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Australia's Smith fears South Africa pace attack in WTC final
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US, China begin key trade talks in London
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Injured Scotland prop Fagerson out of Lions tour
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England's Tuchel refuses to 'sugarcoat' criticism after dire display against Andorra
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Russia, Ukraine swap first prisoners in large-scale exchange
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Defence or environment? UK faces spending choices
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Stocks diverge awaiting China-US trade talks
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Chivu leaves Parma ahead of Inter Milan move
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Hitchcock heroine Novak awarded Venice lifetime achievement award
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UK to boost 'homegrown talent' in new AI skills drive
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Beaten Sinner extends lead on Alcaraz at top of ATP rankings
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Strycova to replace Pala as Czech Billie Jean King Cup team captain
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'Tennis the winner' as Alcaraz and Sinner set for enduring rivalry
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Chivu says goodbye to Parma ahead of Inter Milan move
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Iran says to submit own nuclear proposal to US soon
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Boisson jumps 296 places in WTA rankings after French Open run
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Tangled humpback whale sparks rescue mission off Australia
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Malaysia bus crash kills at least 15, mostly students
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Climate change heightens risk of Indian farmer suicides
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Farmed production of some fish - and seaweed - is soaring
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Bust attributed to Donatello splits Slovakia
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'Maybe Happy Ending' tops Broadway's Tony Awards
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'Flawed' Test Championship reveals world cricket's underlying problems
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Retired great Hakuho says leaving sumo after bullying scandal
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Haliburton vows to improve after Thunder defense stifles Pacers
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Trump travel ban in effect, citizens from 12 nations barred from US
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McIntosh impresses in 800m free win at Canada trials
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NATO learns as Ukraine's 'creativity' changes battlefield
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Thunder rumble to 123-107 win over Pacers to level NBA Finals
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Chinese consumer prices continue to fall as US trade talks loom
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Thunder power past Pacers to level NBA Finals
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Asian markets rally ahead of latest China-US trade talks
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UN summit to tackle 'emergency' in world's oceans
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Alexandre de Moraes: Brazilian judge in showdown with far-right
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US, China seek to extend trade truce with London talks
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Fox beats Burns on fourth playoff hole to win PGA Canadian Open
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Nations League victors Portugal toast Ronaldo's 'winner mentality'
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Spain focused on World Cup after defeat, says coach
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New Zealand Rugby chief Robinson quits
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Lewandowski to boycott national team under current coach
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Portugal beat Spain on penalties to win Nations League
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Alcaraz puts French Open miracle down to 'real champions' mindset
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Kupcho ends LPGA title drought with Shoprite Classic crown
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Alcaraz stuns Sinner in all-time great French Open final
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'This one hurts': Sinner wants to forget painful French Open final loss
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Powerful 6.3 magnitude quake shakes central Colombia, damaging buildings
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'They could be here in two days': Ukrainian town braces for Russian advance
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Iran says no sanctions relief in US nuclear proposal

Defence or environment? London faces spending choices
Torn between growing geopolitical tensions and constrained public finances, Britain's finance minister Rachel Reeves is set to unveil feared trade-offs in a government spending review on Wednesday.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer is boosting the defence budget, and reports point to National Health Service (NHS) being bolstered -- forcing other key ministries to tighten their belts.
"Sharp trade-offs are unavoidable," said the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a respected think tank, of the spending plans through to 2029-2030.
Reeves, the chancellor of the exchequer, is to detail day-to-day spending plans in her review to parliament on Wednesday.
An inaugural budget in October featured tax rises and big spending announcements on infrastructure, meaning belt-tightening has to come from elsewhere.
Already in March, Labour announced contested cuts to disability welfare payments, hoping to save more than £5 billion ($6.8 billion) by the start of the next decade.
Thousands of protestors gathered in central London on Saturday, many holding placards that read "tax the rich, stop the cuts -- welfare not warfare".
The government on Sunday announced £86 billion of investment in science and technology and defence by 2030.
Reeves hopes the spending will boost sluggish growth, which risks added pressure from the tariffs trade war unleashed by US President Donald Trump.
Reeves is set to announce a funding boost of up to £30 billion for the NHS, according to The Times newspaper.
Britain's media has in recent days reported on tough, last-minute discussions between the Treasury and the interior ministry, particularly regarding the police budget, as well as with the energy department amid fears for the UK's carbon-reduction commitments.
- Defence priority -
Reeves has amended her fiscal rules to allow the government more headroom for investment in the run-up to the spending review.
At the same time, she wishes to balance the books so that tax revenues match day-to-day spending, meaning the government borrows only to invest.
The chancellor has allowed the Treasury to borrow more, particularly for infrastructure projects across the vital housing and energy sectors.
This has handed her a windfall of £113 billion over five years.
"When it comes to capital spending, government investment is set to be sustained at historically high levels in the coming years," the IFS noted.
"If spent well, this should help contribute to growth and to better public services in years to come."
Citing Russia's invasion of Ukraine, London has announced it will increase its defence budget to 2.5 percent of UK gross domestic product by 2027 -- and up to 3.0 percent by 2034, helped by cutting international aid.
"While going for growth and fixing the NHS will still be central to the Spending Review, bolstering the nation's defence is now considered an urgent pressing need," said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown.
While seeking to cut costs, it has been reported that the Labour government may later this year announce plans to lift a cap on child benefits and reverse a decision to scrap a winter heating benefit for millions of pensioners, after a backlash over the policies from some of its party members.
Possible "U-turns on benefit and welfare spending, increased pressure to ramp up defence spending and higher borrowing costs have left the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, in a sticky position", concluded Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics.
"If she wishes to avoid a political backlash and/or an adverse reaction in the financial markets, she probably has little choice but to raise taxes in the Autumn Budget."
The government has already hiked a business tax that entered into force in April.
W.Huber--VB