World News

Highlights

    1. Russia and Ukraine Hold U.S.-Mediated Talks: What to Know

      American envoys began talks with Russian officials on Monday, a day after meeting with a Ukrainian delegation. The discussions were expected to focus on halting attacks on energy facilities.

       By Ivan Nechepurenko and

      A building in Sloviansk, eastern Ukraine, on Wednesday after a Russian drone strike.
      A building in Sloviansk, eastern Ukraine, on Wednesday after a Russian drone strike.
      CreditNicole Tung for The New York Times
  1. Trump Did What Castros Couldn’t: Take Radio Martí Off the Air

    For four decades, a U.S.-financed broadcaster provoked the ire of the communist government in Cuba. President Trump dismantled it in a matter of days.

     By

    Orlando González Esteva recording his show, “Entre Nosotros” (Between Us), in a Radio Martí studio in Miami in 2015. The station is now off the air.
    CreditAngel Valentin for The New York Times
  2. What We Know About the Turmoil in Turkey

    The arrest of Istanbul’s mayor on corruption charges has stoked worries that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is becoming more authoritarian in seeking to sideline a top rival.

     By

    The police used pepper spray, tear gas and water cannons to disperse protests on Sunday in Istanbul after the arrest of Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu.
    CreditUmit Bektas/Reuters
  3. After a Brief Return Home, Palestinians Are Displaced Once Again

    The Israeli military’s renewed drive into Gaza has pushed families to flee neighborhoods they had only recently returned to during a cease-fire.

     By Hiba Yazbek and

    Palestinians fleeing the north of Gaza Strip with their belongings to the center of Gaza City.
    CreditSaher Alghorra for The New York Times
  4. Israel’s Perfect Storm: Fighting Enemies Abroad and Each Other at Home

    For months, Israelis put aside their deep rifts to fight a common enemy. Now, amid a renewed government push for power, they are battling one another.

     By

    A protest against Israeli government efforts to dismiss Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara and the security agency chief, Ronen Bar, near the Jerusalem residence of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, on Monday.
    CreditAmmar Awad/Reuters
  5. Trump’s Moves on Greenland Appear to Be Backfiring

    The Greenlandic government is calling an upcoming visit by Trump officials “aggressive,” pushing the island further from the United States.

     By Jeffrey Gettleman and

    Demonstrators protested at the United States consulate in Nuuk, Greenland, earlier this month.
    CreditChristian Klindt Soelbeck/Ritzau Scanpix Foto, via Associated Press
    News Analysis
  1. Gérard Depardieu Appears in Court Over Sexual Assault Allegations

    The French actor faces charges in a case involving two women working on the set of a movie in which he starred.

     By

    Two women have accused the French movie star Gérard Depardieu, shown in 2018, of sexual assault during the production of a 2022 film.
    CreditAnne-Christine Poujoulat/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  2. South Korea​n Court ​Reinstates Impeached Premier as Acting President

    The legislature impeached Han Duck-soo in December, soon after impeaching President Yoon Suk Yeol for declaring martial law. Mr. Yoon’s fate is still unclear.

     By

    Han Duck-soo in Seoul on Monday, after the Constitutional Court reinstated him as South Korea’s acting president. The court’s impending ruling on President Yoon Suk Yeol’s impeachment will be a far more consequential decision.
    CreditPool photo by Ahn Young-Joon
  3. Keir Starmer on Putin, Trump and Europe’s Challenge: ‘We’ve Known This Moment Was Coming’

    The British prime minister said in a series of conversations that the tectonic shifts in America’s relationship with Europe and Russia had to be a ‘galvanizing moment.’

     By

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Barrow-in-Furness, England, on Thursday.
    CreditAndrew Testa for The New York Times
  4. Sudan’s Military Sweeps Across Capital, Hoping to Turn the War

    A New York Times reporter and photographer were the first Western journalists to visit central Khartoum since the civil war broke out two years ago. The scale of how much has been lost was inescapable.

     By Declan Walsh and

    CreditIvor Prickett for The New York Times
  5. Bird Flu Found in Sheep in U.K., a World First

    The H5N1 virus was detected in a single animal in Yorkshire, the British government said on Monday. It added that the risk to humans remained very low.

     By

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The Global Profile

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  1. How a British Dad Made Comedy Gold Imagining Two Toddlers Chatting

    George Lewis’s riffs on the absurdities of millennial parenting — and the inner lives of 2-year-olds — have won him legions of fans online and galvanized his once middling stand-up career.

     By

    George Lewis, a bard of British parenting comedy, is on his first tour as a headliner, and his shows keep selling out.
    CreditAndrew Testa for The New York Times
  2. Facing Early-Onset Alzheimer’s, She Fought for the Right to Plan Her Death

    Sandra Demontigny, 45, pushed Quebec to become one of the few places in the world to allow people to choose a medically assisted death sometimes years in advance.

     By Norimitsu Onishi and

    CreditRenaud Philippe for The New York Times
  3. The Hong Kong Artist Who Got Fired From McDonald’s

    Luke Ching has made a name for himself with creative campaigns to improve working conditions for menial laborers, even as the scope for political protests in the city has narrowed.

     By

    Hong Kong Artist Luke Ching waiting outside a McDonald’s before the news conference in Hong Kong in February.
    CreditBilly H.C. Kwok for The New York Times
  4. A French Cartoonist Draws a Window Into the Middle East

    Riad Sattouf’s saga of his parents’ failed bicultural marriage, with its harsh depiction of life in rural Syria, has become a literary sensation.

     By

    Riad Sattouf signing his books in Rennes, France, last month. His masterwork series, “The Arab of the Future,” tells the story of his childhood, which was jarringly divided between the Middle East and France.
    CreditDmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times
  5. The Voice of South Africa’s First Post-Apartheid Generation

    Thandiswa Mazwai has sung of South Africa’s highs and lows since the country became a multiracial democracy 30 years ago. “My calling is to sing the people’s joy, to sing the people’s sadness.”

     By

    Thandiswa Mazwai performing in Midrand, South Africa, in September. Ms. Mazwai has used her mezzo-soprano voice to amplify South Africa’s struggles.
    CreditOJ Koloti/Gallo Images, via Getty Images

Dispatches

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  1. Park or Personal Paradise? A Rare Private Island Comes Onto the Italian Market.

    The sale of an island just off the coast of Bacoli, near Naples, has pit the quest for a rich investor against a more communal alternative.

     By

    CreditGianni Cipriano for The New York Times
  2. Clues From Inside an ‘Extermination Camp’ Promise Despair and Hope

    The discovery of an “extermination camp” outside a small village in Mexico has sent families searching for their missing loved ones into a mix of turmoil and hope for answers.

     By Paulina Villegas and

    Credit
  3. Greenland Races Into New Era Without Losing Grip on Inuit Traditions

    Amid dizzying changes caused by a warming climate and global attention, Greenlanders don’t want to have to choose between embracing the future and honoring their heritage.

     By Jeffrey Gettleman and

    Like many Greenlanders, Hans Sandgreen is an avid ice fisherman. Here, he’s pulling his catch from an icy fjord near Ilulissat, Greenland.
    Credit
  4. Braving Artillery Strikes to Serve Fresh Sushi in a Frontline Town

    Sushi has long been a popular indulgence in Ukraine. For the residents of Sloviansk, a city in Russian cross hairs, it can provide a sense of normalcy that is akin to a necessity in wartime.

     By Cassandra VinogradDzvinka Pinchuk and

    CreditBrendan Hoffman for The New York Times
  5. Toast, Trees and a Wassailing Queen: An Ancient English Ritual Is Back

    The centuries-old tradition of wassailing is making a comeback in rural England, with rituals and revelry meant to chase away evil spirits and the winter blues.

     By Stephen Castle and

    Em Sibley, the “wassail queen," after successfully completing the ceremony at Sheppy’s farm in Bradford-on-Tone, England.
    Credit

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Read The Times in Spanish

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  1. Los migrantes deportados a Panamá se preguntan: ¿Adónde voy a ir?

    Decenas de migrantes varados duermen en colchonetas en el gimnasio de una escuela. En entrevistas, 25 personas deportadas de todo el mundo dicen estar atrapadas en el limbo.

     By Genevieve GlatskyFarnaz FassihiJulie Turkewitz and

    Azada Rahimi, an Afghan migrant deported by the United States government, in a shelter in Panama City.
    CreditNathalia Angarita for The New York Times
  2. Trump hizo lo que los Castro no pudieron: sacar del aire a Radio Martí

    Durante cuatro décadas, una emisora de radio financiada por Estados Unidos provocó la ira del gobierno comunista de Cuba. El presidente Trump la desmanteló en cuestión de días.

     By

    Orlando González Esteva grabando su programa, Entre Nosotros, en un estudio de Radio Martí en Miami en 2015. La emisora está actualmente fuera del aire.
    CreditAngel Valentin para The New York Times
  3. El papa Francisco reaparece en público tras semanas en el hospital

    Desde un balcón, Francisco saludó a cientos de personas que esperaban fuera del hospital donde había sido tratado por problemas respiratorios.

     By

    El papa Francisco en Roma el domingo, durante su primera aparición pública desde que fue ingresado en un hospital a mediados de febrero.
    CreditYara Nardi/Reuters
  4. Detenciones de turistas en la frontera de EE. UU.: lo que debes saber si eres un visitante internacional

    Los incidentes de viajeros a los que se ha denegado la entrada en Estados Unidos en las últimas semanas han suscitado preocupación sobre qué esperar en los aeropuertos y otros pasos fronterizos.

     By

    La ley federal estadounidense otorga a los agentes del gobierno el derecho a registrar las pertenencias de las personas, incluidos sus teléfonos y ordenadores portátiles, en los puntos de entrada fronterizos.
    CreditJoe Raedle/Getty Images
  5. Las pistas del interior de un ‘campo de exterminio’ prometen respuestas, desesperación y fe

    El descubrimiento de un “campo de exterminio” a las afueras de un pequeño pueblo de México ha sumido a las familias que buscan a sus seres queridos desaparecidos en una mezcla de confusión y consuelo.

     By Paulina Villegas and

    Credit
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    Pope Makes First Public Appearance Since Falling Ill

    Pope Francis made his first public appearance in Rome after being admitted to a hospital in mid-February with an acute respiratory insufficiency. Francis will continue recovery at the Vatican guesthouse where he lives.

    By The Associated Press

     
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