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Australian PM calls general election for May 3
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Journalism under threat in Turkey, says AFP photographer
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UK's King Charles cancels appointments after cancer treatment 'side effects'
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Djokovic becomes oldest Masters semi-finalist in Miami
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Trump administration expands university DEI probes to California
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Czech teen Mensik, Djokovic into Miami semis
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Sabalenka blasts past Paolini into Miami final
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Barca bolster Liga title bid by winning match they didn't want to play
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Maradona died 'in agony,' forensic expert tells court
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Judge hears Associated Press suit over White House denial of access
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Chelsea to face Barcelona in Women's Champions League semis after Man City fightback
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Barca cruise past Osasuna to bolster Liga title bid
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US judge orders Trump admin to save 'Signalgate' chat
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Autos lead market losses after Trump unveils sharp tariffs
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Rubio warns Venezuela of force if it attacks oil-rich Guyana
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Standing ovation as defending champ Malinin grabs world figure skating lead
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Thousands protest against new Israel law expanding control over judicial appointments
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Axed Lawson laments 'tough' end to Red Bull F1 'dream'
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Shiffrin takes 101st World Cup win, globes for Ljutic, Kristoffersen
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Iran says it has responded to Trump's nuclear talks letter
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Era of close ties with US 'is over': Canada PM Carney
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US auto industry stunned by tariffs meant to save it
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Haugan wins men's slalom finale as Kristoffersen gets World Cup globe
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NBA says it will explore creating new pro league in Europe
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Barcelona thrash Wolfsburg to reach women's Champions League semis
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Shiffrin takes slalom finale for 101st World Cup win
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Czech teen Mensik into first Masters semi-final in Miami
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Prosecutors ask for 18-month suspended jail for actor Depardieu
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Sudan paramilitaries vow 'no surrender' after Khartoum setback
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Sundance film festival moving to Boulder, Colorado
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Premier League alters transfer window to accommodate Club World Cup
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Why has Mexico's water debt opened new battle line with US?
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English rugby chief Sweeney survives no confidence vote
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Trump withdraws UN envoy pick amid Congress majority fears
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Explosive Pooran powers Lucknow to IPL win over Hyderabad
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Games publisher Ubisoft announces restructuring, billion-euro investment
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Is that it?: F1's shortest driver stints after Liam Lawson sacking
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TikTok Shop ready for business in France, Germany, Italy
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At Jerusalem meet, Netanyahu warns of rising anti-Semitism
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Brothers in arms as Marc Marquez chases treble in Texas
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Argentina seeking $20 billion IMF loan
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Space telescope Gaia sent into 'retirement' but legacy endures
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Convalescing Pope Francis aims to give Easter blessing: Vatican
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Arctic sea ice hits lowest peak in satellite record, says US agency
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BBC launches survey on its future ahead of funding review
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Russian Paralympian stripped of 2014 Sochi medals for doping breach
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Sudan paramilitaries vow 'no surrender' after Khartoum reverses
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Norway's Haugan grabs men's slalom lead at World Cup Final
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Kildunne returns as Women's Six Nations champions England make 13 changes for Wales
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Leverkusen throw down gauntlet to Bayern in title tussle

Canada Indigenous schools abuse: a timeline
For a century, tens of thousands of Indigenous, Inuit and Metis children in Canada were forcibly enrolled in state boarding schools, isolated from their families, language and culture as part of a failed policy of assimilation.
Canada has been grappling with the reality of this brutal past for some time, but the discovery last year of children's remains buried in hundreds of unmarked graves at one former school catapulted it back into the national consciousness, prompting shock and soul-searching.
Here's a timeline of those events:
- Government apology, 2008 -
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper officially apologizes in June 2008 to Indigenous peoples for "failing them so profoundly."
"We are sorry," he says in the House of Commons, flanked by residential school alumni, adding that "the treatment of children in Indian Residential Schools is a sad chapter in our history."
- Truth and reconciliation, 2015 -
A truth and reconciliation commission, after spending six years interviewing more than 6,500 former students and others, creates a historical record of the residential school experience, concluding in 2015 that it amounted to "cultural genocide."
Many of the children were physically and sexually abused by teachers and headmasters, say commissioners who determined that at least 4,100 children died of disease, malnutrition or neglect. They estimate the actual toll to be much higher.
The commission also blames the schools policy for a high incidence of poverty, alcoholism and domestic violence, as well as high suicide rates in Indigenous communities.
- Unmarked graves found, May 2021 -
Tk'emlups te Secwepemc chief Rosanne Casimir announces in May 2021 the discovery, using ground-penetrating radar, of 215 unmarked graves at the former Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia province.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau orders Canadian flags atop federal buildings to be lowered to half-mast -- saying they would stay that way until Indigenous communities say it is ok to raise them again
They remain lowered for nearly six months.
In June, the Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchewan announces that as many as 751 unmarked graves have been discovered near the former Marieval Indian Residential School.
The Lower Kootenay Band also says it found 182 unmarked graves at the St. Eugene's Mission School in British Columbia.
Over the coming months, several more searches begin, eventually bringing the total number of unmarked graves found to more than 1,300.
- No celebrating Canada, July 2021 -
Victoria and other cities cancel Canada Day celebrations on July 1, 2021 to allow for "thoughtful reflections" on the nation's colonial past.
Police, meanwhile, report a wave of vandalism of churches and statues of monarchs splashed with red paint and torn down.
Mary Simon is named Canada's first Indigenous governor general.
- Truth and reconciliation day, September 2021 -
Canada marks its first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation on September 30, 2021.
"The tragic locating of unmarked graves at former residential school sites across the country has reminded us of not only the impacts of colonialism and the harsh realities of our collective past, but also the work that is paramount to advancing reconciliation in Canada," Trudeau says.
- Papal apology, April 2022 -
Pope Francis issues an apology on April 1, 2022 for abuses at church-run schools and the harms caused to generations of Indigenous peoples.
The Vatican also announces that the pontiff will travel to Canada to offer his apology in person on lands sacred to Indigenous peoples.
- Prince Charles acknowledges suffering, May 2022 -
Prince Charles acknowledges the suffering of Canada's Indigenous peoples, speaking during an official visit to Canada on behalf of the queen in May 2022.
"We must find new ways to come to terms with the darker and more difficult aspects of the past. Acknowledging, reconciling and striving do to better, it is a process that starts with listening," he says.
- Papal visit, July 2022-
Pope Francis, despite cancelling numerous events in recent months due to pain in his knee that has forced him to use a wheelchair, is scheduled at the end of July to visit Edmonton, Iqaluit and Quebec City.
There he will meet with Indigenous survivors of abuse committed at residential schools.
A.Taylor--AT