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Britain's King Charles calls for unity in 'uncertain times'
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Morikawa seizes lead at Arnold Palmer after birdie rally
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Alcaraz, Keys breeze into Indian Wells third round
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Record-setting Skotheim claims European indoor heptathlon title
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Inter survive Monza scare to extend Serie A lead
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Argentina port city 'destroyed' by massive rainstorm, 13 dead
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Townsend relishing 'toughest fixture' in France after Scotland's Six Nations win over Wales
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Colombian guerillas release hostage security forces: AFP
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Some 200 detained after Istanbul Women's Day march: organisers
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Draper sends Brazilian sensation Fonseca packing at Indian Wells
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Man with Palestinian flag scales London's Big Ben clock tower
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Protesters rally on International Women's Day, fearing far right
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Australian Open champion Keys cruises into Indian Wells 3rd round
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Barca Liga match postponed after club doctor dies
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Alldritt revels in 'historic' French performance to thrash Irish
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Watkins haunts Brentford to revive Aston Villa's top-four hopes
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Pulisic double rescues AC Milan at lowly Lecce
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Mirrors, marble and mud: Desert X returns to California
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'Grieving': US federal workers thrown into uncertain job market
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Slot blast fuelled Liverpool's comeback against Southampton
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Russell back in the groove as Scotland see off Wales in Six Nations
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Remains of murdered Indigenous woman found at Canada landfill
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French throng streets for International Women's Day rallies
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Security forces taken hostage by Colombian guerillas released: AFP
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Pope responding well to pneumonia treatment, Vatican says
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France coach Galthie 'angry' at Dupont knee injury
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The French were clinical, we were not, says Irish coach Easterby
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Sleeping man is struck by train in Peru but survives
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Dembele hits double as PSG win ahead of Liverpool return
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Bosnia top envoy backs court ruling against separatist laws
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Bayern get away with shock loss as Leverkusen fall to defeat
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'We have to rebuild a city,' Argentine official says after storm kills 10
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Guardiola urges troubled Man City to fight for Champions League place
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Salah fires Liverpool 16 points clear, Forest beat Man City
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Liverpool fight back to go 16 points clear as title moves closer
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Hermes celebrates felt at Paris Fashion Week
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Bayern unpunished for shock loss as Leverkusen fall to defeat
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Majestic France destroy Irish Six Nations Grand Slam dreams
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Santner wants New Zealand to keep 'open mind' for Champions Trophy final
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Pogacar remounts after fall and charges to Strade Bianche win
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Negri wants Italy to 'make things right' against England in Six Nations
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Attack on Iran nuclear plant would leave Gulf without water, Qatar PM warns
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Mitchell backs Dingwall to be England rugby's answer to Rodri
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Unfinished business for India in Champions Trophy final, says Gill
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Women will overthrow Iran's Islamic republic: Nobel laureate
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Forest beat Man City in a top four showdown
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Former England star Pearce in hospital after plane health scare
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Russia claims advances in Kursk region, Zelensky demands sanctions
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Brignone dominates giant slalom to close in on World Cup title
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Von Allmen edges Odermatt in downhill to keep title battle alive

French left 'people's primary' fails to end feuding
France's leftist presidential hopefuls traded barbs on Monday after a prominent former minister won a grass roots "people's primary" that failed to end the squabbling between left-wing forces ahead of the April vote.
The primary on Sunday picked former justice minister Christiane Taubira as the favourite to lead the left's efforts to unseat President Emmanuel Macron in the election.
A total of 392,000 people took part in the four-day online poll organised by political activists including environmentalists, feminists and anti-racism groups.
Taubira, a long-time champion of the activist left, entered the contest as the favourite and emerged with the highest score on a scale from "very good" to "inadequate".
The French Guiana-born left-winger, 69, was a progressive voice in former Socialist president Francois Hollande's government and the driver behind the 2013 legalisation of same-sex marriage. She resigned after disagreeing with Hollande over anti-terror legislation.
Next in the primary rankings came the Green party's Yannick Jadot, hard-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon, and Euro MP Pierre Larrouturou, followed by Anne Hidalgo who is the mayor of Paris and the Socialist Party candidate.
"We want a united left, we want a strong left and we have a great road in front of us," Taubira told activists after the result Sunday.
But the primary was in trouble from the start after Melenchon, Hidalgo and Jadot refused to have anything to do with it, or abide by its result.
Communist candidate Fabien Roussel said Monday he had no intention of backing Taubira who "has no election programme".
- 'Extremely disrespectful' -
Asked about her ambition to a be a unity candidate, Roussel told the BFMTV broadcaster: "She said she didn't want to add just another candidacy, and now she's adding just another candidacy."
Others charged that the primary had always been designed to endorse Taubira, rather than provide a real vehicle for unity.
"This could have been a rallying moment for the entire left, but it turned out to be just another candidacy," said Hidalgo.
Melenchon said of Taubira that "she is stepping into the shoes that were made for her" by the primary, adding that "none of this is my concern".
Jadot simply stated that he had "nothing" to say to the primary winner.
Taubira herself lashed out at the remarks by her rivals, saying they were "extremely disrespectful towards the people who organised this primary and those who chose to take part".
But, she charged, "the fact is that nearly half a million people decided to play a role in the campaign", also deploring on franceinfo radio the other candidates' "haughty way to distance themselves from a democratic process".
Polls currently predict that all left-wing candidates will be eliminated in the first round of presidential voting in April.
Macron, who has yet to declare his candidacy for re-election, is favourite to win the first round, with the far-right's Marine Le Pen or right-wing contender Valerie Pecresse expected to make the run-off vote two weeks later.
L.Dubois--BTB