New Photo - US states sue Zillow, Redfin over rental listings

US states sue Zillow, Redfin over rental listings By Jonathan StempelOctober 1, 2025 at 10:24 AM 1 By Jonathan Stempel (Reuters) Zillow Group and Redfin were sued on Wednesday by five U.S.

- - US states sue Zillow, Redfin over rental listings

By Jonathan StempelOctober 1, 2025 at 10:24 AM

1

By Jonathan Stempel

(Reuters) -Zillow Group and Redfin were sued on Wednesday by five U.S. states for allegedly conspiring to thwart competition in online rental listings, including when Zillow paid Redfin $100 million to stop running apartment ads.

Attorneys general of Virginia, Arizona, Connecticut, New York and Washington filed their antitrust lawsuit in the Alexandria, Virginia federal court. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission filed a similar lawsuit there on Tuesday.

Both cases stemmed from a February agreement between Zillow and Redfin, which together with Apartments.com owner CoStar account for most revenue from U.S. online rental ads.

In exchange for the $100 million, Redfin allegedly agreed to end advertising contracts with managers of larger apartment buildings, stay out of that market for nine years, and display on its platform only rentals that Zillow also displays.

The attorneys general said this would lead to higher prices and worse terms for advertisers, and harm renters by reducing incentives to compete for them. New York Attorney General Letitia James said renters could also face higher prices.

Renters occupy nearly 49 million units in the United States, or more than 30% of all housing nationwide, the complaint said.

"Zillow paying Redfin to exit the market harms renters and property owners by taking away free market incentives to provide high-quality services that businesses and consumers rely on," Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares said in a statement.

Zillow and Redfin repeated their separate statements from Tuesday that their agreement gives property managers and advertisers access to more renters, and benefits renters by providing access to more listings.

Redfin added it was confident it would prevail in court.

Rocket Cos, which owns Rocket Mortgage, bought Redfin on July 1.

Zillow, based in Seattle, is also defending against a lawsuit by Compass, the largest U.S. residential real estate brokerage by sales volume, claiming it tried to monopolize private home listings.

The case is Virginia et al v Zillow Group Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia, No. 25-01647.

(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New YorkEditing by Bill Berkrot)

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US states sue Zillow, Redfin over rental listings

US states sue Zillow, Redfin over rental listings By Jonathan StempelOctober 1, 2025 at 10:24 AM 1 By Jonathan Ste...
New Photo - US Pfizer deal powers health stocks as drugmakers court Trump

US Pfizer deal powers health stocks as drugmakers court Trump By Alun John, Danilo Masoni, Dimitri Rhodes and Maggie FickOctober 1, 2025 at 1:57 PM 0 FILE PHOTO: The logo of Swiss drugmaker Roche is seen at its headquarters in Basel, Switzerland January 30, 2020.

- - US Pfizer deal powers health stocks as drugmakers court Trump

By Alun John, Danilo Masoni, Dimitri Rhodes and Maggie FickOctober 1, 2025 at 1:57 PM

0

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Swiss drugmaker Roche is seen at its headquarters in Basel, Switzerland January 30, 2020. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo

By Alun John, Danilo Masoni, Dimitri Rhodes and Maggie Fick

LONDON (Reuters) -European and U.S. healthcare stocks surged on Wednesday, propelled by a deal between Pfizer and President Donald Trump to lower prescription drug prices in the Medicaid programme in exchange for tariff relief.

The agreement, seen as less punishing than some within the industry had feared, gives hard-hit global drugmakers a degree of clarity after a volatile year during which Trump has taken aim at the sector over high U.S. medicine prices.

The Pfizer deal is expected to break the seal for other agreements as companies look to hand Trump pricing wins in return for lower tariffs on their drugs to enter the huge U.S. market, investors, company insiders and lobbyists said.

"We expect EU pharma to follow suit and negotiate with the Trump administration for exemptions," said Lucy Coutts, investment director at wealth managers JM Finn, which holds shares in GSK, AstraZeneca, Roche and Novo Nordisk.

She said this would likely be in the form of investment in U.S. manufacturing and participation in TrumpRX, a website being launched by Trump for Americans to buy drugs at a discount.

Trump sent letters to 17 leading drug companies in July telling them to slash prices to match those paid overseas. He asked them to respond with binding commitments by September 29. Pfizer is the first drugmaker to announce a deal.

U.S. patients currently pay far more for prescription medicines, often nearly three times more than in other developed nations, and Trump has been pressuring drugmakers to lower their prices to what patients pay elsewhere.

On Wednesday, Europe's healthcare sector index cheered the Pfizer deal, closing 5.3% higher, logging its biggest one-day jump since November 2008.

Among the stocks of pharmaceutical companies and their suppliers, Ambu, Sartorius, and Merck, Roche and AstraZeneca rose between 8% and 12% at close. Novo Nordisk and Novartis closed 6.4% and 3.9% higher, respectively.

U.S. pharma stocks also extended the previous session's gains on Wednesday, lifting the broader healthcare sector up about 2% to an over five-month high. Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Merck, AbbVie and Bristol Myers Squibb were among the top performers on the benchmark index, with their shares gaining between 5% and 8%.

Shore Capital analyst Sean Conroy said clarity was beginning to emerge on the potential impact of the Trump administration's "most-favoured-nation" drug pricing proposal and things looked "far less draconian than feared".

"The announcement yesterday offers some relief to the market," HSBC analyst Rajesh Kumar said. "(It) may suggest that the deals are now being closed with the U.S. administration offering a path for resolution of the overhang."

COMPANIES IN 'CONSTRUCTIVE' TALKS WITH US ADMINISTRATION

Britain's GSK, maker of HIV drugs and vaccines, said it was having constructive conversations with the Trump administration over drug pricing. Germany's Merck KGaA, which makes cancer drugs, said similar.

Roche said that it and its U.S. unit Genentech remained committed to working with the Trump administration towards strengthening U.S. manufacturing and making medicines more affordable for patients there.

Novo Nordisk, the Danish firm that makes the Wegovy weight-loss injection, said it was in talks with the Trump administration over the "most-favoured-nation" executive order.

Novartis said it remained committed to finding constructive solutions that lower costs for Americans and address price disparities between the U.S. and other high-income countries.

Berenberg analysts estimated that a 50% reduction in Medicaid sales, which account for about 3% of large pharma revenues, would hit sector earnings per share by an average of 4%, with the biggest impact at GSK at around 7% and the smallest at Pfizer at about 1%.

"We believe that now if the companies are investing in the U.S. they should be on the safe side," Bernstein analyst Florent Cespedes said, adding that European firms had announced about $200 billion in U.S. investments.

Angelo Meda, head of equities at Banor SIM in Milan, said 2025 was meant to have been a year of expansion for drugmakers, but this had been hit by tariffs. The deal was a relief.

"Any positive news on that front can breathe new life into a sector that is currently trading at relative lows compared to the broader market," he said.

(Reporting by Alun John in London, Danilo Masoni in Milan, Dimitri Rhodes in Gdansk and Maggie Fick. Additional reporting by Dave Graham, Patricia Weiss and Mariam Sunny. Writing by Adam Jourdan. Editing by Amanda Cooper, Ros Russell and Sergio Non)

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US Pfizer deal powers health stocks as drugmakers court Trump

US Pfizer deal powers health stocks as drugmakers court Trump By Alun John, Danilo Masoni, Dimitri Rhodes and Mag...
New Photo - The U.S. has lost thousands of manufacturing jobs this year, analysis finds

The U.S. has lost thousands of manufacturing jobs this year, analysis finds Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 1:09 PM 44 Witthaya Prasongsin / Getty Images Manufacturers in the U.S.

- - The U.S. has lost thousands of manufacturing jobs this year, analysis finds

Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 1:09 PM

44

Witthaya Prasongsin / Getty Images

Manufacturers in the U.S. are cutting thousands of jobs even as President Trump pushes economic policies that he says will revitalize the industry.

Employers shed 12,000 manufacturing jobs in August, while payrolls in the sector have shrunk by 42,000 since April, according to a new analysis from the Center for American Progress (CAP) that draws on government labor data.

The nonpartisan policy institute attributes that decline to the Trump administration's steep new tariffs; hardline stance on immigration; and the Republican-backed "big, beautiful bill," a tax and spending package enacted by Mr. Trump in July that CAP says hurts renewable energy companies by phasing out certain tax credits.

For all of 2025, manufacturing employment in the U.S. has sunk by a total of 33,000 jobs, according to Labor Department figures. Most of those job losses have been among companies that make durable goods, such as cars, household appliances and electronics. The drop comes as hiring overall has slowed sharply in recent months, with employers adding only 22,000 jobs in August, well below forecasts.

The number of manufacturing jobs in the U.S. has declined for the past six decades, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. In 1960, manufacturing represented about 34% of total employment, while the number of jobs in the sector peaked in 1970 at 19.5 million. As of August this year, 12.7 million Americans were employed in manufacturing, while the industry lost 87,000 jobs in 2024, data shows.

Uncertainty hurting businesses

When Mr. Trump in April announced a range of levies on dozens of other countries, the White House said tariffs would protect American workers by reducing the U.S. trade deficit with its economic partners and spurring employers to move manufacturing jobs to the U.S.

For now, however, confusion over the scale and scope of U.S. tariffs has put manufacturers on the defensive, increasing their costs and discouraging them from hiring, economist Sara Estep, one of the authors of the CAP report, told CBS MoneyWatch.

"Companies are uncertain about what's happening," she said. "Everything has been changing on a day-to-day basis, so it's not clear what production should look like. That's why they aren't hiring."

In August, for example, farm equipment giant John Deere cited tariffs in announcing that its sales and operating profits had dipped from a year ago. In an earnings call, an executive with the company noted that it had racked up roughly $300 million in tariff-related costs, including on steel and aluminum imports. John Deere also announced it was laying off more than 200 workers at plants in Illinois and Iowa, according to AgWeb, a trade publication.

Automakers pointed partly to tariffs in announcing nearly 5,000 job cuts in July, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, while it noted that the retail sector has also stepped up layoffs and store closures because of economic uncertainty.

Another factor fueling uncertainty for manufacturers are the ongoing legal challenges to the Trump tariffs, making it hard to plan and invest for the future, according to experts.

A federal appeals court in August ruled that Mr. Trump unlawfully invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, to impose sweeping tariffs on U.S. trade partners. Mr. Trump on September 3 asked the Supreme Court to review the lower court's decision before it takes effect in October.

The outcome of the case leaves many manufacturers in doubt about how to proceed, making them reluctant to expand their workforce as they seek to control costs, Daco told CBS MoneyWatch.

"The slowdown is symptomatic of an environment where purchasing managers are all under stress, and they are being squeezed by higher costs of goods and reduced demand," said EY-Parthenon chief economist Gregory Daco. "And so in that squeeze, they are having to find ways to offset the higher costs, and one of the avenues to do that is to streamline their operations and make sure that they only have the essential talent on hand."

The White House did not respond to several requests for comment on CAP's findings. The Office of the United States Trade Representative and National Association of Manufacturers, a trade group, didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Immigration effect

The Trump administration's crackdown on U.S. immigrants is also weighing on hiring in manufacturing, said Daniel Altman, an economist and author of the High Yield Economics newsletter.

"Immigration has been an important source of employment in manufacturing for some industries, and if you take away some of their labor supply, that's just gives them more incentive to pursue automation and other forms of capital intensive manufacturing," he told CBS MoneyWatch.

The government stepped up its campaign last week when Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained 475 immigrants, most of them Korean, at a Hyundai plant in Georgia because they were suspected of living and working in the U.S. illegally.

Border patrol agents have also conducted raids targeting immigrants working in retail, according to CBS News. In sectors like farming, food processing and construction, undocumented immigrants make up to 20% of the workforce, according to Goldman Sachs.

White House "border czar" Tom Homan on Sunday said the White House will expand such efforts.

"We're going to do more worksite enforcement operations," Homan told CNN. "No one hires an illegal alien out of the goodness of their heart. They hire them because they can work them harder, pay them less, undercut the competition that hires U.S. citizen employees."

Other long-term factors that go beyond the Trump administration's policies are also contributing to the ongoing contraction in manufacturing jobs. During the pandemic, manufacturers invested heavily in technologies to automate their operations, Altman noted.

"We've seen a lot of automation, which means companies do not need as many workers to provide the same output," he told CBS MoneyWatch. "Output per worker has been increasing, and when we see that kind of increase in labor productivity, it usually means workers have access to more capital, or better technology or both, and that's what you'd expect with automation."

Watch: Pete Hegseth addresses military leaders at Quantico

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The U.S. has lost thousands of manufacturing jobs this year, analysis finds

The U.S. has lost thousands of manufacturing jobs this year, analysis finds Megan CerulloOctober 1, 2025 at 1:09 P...
New Photo - U.S. consumers cannot report fraud to FTC during shutdown, agency says

U.S. consumers cannot report fraud to FTC during shutdown, agency says By Jody GodoyOctober 1, 2025 at 4:27 PM 0 FILE PHOTO: A view of signage at the Federal Trade Commission headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo By Jody Godoy (Reuters) The U.S.

- - U.S. consumers cannot report fraud to FTC during shutdown, agency says

By Jody GodoyOctober 1, 2025 at 4:27 PM

0

FILE PHOTO: A view of signage at the Federal Trade Commission headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 24, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo

By Jody Godoy

(Reuters) -The U.S. Federal Trade Commission will not take consumers' fraud complaints or help them block spam calls, and it will not grant early clearance to mergers during the government shutdown, the agency said on Wednesday.

The shuttering of the agency that enforces laws against anticompetitive and deceptive business behavior is one small part of the national gridlock that began on Wednesday and could result in the furlough of 750,000 federal workers and delay air travel.

The FTC's shutdown plan under President Donald Trump is similar to the one the agency put in place under Joe Biden's presidency.

The FTC's fraud reporting website and national registry that lets individuals opt out of telemarketing will not be available during the shutdown, the agency said.

Wall Street dealmakers can still file for clearance for mergers and acquisitions. But the agency will stop granting early clearance to deals that do not pose a threat to competition during the shutdown. Under Biden, the agency had stopped granting early clearance entirely.

The agency has 1,180 full-time employees, and said around 400 of those could be required to work without pay during the shutdown in certain circumstances, such as when a court deadline means the FTC could lose if it does not act.

The lack of resources could cause transaction reviews to take longer, said Aleksandr Livshits, an antitrust partner at law firm Fried Frank.

"It's more helpful to have a fully functioning government, there's more predictability," he said.

(Reporting by Jody Godoy; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )

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U.S. consumers cannot report fraud to FTC during shutdown, agency says

U.S. consumers cannot report fraud to FTC during shutdown, agency says By Jody GodoyOctober 1, 2025 at 4:27 PM 0 F...
New Photo - Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position

Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position Matt Harmon and Nate TiceOctober 1, 2025 at 10:00 PM 0 Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy ForecastApple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube It's another edition of the Fantasy Film Room with Matt Harmon and Nate Tice.

- - Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position

Matt Harmon and Nate TiceOctober 1, 2025 at 10:00 PM

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Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy ForecastApple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube

It's another edition of the Fantasy Film Room with Matt Harmon and Nate Tice. Given we've reached the first quarter pole of the season, the two look at the biggest surprises in the top 12 at each of the four main positions in fantasy. The two do a deep dive on the biggest positive surprises at the QB, RB, WR and TE position and determine if those starts are sustainable. The two end the show previewing the TNF matchup between the 49ers and Rams.

(3:00) - Fantasy fallout from RB injuries: Latest on Bucky Irving, Trey Benson and Chuba Hubbard

(21:00) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in RB fantasy scoring so far

(37:30) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in WR fantasy scoring so far

(1:00:15) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in QB fantasy scoring so far

(1:05:45) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in TE fantasy scoring so far

(1:11:15) - TNF preview: 49ers vs. Rams

It's another edition of the Fantasy Film Room with Matt Harmon and Nate Tice. Given we've reached the first quarter pole of the season, the two look at the biggest surprises in the top 12 at each of the four main positions in fantasy. The two do a deep dive on the biggest positive surprises at the QB, RB, WR and TE position and determine if those starts are sustainable. The two end the show previewing the TNF matchup between the 49ers and Rams. (Jason Jung)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

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Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position

Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position Matt Harmon and N...
New Photo - Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight

Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie CoreyBoulet and Jennifer RigbyOctober 2, 2025 at 3:08 AM 0 Aguitia Pascal, a nurse, gestures as he stands in front of an Integrated Health Center, in Bogo, Cameroon September 2, 2025.

- - Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight

By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie Corey-Boulet and Jennifer RigbyOctober 2, 2025 at 3:08 AM

0

Aguitia Pascal, a nurse, gestures as he stands in front of an Integrated Health Center, in Bogo, Cameroon September 2, 2025. REUTERS/Desire Danga Essigue

By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie Corey-Boulet and Jennifer Rigby

BOGO, Cameroon (Reuters) -Nine-month-old baby Mohamat burned with fever for three days before his family took him to the closest health centre in northern Cameroon, but it was too late. He died of malaria that day.

Mohamat's death was part of a spike this year in malaria fatalities that local health officials attribute to foreign aid cuts by the United States.

Before the cuts, Mohamat might have been diagnosed earlier by one of more than 2,000 U.S.-funded community health workers who would travel over rough dirt roads to reach the region's remotest villages.

And at the health centre, he might have been treated with injectable artesunate, a life-saving drug for severe malaria paid for by U.S. funds that is now in short supply. But the centre had none to give out.

Reuters travelled to northern Cameroon - where the U.S. had played a leading role in the malaria response for nearly a decade - to document how the sudden cuts are contributing to delayed malaria diagnoses, inadequate treatment and a growing number of deaths. This story is based on interviews with more than 20 doctors, nurses, community health workers, residents and former U.S. officials involved in malaria programming.

Mohamat's father, sorghum and banana farmer Alhadji Madou Goni, is mourning a son he had hoped would one day escape poverty.

"I feel so sad about my loss. I hope no one suffers from this (malaria) again," Goni, 30, told Reuters as he sat outside his home, his wife next to him holding prayer beads.

"Since there is hardship here, and people don't have the means, we hope aid comes."

U.S. MALARIA PROGRAMME DISRUPTED BY CUTS, END OF USAID

Upon taking office in January, U.S. President Donald Trump paused all foreign aid, including the President's Malaria Initiative (PMI), launched in 2005 by George W. Bush. The PMI is credited with helping to save 11.7 million lives and prevent 2.1 billion malaria cases.

A limited waiver issued in February allowed life-saving work on malaria to continue, but PMI's 30 partner countries - most of them in Africa - have reported major disruptions linked to the dissolution of the U.S. Agency for International Development, the main implementer of PMI-funded programmes.

In Cameroon's Far North region, where Goni lives, the cuts stripped support for PMI-funded community health workers who distributed prevention tools like bed nets and identified serious cases.

PMI funded half - 1,492 out of 2,824 - of all community health workers in the region, said Dr Jean-Pierre Kidwang, coordinator of the regional technical group for malaria control.

The support included a monthly stipend of 15,000 CFA francs ($26), a transport allowance, bicycles and clothing.

Nearly all of the U.S.-funded community health workers are now out of service. Prosper Laurent Messe Fouda, head of planning, monitoring and evaluation at the National Malaria Control Programme, confirmed that 2,105 out of the 2,354 U.S.-funded workers in Cameroon's Far North and North regions were no longer working.

AFTER FALLING FOR YEARS, MALARIA DEATHS NOW RISING

PMI made Cameroon a focus country in 2017, and recorded malaria deaths in Far North dropped from 1,519 in 2020 to 653 in 2024 - but now appear to be rising, Kidwang said.

"With PMI funding, we moved from a mortality rate of 17% to bring the situation down to 8%," Kidwang said.

"Now, with the September–October peak underway, available trends indicate that fatalities are rising sharply, even though official data has yet to be released," he said, citing a figure of 15% for the first half of 2025.

"We may get to a point where all the gains against malaria are reversed."

The Trump administration says it is reforming foreign aid that did not align with its "America First" agenda and Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said repeatedly that no-one has died as a result of the cuts.

Trump has said the U.S. pays disproportionately for foreign aid and wants others to pay more. Between 2010 and 2023, the U.S. contributed an average of 37% of funding for malaria programmes, the World Health Organization says.

This year, the U.S. has cancelled more than 80% of aid contracts, but said life-saving work, including for malaria, would continue. Yet organizations on the ground and the WHO in April said "critical gaps" remained in the malaria response after the cancellations.

Going forward, Trump's initial budget request for fiscal year 2026 included a 47% cut to PMI's budget from the just below $800 million it had hit in recent years, though Congress will have the final say later this year.

The "America First Global Health Strategy" Rubio announced in September stated some commitments to reducing malaria mortality and incidence, but made no mention of PMI or budgets. A State Department spokesperson confirmed to Reuters that the programme would continue.

Anne Linn, former senior community health advisor for PMI, told Reuters that before the January cuts the programme supported 115,000 community health workers across 30 countries. That all disappeared, she said, although it is unclear how much funding has since resumed and where governments and non-profits have stepped in to fill urgent gaps.

The State Department spokesperson said in the future it would provide support to fight malaria through bilateral agreements with partner countries, and committed to maintaining 100% of current U.S. funding for commodities such as nets and drugs and frontline health workers in fiscal year 2026, before asking governments to co-invest. They gave no details of their current annual budget.

The effects of the cuts have been felt in a number of African countries, including Liberia, where some community health workers are volunteering without pay.

In Cameroon's Far North, a region prone to droughts and flooding as well as violence linked to the Islamist Boko Haram insurgency in neighbouring Nigeria, the cuts came as officials were training community health workers to deploy during the rainy season, which runs from May to October, Kidwang said.

Oumarou Gassi, one of the health workers, said he was devastated to lose the job.

"I am struggling to survive. The little I used to get from the PMI project was helpful in supporting my family," he said.

With health workers no longer in the field, more malaria cases are becoming severe, and the U.S. cuts have also hit the supply of injectable artesunate, Kidwang said.

Far North was out of stock for much of this year, he said.

Some 200,000 vials arrived in Maroua, the regional capital, on September 2, but that is not enough to meet the region's needs for even three months, he said.

Authorities are trying to fill the gap but face resource constraints, said Olivia Ngou, executive director of Impact Sante Afrique, a nonprofit.

PICTURE UNCLEAR AS U.S. CUTS ALSO AFFECT DATA COLLECTION

Just how bad the situation gets may be difficult to gauge given that PMI also played a major role in data collection.

That data is no longer online. PMI's website says it is "currently undergoing maintenance as we expeditiously and thoroughly review all of the content" to comply with Trump's executive orders.

As a result, "we won't know the extent to which this bounce back is going to occur," said Louisa Messenger, a public health expert at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas who has worked with PMI and other malaria programmes in Africa.

The big-picture data matters little to Djidja and Daouda Amadou, who lost their five-month-old girl to malaria in July.

Like Goni, they waited in hopes the child's fever would subside before taking her to a health clinic, where staffers referred them to Maroua.

By the time they arrived, it was too late, and now their baby is buried under a mound of earth in their yard.

"I am devastated," Amadou said quietly. "The child's memory keeps coming back to me."

(Reporting by Amindeh Blaise Atabong in Bogo, Robbie Corey-Boulet in Dakar and Jennifer Rigby in London; Writing by Robbie Corey-Boulet; Editing by Estelle Shirbon, Alexandra Hudson)

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Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight

Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie CoreyB...
New Photo - West Indies lose five 1st-session wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat

West Indies lose five 1stsession wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat October 1, 2025 at 10:08 PM 0 1 / 5India West Indies CricketIndia's Kuldeep Yadav, right, and India's captain Shubman Gill celebrates the dismissal of West Indies' Shai Hope on the first day of the first Test cr...

- - West Indies lose five 1st-session wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat

October 1, 2025 at 10:08 PM

0

1 / 5India West Indies CricketIndia's Kuldeep Yadav, right, and India's captain Shubman Gill celebrates the dismissal of West Indies' Shai Hope on the first day of the first Test cricket match between India and West Indies at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)

AHMEDABAD, India (AP) — West Indies lost half its batting attack by lunch on the first day of the first cricket test Thursday against India, reduced to 90-5 after winning the toss and deciding to bat.

Mohammed Siraj took 3-19 in seven overs, while Jasprit Bumrah (1-24) and Kuldeep Yadav (1-7) picked up a wicket each.

The visitors made a poor start as Siraj was on the money with the new ball. He struck early — Tagenarine Chanderpaul was caught behind for an 11-ball duck. Bumrah took a couple of overs to find his rhythm — he also struck in the seventh over as opener John Campbell was caught behind for eight runs.

Siraj put the morning conditions to good use. He swung the ball well and consistently hit a good length to trouble the batters repeatedly. West Indies' batters looked eager to play their strokes and fell for some poor shot selection.

Skipper Roston Chase (22 not out) and Shai Hope added 48 runs for the fifth wicket. It was the best passage of play for West Indies as the experienced pair displayed more caution than the top order.

Shubman Gill led India for the first time on home soil — the new test skipper had previously been in in charge for a 2-2 away draw against England.

It marked the first time in 15 years that India played a home test without Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin. The trio retired over the past season — their previous appearance on home soil against New Zealand last October was a stunning 3-0 loss for India.

West Indies has not beaten India in their last 25 tests — home or away — dating to 2002.

The second test in the two-test series is set to begin Oct. 10 in New Delhi.

___

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West Indies lose five 1st-session wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat

West Indies lose five 1stsession wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat October 1, 2025 at 10:08 ...

 

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