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Trump gives Putin 'peace letter' from wife Melania
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Coffe-lover Atmane felt the buzz from Cincinnati breakthrough
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Monster birdie gives MacIntyre four-stroke BMW lead
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Hurricane Erin intensifies offshore, lashes Caribbean with rain
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Nigeria arrests leaders of high-profile terror group
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Kane lauds Diaz's 'perfect start' at Bayern
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US suspends visas for Gazans after far-right influencer posts
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Defending champ Sinner subdues Atmane to reach Cincinnati ATP final
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Nigeria arrests leaders of terror group accused of 2022 jailbreak
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Kane and Diaz strike as Bayern beat Stuttgart in German Super Cup
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Australia coach Schmidt hails 'great bunch of young men'
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Brentford splash club-record fee on Ouattara
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Barcelona open Liga title defence strolling past nine-man Mallorca
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Pogba watches as Monaco start Ligue 1 season with a win
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Canada moves to halt strike as hundreds of flights grounded
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Forest seal swoop for Ipswich's Hutchinson
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Haaland fires Man City to opening win at Wolves
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Brazil's Bolsonaro leaves house arrest for medical exams
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Mikautadze gets Lyon off to winning start in Ligue 1 at Lens
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Fires keep burning in western Spain as army is deployed
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Captain Wilson scores twice as Australia stun South Africa
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Thompson eclipses Lyles and Hodgkinson makes stellar comeback
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Spurs get Frank off to flier, Sunderland win on Premier League return
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Richarlison stars as Spurs boss Frank seals first win
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Hurricane Erin intensifies to 'catastrophic' category 5 storm in Caribbean
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Thompson beats Lyles in first 100m head-to-head since Paris Olympics
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Brazil's Bolsonaro leaves house arrest for court-approved medical exams
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Hodgkinson in sparkling track return one year after Olympic 800m gold
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Air Canada grounds hundreds of flights over cabin crew strike
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Hurricane Erin intensifies to category 4 storm as it nears Caribbean
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Championship leader Marc Marquez wins sprint at Austrian MotoGP
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Newcastle held by 10-man Villa after Konsa sees red
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Semenyo says alleged racist abuse at Liverpool 'will stay with me forever'
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Pakistan rescuers recover bodies after monsoon rains kill over 340
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In high-stakes summit, Trump, not Putin, budges
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Pakistan rescuers recover bodies after monsoon rains kill 340
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Hurricane Erin intensifies to category 3 storm as it nears Caribbean
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Ukrainians see 'nothing' good from Trump-Putin meeting
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Pakistan rescuers recover bodies after monsoon rains kill 320
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Bob Simpson: Australian cricket captain and influential coach
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Air Canada flight attendants strike over pay, shutting down service
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Sabalenka and Gauff crash out in Cincinnati as Alcaraz survives to reach semis

ADB acting on US concerns over China, bank chief tells AFP
The Asian Development Bank was trying "very hard" to accommodate US concerns over lending to China, the bank's president told AFP, including by slashing loans to the world's second-largest economy.
Global development institutions are in Spain this week for a UN summit on financial aid for the world's poorest overshadowed by Washington's gutting of poverty and climate change programs.
The United States is a major donor to multilateral banks like the ABD, but Washington's future commitment to development lenders has been in doubt since the election of President Donald Trump.
In April, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged ADB President Masato Kanda "to take concrete steps" to end loans to rival China.
Kanda said lending to Beijing was "radically decreasing" and had already halved from $2 billion in 2020 to $1 billion in 2024.
"We are already on... a declining trajectory," the Japanese head of the Manila-based lender told AFP in an interview in Paris on Friday.
"Probably -- I can't promise -- but probably this declining trajectory will be continued, and someday may be zero," he added, stressing that such a decision would ultimately be decided by the bank's shareholders and board of directors.
Kanda said US demands that ADB curtail financing for China were hardly new and probably "one of the very few agendas across the aisle in the US Congress".
"Even under the Biden administration, it was the same request," Kanda said, referring to the last administration under President Joe Biden.
The United States and Japan are the largest shareholders of ADB, which helps bankroll projects in the Asia-Pacific region that lift living standards and promote economic growth.
China, India and Australia are also significant members.
- 'Universal' challenge -
Kanda said ADB's efforts to raise lending without asking more of taxpayers in donor countries "was very much appreciated by the United States and others".
"I try very hard to accommodate the issues of the United States," he said.
Kanda is among thousands this week attending the International Conference on Financing for Development in Seville, the biggest event in a decade on the crisis-hit aid sector.
The United States in snubbing the UN-sponsored conference, underlining the erosion of global cooperation on combating hunger, disease and climate change.
Trump's cuts have come under particular scrutiny but Germany, Britain and France have also slashed foreign aid while boosting spending in areas such as defence.
With budgets in doubt, multilateral development banks have come under particular pressure to step up financing for projects that tackle global warming and prepare poorer countries for climate disaster.
Last year, rich countries committed $300 billion annually by 2035 for climate finance in the developing world -- well short of the $1.3 trillion that experts say is needed.
Last year, the ADB committed to channelling half its annual lending to climate-related projects by 2030 and Kanda said it was likely this would grow in time.
The bank was navigating a level of global uncertainty not seen in many decades but it was critical to consider the most vulnerable on the rocky road ahead, he added.
"This is not just a short-term phenomenon of one country, but it is rather universal," he said.
"This is a really difficult situation. And as long as we don't improve the root cause of this situation -- for instance, a more fair society -- it will not be so easy."
L.Miller--AMWN