Some US lawmakers have been told they will be able to access a less-censored version of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election.
Democrats are complaining of inconsistencies between the report's conclusions and the interpretation of US Attorney General William Barr.
They want Mueller, who compiled the report, to publicly testify before Congress about the work he has done.
Barr had earlier admitted that he and his deputy did not agree with the legal conclusions drawn by Mueller in his two-year probe into the Trump campaign's links to the Kremlin.
Kevin McAleese has this update from Washington.

Trump backs down on strikes on Iran's power network
71 rescued as Colombian military plane crashes shortly after take-off
Hong Kong police given new powers to obtain phone, computer passwords
ICE agents begin deploying at some US airports
Air Canada jet collision shuts LaGuardia; pilots killed, dozens injured
Kuwait launches probe into espionage, state security cases
Trump, Iran threaten to escalate conflict with attacks on energy and water facilities
Fuel reservoir in Russia's Primorsk port on fire after drone attack, governor says
