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Giroud signs one-year deal with Ligue 1 club Lille
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Gonzalo heads Real Madrid past Juventus and into Club World Cup quarters
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Gauff crashes out of Wimbledon on day of shocks
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Big automakers report US sales jump on pre-tariff consumer surge
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'Alone' Zverev considers therapy after shock Wimbledon exit
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Second seed Coco Gauff knocked out of Wimbledon
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Switzerland comes to the aid of Red Cross museum
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UK govt guts key welfare reforms to win vote after internal rebellion
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Macron, Putin discuss Iran, Ukraine in first talks since 2022
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French league launches own channel to broadcast Ligue 1
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Man City left to reflect on Club World Cup exit as tournament opens up
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Europe swelters as surprise early summer heatwave spreads
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Third seed Zverev stunned at Wimbledon
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Israel expands Gaza campaign ahead of Netanyahu's US visit
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Gaza mourns those killed in Israeli strike on seafront cafe
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Rubio hails end of USAID as Bush, Obama deplore cost in lives
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Berlusconi family sell Monza football club to US investment fund
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UN aid meeting seeks end to Global South debt crisis
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Trump ramps up Musk feud with deportation threat
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French paparazzi boss handed 18-month suspended sentence for blackmail
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Gilgeous-Alexander agrees record $285 mln extension: reports
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Tearful former champion Kvitova loses on Wimbledon farewell
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IMF urges Swiss to strengthen bank resilience
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Sri Lanka eye top-three spot in ODI rankings
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Trump hails new 'Alligator Alcatraz' migrant detention center
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US Senate approves divisive Trump spending bill
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Krejcikova toughs it out in Wimbledon opener, Sinner cruises
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UK govt braces for crunch welfare reforms vote amid major rebellion
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Shifting to Asia, Rubio meets Quad and talks minerals
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Stocks diverge while tracking US trade deal prospects
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Bruce Lee Club closes archive doors citing operating costs
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Trump ramps up Musk feud with deportation, DOGE threats
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BTS announces comeback for spring 2026
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Beating England without Bumrah 'not impossible' for India captain Gill
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Krejcikova battles back against rising star Eala to win Wimbledon opener
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US Republicans close in on make-or-break Trump mega-bill vote
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Arsenal sign goalkeeper Kepa from Chelsea
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Olympic champion Zheng knocked out of Wimbledon
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Line judges missed at Wimbledon as AI takes their jobs
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Tshituka to make Test debut as Springboks change five
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'Remember Charlie Hebdo!' Protesters seethe at Istanbul magazine
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Top seed Sinner eases into Wimbledon second round
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Stocks retreat as profit-taking follows Wall Street records
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Israel expands campaign in Gaza ahead of Netanyahu's US visit
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Barcelona's Ansu Fati aims to kick-start career in Monaco

Ex-UN climate chief has 'lost patience' with fossil fuel industry
The UN's former climate chief said Thursday she had "lost patience" with fossil fuel companies and that they should steer clear of crunch talks in Dubai if the industry refuses to be part of the solution.
Speaking at the "Climate Changes Everything" conference on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, Christiana Figueres, among the key negotiators of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement, said that the industry had failed to put "out-of-the-park" profits back into developing renewables.
"Instead of doing everything that they do and applying their amazing engineering capacity, they've been actually doing the opposite," she said.
Oil and gas companies have been slowing down their decarbonization commitments, paying out handsome dividends to shareholders and lobbying governments to reverse climate commitments.
Asked whether to welcome them at the two-week talks in Dubai starting in late November, Figueres said "it should depend on whether they are there to help and to accelerate decarbonization," or "whether they are literally operating against those objectives."
The issue of the industry's participation is a hugely contentious point for the climate action community, even as the president-designate of the talks, Sultan Al Jaber, is himself an oil executive.
Figueres said the sector from which the COP president comes was not as relevant as being true to the mandate, and in this regard, she offered some cautious praise.
While she was initially skeptical Al Jaber was separating his country's national interest from global interest, "lately I have seen he is moving in that direction, which I celebrate.
"I think he has understood the political international responsibility, multilateral responsibility that comes with that presidency."
Jaber addressed a UN climate summit on Wednesday, acknowledging "the phasedown of fossil fuels is inevitable” and "essential."
T.Ward--AMWN