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Treasury chief returns to US as China trade talks ongoing
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Duckett stars as England complete T20 sweep against West Indies
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Scheffler seeks back-to-back major wins at formidable Oakmont
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No panic, but England 'not good enough', says Kane
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Netherlands thrash Malta, Poland stumble in World Cup qualifying
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Hope recalled for West Indies Test series against Australia
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Teen pleads 'not guilty' to shooting Colombian presidential candidate
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Brazil's Bolsonaro rejects charges in coup trial
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England stunned by Senegal to put Tuchel under immediate pressure
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Combs defense seeks to show ex-girlfriend had agency
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Seven dead as Colombia hit with wave of bombings and gun attacks
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DeChambeau eyes new LIV deal ahead of US Open defence
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UK, Australia, Canada, N.Zealand, Norway sanction far-right Israeli ministers
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US intel chief denounces 'warmongers' after Hiroshima visit
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US restores some medical research grants, says top Trump official
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Man City sign Cherki in time for Club World Cup
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Four dead as Colombia hit with wave of bombings and gun attacks
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Supporters ask to visit deported Venezuelans in Salvadoran jail
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Brazil's Bolsonaro takes stand, rejects coup charges
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McIlroy improves his driver woes as US Open test nears
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US-China trade talks stretch into evening on second day
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Combs defense seeks to show ex had agency
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Former student kills 10 people in Austrian high school shooting
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Nations call for strong plastics treaty as difficult talks loom
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Pentagon chief vows to honor US-Australia sub deal
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UK and allies sanction two far-right Israeli ministers
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Bonmati, Putellas lead Spain as Hermoso overlooked for Euro 2025
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Four dead as Colombia hit with wave of bombings, gun attacks
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Stocks muted as investors track US-China trade talks
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Romeo wins Dauphine third stage to take yellow
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Rahm warns to expect 'a lot of unfortunate things' at US Open
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UK and four nations sanction two far-right Israeli ministers
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French Senate adopts bill to regulate fast fashion
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Russell looks forward to Twickenham roar as Bath seek end to Premiership drought
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Three dead as wave of bombings, gun attacks rocks Colombia
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World Bank cuts growth forecast on trade tumult
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War in Gaza 'hurts my whole body', says Man City boss Guardiola
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Hopes rise on second day of US-China trade talks
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Ukraine, Russia swap more captured soldiers after nighttime attacks
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EU proposes lowering Russia oil price cap in new sanctions
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McIlroy with Rose and Lowry while Scheffler off late at US Open
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Billy Boston, 90, becomes rugby league's first knight
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Netflix to invest 1 bn euros in Spain productions to 2029
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Stocks mixed as investors track US-China trade talks
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Japan, South Korea celebrate World Cup qualification with big wins
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South Africa gamble on Mulder at number three in WTC final against Australia
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Dortmund sign Bellingham brother Jobe from Sunderland
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French Senate to vote on regulating fast fashion
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Arsenal women to play all league matches at the Emirates
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Trump deploys Marines, raising tensions in Los Angeles protests

Trump's cuts are 'devastating' for vulnerable women worldwide: UN
The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has faced budget cuts before, but the impact of President Donald Trump's policies has been even more "devastating" for reproductive health worldwide, chief Natalia Kanem told AFP.
The agency has been targeted by US conservatives since the Kemp-Kasten Amendment's enactment in 1985 by Congress, when the administration of then president Ronald Reagan rallied against China's population policies, accusing Beijing of promoting forced abortions and sterilizations.
All subsequent Republican presidencies have cut US funding to UNFPA, and the second Trump administration is no exception.
"We've had over $330 million worth of projects ended," virtually overnight, in "some of the hardest hit regions of the world" like Afghanistan, Kanem said in an interview coinciding with the release of the UNFPA's annual report Tuesday.
"So yes, we are suffering."
Kanem pointed to the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan as an example, where over the years more than 18,000 pregnancies were delivered by "heroic midwives" who "conducted these over 18,000 deliveries without a single maternal death, which you know, in a crisis situation is extraordinary."
"Those maternity wards today have closed. The funding cuts immediately have meant that those midwives are no longer able to do their jobs," Kanem said.
Although it is too soon to estimate the precise impacts of the US cuts, they will inevitably result in increased maternal mortality and more unintended pregnancies, according to Kanem.
"What's different this time for UNFPA is that our ecosystem of other reproductive health actors who might be able to fill in for us," Kanem said, adding they are "reeling from huge impact of having their funding denied."
The Trump administration has slashed many such external aid programs.
"So it is very lamentable that this year, to me, has been drastically worse than ever before, precisely because now everybody is caught up in the whirlwind."
"The withdrawal of the United States from the funding arena for reproductive health has been devastating," Kanem said.
- Desire and rights -
American policy is not only marked by funding cuts, but also a challenge to gender equality matters.
"There will be debates about concepts, but there shouldn't be any debate about the non-negotiability of the rights and choices of women and adolescent girls," Kanem emphasized.
"We always embrace change, but we should not compromise on these common values which spell the difference between life and death for women and girls all around the world," she continued.
"Women deserve support. Adolescent girls deserve to finish their schooling, not become pregnant, not be bartered or sent off into marriage as a non-solution to issues that families may face."
The UNFPA's annual report, published Tuesday and based on the results of an survey of 14,000 people from 14 countries -- nations which represent over a third of the world's population -- also underscores concerns that millions of people around the world cannot create the families they desire.
More than 40 percent of those over the age of 50 reported not having the number of children they wanted -- with 31 percent saying they had fewer kids than they desired and 12 percent saying they had more than they wanted.
More than half of respondents said economic barriers prevented them from having more children.
Conversely, one in five said they were pressured into having a child, and one in three adults reported an unintended pregnancy.
The majority of people "live in countries where fertility rates have fallen so far and so fast that they are below replacement," Kanem said.
"We know that the issue of population pressure takes almost like a headline drastic view. Some people think there are way too many people. Others are saying we don't have enough, women should have more babies," Kanem said.
"What UNFPA really cares about is a woman's true desire, rights and choices," Kanem said.
P.Santos--AMWN