WORLD NEWS

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In Gaza’s Emaciated Children, a Hunger Crisis Is Laid Bare

200 Miles of Sublime Pain on a Hindu Pilgrimage in Pakistan

A Library on the Canada-U.S.Border Is Ensnared by Trump’s Foreign Policy

How White South Africans Are Convincing the U.S. to Accept Them as Refugees

White South Africans waiting to hear welcome statements from U.S. government officials shortly after arriving at Washington Dulles International Airport earlier this month.

Ukraine Accuses Russia of Stalling Peace Negotiations

A prisoner exchange in the Chernihiv region of Ukraine last week.

Israel Orders Evacuation of Much of Northern Gaza, Warning of Dangerous Combat

Palestinians flee parts of northern Gaza on Friday after the latest evacuation order from the Israeli military.

A Ukrainian Girl Struggles to Survive Her Country’s War and Her Own

Margaryta Karpova, 12, and her mother, Liudmyla, at a hospital in Kyiv, Ukraine, in December. She has stayed in the city through six rounds of chemotherapy.

Islamic State Says It Targeted Syrian Forces in Bomb Attacks

Syrian security forces in Sweida Province, in the country’s south, this month. ISIS claimed attacks in the south in an area where the government has struggled to establish security.

Paul Doyle, 53, Appears in Court Over Liverpool FC Parade Crash

A prison van believed to be transporting Paul Doyle arriving at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court on Friday.

In South Korea, Desperate Workers Take Their Grievances Into the Sky

Kim Hyoung-su in his makeshift tent at the top of a 98-foot-tall traffic camera tower in central Seoul.

Why Myanmar Rebels Retreated From Lashio

Members of the Kokang Group’s rebel police force in Lashio, Myanmar, last month. The rebels withdrew from the city under pressure from China.

How China Uses Work to Reshape Uyghur Identity and Control a Strategic Region

An Ex-Convict and Cartel Lawyers Are Among Mexico’s Judicial Candidates

Protesters outside of Mexico’s Senate last year, demonstrating against the overhaul of the judicial system. Former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador pushed the plan, saying it would democratize the system.

Energy Dept. Cancels $3.7 Billion for New Technologies to Lower Emissions

Among the canceled awards was a $331 million to Exxon Mobil, which had been planning to replace natural gas with hydrogen at a chemical facility in Baytown, Texas.

Landslide at Quarry in Indonesia Kills at Least 10

Rescuers searching for landslide victims at a quarry in West Java, Indonesia, on Friday.

Haribo Recalls Cola Candy in the Netherlands After Cannabis Is Found

Trump Accuses China of Violating Trade Agreement

President Trump at the White House last week. In a social media post on Friday, Mr. Trump said that China violated a trade pact with the United States and suggested he could return to a more confrontational approach.

Friday Briefing

President Trump announcing new tariffs at the White House in April.

Chinese Paraglider Reaches Near-Record Heights, Over 28,000 Feet, by Accident

The Qilian Mountains in Zhangye City, Gansu Province, China, in May.

South African Woman Sentenced to Life in Prison for Trafficking Missing Daughter, 6

Racquel Smith in court for her sentencing in Saldanha Bay, South Africa, on Thursday.

Tariff Rulings Inject New Uncertainty Into Trump Trade Strategy

Using tariffs to pressure foreign countries to drop their own levies and to remove other barriers to U.S. exports has been one of President Trump’s main tactics.

Trump Administration Targets Brazilian Judge for “Censorship”

Alexandre de Moraes, a Brazilian Supreme Court justice, in Brasília, Brazil, in 2024.

Trump Makes a New Push to ‘Decouple’ U.S. From China

A port in Shanghai. American consumers have benefited from decades of relatively inexpensive goods manufactured in China.

Friday Briefing: Trump Battles the Court

White House Puts Israel-Backed Cease-Fire Proposal to Hamas Amid Growing Pressure

An Israeli official said a cease-fire deal would include flow of aid through U.N.-run operations.

Some Glaciers Will Vanish No Matter What, Study Finds

The Lewis Glacier on Mount Kenya, one of the few glaciers in Africa, in March.

New U.S. Envoy Makes First and Symbolic Trip to Syria

The American flag flies at the U.S. ambassador’s residence in Damascus, Syria, on Thursday for the first time in over a decade.

British Man Faces 7 Charges Over Liverpool Parade Car Crash

Ambulances and police vans at the scene of the crash in Liverpool, England, on Monday.

Court Tariffs Ruling Upends Trump’s Trade Strategy

Since taking office, President Trump had relied on a federal emergency powers law to put his trade policy into effect.

New Aid Site in Gaza Brings More Scenes of Chaos

Canada Wildfires Prompt State of Emergency in Manitoba and Force Evacuations

A wildfire near Flin Flon, Manitoba, where residents have been told to evacuate.

After Court Blocks Trump’s Tariffs, America’s Trading Partners Weigh Next Moves

Economists pointed out that President Trump could turn to other legal routes to enact broad tariffs.

Trump’s Embrace of Putin Shows Few Results

Russia Appears to Launch New Offensive in Ukraine Amid Peace Talks

A Ukrainian soldier with the 42nd Separate Mechanized Brigade monitoring for Russian drones in the Kharkiv region this month.

Will Charleston’s Climate Lawsuit Survive the Week?

Mexico’s Judicial Election: What to Know

Election materials being loaded onto a truck in Mexico City earlier this month in preparation for judicial elections on Sunday.

Chinese Students Are Frustrated With Trump’s Visa Bans: ‘What Now?’

Waiting outside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing on Thursday.

Four Killed as South Korean Navy Airplane Crashes Into Hillside

Firefighters and members of the military working at the scene of a South Korean Navy plane crash in Pohang on Thursday.

Thursday Briefing

A crowd stormed a food warehouse in central Gaza on Wednesday.

UK Weighs Sanctions on 2 Israeli Ministers as Gaza Crisis Worsens

The city of Beit Lahia in Gaza, this month. As Israel has expanded military operations in Gaza, British officials have considered imposing sanctions on government ministers.

U.S. Will ‘Aggressively’ Revoke Visas of Chinese Students, Rubio Says

Secretary of State Marco Rubio testifying at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing last week.

U.S. Pauses Exports of Airplane and Semiconductor Technology to China

A model of the Chinese-made COMAC C919 passenger plane in Shanghai last year.

Glacier Collapse in the Swiss Alps Destroys Most of a Village

A mass of ice, rocks and mud tumbled down a mountain, smothering Blatten, Switzerland, on Wednesday.

Thursday Briefing: Aid Chaos Grows in Gaza

An aid warehouse was stormed in central Gaza yesterday.

Mount Everest’s Record-Setting Sherpa Sees a Future of Snowless Mountains and Fewer Guides

Kami Rita Sherpa during a celebration of his 31st successful ascent of Mount Everest on Wednesday.

RFK Jr. and Dr. Oz Want Canada to Save Ostriches on Farm With Avian Flu

A sign posted at a Canadian ostrich farm pleaded for the lives of 400 birds targeted for culling because of avian flu exposure.

German Court Dismisses Climate Lawsuit Against RWE

The plaintiff, Saúl Luciano Lliuya, was seeking damages linked to the threat of flooding from Lake Palcacocha in Peru.

UK Authorizes Rape and Human Trafficking Charges Against Andrew and Tristan Tate

Andrew Tate, right, and his brother, Tristan Tate, in Bucharest, Romania, in March.

Crime Rings Plotted to Trade Cocaine for Syrian Weapons, Prosecutors Say

Weapons and ammunition handed in by former Syrian soldiers and police officers in Latakia, Syria, in December.

U.N. Condemns Israel’s New Aid Program in Gaza, After Chaotic Start

Japan Welcomes a New Sumo Champ. Surprise: He’s Japanese.

Onosato, center, celebrated his promotion to yokozuna on Wednesday.

Turkey Cracks Down on Fliers Who Stand Up Too Soon, Threatening Fines

A Turkish Airlines flight landing at Ataturk International Airport in Istanbul in 2018.

Israel Strikes Yemen’s Main Airport Again After Houthi Attacks

Wreckage on May 7 after an earlier Israeli attack on the international airport serving Sana, the capital of Yemen.

Stalin’s Image Returns to Moscow’s Subway, Honoring a Brutal History

A new statue of Joseph Stalin in a Moscow metro station reflects Russia’s efforts to rehabilitate the memory of a bloody ruler.

Merz Says Germany Will Step Up Ukraine Weapons Support as Zelensky Visits

Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany, right, shaking hands with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine after his arrival in Berlin on Wednesday.

Wednesday Briefing: Chaos at a Gaza Aid Site

Palestinians carrying aid packages delivered in Rafah, southern Gaza, yesterday.

As Trump Seeks Iran Deal, Israel Again Raises Possible Strikes on Nuclear Sites

President Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the White House last month.

Wednesday Briefing: Chaos at a Gaza Aid Site

Palestinians carrying aid packages delivered in Rafah, southern Gaza, yesterday.

Chaos Erupts at Israeli-Backed Aid Distribution Site in Gaza

Gazans collecting food aid in Rafah were on edge on Tuesday after gunfire was heard.

French Crypto Chiefs Step Up Security After Violent Kidnappings

Police officers secured an area in central France in January after the kidnapping of David Balland, the co-founder of a company that sells devices to store crypto assets.

Trump’s Tariffs Drive a Rise in Trade Crime

During the first Trump administration, Charlotte Pipe and Foundry won several cases against China in which high duties applied to Chinese products.

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