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Heartbreak will help Arsenal's Champions League charge: Arteta
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Europe stumped by Trump demands over Russia sanctions
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Cycling fears spread of race-halting protests after Vuelta chaos
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US, China reach 'framework' deal on TikTok ownership
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'With our fists if necessary': Venezuelans prepare to defend homeland against potential US invasion
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Duplantis thrives on Tokyo energy to break world record again
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Ex-France defender Umtiti calls time on club career
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One in six US parents rejecting standard vaccine schedule: poll
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Sheffield Utd appoint Wilder for third managerial spell
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UAE hammer Oman in Asia Cup to keep Super Four hopes alive
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Activists on trial as France debates right to die
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Duplantis reaches new heights, Beamish makes Kiwi history at worlds
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Frank relishing Champions League debut with Spurs
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Spanish PM calls for Israel to be barred from international sport
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UK aristocrat, partner get 14 years for baby daughter's manslaughter
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US says 'framework' deal with China on TikTok ownership
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Shootings 'unjustified' in Bloody Sunday killings, Belfast court hears
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Three French women accused of IS links go on trial
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'Stoked' Beamish stuns tearful El Bakkali for world steeplechase gold
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Israel attack aimed to halt Gaza talks, Qatar emir tells emergency summit
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Stocks push higher ahead of expected US rate cut
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Duplantis sets new pole vault record as retains world title
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US announces 'framework' TikTok deal with China
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Kiwi Beamish stuns tearful El Bakkali for world steeplechase gold
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Mbappe not anxious over Champions League wait: Alonso
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Japan medal hope Muratake relishing stage at Tokyo worlds
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Right-to-die activists on trial in France as lawmakers debate end-of-life bill
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Singing British hurdler Donovan in tune on world debut
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'Multiple concussions' force France lock Willemse to retire
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Athletic 'not afraid' of Arsenal on Champions League return: Inaki Williams
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Hatton's family speak of 'immeasurable' loss after boxer's death
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Rubio promises 'unwavering support' for Israel in Gaza goals
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Stocks diverge ahead of expected US rate cut
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Alfred out of world 200m with hamstring strain
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Ex-British soldier goes on trial in landmark Bloody Sunday case
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Pro-Palestinian protestors invading Vuelta course 'unacceptable': organisers
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Fruit fly tests in Greece target invasive species threat
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US 'very close' to TikTok deal with China: US Treasury chief
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Paolini vows to 'fight until last ball' for BJK Cup glory
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'Multiple concussions' forces France lock Willemse to retire
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Rubio talks Gaza with Netanyahu after Qatar strike
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Pakistan lodge protest as India tensions spill into cricket
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German defence giant Rheinmetall to take over warship maker
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Arab, Muslim leaders hold emergency talks after Israel's Qatar attack
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Markets mixed ahead of expected US rate cut
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Rubio takes up Qatar strike unease with Netanyahu
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US-China trade talks resume in Madrid
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Gaza aid flotilla carrying Greta Thunberg departs Tunisia
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New Nepal interim ministers sworn in after protests
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Cluster bombs kill, wound over 1,200 in Ukraine since 2022: monitor

UN resuming talks on high-seas treaty amid growing concerns
After four inconclusive sessions, UN member states on Monday resume talks aimed at finally completing a treaty to protect the world's high seas, a vital yet fragile resource that covers nearly half the planet.
A host of NGOs and affected countries say the pact is urgently needed to improve environmental stewardship over the vast, yet largely unregulated, area as it faces growing challenges.
But the Covid-19 pandemic slowed negotiations for two years, and a session in March that was supposed to have been conclusive made progress but ran out of time.
The new round of talks opening Monday is set to run through August 26 at United Nations headquarters in New York.
Whether it will really be the last round remains uncertain, according to those close to the talks.
Negotiators are "cautiously optimistic," said a source with the High Ambition Coalition, which groups some 50 countries led by the European Union.
The source told AFP that participants need to find a compromise between two "grand ideas": protecting the environment and regulating human activities on the one hand, while also guarding freedoms on the high seas.
The high seas begin at the border of nations' exclusive economic zones (EEZs), which by international law reach no more than 200 nautical miles (370 kilometers) from each country's coast, and are under no state's jurisdiction.
Even if the high seas represent more than 60 percent of the oceans -- and nearly half the planet -- they have long been largely ignored in favor of coastal zones, with protections extended only to a few vulnerable species. Only one percent of the high seas enjoys legal protection.
Yet, scientists have proved the importance of protecting oceanic ecosystems in their entirety. They produce half the oxygen humans breathe and help limit global warming by absorbing much of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activity.
They are seriously at risk, however, from the continuing rise in levels of carbon dioxide (which intensifies warming and makes ocean waters more acid), pollution and overfishing.
- A global 'compass' -
That adds to the urgency of finally completing the global pact on the "Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction," say NGOs and the High Ambition Coalition.
"This treaty is of major importance," said Julien Rochette, a researcher with the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI), "because it is going to provide a framework -- a compass -- for the principles and rules guiding the entire international community in managing this common space."
But the latest treaty draft still fails to resolve several thorny issues or to choose among diverse and contending options, such as the conditions for creating so-called Marine Protected Areas.
To James Hanson of Greenpeace, the future Conference of Parties (or COP, a decision-making body which includes all signatory states) must have the power to "create these Marine Protected Areas without having to defer to the existing bodies."
Yet questions about cooperation with regional maritime organizations (such as over fishing rights) must yet be decided.
Also unresolved, Rochette told AFP, is whether the COP could ban certain activities on the high seas if a mandated environmental-impact study proves unfavorable, or whether a state could simply go ahead.
Another sensitive issue involves the allocation of potential profits from developing genetic resources in the high seas, where pharmaceutical, chemical and cosmetic companies hope to find miracle drugs, products or cures.
Such costly research at sea is largely the prerogative of the rich, but developing countries do not want to be left out of potential windfall profits drawn from marine resources that belong to no one. It remains unclear whether there has been substantial movement by key parties since the last round of talks, said Rochette.
He said those pressing hardest for agreement on this issue include the European Union, Australia, New Zealand and developing countries, while the strongest opposition comes from Russia and from countries concerned about fishing rights, including Iceland and Japan.
A.Malone--AMWN