershocks rattle Mandalay as rescuers search for survivors in Myanmar quake

Pressing matters: White House shake-up boosts pro-Trump media
It was a moment that instantly went viral -- a White House reporter asking Volodymyr Zelensky why he wasn't wearing a suit in the Oval Office just before his huge row with Donald Trump.
But it was also the moment that defined a new media landscape under the Republican president that has given increased prominence to right-wing outlets.
From the White House to Air Force One, the traditional "pool" of reporters who follow the US president has had its biggest shake-up in decades with the addition of members of an often raucous, partisan new media.
Trump's administration is giving unprecedented access to podcasters and influencers, many of them openly supportive of his MAGA movement. At the same time, it is bitterly attacking -- and in one case barring -- the legacy media.
It comes after former reality TV show host Trump embraced podcasters on his way to an extraordinary White House comeback in the 2024 election.
"I'm not hiding. I voted for Trump. I think he's doing a good job," said Clay Travis, founder of sports culture website Outkick, who was part of the pool on Trump's trip to watch a wrestling match in Philadelphia last weekend.
Travis, who is also the host of a conservative radio show and podcast The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show, got a rare one-on-one interview with Trump on the presidential plane.
He told AFP: "People can say, OK, I don't want to trust that guy because I know that he likes Trump and thinks he's doing a good job. Or they can say, I do trust that guy more because he's being honest and telling us what his perspective is."
Travis is emblematic of the change signaled by Karoline Leavitt, who at 27 was the youngest press secretary in history at her very first briefing back in January.
Pledging to follow her boss's "revolutionary media approach," Leavitt unveiled a "new media seat" in the famed briefing room and threw open the press accreditation system to all comers.
The White House told AFP it had received a staggering 92,000 applications so far.
The seat has been occupied by a wide variety of people, including a journalist from pro-Trump "My Pillow" businessman Mike Lindell's TV channel.
Less than a month later Leavitt dropped the bombshell that the White House -- and not an independent association of journalists -- would choose which reporters are part of the pool and add some new organizations to the rotation.
- 'Enemy of the people' -
Many of those have been right-wing or fringe news outlets, meaning that more mainstream organizations -- including Reuters, Bloomberg and AFP -- have seen their access to the president decrease.
And while Trump's White House is packing the press corps with friendly media, it is engaging in open hostility with those that it dislikes.
Trump banned the US newswire the Associated Press from almost all presidential events after it refused to refer to the Gulf of Mexico by the new name he has decreed, the "Gulf of America."
The president has also stepped up his targeting of individual journalists.
He branded The Atlantic magazine's editor-in-chief a "sleazebag" this week after the journalist revealed he was accidentally included in a chat group of US officials about air strikes on Yemen.
He called the New York Times the "enemy of the people" and said outlets including CNN, MSNBC and unidentified newspapers writing critically about him were "illegal."
On social media, he has lashed out by name at a string of well-known reporters -- often women. He has even targeted one from Fox News, which is popular with conservative viewers.
Meanwhile, one of the biggest beneficiaries of the changes was the man behind the Zelensky suit question -- Brian Glenn, chief White House correspondent for Real America's Voice, a right-wing cable news channel.
Glenn, who also happens to be the boyfriend of the firebrand, ultra-Trumpist congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, is not officially in the pool but gets access to many of Trump's appearances.
"I said you were right!" Glenn exclaimed as Trump threw him a red baseball cap marked "Trump was right about everything" during one Oval Office event.
He was the only journalist to take one.
P.Smith--AT