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G7 says it's 'serious' about confronting China's critical mineral dominance
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NFL fines Ravens $100,000 over Jackson injury status report
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Trump says Christians in Nigeria face 'existential threat'
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French-Turkish actor Tcheky Karyo dies at 72
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Trump keeps world guessing with shock nuclear test order
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Wall Street stocks rebound on Amazon, Apple earnings
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US Fed official backed rate pause because inflation 'too high'
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Prayers and anthems: welcome to the Trump-era Kennedy Center
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French court jails Bulgarians for up to four years for Holocaust memorial defacement
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Profits dip at ExxonMobil, Chevron on lower crude prices
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Ashraf and Mirza skittle South Africa as Pakistan win 2nd T20
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2,000 trucks stuck in Belarus after Lithuania closes border: association
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French lawmakers reject wealth tax proposal in budget debate
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Premier League blames European expansion for lack of Boxing Day games
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World's most expensive coffee goes on sale in Dubai at $1,000 a cup
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Trump stirs global tensions, confusion with nuclear test order
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Panic across US as health insurance costs set to surge
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China sends youngest astronaut, mice to space station
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Turkish court jails 11 for life over deadly hotel inferno
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Auger-Aliassime ends Vacherot run to reach Paris Masters semis
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Australia captain Wilson denies Wallabies use 'dangerous' breakdown tactics
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'Populists can be beaten': Dutch centrist Jetten claims election win
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China's suspension of rare earth controls applies to EU: official
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Italy complains about strong euro, urges ECB to cut rates
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Louvre to get anti-ramming barriers by year end: minister
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Wall Street bounces on Amazon, Apple earnings
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AI giants turn to massive debt to finance tech race
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Japan PM says raised 'serious concerns' with Xi on South China Sea, Xinjiang
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Shanghai reports first Covid deaths since start of lockdown
Shanghai on Monday said three people had died from Covid-19, the first official announcement of deaths from an outbreak which has plunged the megacity into a weeks-long lockdown, sparking widespread anger and rare protests.
Since March, a patchwork of restrictions has kept most of the city's 25 million residents confined to their homes or compounds, with daily caseloads regularly edging over 25,000.
On Monday city officials revealed the first deaths -- all elderly people with underlying conditions.
They "deteriorated into severe cases after going into hospital, and died after all efforts to revive them proved ineffective," the city said on an official social media account.
The statement said two of the dead were women aged 89 and 91, while the third was a 91-year-old man.
The municipal health commission confirmed the deaths.
The eastern business hub posted 22,248 new domestic cases on Monday, according to the municipal health commission.
While relatively low compared to other global outbreaks, the figures extend the pattern of recent weeks which has seen the city log tens of thousands of daily cases, most of which are asymptomatic.
In response, authorities have doubled down on Beijing's longstanding zero-tolerance approach to the virus, vowing to persist with onerous curbs on movement and isolating anyone who tests positive -- even if they show no signs of illness.
Residents in Shanghai -- one of China's wealthiest and most cosmopolitan cities -- have chafed under the restrictions, with many complaining of food shortages, spartan quarantine conditions and heavy-handed enforcement.
Social media users ripped into authorities for the filmed killing of a pet corgi by a health worker and a now-softened policy of separating infected children from their virus-free parents.
In a rare glimpse into the discontent, videos posted online last week showed some residents scuffling with hazmat-suited police ordering them to surrender their homes to patients.
Other footage and audio clips have indicated increasing desperation, including some showing people bursting through barricades demanding food.
Despite the blowback, China, where the coronavirus was first detected in late 2019, is sticking to its tried-and-tested zero-Covid policy of mass testing, travel restrictions and targeted lockdowns.
But the world's most populous nation has recently struggled to contain outbreaks in multiple regions, largely driven by the fast-spreading Omicron variant.
The country last reported new Covid-19 deaths on March 19 -- two people in the northeastern rust belt province of Jilin -- the first such deaths in more than a year.
L.Dubois--BTB