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SKIP ADVERTISEMENTThe 7.7-magnitude quake caused widespread damage in a country already in chaos because of civil war.
By The New York Times
Credit The New York TimesThe small incursion targets the Belgorod region, according to Ukrainian officials, analysts of open-source intelligence and Russian military bloggers. The advance comes as cease-fire talks continue.
By Maria Varenikova
Credit Nanna Heitmann for The New York TimesPresident Trump’s disdain for protecting European allies gives Vladimir Putin a fresh opportunity to extend his influence.
By Josh Holder Lara Jakes and Bill Marsh
Credit The New York TimesView the location of the quake’s epicenter and shake area.
By William B. Davis Pablo Robles Agnes Chang Madison Dong Judson Jones John Keefe and Bea Malsky
Credit The New York TimesMajor Donor to Reform U.K. Party Sold Weapons Parts to Russian Supplier
The aerospace company H.R. Smith Group was an early backer of the party after Nigel Farage became leader. Reform has faced criticism over comments seen as supporting Moscow.
By Jane Bradley
Credit Andrew Testa for The New York TimesPope Francis Came Near Death in Hospital, His Doctor Says
In an interview, the leader of Pope Francis’s medical team called it “a miracle” that the 88-year-old pontiff left the hospital, but said he needs to change his vigorous habits, at least for a while, to recover.
By Jason Horowitz and Patricia Mazzei
Credit Guglielmo Mangiapane/ReutersVance Lands in Greenland, a Place That Doesn’t Want Him
Vice President JD Vance’s trip to an island that President Trump wants to “get” is a scaled-back version of the original White House plan. “He’s not welcome,” one Greenlander said.
By Jeffrey Gettleman and Maya Tekeli
Credit Pool photo by Jim WatsonHegseth Seeks to Reassure Allies on First Official Trip to Asia
At his first stop in the Philippines, the U.S. defense secretary promised to strengthen deterrence against Chinese “threats” in the region. He also plans to visit Japan.
By Sui-Lee Wee
Credit Ezra Acayan/Getty ImagesU.S. Revives Tough Demands in Reworked Deal for Ukraine’s Minerals
Officials in Kyiv say the country cannot possibly accept the proposal and that new negotiations would be needed. But they have not rejected it outright, which would anger the White House.
By Constant Méheut
Credit Brendan Hoffman for The New York TimesAdvertisement
SKIP ADVERTISEMENTHow 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 Amelia Nierenberg
Credit Andrew Testa for The New York TimesFacing 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 Renaud Philippe
Credit Renaud Philippe for The New York TimesThe 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 Tiffany May
Credit Billy H.C. Kwok for The New York TimesA 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 Richard Fausset
Credit Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York TimesThe 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 Lynsey Chutel
Credit OJ Koloti/Gallo Images, via Getty ImagesDolphin Hunting Is Their Tradition. Rising Seas Have Made It a Lifeline.
The residents of Fanalei Island, in the Solomon Islands, say the lucrative hunts will help them buy land elsewhere and move off their sinking home.
By Prianka Srinivasan and Matthew Abbott
Credit Matthew Abbott for The New York TimesWhat Makes Sydney’s New Beach Different? It’s 50 Miles Inland.
It’s no Bondi Beach, but Pondi, or Penrith Beach, has been a welcome relief to the city’s sweltering western suburbs.
By Victoria Kim
Credit Matthew Abbott for The New York TimesTo Him, Americans Were Always Heroes. He’s Not So Sure About Today’s.
A tour led by an 88-year-old guide in Bastogne, Belgium, scene of a critical battle of World War II, offers a snapshot into the way President Trump’s second term is shifting perceptions of America abroad.
By Jeanna Smialek
Credit Jim Huylebroek for The New York TimesPark 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 Neil MacFarquhar
Credit Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesClues 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 Fred Ramos
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SKIP ADVERTISEMENTEl ‘exportador de bebés’ más grande del mundo admite fraude en las adopciones
Una comisión de la verdad de Corea del Sur concluyó que hubo falsificación de documentos de los niños y envío de bebés “como equipaje” para obtener ganancias, entre otras faltas.
By Choe Sang-Hun
Credit Ahn Young-Joon/Associated PressLos mensajes filtrados de altos funcionarios de Trump profundizan la brecha entre EE. UU. y Europa
Funcionarios de Trump han exigido más gasto militar europeo y han cuestionado los valores del continente. Varios mensajes filtrados revelan la profundidad de las desavenencias.
By Jeanna Smialek and Steven Erlanger
Credit Doug Mills/The New York Times¿Por qué conducir en Singapur es como ‘llevar un Rolex’?
La ciudad-Estado, donde el derecho a tener un vehículo cuesta hasta 84.000 dólares, es uno de los lugares más caros para conducir.
By Isabella Kwai Nicholas Yong and Chang W. Lee
Credit Chang W. Lee/The New York TimesTrump amenaza con aranceles a los países que compren petróleo a Venezuela
El presidente amagó con usar aranceles como si fueran sanciones financieras, al afirmar que EE. UU. gravará las importaciones de los países que compren petróleo venezolano.
By Ana Swanson Rebecca F. Elliott and Alan Rappeport
Credit Matias Delacroix/Associated PressLos 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 Glatsky Farnaz Fassihi Julie Turkewitz and Nathalia Angarita
Credit Nathalia Angarita for The New York TimesEarthquake-stricken Myanmar faces a humanitarian crisis. Political complexities are likely to hamper international aid delivery, leaving vulnerable people at risk.
By Jenny Gross
Times VideoThe Israeli military launched airstrikes in the neighborhood of Dahiya, on the southern edges of the Lebanese capital. Israel said it had targeted a site that stored Hezbollah drones.
By The Associated Press
Times VideoSeveral people were killed in a building collapse and dozens more were missing as of Friday evening in Thailand, the authorities said.
By McKinnon de Kuyper
Patients had to lie on cardboard or directly on the concrete outside the main hospital in Mandalay. Even before the earthquake, the health care system in Myanmar was under stress.
By Sui-Lee Wee
Just Stop Oil, the group that made headlines for high profile stunts to protest use of fossil fuels, said it was ending protests in museums after achieving its initial demand.
By Jonathan Wolfe
More than 140 people were reported dead in the country, and the earthquake was felt across Southeast Asia.
By Lynsey Chutel
Leer en español In Photos and VideosThe 7.7-magnitude quake caused widespread damage in a country already in chaos because of civil war.
By The New York Times
Leer en españolSince 2021, the ruling military junta has severely restricted the internet and cut access to social media, digitally isolating the country.
By Adam Satariano and Paul Mozur
A building in Bangkok that had been under construction collapsed, killing at least eight people, while dozens of workers remained stuck in the rubble.
By Muktita Suhartono and Richard C. Paddock
President Trump’s disdain for protecting European allies gives Vladimir Putin a fresh opportunity to extend his influence.
By Josh Holder, Lara Jakes and Bill Marsh
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