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Iraq's famed 'hunchback' of Mosul rebuilt brick by brick

by Rouba El Husseini

The leaning minaret of Mosul in northern Iraq has been restored using its original brickwork, years after it was reduced to rubble under Islamic State group rule.

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China slams U.S. 'suppression' as trade war deepens

by Oliver HOTHAM

Beijing accused the United States Wednesday of "suppression" after its postal service said it was suspending parcels from China and Hong Kong, a move that could hit e-commerce giants Temu and Shein.

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Tokyo police bust alleged prostitution ring targeting tourists

Japanese police said they have arrested seven people suspected of running an illegal sex business that reportedly targeted tourists in Tokyo's busy red-light district.

A record 36.8 million foreign visitors came to Japan last year, drawn partly by the weak yen -- a figure the government wants to almost double to 60 million annually by 2030.

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'President calls for ethnic cleansing, again': Internet outraged after Trump's Gaza remark

Critics unloaded on voters and President Donald Trump after he announced support for displacing Gaza residents and relocating them somewhere else in the Middle East "like Egypt" or Jordan.

According to Trump, Palestinians "would be happy" to leave Gaza because it has been decimated by rubble.

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'It's a demolition site': Trump says Palestinians have 'no alternative' but to leave Gaza

President Donald Trump insisted Tuesday that Palestinians had "no alternative" other than leaving Gaza, which he dubbed a "big pile of rubble."

In an Oval Office rant, Trump spoke about the aftermath of Israel's war in Gaza — and suggested the occupants would willingly leave.

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Trump leaves ‘instructions’ to have Iran ‘obliterated’ if he is assassinated

President Donald Trump signed a memorandum on Tuesday ordering the United States to have Iran "obliterated" if the country assassinated him.

Trump said he was "torn" about whether or not to sign the order but decided to move forward because Iran was "too close" to having a nuclear weapon, he said in remarks Tuesday from the White House.

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'Sheer malevolence': Analyst says Trump's first weeks 'worse than you could have imagined'

Democrats tried to work with President Donald Trump at the start of his second term, but the spirit of "sheer malevolence" by Trump and Elon Musk has made moving forward all but impossible, argued an opinion writer for MSNBC.

Journalist Paul Waldman wrote that initially, "some Democrats decided to extend a hand of bipartisanship." They included progressive Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) who were both spurred on by the idea of cutting government waste through Musk's Department of Government Efficiency.

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Trump's tariff push tears rift between him and top White House aides: report

President Donald Trump’s decision to impose harsh trade tariffs on China, Canada and Mexico didn't have complete White House buy-in, according to a new report in The Wall Street Journal.

Stephen Miller, Trump's White House deputy chief of staff for policy, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent both reportedly voiced opposition to the punitive tariffs, arguing that they were counterproductive to the administration's goals.

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'Not a huge fan': Top Republican stands up to Trump on key policy

GOP Rep. Adrian Smith (R-NE), the top Republican on the Ways and Means trade subcommittee, is not an advocate of President Donald Trump's punitive use of tariffs, according to new reporting by Politico.

Smith told reporter Ari Hawkins at a Tuesday morning breakfast that he's “'not a huge fan of tariffs,' like the ones Trump threatened to levy on Canada and Mexico and slapped on China over the weekend. But he said that 'we need to come to terms' with the fact that Trump is bent on using them to achieve his economic and security aims."

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Despite tariff reprieve Canadians worry 'damage already done' to U.S. ties

by Ben Simon

The trade war may be on hold, but in a Canadian border city where the unhindered flow of auto parts across the bridge to Detroit supports thousands of jobs, the future remains uncertain.

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Gunman wounds four at Sweden education center

by Nioucha ZAKAVATI

A gunman shot and wounded four people at an education center in central Sweden on Tuesday, police said, urging the public to stay away from the area as officers hunted for possible accomplices.

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Spain moves to slash working week to 37.5 hours

Spain's minority leftist government on Tuesday approved a plan to reduce the working week to 37.5 hours in one of the world's fastest-growing developed economies.

But the measure faces an uphill battle in parliament and the misgivings of business leaders who fear it will stifle growth.

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Thousands leave as fresh tremors shake Greece's Santorini

by Will VASSILOPOULOS with John HADOULIS in Athens

Thousands of people fled the Greek island of Santorini by sea and air for a third day on Tuesday, as more earthquakes shook the top travel destination.

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