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Almeida wins time-trial to take Tour of Switzerland
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Bublik sees off Medvedev to claim second title on grass in Halle
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Feyi-Waboso banned for England tour to Argentina
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US strikes on Iran: what we know
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Alcaraz crowned king of Queen's for second time
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US says strikes 'devastated' Iran's nuclear program
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Bublik sees off Medvedev to claim fifth AFP title in Halle
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Freed Belarus opposition figure urges Trump to help release all prisoners
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Wave of syringe attacks mar France's street music festival
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US intervention 'devastated' Iran's nuclear programme says Pentagon
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Marc Marquez completes perfect Mugello weekend with Italian MotoGP triumph
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Vondrousova warms up for Wimbledon with Berlin title
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India still on top in first Test despite Brook fifty for England
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Ukraine army chief vows to expand strikes on Russia
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United behind Iran war effort, Israelis express relief at US bombing
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Former England fast bowler David Lawrence dead at 61
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Trump says US strikes 'obliterated' Iran nuclear sites
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Japan's high-tech sunscreens tap into skincare craze
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Tesla expected to launch long-discussed robotaxi service
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South Korea counts on shipbuilding to ease US tariff woes
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Bombing Iran, Trump gambles on force over diplomacy
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Trump says US attack 'obliterated' Iran nuclear sites
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Itoje to Valetini: five to watch when the Lions face Australia
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Wallabies confident but wary of wounded British and irish Lions
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Panama cuts internet, cell phones in restive province
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Outgoing IOC president Thomas Bach faced mammoth challenges
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Maro Itoje comes of age with Lions captaincy
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Ex-members of secret US abortion group fear return to dark era
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Trump says US launched 'very successful' attack on Iran nuclear sites
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Minjee Lee grabs four-shot lead at 'brutal' Women's PGA Championship
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Olympic balloon rises again in Paris
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Inter Milan, Dortmund claim first wins at Club World Cup
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South American teams lay down the gauntlet to Europe at Club World Cup
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Fleetwood grabs PGA Travelers lead as top-ranked stars fade
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'Lucky' Lamothe hat-trick guides Bordeaux-Begles into Top 14 final
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Lamothe hat-trick guides Bordeaux-Begles into Top 14 final
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UK PM Starmer says Kneecap should not perform Glastonbury
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Inter Milan strike late to beat Urawa Reds at Club World Cup
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Cuba gradually turning lights back on after island-wide blackout
Power was slowly being restored across most of Cuba on Sunday, after nearly 40 hours without electricity, in the island's fourth major blackout in six months.
Lazaro Guerra, director of the island's Energia Electrica utility, said the Cuban power grid was now again "interconnected" from the western port of Mariel, some 30 miles (50 kilometers) from Havana, to Guantanamo province in the far east.
Power had yet to be restored, however, in part of western Cuba.
The authorities said the system was generating 935 megawatts of power nationwide on Sunday, well below the normal daily demand of 3,000 MW.
In Havana, a city of 2.1 million, just 19 percent of homes had regained power.
Some Cubans were awakened early Sunday by the sounds attending a restoration of power.
"At 5 am, there was a tremendous rush, charging phones, lamps, pumping water into tanks -- a tremendous uproar waking up the neighbors," Alex Picart, a 60-year-old resident of Guanabacoa, just east of Havana, told AFP.
Cubans have grown resigned to frequent outages -- including blackouts ranging anywhere from four hours to 20 hours or more.
But the constant disruptions are exhausting, they say, as outages cut off water and gas supplies as well as phone communications, and can virtually paralyze public transit.
"No elevator, no water, it's awful. I feel cornered, very annoyed," said Ruben Borroto, 69, who has to walk up seven floors to his Havana apartment.
The latest blackout began Friday with a failure at a substation in a Havana suburb, then spread across the island.
Cuba had seen three other major outages in the past half-year.
The island is suffering through its fourth year of economic crisis, and its eight thermal power plants, nearly all dating to the 1980s or 1990s, regularly fail.
Floating power barges and a series of generators shore up the national power system, but the US embargo makes it difficult to import fuel.
The government is rushing to install at least 55 solar parks this year -- enough, it says, to supply 12 percent of national demand.
M.Qasim--SF-PST