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BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Juan Manuel Santos convincingly won re-election Sunday after Colombia's tightest presidential contest in years, an endorsement of his 18-month-old peace talks to end the Western Hemisphere's longest-running conflict.

Santos defeated right-wing challenger Oscar Ivan Zuluaga with 53 percent-to-47 percent of valid votes, with 98 percent of precincts reporting less than an hour after polls closed.

Zuluaga was backed by former two-term President Alvaro Uribe, who many considered the true challenger.

They had accused Santos of selling Colombia out in the Cuba-based negotiations and insisted Zuluaga would halt the talks unless the rebel Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, known as the FARC, ceased all hostilities.

The outcome affirmed Santos' position that he has steered Colombia to a historic crossroads after a half-century of conflict that claimed more than 200,000 lives, most of them civilians.

The campaign has been the Andean nation's dirtiest in years, and Uribe continued to alleged widespread fraud by the Santos camp right up to the closing of polls.

Zuluaga shocked the incumbent's camp by outpolling Santos in the May 25 five-candidate first round of voting.

Zuluaga and Uribe had accused Santos, grandnephew of a president from a blue-blood Bogota clan that formerly owned the newspaper El Tiempo, of offering impunity to the rebels.

Bogota industrial designer Felipe Quintero said he voted for Zuluaga, a previously little-known finance minister during Uribe's administration, because Santos was conceding too much to rebels.

"They need to be punished, not to be rewarded with liberty" and seats in Congress, Quintero said.

Santos, 62, denied he would let war criminals go unpunished.

And he is no dove. As Uribe's defense minister and then president, he helped professionalize Colombia's U.S.-backed military and wielded it to badly weaken the FARC, including killing its top three leaders.

The bulk of Colombia's left endorsed Santos, a University of Kansas-educated economist and veteran of three Colombian presidential Cabinets prior to his own presidency. He also got the backing of 80 top business leaders last week as he announced exploratory talks with the National Liberation Army, Colombia's other, far smaller rebel band.

Beyond betting his future on peace, Santos has improved ties with the leftist governments of neighboring Venezuela and Ecuador, a sharp contrast to Uribe.

Yet the incumbent has a "severe likeability and trust problem," said analyst Adam Isacson of the Washington Office on Latin America, saying the president has been "unable to shake the image of an out-of-touch Bogota aristocrat who will promise everything and deliver little."

Bogota business consultant Maria Eugenia Silva cited a big reason many Colombians voted for Santos despite his faults: Alvaro Uribe.

"The eight years he was president were a time of some of the works corruption and biggest scandals," she said. With Uribe the power behind Zuluaga's bid, a victory for his candidate would have lessened chances the former leader could face prosecution for alleged crimes, including human rights violations.

Blemishes of his 2002-10 government included extrajudicial killings of innocent civilians to boost military body counts, illegal spying on judges and journalists and the funneling of agricultural subsidies to well-heeled ranchers. Uribe won a Senate seat in March after being constitutionally barred from another presidential run.

Zuluaga was backed by cattle ranchers and by palm oil plantation owners, beneficiaries of a deal Uribe made with far-right paramilitaries that dismantled their militias. Big landholders had by then consolidated control over territory that the militias had largely rid of rebels while driving at least 3 million poor Colombians off their lands. As part of the Santos-negotiated peace process, those stolen lands would be returned.

The slow pace of peace talks did not help the incumbent. Framework agreements have been reached on agrarian reform, dismantling the illegal drug trade and creating a role for rebels in national politics.

But analysts say Santos could have done much better at communicating the gains and building public support.

Still, the peace process ranked relatively low on most Colombians' list of priorities. The Gallup poll found less than 5 percent of respondents believe the FARC will be the next president's main problem. For many, spreading the benefits of a growing economy is more important.

Economic growth averaged 4.5 percent annually during Santos' four years and 2.5 million jobs were added. But analysts say the president has done little to improve education, health care and infrastructure.

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Associated Press writers Cesar Garcia and Libardo Cardona contributed to this report.

SALVADOR, Brazil (AP) — The fact that Miroslav Klose could become the top all-time scorer in World Cup history won't influence Germany coach Joachim Loew.

Klose, the 36-year-old forward, has 14 goals in 19 World Cup matches, just one short of Brazil's Ronaldo.

But Loew said that this does not automatically mean he would play Klose in Brazil.

The record "is very important for the team and him personally," Loew said. "But as a coach, those statistics are secondary and do not mean he would be included in the lineups."

Klose is the only classic forward on the German team. But Loew has been favoring a "false nine" system, with attacking midfielders taking on the role of scorers, in the likes of Thomas Mueller and Mario Goetze.

— By Dusan Stojanovic — www.twitter.com/dusansto

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FOND FAREWELL

TERESOPOLIS, Brazil (AP) — Several hundred Brazilian fans waited hours Sunday to greet the national team as it left for the match against Mexico in the northeastern city of Fortaleza.

Many dressed in the green and yellow colors of Brazil, the fans gathered outside the team's training camp to show their support to the players. The crowd waved flags frantically and chanted as the bus carrying the squad passed by.

Some tried to take photos of their favorite players.

Fans had to wait outside the gates because they are not allowed to enter the team's training camp in the mountainous city of Teresopolis, located about an hour away from Rio de Janeiro.

More than 15 vehicles followed the Brazilian delegation in the trip to Rio's airport, including some belonging to police and even the army.

Brazil will play Mexico on Tuesday.

— By Tales Azzoni — www.twitter.com/tazzoni

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HOT RUNNING

MANAUS, Brazil (AP) — It's hot in Manaus. It's humid in Manaus. And on Sunday, it was race day in Manaus.

About 1,000 runners competed in a dual 5 kilometer-10 kilometer road race in the jungle city, jogging through the high temperatures of the late morning, with most wearing yellow or green T-shirts made for the event.

The race, the 22nd Corrida Rustica, finishes at a marine base on the outskirts of town and celebrates a June 11, 1865, naval battle victory over Paraguay.

And the racers, many of them military personnel, certainly got a feel for the service with a naval band in white uniforms playing music as runners crossed the finish line and collected their medals.

The only thing better than a medal around the neck for the finishers was perhaps a cup full of cold water.

— Chris Lehourites — www.twitter.com/chrislehourites

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CYCLE CITY

SAO PAULO (AP) — Hundreds of recreational cyclists — mothers, fathers, children alike — took to the major street of Avenida Paulista in Sao Paulo on Sunday, most wearing helmets and holding balloons with the Brazilian flag as they rode.

Parts of the road were sectioned off for the bikers, and large banners hung above the busy street with instructions to use caution and watch for the cyclists.

Sao Paulo has a large number of cycling groups, including some focused on fitness and others the social element of exploring the city and taking in the scenery. There's even SP Gay Bikers, the city's first gay bike group.

— By Janie McCauley — www.twitter.com/JanieMcCAP

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RIVALS COMPETING

SANTOS, Brazil (AP) — Mexico and Brazil did not wait until Tuesday, when they face each other in a Group A match, and took their rivalry to the social networks.

The Brazilian federation challenged its Mexican counterpart to see which country arrives with the most followers for the day of the game.

"Congratulations for yesterday, @miseleccionmx! What about a game here on Twitter? Let's see who gets to the match with more followers..." the CBF posted Saturday night.

The Mexican federation quickly accepted, and the game is on.

The loser will donate a team jersey signed by the players to a charity of the winner*s choice.

"The bet is on against Brazil on Twitter, let's see who gets the most followers, even there we want to win," wrote the Mexican manager, Miguel Herrera.

The battle is a close one. Brazil had 1,615,061 followers, while Mexico had 1,665,931.

— By Carlos Rodriguez — www.twitter.com/crodriguezap

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STREET PARTY

BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil (AP) — Strolling along central Belo Horizonte's tree-lined avenues on a Sunday morning is a quiet affair. Until you stumble onto Avenida Afonso Pena.

Song and dance, colors, artisan stalls and the smells of Brazilian street food hit the senses all at once.

Officially, it's the Feira de Artesanato, the weekly artisans' fair. But it's more like an impromptu street party.

Arriving at 10:30 a.m. seems a little late, because a group of four drummers and a guitarist are in full swing and onlookers are dancing, drinking ice-cold beers and eating espetinhos. It's a spontaneous jamming session watched by locals and World Cup visitors — including Colombia fans in full party mode because of the team's 3-0 win over Greece on Saturday at Mineriao Stadium.

The main attraction, though, is the hundreds of stalls selling anything from handcrafted leather sandals and porcelain earrings to caricatures and children's toys. It's a bustling bazaar that stretches for at least half a mile in front of the city's municipal park. Algeria fans arriving for their team's match Tuesday against Belgium were also out waving flags and taking pictures of a capoeira group.

The divide among the haves and have-nots was also visible at the fair, with several men lugging huge transparent plastic bags filled with empty beer cans and soda bottles tossed away by the revelers.

— By Frank Griffiths — www.twitter.com/fgriffithsap

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EVERYBODY'S 'PERSIEING'

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — First there was planking and Tebowing. Now a spectacular World Cup goal has spawned "Persieing."

In what is sure to be one of the goals of the tournament in Brazil, Netherlands captain Robin van Persie flung himself at a long pass and headed the ball over Spain goalkeeper Iker Casillas to level the score at 1-1 just before halftime of the teams' Group B opener. The Netherlands went on to win 5-1 in one of the shocks of the tournament so far.

The flying Dutchman's momentum sent him sliding on his belly across the damp turf of Salvador's Arena Fonte Nova, his arms stretched out to either side.

Fans wasted no time photographing themselves — and even their babies — in similar poses and posting them online, giving birth to the "Persieing" meme.

— By Mike Corder — www.twitter.com/mikecorder

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NEYMAR'S HAIR

TERESOPOLIS, Brazil (AP) — Brazil star Neymar clearly isn't superstitious when it comes to his hair.

After scoring twice in victory to open the World Cup, Neymar showed up with a new style at the squad's training session Sunday. So did left back Dani Alves, his Barcelona teammate.

Neymar's head was shaved on the sides, with the front dyed blond. Alves' shorter cut had a grayish tinge to it.

Neymar has been known to constantly change his hairstyle during tournaments. Alves also shows up with different haircuts from time to time.

Brazil will play its second World Cup match against Mexico on Tuesday in the northeastern city of Fortaleza.

— By Tales Azzoni — www.twitter.com/tazzoni

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Associated Press reporters will be filing dispatches about happenings in and around Brazil during the 2014 World Cup. Follow AP journalists covering the World Cup on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Sports/world-cup-2014

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