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Japan scrum-half Saito extends Toulouse deal
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Turkmenistan reduces 50-year fire dubbed 'Gateway to Hell'
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England paceman Carse considered amputation of troublesome toe
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Australia on brink of World Cup after dramatic late winner
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Germany's Merz to brave Trump's Oval Office test
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Restaurants strike on popular Greek tourist island over beach clampdown
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Greenpeace activists charged with theft of Macron waxwork
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US trade deficit sharply narrows in April as Trump tariffs take hold
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US says NATO close to agreeing to Trump's spending demand
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ECB cuts rate again facing growth, tariff woes
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Ailing Baltic Sea in need of urgent attention
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Erasmus unveils monster Springbok squad for Tests against Baa-Baas, Italy and Georgia
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Afghan women UN staff forced to work from home after threats
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US says NATO close to agreeing to Trump's defence spending demand
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Brazil's Lula urges Macron to seal Mercosur trade deal
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Japanese startup attempts Moon landing
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Swiatek faces Sabalenka as Boisson eyes 'dream' French Open final
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Eurozone stocks climb before ECB rate decision
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Iranians' World Cup dream crushed by US travel ban
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Australia says China anxiety, geography driving closer Indonesia ties
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'Hurt': Ukrainians in Poland worried by rise of nationalists
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Overton, Bethell back in England Test squad for first India Test
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New Zealand parliament gives record bans to Maori MPs over haka
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Germany's Merz heads for delicate talks with Trump
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Rangers appoint former Southampton boss Martin as new head coach
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Zelensky slams Russia after three generations killed in drone strike
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Equities on front foot as US data feeds rate-cut hopes
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Vietnamese say no to more kids after two-child limit scrapped
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Namibia's Mouton eyes Top 14 'dream' with Grenoble
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Indonesia allowing nickel industry abuses to go unchecked: report
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Albania town where everything's coming up roses
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As birthrates fall, Turkey's government steps in
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US pressures NATO to seal deal on ramping up defence spending
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Sci-fi writer Charles Stross' dark take on Silicon Valley 'religion'
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Fighter pilot takes next giant step for India's space plans
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New eurozone rate cut expected as Trump trade war weighs
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NATO looks to thrash out spending deal under US pressure
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Burundi votes but with opposition neutered

Musk blasts Trump mega-bill, days after farewell
Elon Musk on Tuesday hammered US President Donald Trump's proposed spending bill as a "disgusting abomination" as tensions between the pair burst into the open following the tech billionaire's White House exit.
Musk left his role as an official government employee last week, lauded by Trump for spearheading a federal spending cuts program, but disagreements between the duo have been building.
"This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination," Musk posted on X, in by far his most caustic remarks on Trump's spending plans.
"Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong."
It was not Musk's first comments on Trump's so-called "big, beautiful bill" which is set to add $3 million to US deficits over a 10-year horizon, despite deep cuts to health and food aid programs.
But Musk's previous criticism was restrained, with the ex-head of Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) task force offering only that it undermined his cost-cutting efforts.
On Tuesday he said that the bill -- being considered by Congress -- would burden "citizens with crushingly unsustainable debt."
The escalation in rhetoric indicated bitter hostilities between the White House and Musk, who donated almost $300 million to Trump's election campaign but has recently voiced frustrations.
"The president already knows where Elon Musk stood on this bill, it doesn't change his opinion," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters in a rapid response to Musk's tweet.
"This is one big, beautiful bill, and he's sticking to it."
As the world's richest person bowed out of his role as Trump's cost-cutter-in-chief, their relationship appeared on an even keel as the Republican hailed his fellow billionaire's "incredible service."
- Once inseparable -
Trump even insisted that Musk was "really not leaving" after a turbulent four months in which the South African born tycoon cut tens of thousands of jobs, shuttered whole agencies and slashed foreign aid.
Musk was once almost inseparable from Trump, glued to his side on Air Force One, Marine One, in the White House and at Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
The right-wing magnate's DOGE led an ideologically-driven rampage through the federal government, with its young "tech bros" slashing tens of thousands of jobs.
But DOGE's achievements fell far short of Musk's original goal of saving $2 trillion dollars.
The DOGE website claims to have saved taxpayers about eight percent of the $2 trillion figure so far -- $175 billion -- and fact checkers even see that claim as dubious, given previous serious inaccuracies in its accounting.
But the non-governmental "Musk Watch DOGE Tracker" puts the verifiable figure at $16 billion -- less than one percent of the goal.
Tesla shareholders called for Musk to return to work as sales slumped and protests targeted the electric vehicle maker, while SpaceX had a series of fiery rocket failures.
J.Williams--AMWN