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Philippine senator seeks military support to block ICC drug war arrest
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Ronaldo left waiting for Saudi title after goalkeeping gaffe
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EU to ease train travel with one journey, one ticket rules
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Quick bowler Brown left out of Australia T20 World Cup squad
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Los Angeles stadium undergoes World Cup facelift
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Pacific nation Nauru to change name in break from colonial past
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Messi still highest-paid player in MLS
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Paramount defends Warner bid amid California probe
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Agnete Kirk Kristiansen Appointed Chair of the LEGO Foundation
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Tens of thousands demonstrate in Argentina over Milei university cuts
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Ex-NBA player Jason Collins dies after brain cancer battle
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Foot blister forces McIlroy to cut short PGA practice round
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Man City boss Guardiola urges players to make VAR irrelevant
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Favourites Finland, Israel through at Eurovision semis
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Revitalized Rose sets aside Masters loss for top PGA form
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Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman tells tech titan trial
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Former Honduras mayor arrested over murder of environmental activist
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Oil prices advance, stocks mostly fall on US-Iran deadlock
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'Bittersweet' runner-up run has Scheffler inspired at PGA
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Lakers would welcome return of LeBron James
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Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman says in high-stakes trial
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US appeals court halts order declaring Trump's global 10% tariff illegal
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Rubio, with new Chinese name, heads to Beijing despite sanctions
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Showtime as boycotted Eurovision kicks off
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Stars descend as Cannes Film Festival opens without Hollywood backing
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Trump heads to China for superpower summit
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Referees' chief says disallowing Hammers goal against Arsenal 'categorically' right
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Brazil's Lula launches plan to fight organized crime ahead of elections
year
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Grizzlies forward Brandon Clarke dies at 29: team
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No.5 Morikawa still battles back issues as PGA start looms
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Stadium changes just part of Houston's World Cup transformation
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Trump announces departure of food and drug regulation chief
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Russia demands closure of high representative post in Bosnia
Trump freezes VOA, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe
President Donald Trump's administration on Saturday put journalists at Voice of America and other US-funded broadcasters on leave, abruptly freezing outlets long seen as critical to countering a Russian and Chinese information offensive.
Hundreds of reporters and other staff at VOA, Radio Free Asia, Radio Free Europe and other outlets received a weekend email saying they will be barred from their offices and should surrender press passes, office-issued telephones and other equipment.
Trump, who has already eviscerated the US aid agency and Education Department, on Friday issued an executive order listing the US Agency for Global Media as among "elements of the federal bureaucracy that the president has determined are unnecessary."
Kari Lake, a firebrand Trump supporter and former Arizona news anchor who was put in charge of the media agency after she lost a US Senate bid, wrote -- in an email to media outlets she supervises -- that federal grant money "no longer effectuates agency priorities."
A White House press official, Harrison Fields, took a much less legalistic tone in a post on X, simply writing "goodbye" in 20 languages, a sarcastic jab at VOA's multilingual coverage.
The head of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which started broadcasting into the Soviet bloc during the Cold War, called the cancellation of funding "a massive gift to America's enemies."
- Gift to China? -
"The Iranian ayatollahs, Chinese communist leaders, and autocrats in Moscow and Minsk would celebrate the demise of RFE/RL after 75 years," its president, Stephen Capus, said in a statement.
"Handing our adversaries a win would make them stronger and America weaker," he said.
US-funded media have reoriented themselves since the end of the Cold War, dropping much of the programming geared toward newly democratic Central and Eastern European countries and focusing on Russia and China.
Radio Free Asia, established in 1996, sees its mission as providing uncensored reporting into countries without free media including China, Myanmar, North Korea and Vietnam.
The outlets have an editorial firewall, with a stated guarantee of independence despite the funding from the US government.
The policy has angered some around Trump, who has long railed against media and in his first stint in office had suggested that US government-funded outlets should promote his policies.
P.L.Madureira--PC