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Dreyer, Pellegrino lift San Diego to 4-0 MLS Cup playoff win over Portland
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Indonesia names late dictator Suharto a national hero
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Fourth New Zealand-West Indies T20 washed out
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Tanzania Maasai fear VW 'greenwashing' carbon credit scheme
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Chinese businesswoman faces jail after huge UK crypto seizure
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Markets boosted by hopes for deal to end US shutdown
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Amazon poised to host toughest climate talks in years
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Ex-jihadist Syrian president due at White House for landmark talks
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Saudi belly dancers break taboos behind closed doors
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The AI revolution has a power problem
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Big lips and botox: In Trump's world, fashion and makeup get political
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NBA champion Thunder rally to down Grizzlies
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US senators reach deal that could end record shutdown
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Weakening Typhoon Fung-wong exits Philippines after displacing 1.4 million
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Lenny Wilkens, Basketball Hall of Famer as player and coach, dies
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Griffin wins PGA Mexico title for third victory of the year
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NFL makes successful return to Berlin, 35 years on
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Lewandowski hat-trick helps Barca punish Real Madrid slip
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George warns England against being overawed by the All Blacks
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Lewandowski treble helps Barca beat Celta, cut gap on Real Madrid
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Neves late show sends PSG top of Ligue 1, Strasbourg down Lille
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Inter go top of Serie A after Napoli slip-up
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Bezos's Blue Origin postpones rocket launch over weather
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Hamilton upbeat despite 'nightmare' at Ferrari
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Taylor sparks Colts to Berlin win, Pats win streak hits seven
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Alcaraz and Zverev make winning starts at ATP Finals
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Protests suspend opening of Nigeria heritage museum
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Undav brace sends Stuttgart fourth, Frankfurt win late in Bundesliga
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Roma capitalise on Napoli slip-up to claim Serie A lead
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Liverpool up for the fight despite Man City masterclass, says Van Dijk
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Two MLB pitchers indicted on manipulating bets on pitches
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Wales rugby captain Morgan set to be sidelined by shoulder injury
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After storming Sao Paulo podium, 'proud' Verstappen aims to keep fighting
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US flights could 'slow to a trickle' as shutdown bites: transport secretary
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Celtic close on stumbling Scottish leaders Hearts
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BBC chief resigns after row over Trump documentary
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Norris extends title lead in Sao Paulo, Verstappen third from pit-lane
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Norris wins in Sao Paulo to extend title lead over Piastri
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Man City rout Liverpool to mark Guardiola milestone, Forest boost survival bid
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Man City crush Liverpool to mark Guardiola's 1,000 match
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Emegha fires Strasbourg past Lille in Ligue 1
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Howe takes blame for Newcastle's travel sickness
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Pumas maul Wales as Tandy's first game in charge ends in defeat
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'Predator: Badlands' conquers N. American box office
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Liga leaders Real Madrid drop points in Rayo draw
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'Killed on sight': Sudanese fleeing El-Fasher recall ethnic attacks
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Forest boost survival bid, Man City set for crucial Liverpool clash
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US air travel could 'slow to a trickle' as shutdown bites: transport secretary
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Alcaraz makes winning start to ATP Finals
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'I miss breathing': Delhi protesters demand action on pollution
Shakira, Shakira: wronged Latina superstar in comeback mode
After a bitter split from her footballer ex Gerard Pique, Colombian superstar Shakira is back with a vengeance.
First she released a diss track that nearly broke YouTube and on Monday she struck a deal with Spanish authorities to avoid the embarrassment of a tax fraud trial related to her years in Barcelona with Pique.
The legal woes of the woman dubbed the queen of Latin music since her 2005 smash hit "Hips Don't Lie" are not yet at an end, with a second Spanish investigation into alleged tax evasion still hanging over her.
But the trial that had been due to start on Monday was the bigger of the two cases.
Prosecutors had been seeking a jail sentence of eight years and two months for the 46-year-old, whom they accused of defrauding the Spanish state of 14.5 million euros ($15.7 million) between 2012 and 2014.
Shakira admitted guilt and agreed to pay a fine of 7.3 million euros, saying she needed "to move past the stress and emotional toll of the last several years and focus on the things I love", including her two sons, Milan and Sasha.
- Dark times -
But the last few years have not been easy for Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, an icon of Latina girl power, who has sold some 80 million albums worldwide and won three Grammy awards.
In 2021, she was named in the "Pandora Papers" leaks, which revealed the wealth and tax avoidance strategies of the global elite.
And in June 2022 she announced her split from Spanish footballer Pique, ending one of the world's most famous celebrity couples.
The breakup came around the same time as her elderly father suffered a bad fall.
"Everything happened at once. My home was falling apart," she told People Magazine in 2023.
"I thought I wasn't going to survive so much."
Picking herself up through her music, Shakira released a searing revenge song with Argentine DJ Bizarrap that has been viewed 645 million times on YouTube.
Slamming Pique and his new love interest, she sings: "You swapped a Ferrari for a Twingo/You swapped a Rolex for a Casio."
- 'Like a goat' -
Her phenomenally successful career is a story of serial reinvention, from teen crooner to Colombian rock chick to Latina bombshell.
She grew up in a family of Arab descent in the Colombian port city of Barranquilla and began performing at the age of four, when she hopped up onto a table in a Middle Eastern restaurant and had the room clapping and cheering as she bellydanced.
"I fell in love with the sensation of being on stage," she told Britain's Guardian newspaper in a 2002 interview.
Her friends were less complimentary about her voice, declaring she sang "like a goat", but Shakira was undeterred, recording her first single "Magia" as a denim-clad 14-year-old pining for her first love.
Her breakthrough came in 1996 with her third album "Pies Descalzos", featuring a young rocker with jet black hair and a guitar slung across her shoulder.
- 'Innocent sensuality' -
By 22, she had become Latin America's biggest pop star, with fans including Colombian Nobel literature prize laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, who declared she had "invented her own brand of innocent sensuality".
To help her break out of Latin America, US-Cuban diva Gloria Estefan encouraged her to sing in English and in 2002 she went on a world tour with her first bilingual album, "Laundry Service".
She had become blonde by this point, mixed salsa and merengue with RnB, electro and hip-hop on chart-topping tracks like "Whenever, Wherever", and infused her routine with the head-spinning hip gyrations that would become her trademark.
By the time she got to the World Cup South Africa, where she met Pique and headlined the closing ceremony, she was a superstar.
In 2017, she temporarily lost her voice after suffering a haemorrhage on her right vocal cord and was forced to call off a world tour for seven months.
But she recovered and enjoyed a new career high in 2020 when she shared a half-time show with Jennifer Lopez during the Super Bowl.
This year she collaborated with one of her new, younger rivals on the Colombian music scene, Karol G, on the reggaeton hit "TQG" (acronym for "Too Big for You" in Spanish).
W.Mansour--SF-PST