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US Family Offices Top Pay Ranks With $1 Million CIO Salaries
The High-Profile Advisers Behind LIV Golf and the PGA Tour’s Surprise Merger
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US Public Transit Systems Face Credit Downgrades as Riders Stay Away
Paris Plans to Plant Trees That Can Survive Climate Change
‘Bounty Hunters’ Are Earning Money for Voter Signatures in California. Now, There’s a Backlash
Kardashian Crypto Hype Lawsuit Advances Over Her Alleged Lies
Coinbase Crackdown Widens as US States Push to Halt Staking Product
Coinbase Threatens to Take SEC Fight to Supreme Court If Needed
Kamran Haider and
Tom Redmond
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Since his ouster as prime minister last year, Imran Khan has played a high-stakes game of challenging Pakistan’s powerful military. Now it’s reaching a breaking point.
Khan’s dramatic arrest by dozens of paramilitary rangers last week for graft triggered protests that left at least eight people dead and hundreds injured, risking more spasms of violence in a nation struggling to pull back from economic collapse. By detaining the former premier, Pakistani authorities have drawn a line in the sand: Khan is an outcast in the eyes of the state, including among former army allies, and many are increasingly ready to bear the consequences of stopping him.