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- PSG, Italian giants are biggest movers in Europe's winter transfer window
- Man City move for Gonzalez, Tel joins Spurs on deadline day
- Winners and losers from the Premier League transfer window
- Baseball umpire fired for violating league gambling rules: MLB
- Resilient Chelsea impress Maresca in comeback win over West Ham
- With boos and boycotts, Canadians voice displeasure with Trump
- Silencing science: How Trump is reshaping US public health
- Trump halts Canada, Mexico tariffs after last-ditch talks
- Musk takes reins of US Treasury payments, sparking alarm
- Chelsea hit back to ruin West Ham boss Potter's revenge mission
- Goodell laughs off 'ridiculous' Kansas City ref claims
- Democrats blast Musk as US aid agency HQ shutters
- Hundreds of US government sites go offline
- Asensio joins Aston Villa on loan from PSG
- Beyonce's best album Grammy: a long time coming
- Man City move for Gonzalez, Tel set for Spurs loan on deadline day
- Trump says 'no guarantees' Gaza truce will hold ahead of Netanyahu visit
- Baldoni, Lively lawyers face off in $400 mn 'It Ends With Us' case
- Trump halts Mexico tariffs as last-ditch Canada, China talks continue
- Comeback queen Vonn rounds on critics, eyes world podium
- Afghan exiles find snowboarding freedom in France
- Silencing science: How Trump is reshaping US health
- French PM moves to force budget through divided parliament
- Stock markets sink on Trump tariffs
- Neuer signs new Bayern contract to 2026
- Chelsea striker Sam Kerr called police officer 'stupid and white', court told
- Musk takes control of US Treasury payments systems
- Trump pauses Mexico tariffs as last-ditch Canada talks continue
- Ex-Wimbledon champion Kvitova returns to tennis after giving birth
- Musk says Trump 'shutting down' US aid agency
- Israeli premier in Washington for Gaza ceasefire talks
- Ligue 1 strugglers Reims sack coach Elsner
- Ex-Milan captain Calabria loaned to Bologna after coach row
- Stock markets sink, dollar rallies on Trump tariffs
- The role of minerals and tech firms in the DR Congo conflict
- World ski chief working to 'minimise and mitigate' racing dangers
- Embattled French PM gets boost from Socialists over budget
- Greek PM calls for calm amid 'very intense' Santorini tremors
- French director gets two years with electronic bracelet for abusing child actor
- Next round for strategy game lineage in 'Civilization VII'
- Norway nears 100% goal of all-electric cars
- Biathlon great Fourcade refuses to 'sacrifice convictions' for 2030 Olympics presidency
- WHO chief counters Trump criticisms behind US pullout
- Trump trade threats overshadow European defence meet
- Rashford attracted by Aston Villa's 'constant ambition'
- EU leaders vow to hit back if Trump triggers trade war
- East Ukrainian crime boss killed in Moscow blast: Russian media
- Trump accuses South Africa of 'confiscating' land, cuts funding
- CK Hutchison: the Hong Kong firm behind Panama port operators
Hundreds of US government sites go offline
Hundreds of US government websites were offline on Monday, an AFP review showed, including that of the humanitarian agency USAID which President Donald Trump's administration is shutting down.
From a list of nearly 1,400 federal sites provided by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), more than 350 were unavailable on Monday afternoon.
These included sites linked to the departments of defense, commerce, energy, transportation, labor as well the Central Intelligence Agency and the Supreme Court, the review showed.
The exact time when the sites became unavailable was not clear. Nor was it known whether the sites were temporarily offline or taken down at the instruction of Trump's administration.
But the development comes amid the administration's controversial drive to radically shrink the US government.
Elon Musk, the Tesla and SpaceX chief executive and the world's richest person, is leading Trump's federal cost-cutting efforts under the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
On Monday, Musk said USAID will be shuttered, calling the agency which runs relief programs in about 120 countries a "criminal organization."
USAID's website was offline as employees were instructed by email not to go to their offices on Monday.
A slew of US government websites, including top public health agencies, have also scrubbed references to LGBTQ after a Trump directive last week instructing them to terminate all programs funded by taxpayers that promote "gender ideology," US media reported.
Trump has already issued executive orders banning diversity, equity and inclusion in the government.
Key information and datasets related to HIV and LGBTQ youth have also disappeared from the website of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), alarming health experts.
On Monday, the CDC's landing pages for both topics said: "The page you're looking for was not found."
"The removal of HIV- and LGBTQ-related resources from the websites of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other health agencies is deeply concerning and creates a dangerous gap in scientific information and data to monitor and respond to disease outbreaks," the Infectious Diseases Society of America said in a statement.
Public access to this information was "especially important as diseases such as HIV, mpox, sexually transmitted infections and other illnesses threaten public health and impact the entire population," it added.
T.Perez--AT