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Ferrand-Prevot wins sensational Paris-Roubaix women's debut
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UK lawmakers hold emergency debate to save British Steel
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Warnings issued, flights cancelled as strong winds whip north China
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Israel takes control of key Gaza corridor, to expand offensive
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First US-Iran nuclear talks in years start in Oman
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Asian football chief fears 'chaos' if 2030 World Cup expands to 64 teams
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UK lawmakers begin emergency debate to save British Steel
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Hamas expects 'real progress' in Cairo talks to end Gaza war
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UN warns US aid cuts threaten millions of Afghans with famine
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Japan PM warns of divided world at futuristic World Expo opening ceremony
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Junta chief frontrunner as Gabon holds first election since 2023 coup
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Iran delegation in Oman for high-stakes nuclear talks with US
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Australia beat Colombia to end BJK Cup bid on winning note
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German refinery's plight prompts calls for return of Russian oil
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Trump carves up world and international order with it
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Paris theatre soul-searching after allegations of sexual abuse
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US, Iran to hold high-stakes nuclear talks
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Frustrated families await news days after 222 killed in Dominican club disaster

Colombia demands removal from 'hunger hotspots' list
Colombia took umbrage Monday at being included in a report by UN agencies on 20 "hunger hotspots," demanding to be removed from the list of countries considered at risk of "acute food insecurity."
The report published last week by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Food Programme said that "7.3 million Colombians are food insecure and in need of food assistance in 2022."
Other countries on the list included South Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Madagascar and Yemen.
In a letter provided to the media, Colombia's foreign ministry informed the FAO in Rome of its "rejection of this publication" which it said "lacks factual support, methodological definition and clarity in the sources that give it validity and credibility."
The country asked to be removed from the list of "hotspots" and for statements made about Colombia to be "corrected," Foreign Minister Martha Lucia Ramirez told reporters.
The report had blamed the situation in Colombia on "a combination of political instability, economic challenges and the ongoing impact of the regional migratory crisis amplified by internal displacement."
It also highlighted a lack of food security for 1.1 million Venezuelan migrants who fled their country and now live in Colombia.
Alan Bojanic, the FAO representative in Colombia, lamented that the way the data was presented "was not the best".
The idea, he said, was to "draw attention to the acute food insecurity of some populations in the territory, mainly migrants".
A.Anderson--AT