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Big-hitting New Zealand crush Pakistan by five wickets for 2-0 lead
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Hong Kong leader says concerns over Panama ports deal warrant 'attention'
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Trump and Putin set for 'very critical' Ukraine call
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German parliament to vote on huge spending boost for defence, infrastructure
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Australia slams reported targetting of citizen by Hong Kong
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China EV giant BYD soars after 5-minute charging platform unveiled
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Israel pounds Hamas in Gaza in strikes that rescuers say killed 121
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Red-hot Forest striker Wood targets New Zealand history at World Cup
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Huthis claim new attack on American warships, report new US strikes
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Asian markets track Wall St gains as tech inspires Hong Kong
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Japan victims voice fears 30 years after sarin subway attack
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Trump touts control over famed arts venue
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Trump taps Michelle Bowman to be US Fed vice chair for supervision
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Jury deliberates US pipeline case with free speech implications
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European star-gazing agency says Chile green power plant will ruin its view
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Carney says Canada 'too reliant on US' on UK, France trip
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Starbucks ordered to pay $50m for hot tea spill
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Talks on divisive deep-sea mining resume in Jamaica
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Astronauts finally to return after unexpected 9-month ISS stay
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Trump veers towards courts clash over migrant flights
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Donors pledge 5.8 bn euros for Syria, down on last year
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M23 shuns DR Congo peace talks at 11th hour after sanctions
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Man Utd defy fan groups with five percent season ticket rise
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Huthis report new US strikes after major rallies in rebel-held Yemen

EU warns Trump's freeze of US-funded media risks aiding enemies
The EU on Monday warned that President Donald Trump's freeze on US-funded media outlets, including Radio Free Europe, risked "benefitting our common adversaries".
Trump's administration at the weekend started laying off staff at Voice of America and other broadcasters including Prague-based Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFERL) after freezing their funding.
"We see these media outlets really as beacons of truth, of democracy, and of hope for millions of people around the world," said European Commission spokeswoman Paula Pinho.
"Freedom of the press... is critical for democracy. And this decision risks benefitting our common adversaries," she said, without naming countries, groups or individuals.
Pinho added that the freeze would be discussed during a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels on Monday.
Founded by the United States during the Cold War to counter Soviet propaganda, RFE/RL was banned across the communist bloc including former Czechoslovakia, where regimes regularly jammed its signal.
The US-funded media have since focused on countries like Russia, China and Iran.
Asked whether the European Union would "fill the void" left by the United States, Pinho said it would not always be possible for the bloc to do so.
"We are reiterating our support," she told reporters, adding: "We cannot always step in for the US and for whatever the US stops doing."
Trump has already eviscerated the United States' aid agency and its education department.
The media funding freeze affects many other US outlets besides Voice of America and RFERL, including Radio Farda, a Persian-language broadcaster blocked by Iran's government, and Alhurra, an Arabic-language network established after the Iraq invasion in the face of highly critical coverage by Qatar-based Al-Jazeera.
Iran, China and Russia have all invested heavily in state media outlets created to compete with Western narratives and to push out government lines to foreign audiences.
T.Wright--AT