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Suncor’s $4 Billion Deal May Spell End of Base Plant Project
First Republic Short Sellers Are Struggling to Find Stock to Bet Against
Rishi Sunak Wins Backing From IMF Economist for Bringing Stability to UK
Argentina Hikes Key Rate to Record High to Halt Peso Slump
BOE Says Companies More Vulnerable to Souring Market Sentiment
Bored Ape’s New Boss Seeks to Revive NFTs Through Gaming, Events
US in ‘Worst of Both Worlds’ With High Inflation, GDP Slowdown
Microsoft Xbox Chief Seeks to Reassure Game Staff on Activision
Once-Hot Chat Startup Clubhouse Is Cutting Half of Staff
Bank Turmoil Seen Crimping Credit at Double Powell’s Estimate
US Wants to ‘De-Risk,’ Not Decouple, From China, Biden Aide Says
Debt-Limit Dealmaker of 2011 Lays Out What Will Happen This Time
Harley-Davidson Says Repo Shortage Is Fueling Credit Losses
Mortgage Rates in the US Rise to Highest Level Since Mid-March
Backpacks Replace Handbags in New Work Era. Here Are Eight to Buy
Oakland Athletics Face a $500 Million Battle With Las Vegas Over New Stadium
Singapore’s Boom Hits at Least One Speed Bump
First Republic Is in Limbo
Industrial Order Slowdown Perplexes Investors
What the US Can Learn From Europe’s ESG Mistakes
Good Luck Paying for Those $10,000 Obesity Drugs Everyone’s Talking About
A Tax Loophole Makes EV Leasing a No-Brainer in the US
Trump’s Lawyer Presses E. Jean Carroll on Details of Alleged Attack
Kansas Sets Transgender Athlete Rule for Schools
Big Power Shortfall Looms After Quebec Wooed US With Cheap Hydro
Turkmenistan Faces Unprecedented Calls to Clean Up Methane Leaks
In Housing Court, a Scramble for Eviction-Fighting Lawyers
Anatomy of an ‘American Transit Disaster’
New Penn Station Entry Would Cost $2 Billion, NY MTA Says
Former FTX Executive Ryan Salame’s House Searched by FBI
Coinbase Warns SEC It Will ‘Exhaust All Avenues’ If Sued
Bored Ape’s New Boss Seeks to Revive NFTs Through Gaming, Events
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan
Photographer: Ashraf Shazly/AFP/Getty Images
Simon Marks and
Mohammed Alamin
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Sudan’s military and a group of political opponents are close to a deal that aims to resolve the crisis caused by last year’s coup by restoring a civilian prime minister and guaranteeing the army some independence, according to people familiar with the secret US-brokered discussions.
Talks in recent weeks, also facilitated by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and the UK, have seen the army and the country’s most powerful militia hold direct negotiations with members of the Forces for Freedom and Change, a major opposition coalition, according to the people, who include diplomats.