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UK apologises to thousands of grooming victims as it toughens law
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Trump urges Iran to talk as G7 looks for common ground
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Canada wildfire near Vancouver contained
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Four Atletico ultras get suspended jail for Vinicius effigy
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England's top women's league to expand to 14 teams
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Oil prices drop, stocks climb as Iran-Israel war fears ease
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UN refugee agency says will shed 3,500 jobs due to funding cuts
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US moves to protect all species of pangolin, world's most trafficked mammal
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Electric fences, drones, dogs protect G7 leaders from bear attack
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Oil prices fall, stocks rise as Iran-Israel war fears ease
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Iranian Nobel laureates, Cannes winner urge halt to Iran-Israel conflict
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Khamenei, Iran's political survivor, faces ultimate test
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Ireland prepares to excavate 'mass grave' at mother and baby home
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France shuts Israeli weapons booths at Paris Air Show
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Iran and Israel exchange deadly strikes in spiralling air war
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Ex-England captain Farrell rejoins Saracens from Racing 92
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UN slashes global aid plan over 'deepest funding cuts ever'
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Sri Lanka's Mathews hails 'dream run' in final Test against Bangladesh
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Former England captain Farrell rejoins Saracens from Racing 92
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China factory output slumps but consumption offers bright spot
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Record-breaking Japan striker 'King Kazu' plays at 58
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Trump lands in Canada as G7 confronts Israel-Iran crisis
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Trump orders deportation drive targeting Democratic cities
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Spaun wins US Open for first major title with late birdie binge
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Israel pounds Iran, Tehran hits back with missiles
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'Thin' chance against Chelsea but nothing to lose: LAFC's Lloris
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PSG cruise over Atletico, Bayern thrash Auckland at Club World Cup
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G7 protests hit Calgary with leaders far away

Biden relaunches cancer 'moonshot' to halve death rate
President Joe Biden announced a relaunch of the government's cancer "moonshot" effort in a White House ceremony Wednesday, setting a goal of cutting the US death rate from the disease by half.
The ambitious effort was first launched in 2016 with $1.8 billion in federal funds spread out over seven years. Only $400 million of that remains available to cover this year and 2023.
Biden, whose son Beau died of brain cancer in 2015 at age 46, spearheaded the original project as vice president under Barack Obama. Speaking to a packed room in the White House, he said he wanted to breath new life into "an American moment."
"This is a presidential priority," he said: to "end cancer as we know it."
The goal, Biden said, is to cut today's age-adjusted death rate from cancer by 50 percent over the next 25 years.
He proposed achieving this through leadership in marshalling resources for a more united effort between patients, hospitals, biopharmaceutical companies and researchers.
A White House Cancer Moonshot coordinator has been named and a cross-governmental cabinet will oversee goals, including expanding and reorganizing cancer screening networks.
Emphasis is also being put on addressing racial inequity in access to cancer care.
Biden said a particularly urgent step is to redress the backlog of nine million cancer screenings from canceled appointments during the Covid-19 pandemic.
"Screening is how you catch it early before it's too late," he said, adding that he knew a check-up could be "scary."
- 'Grief' and 'purpose' -
The initiative's name deliberately echoes the 1969 triumph of NASA landing the first humans on the Moon.
However, so far there is no new funding announced.
Biden urged Congress to help and a senior official told reporters he was "very confident that there will be robust funding."
"I've got to say, in these times of disagreements, there's certainly one thing on which we all agree, across party, across everything -- which is the effect of cancer on their lives," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"I know nothing that unites us more and that is more bipartisan."
In speeches, Biden and his wife Jill spoke of the pain and shock they endured as they searched for solutions to their son's fatal illness.
"For Joe and me, it has stolen our joy. It left us broken in our grief," the first lady said. "But through that pain we found purpose, strengthening our fortitude for this fight to end cancer as we know it."
Vice President Kamala Harris also spoke movingly about her mother, a breast cancer researcher who died of colon cancer in 2009.
"My mother's discovery helped save women's lives," she said. Then "after a lifetime working to end cancer, cancer ended my mother's life."
However there is hope for a cure, the vice president said.
"Today we are closer than we have ever been. Since the turn of the century we have made significant breakthroughs," she said. "When we reach the Moon, we plant our flag on it."
Already since 2000, the death rate from cancer among Americans has fallen by around 25 percent as a result of better treatments, diagnosis capabilities, therapeutics, vaccines and a halving in adult long-term cigarette smoking.
Z.AlNajjar--SF-PST