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Sinner swamps Auger-Aliassime in Cincinnati power display
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California to change election maps to counter Texas, governor says
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Apple Watch gets revamped blood oxygen feature
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Trump vows not to be intimidated ahead of Putin summit
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Dueling interests for Trump and Putin at Alaska summit
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Global plastic pollution treaty talks in a 'haze'
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Bristol sign Wales wing Rees-Zammit after NFL dream ends
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Gauff cruises into Cincinnati quarter-final with Paolini
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Apple rejects Musk claim of App Store bias
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Searchers seek missing after deadly Italy migrant shipwreck
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Air Canada cancels flights over strike threat
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Trump turns history on head with Putin invitation to key US base
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Gauff dominates Bronzetti to reach Cincinnati last eight
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UN warns Russia, Israel of conflict sex crimes listing risk
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Flood kills 46 in Indian Kashmir mountain village
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Germany sacks rail chief with train network in crisis
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Trump says Putin summit could fail, promises Ukraine say
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Lyles v Thompson in re-run of Olympic 100m final in Silesia
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LA 2028 to sell venue name rights in Olympic first
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Solomon Islands says China not influencing diplomatic decisions
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Flood kills 37 in Indian Kashmir mountain village
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US stocks drop as producer inflation surges
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Greenpeace stages Anish Kapoor art protest on UK gas platform
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US producer inflation highest in three years in July
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Greek firefighters beat back wildfires
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Serbia's political crisis escalates into clashes
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Australia recall O'Connor to face champions South Africa
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Kremlin says Putin, Trump to hold 'one-on-one' talks in Alaska
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Stocks diverge as bitcoin hits record high
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Spain suffers third wildfire death, Greece beats back flames
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Liverpool 'agree deal' for Parma prospect Leoni
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Foreign NGOs say new Israeli rules keep them from delivering Gaza aid
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Japan's grand tea master Sen Genshitsu dies at 102: reports
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Water shortages plague Beirut as low rainfall compounds woes
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Germany's Thyssenkrupp cuts targets as US tariffs weigh
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Brady didn't understand football, says Rooney after 'work ethic' jibe
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Greek firefighters make progress against wildfires
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UK economy slows less than feared after tariffs
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Markets mixed as bitcoin hits new high
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PSG begin French title defence as Pogba returns home and Paris FC step up
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At least 40 dead in Sudan's worst cholera outbreak in years: MSF
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Zelensky in London to meet PM ahead of US-Russia summit
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French dictionary gets bad rap over Congolese banana leaf dish
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Alaska: a source of Russian imperial nostalgia
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Last chance saloon for global plastic pollution treaty
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India to bid for Commonwealth Games as part of Olympic push
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North Korea denies removing border loudspeakers
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Despite risks, residents fight to protect Russian national park
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Asian markets mixed as bitcoin surges to new high
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War-weary Ukrainians find solace by frontline lake

US nears 1 mn Covid dead, early epicenter New York seeks to move on
The United States is about to cross the threshold of one million deaths from Covid-19, a grim milestone that comes as cities like New York try to turn the page on the pandemic despite threats of another surge.
"It's unfathomable," Diana Berrent, one of the first people in New York state to catch coronavirus, said of the toll that far exceeds epidemiologists' worst predictions made at the outbreak of the crisis in spring 2020.
Then, New York City was the virus epicenter. Hospitals and morgues overflowed and empty streets rang to the sound of ambulance sirens as then-president Donald Trump responded chaotically in Washington.
Two years on, and life in the Big Apple is largely back to normal as residents attempt to put the collective trauma of the virus that has killed 40,000 New Yorkers behind them.
Broadway stage lights are once again illuminated, tourists are back riding in horse carriage in Central Park, yellow taxis clog main avenues and bars in business districts hum with post-work chatter.
"Without a doubt you feel the energy of the people that are on the streets. It's been a long time coming," Alfred Cerullo, president of a business improvement group in Midtown Manhattan, told AFP.
New York’s rebound has been aided by its high vaccination numbers -- some 88 percent of adults are fully vaccinated, a rate that was boosted by mandates, including for indoor activities like dining.
Jeffrey Bank, owner of Carmine's restaurant near Times Square, says sales at the Italian eatery are better than they were in 2019, as residents and tourists make up for lost time.
"People have been sitting at home for two years. They want to celebrate and they're entitled to," he told AFP.
- 'Disconnect' -
But the city has a long way to go. Many stores remain empty and only 38 percent of Manhattan office workers are in the office on an average weekday, according to Kastle Systems, a security firm that tracks building occupancy.
The Big Apple's tourism board also doesn't expect visitor numbers to get back to the 67 million of 2019 people for a few years.
And business owners fear another wave of infections.
"Obviously we are worried," Frank Tedesco, who is unsure how he could keep his jewelry business afloat if another shutdown occurred, told AFP.
In recent weeks, the United States has seen an uptick in the number of daily virus cases, largely due to the new Omicron subvariant.
The rise has coincided with the lifting of mask mandates.
"I think we are in a place where psychologically and socially and economically, people are largely done with the pandemic," said Celine Gounder, an infectious disease expert at New York University.
"(But) the pandemic is not over. So you have a disconnect between what is happening epidemiologically and what's happening in terms of how people are responding," she told AFP.
Among the most at-risk are the unvaccinated, lower-income populations, uninsured people and communities of color, she says.
America recorded its first coronavirus death, on the West Coast, in early February 2020. By the next month, the virus was ravaging New York and the White House was predicting up to 240,000 deaths nationwide.
But those projections were way off.
- Mandates -
Trump was late to back social distancing, repeatedly undermined top scientist Anthony Fauci, peddled unproven medical treatments, and politicized mask-wearing -- before eventually being hospitalized with the virus himself.
In New York and other northeastern urban centers, hospitals become overwhelmed and morgues failed keep up with the dead.
"There were nurses that said if they closed their eyes at night they could hear the patients struggling to breathe and they couldn't get it out of their heads," recalled Boston nurse Janice Maloof-Tomaso.
Ideological clashes over curfews and mask and vaccine mandates ensued as America racked up the world's highest death toll.
Trump did pump billions of dollars into vaccine research, however, and by mid-December 2020, the first vaccines were available for health care workers.
But deaths kept soaring amid a slow take-up of shots in conservative areas of the country, and in February 2021 America counted 500,000 dead.
New President Joe Biden and many Democratic governors enforced mandates but Republican-led states like Florida and Texas outright banned them, highlighting America's patchwork of rules that made forming a unified response to the pandemic difficult.
"We went from 'stay home and save lives' to let it rip," recalled 47-year-old Berrent, who, after her illness in 2020, founded the group Survivor Corps for people looking for information about long-haul Covid or a current Covid-19 infection.
"The question is no longer, 'Have you had Covid?' It's, 'How many times have you had Covid, and what symptoms do you still have?'"
A.Gasser--BTB