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Trump slashes two Utah protected areas by more than 90%
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US strikes Iran for third night as Trump says deal still 'possible'
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Spain 'favourites' says Deschamps ahead of World Cup semi-final showdown
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Trump vows to hit Iran 'hard,' impose Hormuz transit fees
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Norway receive heroes' welcome in Oslo after World Cup exit
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France and Spain prepare to duel at World Cup
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Pickford backs England to keep cool in tense Argentina World Cup semi
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Five Britons among foreign Spanish wildfire victims
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Oil prices surge on US-Iran attacks; tech shares fall
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Ukraine allies pledge more air defence, pressure Russia
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Thomas Tuchel: England's World Cup mastermind
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'Until the end': The tireless, traumatic search for Venezuela quake victims
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Mbappe paradox stirs club v country debate as France face Spain
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Trump expected to shrink protected lands in Utah: reports
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Trump reimposes Iran naval blockade, threatens Hormuz fees
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Twelve US states sue to block Paramount's Warner Bros. takeover
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US vows campaign to end ICC 'threat' to Americans
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New boss Alonso calls for Chelsea 'hunger', wants Fernandez to stay
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Yemen govt says hit Sanaa airport, Houthis attack Saudi Arabia
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Knight excited for future after England career ends in India defeat
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US judge voids 'improper' Trump tax deal
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From bombmaking to motorcycle tweaks: how Nigerian jihadists use AI
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US appeals court revives private cases alleging Tylenol link to autism
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Edwards vows to 'upskill' England women for Ashes after India defeat
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Spieth adamant he has more golf majors left in him
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Hungary MPs pass constitutional tweak to oust Orban-allied president
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'VAR-gentina?': conspiracy theories swirl ahead of World Cup semi-finals
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Ukraine allies meet in Paris to boost air defence, pressure Russia
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Counter-terror police take over investigation into UK politician's killing
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Fitzpatrick blames betting for golf fans' bad behaviour
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McCullum sorry for England defeats after 'romantic' finish with Stokes
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Trump declares Iran blockade back, says US will charge Hormuz fees
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New boss Alonso calls for Chelsea 'hunger'
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Uganda opposition leader treason trial starts without lawyers
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Trump says US reinstates Iran blockade, will be 'paid' for guarding Hormuz
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Iraola vows to remain true to himself at Liverpool
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McCullum sorry for England Test defeats after Australia and India losses
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Volkswagen confirms weighing up to 50,000 more job cuts
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Trump says US 'taking over' Hormuz as fighting with Iran flares
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Yemen government says attacked Sanaa airport, reviving dormant conflict
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Three Britons among foreign Spanish wildfire victims
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EU sanctions target Russian state-backed messaging app
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Switzerland, Britain conclude 'modernised' free trade deal talks
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Oil prices surge on US-Iran attacks, tech shares tank
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Taliban says 'no oppression' of Afghan women after dress crackdown
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Counter-terror police take lead of probe into UK politician's killing
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Commander of Ukraine's French-trained brigade arrested in murder probe
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'Outstanding' India thrash England in historic first women's Test at Lord's
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Slaven Bilic returns as Croatia coach
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UK unveils plan to ban Iran Revolutionary Guards: ministry
Top US government scientist grilled on Covid
Former US government scientist Anthony Fauci angrily denied covering up the origins of Covid-19 Monday in his first public congressional testimony since retiring as the face of the fight against the pandemic.
Fauci became the nation's most trusted expert in the chaotic early days of the 2020 outbreak, but his clashes with former president Donald Trump over the response sparked fury on the right, and he now lives with security protection following death threats against his family.
Republicans accuse the 83-year-old immunologist of helping to set off the worst pandemic in a century by approving funding passed on to Chinese scientists they accuse of manufacturing the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus that causes Covid-19.
He was pressed by Republicans on the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic on his knowledge of "gain of function" research, which seeks to enhance viruses as a way of finding ways to combat them.
The controversial technique is at the center of a theory that the pandemic originated in a lab leak.
But Fauci said it would be "molecularly impossible" for the bat viruses studied at the Wuhan Institute of Virology to be turned into the virus that caused the pandemic.
And he dismissed as "absolutely false and simply preposterous" Republican claims that he influenced the CIA's analysis of whether the pandemic started naturally or escaped from the lab.
The director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) for 38 years until he stepped down in December 2022, Fauci helped craft federal policy during an outbreak that killed 1.1 million Americans.
His regular TV appearances correcting Trump's misinformation about the pandemic earned him enemies among allies of the billionaire, who is bidding for a second term in November.
The panel has taken more than 100 hours of testimony and sifted through a mountain of documents in a 15-month investigation but has failed to turn up any evidence linking Fauci to potentially dangerous research in Wuhan.
The World Health Organization and scientists across the world have investigated the origins of the virus, most believing it to have spread from animals to humans in China.
A US intelligence analysis released last year said it was also possible that the virus was genetically engineered and escaped from the Wuhan lab.
Fauci told lawmakers it was "not a conspiracy theory" to discuss the merits of the lab leak theory.
"What is a conspiracy theory is the kind of distortions of that particular subject, like, it was a lab leak and I was parachuted into the CIA like Jason Bourne and told the CIA that they should really not be talking about a lab leak," he said.
U.Maertens--VB