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The Associated Press
Stories by The Associated Press
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NPR NewsTaliban fighters watched the last U.S. planes disappear into the sky over Afghanistan around midnight local time on Monday and then fired their guns into the air.
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NPR NewsHamas-backed activists on Saturday kicked off what they said was a series of protests along the Israeli border meant to pressure Israel to lift a crippling economic blockade on the Gaza Strip.
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NPR NewsForecasters warned residents along the northern Gulf of Mexico coast to rush preparations. Ida is expected to bring winds as high as 130 mph, life-threatening storm surge and flooding rain.
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NPR NewsThe health ministry said contamination was reported from multiple vaccination sites. The news raises concern of a supply shortage as Japan tries to accelerate vaccinations amid a surge in cases.
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NPR NewsHarris participated in events on Thursday in Vietnam that elevated activists in a region known for its challenges and restrictions to human rights.
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NPR NewsDelta will not mandate employees to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, but its CEO says the charge is necessary because the average hospital stay for the virus costs the airline $40,000.
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NPR NewsThe vice president made the announcement during her trip to Southeast Asia. It's part of the Biden administration's push to strengthen its alliances in the region to counter China's influence
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NPR NewsThe Vice President warned China that its actions in the South China Sea amount to "coercion" and "intimidation."
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NPR NewsThose huddled in their homes and in safe houses around Kabul include activists, employees of the collapsed Afghan government and women.
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NPR NewsResidents across the waterlogged Northeast began cleaning up while remnants of Tropical Storm Henri threatened further flooding in New England as the system made a slow trek back to the sea.
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NPR NewsThousands of people have been killed in the 9-month-old civil war in Ethiopia. The U.S. accused an Eritrean leader of overseeing massacres, widespread sexual assault, and the executions of boys.
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NPR NewsAbout 148,000 school employees, and contractors who work in schools, will have to have at least a first dose by Sept. 27. At least 63% of all school employees already have been vaccinated.