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US banks see lower recession risk despite tariff fog
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Springbok Wiese banned for four matches over head butt
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Two men who chopped down iconic UK tree handed jail sentences
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Syrian forces accused of 'executions' in Druze area as Israel launches strikes
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EU threatens US planes and whiskey while pressing for deal
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Prosecutor asks Brazil's Supreme Court to find Bolsonaro guilty of coup
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US consumer inflation accelerates as tariff effects creep in
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Stocks diverge, as US inflation puts focus on Trump's tariffs
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West Indies cricket chief calls emergency meeting after Australia debacle
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Fallen Austrian tycoon Benko charged with fraud
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Rome, Navalny widow blast Italy invite for pro-Kremlin maestro
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Las Vegas Sands makes $8 bn Singapore bet with resort expansion
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Thousands of Afghans and families brought to UK after data breach: minister
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US consumer inflation accelerates as tariff scrutiny grows
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Springboks captain Kolisi makes first appearance of season
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Man City sign kit deal worth reported £1 billion
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UN demands justice in any Ukraine peace talks, as civilian deaths spike
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India's cricket stars consoled by King Charles after Lord's defeat
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Scheffler 'couldn't care less' about being British Open favourite
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German court rejects Yemenis' claim over US strikes
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Russia suggests Trump is emboldening Ukraine, delaying peace
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Navalny widow blasts Italy's invite for pro-Kremlin maestro
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Stock markets gain, dollar dips before US inflation
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Israel strikes Syrian forces sent into Druze-majority Sweida
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Tesla marks India entry with first showroom
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Rahm 'confident' of ending Spain's British Open wait
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Astronauts from US, India, Poland, Hungary on SpaceX capsule return to Earth
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England call up Dawson to replace injured Bashir ahead of fourth Test
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Ukraine covers frontline roads with anti-drone nets
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Barca star Yamal faces probe into dwarf entertainers at 18th birthday
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China's Xi vows greater support for Russia as meets Lavrov
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England midfielder Henderson joins Brentford
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Markets rise as China's economy meets forecasts
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Markets mostly rise as China's economy meets forecasts
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Syrian forces enter Druze city after deadly clashes
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'World's oldest marathon runner' dies aged 114 in road accident
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Indigenous Australians lose landmark climate court case against government
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Skidding Nissan to halt production at Japanese plant
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Passion for hand fans sizzles in burning Spanish heat
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Drought-hit Serbian raspberry farmers fear 'catastrophic' future
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Jadeja hailed for taking India close but Gavaskar rues lack of risk
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'Dialogue' must be at heart of China, Australia ties, PM tells Xi
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Ivory Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields
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France's new star Lanier ready for home pressure at badminton worlds
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Hong Kong leader backs same-sex couples' rights bill
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Nvidia says it will resume sales of 'H20' AI chips to China
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Egypt grand museum delay puts tourism hopes on hold
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Asian markets mixed as China's economy meets forecasts
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China's economy grows 5.2% on trade war truce

Stewart sprints to Dauphine fifth stage win, Evenepoel holds lead
British rider Jake Stewart won a sprint finish to triumph in the fifth stage of the Criterium du Dauphine on Thursday as Belgian Remco Evenepoel held onto the race lead.
Israel Premier Tech rider Stewart claimed his first career victory in a World Tour race, edging the bunched finale ahead of Frenchman Axel Laurance and Norwegian Soren Waerenskjold after the hilly 183km run from Saint-Priest to Macon.
"That one feels good," said the 25-year-old who finished fifth in Sunday's opening stage in Montlucon.
"The boys backed me... and the team backed me, they did an awesome job, so I'm just so happy that I could finish it off for them."
The Israel Premier Tech team managed to win despite the race retirement of its German sprinter Pascal Ackermann, who fell during the stage.
"It's such a shame with Ackermann, he crashed again today, and it was handed over to me there for the final, but it was also a really good day for him, so I'm gutted that he didn't get to contest the finish," added Stewart.
Evenepoel, who took the yellow jersey since Wednesday's time-trial, crashed in the final kilometre but was able to resume without difficulty and lost no time in the overall standings.
"There are no major injuries, just small scratches," said the Belgian.
"I was coming out of the roundabout, I wanted to accelerate, and I slipped. My hands were slippery from the wet weather, so maybe I slipped off the handlebars or started pedalling too early."
Evenepoel is expected to battle with Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar for the overall victory in the Alps.
Jonathan Milan, winner of the second stage in Issoire on Monday, was the favourite in the event of a bunch sprint.
On the Cote des Quatre Vents -- the final climb of the stage over 5.4km at a 4.6 percent gradient -- the towering Italian resisted the acceleration of Mathieu van der Poel's Alpecin-Deceuninck teammates.
But he paid for his efforts afterwards, only finishing fifth in the sprint, despite having been ideally placed by his Lidl-Trek teammates.
Friday's sixth stage is a hilly 126.7km run from Valserhone to Combloux near the border with Switzerland.
P.Hernandez--AT