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Iran hits targets across Middle East after Trump signals talks progress
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McEvoy says best is to come after breaking long-standing swim record
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Japan PM asks IEA chief to prepare additional 'coordinated release' of oil
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Hungary's hard-pressed LGBTQ people say Orban exit is only half battle
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Belarus leader visits North Korea for first time
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Iran fires missile salvo after Trump signals progress in talks
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Italy hoping to end World Cup pain as play-offs loom
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Gauff outlasts Bencic to reach Miami semi-finals
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'Hero' Australian dog who saved 100 koalas retires
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Pope heads to tiny Catholic Monaco
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Meet the four astronauts set to voyage around the Moon
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OpenAI kills Sora video app in pivot toward business tools
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Danish PM's left-wing bloc wins election, but no majority
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Brazil court grants house arrest for jailed Bolsonaro
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Sinner downs Michelsen to reach Miami Open quarter-finals
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Advantage Arsenal in women's Champions League quarter-final against Chelsea
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Garner dreams of World Cup glory in bid to replicate England under-21 success
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New Mexico jury finds Meta liable for endangering children
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Huge crowd in Buenos Aires marks 50 years since Argentina's coup
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Oil, stock trading spiked before Trump's Iran remarks
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Colombia military plane crash death toll rises to 69
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Trump adds Columbus statue, walkway in latest White House makeover
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Toronto unveils upgraded World Cup venue after fan scorn
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Beerensteyn goal gives Wolfsburg edge over Lyon in women's Champions League
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Gang crackdown carried out without 'abuses,' Guatemalan defense chief says
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Afghanistan releases detained US citizen
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Danish PM's left bloc leads election, but no majority
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'Illustrious' Salah to leave Liverpool at the end of the season
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Trump says Iran gave US 'gift' linked to Strait of Hormuz
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US officials downplay controller 'distraction' in New York crash
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Salah to leave Liverpool at the end of the season
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Trump has destroyed Venezuela's socialist ideology: opposition leader
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France urges Israel 'to refrain' from seizing south Lebanon zone
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UN rights council to hold urgent debate on Iran's Gulf strikes
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Russia rains drones on Ukraine, killing eight, hitting UNESCO site
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Lukaku to miss Belgium World Cup warm-up trip to US
Trump freezes VOA, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe
President Donald Trump's administration on Saturday put journalists at Voice of America and other US-funded broadcasters on leave, abruptly freezing outlets long seen as critical to countering a Russian and Chinese information offensive.
Hundreds of reporters and other staff at VOA, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe and other outlets received a weekend email saying they will be barred from their offices and should surrender press passes, office-issued telephones and other equipment.
Trump, who has already eviscerated the US aid agency and Education Department, on Friday issued an executive order listing the US Agency for Global Media as among "elements of the federal bureaucracy that the president has determined are unnecessary."
Kari Lake, a firebrand Trump supporter and former Arizona news anchor who was put in charge of the media agency after she lost a US Senate bid, wrote -- in an email to media outlets she supervises -- that federal grant money "no longer effectuates agency priorities."
A White House press official, Harrison Fields, took a much less legalistic tone in a post on X, simply writing "goodbye" in 20 languages, a sarcastic jab at VOA's multilingual coverage.
The head of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which started broadcasting into the Soviet bloc during the Cold War, called the cancellation of funding "a massive gift to America's enemies."
- Gift to China? -
"The Iranian ayatollahs, Chinese communist leaders, and autocrats in Moscow and Minsk would celebrate the demise of RFE/RL after 75 years," its president, Stephen Capus, said in a statement.
"Handing our adversaries a win would make them stronger and America weaker," he said.
US-funded media have reoriented themselves since the end of the Cold War, dropping much of the programming geared toward newly democratic Central and Eastern European countries and focusing on Russia and China.
Radio Free Asia, established in 1996, sees its mission as providing uncensored reporting into countries without free media including China, Myanmar, North Korea and Vietnam.
The outlets have an editorial firewall, with a stated guarantee of independence despite the funding from the US government.
The policy has angered some around Trump, who has long railed against media and in his first stint in office had suggested that US government-funded outlets should promote his policies.
B.Shevchenko--BTB