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North Korea vows boost to nuclear buildup, military intelligence
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H5 bird flu detected in Australian seabird for first time
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Syria authorities say captured IS-linked cell behind blasts
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Myanmar's pro-democracy revolution weakens five years on
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Hundreds flee homes in Taiwan ahead of biggest typhoon in decades
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Australia's Big Bash League to open season in India
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Asian stocks rally as SK hynix breathes life back into AI trade
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'Everyone' expects Spain to beat us, says Belgium coach
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Venezuela quake tragedy threatens to set back democratic transition
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France's Galthie says 'hot and cold' Australia still a threat
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Yamal's best 'yet to come,' warns Spain coach
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Mbappe warns 'a long way to go' for France at World Cup after reaching semis
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'Up to him' - Curry on chance that LeBron lands with Warriors
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Deschamps hails Mbappe after superstar fires France into World Cup semis
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Revamped Ireland wary of 'bang in form' Japan
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OpenAI number two Simo steps down to focus on health
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Morocco coach Ouahbi vows team will come back stronger after World Cup exit
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Iran buries Khamenei after new fighting with US erupts
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Rennie says Italy won't catch All Blacks off guard
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Can ageless Messi keep delivering for Argentina at World Cup?
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McIlroy encouraged by 'great start' to Scottish Open
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Chip titan SK hynix to raise $26.5 bn in blockbuster US listing
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England chase World Cup glory as Haaland allows Norway to dream
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Bayeux Tapestry begins epic journey from France to London
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'When it's Kylian, there's no problem': Deschamps after France into semis
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Mbappe, Dembele fire France past Morocco into World Cup semi-finals
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Mbappe strikes again as France beat Morocco to reach World Cup semi-finals
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Chip titan SK hynix readies for mega US listing
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Sick Olympic champion McKeown pulls out of Commonwealth Games, PanPacs
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Iyer says India in 'transition' after latest thrashing by England
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Traeen out of Tour de France after losing yellow jersey
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Iyer says India in 'transition' after latest England thrashing
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Ukrainian sports minister slams IOC's 'cynical' Russia decision
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Silencing World Cup hotshot Haaland vital, says England's O'Reilly
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Leonard return to Raptors on hold pending Clippers probe
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Australian sprint sensation Gout Gout set to miss rest of season
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US pushes for weaker truck pollution rules
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England thrash India by nine wickets for T20 series win
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Wimbledon run came 'out of nowhere', says finalist Noskova
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Spain keeping opposition far from goal at World Cup, says 'keeper Garcia
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India captain Kaur hopes Lord's Test can offset World Cup woes
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Trump demonizes migrants in dark, misleading speech
Donald Trump painted an apocalyptic picture of a country being "occupied" by hordes of criminal foreigners in a campaign speech Friday as he escalated his efforts to make November's US election about a migrant crime wave that isn't happening.
With the White House race neck-and-neck in the final stretch, the Republican ex-president has been dividing his closing pitch between a protectionist economic message and riling his largely white, working class supporters by demonizing immigrants.
As his Democratic election rival Kamala Harris pledged to work with Republicans to promote united government, Trump delivered as divisive a speech as he has ever given, wildly exaggerating local tensions and misleading his audience about immigration statistics and policy.
"America is known, all throughout the world, as 'Occupied America.' They call it 'occupied.' We're being occupied by a criminal force," Trump thundered, in an 80-minute appearance Aurora, Colorado focused almost entirely on immigration.
"But to everyone here in Colorado and all across our nation, I make this pledge and vow to you: November 5, 2024 will be Liberation Day in America," he added, flanked by posters of foreign suspected criminals.
While the US government has struggled for years to manage its southern border with Mexico, Trump has super-charged concerns by claiming an "invasion" is underway by migrants he says will rape and murder Americans.
- 'Enemy within' -
Aurora was the scene of a viral video, played on a loop in right-wing media, showing armed Latinos rampaging through an apartment building.
The incident spurred sweeping, false narratives about the town in the Denver suburbs being terrorized by Latin American migrants -- fueling Trump's election message that the United States is overrun by what he calls "savages" and "animals."
Smearing Harris as a "criminal," Trump said falsely that Venezuelan gangs in Colorado had been given permission to shoot police, and spoke darkly of an "enemy within" that he defined as "all the scum that we have to deal with that hate our country."
If Harris got four years in office, Trump said, "you would have 200 million people come in... the country would be over."
Trump vowed to tackle migrant gangs using the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 -- which allows the federal government to round up and deport foreigners belonging to a country with which America is at war -- as part of a mass deportation drive he christened "Operation Aurora."
Violent crime, which spiked under Trump, has in fact fallen in every year of the Biden administration.
Migrants commit fewer crimes proportionately than the native population, though migrant suspects have been named in a few high-profile cases of violent attacks on women and children, infuriating many Republican voters.
Illegal immigration numbers at the southern border are now about where they were in 2020, the last year of Trump's presidency, after peaking at 250,000 migrant crossings in the month of December 2023.
Harris, campaigning in Scottsdale, Arizona, provided a marked contrast to Trump as she pushed a message of unity, pledging to institute a "bipartisan council of advisors" in addition to having a Republican in her cabinet.
- 'Back where they came from' -
"In the last several years in our country there are some powerful forces that are trying to divide us as Americans, would cheer us on if we point fingers at each other," she said, adding: "We have more in common than what separates us."
With less than four weeks to the November 5 election, polls show a race too close to call. The latest Wall Street Journal poll Friday gave Harris slim leads in four of the seven swing states, but all the key contests are within the margin of error.
Aurora's police department told AFP this week that it had only isolated reports of activity in the city by the Venezuelan street gang called Tren de Aragua.
And the Republican mayor, Mike Coffman, called Trump's claims "grossly exaggerated," offering to give him a tour of Aurora, which he called a "safe city -- not a city overrun by Venezuelan gangs."
However, Trump clearly believes his fearmongering is striking a chord.
He has similarly promoted the entirely fictious story that Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, are eating residents' cats and dogs.
In Aurora, he repeated his threat to deport the community, which is in Ohio legally, saying they "have to go back where they came from."
S.Gantenbein--VB