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Pau beat La Rochelle as Hastoy sent off after 34 seconds
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Real Madrid drop points at Girona in third straight Liga draw
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Napoli beat rivals Roma to join Milan at Serie A summit
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Shiffrin bags 104th World Cup win with Copper Mountain slalom victory
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Disney's 'Zootopia 2' rules Thanksgiving at N. American box office
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Arteta takes heart from Arsenal escape in Chelsea battle
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Duplantis and McLaughlin-Levrone crowned 'Athletes of the Year'
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Rubio says 'more work' required after US-Ukraine talks in Florida
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McLaren boss admits team made strategy blunder
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West Ham's red-carded Paqueta slams FA for lack of support
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Ramaphosa labels US attacks on S.Africa 'misinformation'
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Relaxed Verstappen set for another title showdown
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Van Graan compares Bath match-winner Arundell to Springbok great Habana
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Arsenal held by 10-man Chelsea, Isak end drought to fire Liverpool
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Slot hails 'important' Isak goal as Liverpool beat West Ham
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Merino strikes to give Arsenal bruising draw at 10-man Chelsea
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Thauvin double sends Lens top of Ligue 1 for 1st time in 21 years
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Pope urges Lebanese to embrace reconciliation, stay in crisis-hit country
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Arundell stars as Bath top Prem table with comeback win over Saracens
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Villarreal edge Real Sociedad, Betis win fiery derby
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Israel's Netanyahu seeks pardon in corruption cases
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Verstappen wins Qatar GP to set up final race title showdown
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Afghan suspect in Washington shooting likely radicalized in US: security official
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Pastor, bride among 26 kidnapped as Nigeria reels from raids
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Trump officials host crucial Ukraine talks in Florida
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OPEC+ reaffirms planned pause on oil output hikes until March
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Kohli stars as India beat South Africa in first ODI
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Long-lost Rubens 'masterpiece' sells for almost 3 mn euros
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Set-piece theft pays off for Man Utd: Amorim
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Isak scores first Premier League goal for Liverpool to sink West Ham
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Death toll from Sri Lanka floods, landslides rises to 334: disaster agency
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Martinez double at Pisa keeps Inter on heels of Serie A leaders AC Milan
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Swiss reject compulsory civic duty, climate tax for super-rich
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Moleiro snatches Villarreal late winner at Real Sociedad
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Pope arrives in Lebanon with message of peace for crisis-hit country
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Celtic close on Scottish leaders Hearts after beating Hibs
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Swiss right-to-die group says founder dies by assisted suicide
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Zirkzee ends goal drought to inspire Man Utd victory at Palace
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Trump threats dominate as Hondurans vote for president
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Hong Kong in mourning as fire death toll climbs to 146
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West Ham legend Bonds dies aged 79
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Swiss reject compulsory civic duty, climate tax for super-rich: projections
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Kohli's 135 powers India to 349-8 in first South Africa ODI
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Indonesia, Thailand race to find missing as flooding toll tops 600
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After call for Christian unity, pope leaves Turkey for Lebanon
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Floods hit Sri Lanka's capital as cyclone deaths top 200
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Netanyahu submits pardon request in Israel corruption cases
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Corbyn's new left-wing party opts for collective leadership
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Indonesia, Thailand race to find missing as flooding toll rises to 480
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In Istanbul, pope meets bereaved family, prays with Armenians
Trump says to suspend 'third world' migration after troop dies
US President Donald Trump said on Thursday he would suspend migration from what he called "third world countries", a day after an Afghan national allegedly shot two National Guard soldiers in Washington, killing one.
His social media post, which also threatened to reverse "millions" of admissions granted under his predecessor Joe Biden, marked a new escalation in the anti-migration stance of a second term that has been dominated by Trump's mass deportation campaign.
Trump said earlier that Sarah Beckstrom, a 20-year-old West Virginia National Guard member deployed in Washington as part of his crackdown on crime, had died from her wounds.
The FBI has launched an international terror investigation as new details emerged about the alleged gunman, a 29-year-old Afghan national who was a member of the "Zero Units" -- a CIA-backed counterterrorism group, according to multiple US media reports.
The shooting on Wednesday, which officials described as an "ambush-style" attack, has brought together three politically explosive issues: Trump's controversial use of the military at home, immigration, and the legacy of the US war in Afghanistan.
"I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover," Trump wrote on social media.
He also threatened to reverse "millions" of admissions granted under Biden, and to "remove anyone who is not a net asset to the United States."
"I want to express the anguish and the horror of our entire nation at the terrorist attack yesterday in our nation's capital," the Republican leader said in a Thanksgiving video call with US troops.
He linked the shooting and his decision to send hundreds of National Guard troops to the city.
"If they weren't effective, you probably wouldn't have had this done," Trump said. "Maybe this man was upset because he couldn't practice crime."
Joseph Edlow, Trump's director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services, said on Thursday he had ordered a "full scale, rigorous reexamination of every Green Card for every alien from every country of concern."
His agency later pointed to a list of 19 countries -- including Afghanistan, Cuba, Haiti, Iran and Myanmar -- facing US travel restrictions under a previous order from Trump in June.
The Trump administration had earlier ordered an immediate halt to the processing of immigration applications from Afghanistan.
- 'Brazen, targeted' attack -
The other soldier wounded in Wednesday's attack, 24-year-old Andrew Wolfe, was "fighting for his life", Trump said. The suspected shooter was also in a serious condition.
The US attorney for Washington DC, Jeanine Pirro, said the suspected assailant -- identified as Rahmanullah Lakanwal -- had been living in the western state of Washington and had driven across the country to the capital.
In what she called a "brazen and targeted" attack, Pirro said the gunman opened fire with a .357 Smith and Wesson revolver on a group of guardsmen on patrol just a few blocks from the White House.
The suspect was charged with three counts of assault with intent to kill, charges that Pirro had already said would be immediately upgraded to first-degree murder should either of the wounded troops die.
Officials said they still had no clear understanding of the motive behind the shooting.
- Afghan legacy -
CIA director John Ratcliffe said the suspect had been part of a CIA-backed "partner force" fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan, and had been brought to the United States as part of a program to evacuate Afghans who had worked with the agency.
The heads of the FBI, CIA and Homeland Security and other senior Trump appointees all insisted that Lakanwal had been granted unvetted access to the United States because of lax asylum policies in the wake of the chaotic final US withdrawal from Afghanistan under former president Biden.
However, AfghanEvac, a group that helped resettle Afghans in the United States after the military withdrawal, said they had undergone "some of the most extensive security vetting" of any migrants.
The group noted Lakanwal had been granted asylum in April 2025, under the Trump administration, and would be eligible to request permanent residency a year later.
"This individual's isolated and violent act should not be used as an excuse to define or diminish an entire community," its president, Shawn VanDiver, said.
Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth said in the wake of Wednesday's shooting that 500 more troops would deploy to Washington, bringing the total to 2,500.
Trump has deployed troops to several cities, all run by Democrats, including Washington, Los Angeles and Memphis. The move has prompted multiple lawsuits and allegations of authoritarian overreach by the White House.
M.A.Colin--AMWN