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Trump holds a campaign rally in Erie, Pennsylvania, July 29, 2023. REUTERS/Lindsay DeDario
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- Donald Trump was indicted for his wide-ranging attempts to overturn the 2020 election, the third time in four months that the former US president has been criminally charged. Listen to Reuters World News as Joseph Ax tells us what we learnt from the indictment.
- What happens next: Trump is set to make his first court appearance on Thursday, when prosecutors will outline the charges against him and a judge will set his bail conditions. He might enter a plea at that time, but his arraignment could also come at a later date. This graphic shows Trump’s major legal woes.
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- Rating agency Fitch downgraded the US government’s top credit rating, a move that surprised investors, coming despite the resolution of the debt ceiling crisis two months ago. Biden administration officials protested the downgrade, saying the group used flawed methodology and ignored a resilient economy.
- From building apartments for new employees to offering retired workers free canteen meals to share their expertise, Central Europe’s arms manufacturers are scrambling for new ways to cope with the biggest boom since the end of the Cold War. The Ukraine war drove a spike in demand for their productions.
- Is Ford doing a better job of cutting emissions than Toyota? Is BP greener than Shell? For investors looking to weed out climate laggards from portfolios, these are vital questions but existing guidelines on emissions reporting and new rules due to come in for the US and Europe are unlikely to provide hard answers. Sign up here to receive the new Reuters Sustainable Finance newsletter as soon as it launches.
- As corporate leaders from Jamie Dimon to Elon Musk call for an end to remote work arrangements, unions in Australia are setting a precedent and fighting back, taking to court the country’s biggest bank and wrangling with the federal government to demand WFH, as it is known, to become the norm.
- Social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, has sought to quash an Indian court decision that found it non-compliant with content removal orders, arguing the ruling could embolden the government to block more content. For more on the industry, sign up to the Technology Roundup newsletter.
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Vivian Tung lays on an operation table under general anesthesia during egg retrieval surgery at the Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital in Taipei, June 19, 2023. REUTERS/Ann Wang
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Seated with her legs stretched out on her living room floor, Vivian Tung scrunched her bare stomach to find a spot where she could inject Rekovelle, a hormonal medicine used to stimulate egg production. The 33-year-old had to inject herself daily over the two-week process it took to freeze her eggs.
Tung, who is single, is one of a rising number of women in Taiwan opting to freeze their eggs to give them the option to have a child later in life, even though under current laws they cannot use the eggs unless they marry.
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Dutch runner Boas Kragtwijk runs after an interview with Reuters in Amsterdam, Netherlands July 21, 2023. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw
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A Dutch ultrarunner is running from Amsterdam to Kyiv to raise funds for charity and demonstrate how close the Ukraine war zone is to Western Europe. Boas Kragtwijk started on July 22 and plans to cover the 2,500 km by running around 50 km each day for 50 days. The aim is to raise money to buy ambulances that Dutch charity Zeilen van Vrijheid (Sails of Freedom) will take to Ukraine.
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