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TOP STORIES
Democrat Clinton makes history, wins U.S. presidential nomination
PHILADELPHIA - Hillary Clinton secures the Democratic Party's White House nomination, coming back from a stinging defeat in her first presidential run in 2008 and surviving a bitter primary fight to become the first woman to head the ticket of a major party in U.S. history. (USA-ELECTION/ (WRAPUP 2, PIX, TV, GRAPHIC), moved, by Amanda Becker and Luciana Lopez, 941 words)
- USA-ELECTION/CLINTON-LIKABLE (PIX, TV, GRAPHIC), moved, by John Whitesides and Amanda Becker, 815 words
- USA-ELECTION/TRUMP (PICTURES, TV, GRAPHIC), moved, by Steve Holland, 720 words
- USA-ELECTION/LABOR (UPDATE 2), moved, by Bernie Woodall, 430 words
- USA-ELECTION/POLL (POLL, GRAPHIC), moved, by Chris Kahn, 420 words
Islamists attack French church, slit priest's throat
SAINT-ETIENNE-DU-ROUVRAY, France - Knife-wielding attackers interrupt a French church service, force a priest to his knees and slit his throat, a murder made all the more shocking as one of the assailants was a known Islamist militant under supposedly tight surveillance. (EUROPE-ATTACKS/FRANCE (UPDATE 10, PICTURES, TV), moved, by Noemie Olive, 800 words)
Philippines says ASEAN omission of arbitration case not a Chinese victory
MANILA - The Philippines "vigorously pushed" for the inclusion of a arbitration ruling in a joint statement among Southeast Asian countries but its failure to secure that is no diplomatic win for China, its foreign minister says. (SOUTHCHINASEA-RULING/PHILIPPINES (UPDATE 3, PIX, TV), moved, by Lesley Wroughton and Martin Petty, 600 words)
- SOUTHCHINASEA-RULING/KERRY (PIX, TV), moved, by Lesley Wroughton, 433 words
Japanese police raid house of knife attack suspect
SAGAMIHARA - Japanese police raid the house of a 26-year-old man suspected of stabbing to death 19 people and wounding dozens of others at a facility for disabled in a small town near Tokyo, Japan's worst mass killing in decades. (JAPAN-ATTACK/ (UPDATE 2), expect by 0800 GMT/4 AM ET, by Hyun Oh, 500 words)
ASIA
Malaysia's Najib gets new powers amid planned protests over fund scandal
KUALA LUMPUR - Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak will get sweeping security powers amid planned protests calling for his resignation over U.S. allegations that millions of dollars from a state fund wound up in his personal bank account. (MALAYSIA-SCANDAL/LAW (PICTURES, GRAPHIC), moved, by A. Ananthalakshmi, 680 words)
Indonesia president brings World Bank exec back as finance minister
JAKARTA - Indonesia's president appoints World Bank managing director Sri Mulyani Indrawati as finance minister, among a wider cabinet reshuffle aimed at increasing the effectiveness of his team. (INDONESIA-POLITICS/ (UPDATE 3, PIX), moved, by Gayatri Suroyo and Wilda Asmarini, 421 words)
MIDDLE EAST
Kerry hopes to work with Russia on Syria, U.N. aims to restart talks
VIENTIANE/GENEVA - The United States says it hopes to announce in early August details of planned military cooperation and intelligence sharing with Russia on Syria, and a United Nations envoy says he would also aim to resume peace talks next month. (SYRIA-CRISIS/ (WRAPUP 2, PICTURES, TV), moved, by Lesley Wroughton and Stephanie Nebehay, 1,040 words)
SPECIAL REPORTS
In Venezuela's murky oil industry, the deal that went too far
CARACAS/BOGOTA - Even for Venezuela's notoriously opaque economy, it was a sweetheart deal that went too far. A multi-billion-dollar public tender let out by PDVSA provides a window onto the deep dysfunction plaguing the oil-rich socialist nation. (VENEZUELA-PDVSA/CONTRACT (SPECIAL REPORT, PICTURES), moved, by Alexandra Ulmer and Girish Gupta, 1,730 words)
EUROPE
Britain should deliver "full Brexit" soon, lawmaker says
LONDON - Britain should leave the European Union quickly and not be drawn into a discussion about watering down the voters' clearly expressed wish for limits on immigration, senior Conservative lawmaker John Redwood says. (BRITAIN-EU/REDWOOD (INTERVIEW, PIX), moved, by Guy Faulconbridge, 600 words)
Turkish troops hunt remaining coup plotters as crackdown widens
ISTANBUL/ANKARA - Turkish special forces backed by helicopters, drones and the navy hunt a remaining group of commandos thought to have tried to capture or kill President Tayyip Erdogan during a failed coup, as the crackdown on suspected plotters widens. (TURKEY-SECURITY/ (WRAPUP 3, PICTURES, TV, GRAPHICS), moved, by Daren Butler and Orhan Coskun, 1,110 words)
AFRICA
UN Western Sahara mission still recovering from Morocco dispute
UNITED NATIONS - A United Nations peacekeeping mission in disputed Western Sahara is still not fully functional, the U.N. Security Council president says, months after Morocco expels dozens of civilian staff in anger at remarks by U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon. (MOROCCO-WESTERNSAHARA/UN, moved, by Michelle Nichols, 390 words)
UNITED STATES
U.S. issues first government guide on responding to cyber attacks
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK - The White House issues the U.S. government's first emergency response manual for a major cyber attack, though some officials acknowledge it lacks clear guidance on possible retaliation against hacker adversaries. (USA-CYBER/ (UPDATE 5, PICTURES), moved, by Dustin Volz and Karen Freifeld, 720 words)
AMERICAS
U.S. expands Central American refugee screening program
WASHINGTON - The Obama administration announces a broad expansion of a program to let people fleeing violence in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras enter the United States as refugees, and says Costa Rica agreed to temporarily shelter some of those with no other recourse. (USA-IMMIGRATION/ (UPDATE 5, TV, GRAPHIC), moved, by Julia Edwards and Patricia Zengerle, 655 words)
Venezuela gov't aims to sink Maduro recall, opposition protests
CARACAS - Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro's socialist government seeks to scupper a push by the opposition to oust him this year via a referendum, while his opponents call for protests. (VENEZUELA-POLITICS/ (UPDATE 1, PICTURES), moved, by Andrew Cawthorne, 410 words)
SPORT
EXCLUSIVE-Scrutiny on global sport bodies as they decide Russians' Olympic fates
MOSCOW/BELGRADE - The International Olympic Committee's decision to let individual sport federations decide whether to ban Russians from the Rio games over doping puts Moscow's links to governing bodies under scrutiny. (SPORT-DOPING/RUSSIA-INFLUENCE (EXCLUSIVE, PICTURES), moved, by Christian Lowe and Aleksandar Vasovic, 1,240 words)
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