WORLD NEWS

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After Lebanon Cease-Fire, Gaza and Iran’s Nuclear Ambitions Await Trump

A billboard depicting Iranian scientists making the Fattah-1, Iran’s first hypersonic ballistic missile, in downtown Tehran, Iran, on Tuesday.

Millions of Dollars to Protect Pandas Was Spent by China on Roads and Buildings

A female panda, Xin Bao, at the San Diego Zoo in August.

Death of Cyclist in Paris Lays Bare Divide in Mayor’s War Against Cars

Cyclists waiting for a green light on a bridge over the Seine in June.

Ukraine’s River of Anguish

Members of the 126th Territorial Defense Brigrade rested in a fortified front line position after returning from a night mission on the banks of the Dnipro River.

Trudeau Goes to Mar-a-Lago to See Trump Amid Tariff Concerns

Justin Trudeau, prime minister of Canada, leaving his hotel in West Palm Beach, Fla., on Friday to meet with President-elect Donald J. Trump.

Syria Rebels Reach Aleppo, in Biggest Advance in Years

Fighters fire at Syrian government troops on the outskirts of Aleppo on Friday.

Protests Erupt in Georgia as It Pulls Back From Pro-Western Path

The police used water cannons and tear gas to disperse anti-government protesters in front of the Parliament building in Tbilisi, Georgia, early Friday.

A Dublin Neighborhood at the Sharp End of Ireland’s Election Issues

Campaign posters hanging on lamp posts and the facade of a derelict building on Sean McDermott Street in northeast inner-city Dublin, Ireland, on Nov. 27. In a recent election poll, Ireland’s three major parties, Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and Sinn Féin, were neck-and-neck, with 21 percent, 20 percent and 19 percent, respectively.

Major Canadian News Outlets Sue OpenAI In New Copyright Case

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation office in Toronto. It, along with other major news outlets, claims OpenAI is illegally using their content.

UK Lawmakers Vote to Legalize Assisted Dying After Emotional Debate

Supporters of assisted dying campaigning outside Parliament on Friday. Lawmakers voted by 330 to 275 in favor of the new legislation after a five hour debate.

Russia Moves to Cut Off Ukraine’s Nuclear Power Plants

Repairing a power line on Friday outside Odesa, Ukraine, after a Russian drone strike.

China Journalist, Dong Yuyu, Is Sentenced to Prison for Espionage

Dong Yuyu at Harvard University in 2017. He built his career when the Chinese government encouraged interaction with foreigners, but such contacts are now viewed with extreme suspicion.

Israel Warns Residents on Both Sides of Lebanon Border to Stay Away

Damage in a neighborhood of Tyre, Lebanon, as residents continued to return to their homes on Friday.

Chad Ends Longtime Military Partnership With France

French and Chadian soldiers prepare to board a Chadian national army transport plane at Faya-Largeau airport in northern Chad in 2022.

Nigeria Boat Capsizes, Killing at Least 27

The river Niger, pictured near Lokoja, Nigeria, last month.

FIFA Should Compensate Migrant Workers Injured Building Qatar World Cup, Report Says

Workers on the construction site of the Al-Wakrah Stadium, a FIFA World Cup venue, during its construction in 2018.

UK Transport Secretary Louise Haigh Resigns After Fraud Conviction Revealed

Louise Haigh in London last month. As transport minister she oversaw one of the Labour Party’s flagship policies of bringing Britain’s troubled private rail network back into public ownership.

Notre-Dame Shines, and World Gets a Sneak Peek, on Macron’s Televised Tour

President Emmanuel Macron of France during a visit to Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris on Friday.

Life After Death: America’s Cemeteries Are Rewilding

Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn is among the earliest cemeteries in the country to be modeled after rural landscapes, and to serve as an urban park.

Here Are the Risks When Zoos Pay for Endangered Species

Yun Chuan, a male, at the San Diego Zoo in August. American zoos have come to count on pandas, which attract unparalleled crowd numbers, merchandise sales and media attention.

Friday Briefing

Why Mexico Is Eliminating Independent Watchdog Agencies

A protest in Mexico City last year in support of Mexico’s freedom of information body, known as INAI, after the president at the time, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, backed a proposal to scrap it.

Canada Accuses Google of Creating Advertising Tech Monopoly

Canada’s competition authority said that Google owned four of the largest online advertising tech services in the country and that they control 40 percent to 90 percent of their market.

Friday Briefing: Day 2 of Lebanon’s Cease-fire

Residents driving past a mosque in southern Lebanon, yesterday.

Lebanese Residents of Baalbek Return to a Bombed-Out City

The ancient city of Baalbek, Lebanon, has been bombed and many buildings flattened.

Hiker Survives 50 Days in Canadian Wilderness

Romania Court Orders a Recount After Surprise Election Result

Calin Georgescu, who won the most votes in the first round, speaking to reporters on Tuesday in Izvorani, Romania.

Daniel Khalife, UK Prison Escapee, Is Convicted of Spying for Iran

A police van believed to be transporting former soldier Daniel Khalife leaving Westminster Magistrates Court in London in September 2023.

Bangladesh Ties with India Plunge Further After Arrest of Hindu Leader

Chinmoy Krishna Das, a Hindu leader in Bangladesh, has been accused of sedition under a colonial-era law.

What a Deadly Offensive in Syria Means for a Stalled Civil War

Rebel fighters in Syria’s Aleppo Province on Thursday.

What to Know About Australia’s Social Media Ban for Children Under 16

The Australian government has called the legislation a “world leading” move to protect young people online.

Australia Bans Social Media for Everyone Under 16

In Melbourne on Wednesday. Australia passed a social media ban for children despite feasibility concerns.

Russia Strikes Ukraine’s Energy Sector as Putin Signals More to Come

Customers used phones as lights at a restaurant with no electricity in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday after Russian strikes.

Lebanon Cease-Fire Appears to Hold Despite Israeli Strike

Chinese Women Mobilize Against Subpar Sanitary Pads

A shelf of feminine hygiene products in a Beijing 7-Eleven convenience store.

A Top Military Official in China Is Suspended Under Suspicion of Corruption

Adm. Miao Hua arriving at the Pyongyang Airport in Pyongyang, North Korea, in 2019. Until recently, he was in charge of a group that helps enforce Communist Party discipline in the military.

With Trump Returning and Hezbollah Weakened, Iran Strikes a Conciliatory Tone

A billboard in Tehran showing Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his predecessor, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

President João Lourenco of Angola Discusses Biden’s Upcoming Visit

Joao Lourenco, the president of Angola, at the presidential palace in Luanda, Angola.

Hamas Faces a Future Without Its Most Important Ally

A mosque in Gaza damaged by an Israeli airstrike. The Biden administration has tried to increase pressure on Hamas to make a deal with Israel and release the hostages it holds in Gaza.

The U.S. Is Building an Early Warning System to Detect Geoengineering

India’s Exam Leaks Underline the Nation’s Bigger Problem

Indian police officers checking the documents of people preparing to take exams to join the police force outside the examination center in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, in August.

Thursday Briefing

Cars moving south on a busy road near Beirut, the capital of Lebanon. There are hopes that a cease-fire agreement will end 13 months of bloodshed.

Indian Thieves See a Gold Mine in Exams for Government Jobs

850-Year-Old Smithfield Meat Market in London to Close

Smithfield has been the site of a market since at least 1174. The current market was built in the 1860s.

As Plastic Talks Continue, a Reminder of What We’re All Exposed To

Scientists can use silicone wrist bands to measure a person’s exposure to chemicals.

Syrian Rebel Groups Launch Largest Offensive in Years

Clashes between fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and the Syrian Army in Aleppo on Wednesday.

E.U. Vessels Surround Anchored Chinese Ship After Cables Are Severed in Baltic Sea

A bulk carrier called the Yi Peng 3 traveling under a Chinese flag was being monitored by Danish naval patrol vessels.

How Have Israel and Lebanon Responded to the Cease-Fire?

A street in Tyre, Lebanon, on Wednesday, hours into the start of the cease-fire.

As Israel-Hezbollah Cease-Fire Takes Hold, Thousands in Lebanon Head Home

People celebrating as they drove south of Beirut, Lebanon, on Wednesday.

Northern Israel Somber as a Few Soldiers and Residents Trickle Through

Some Israeli troops have begun to return to Israel from Lebanon, but many remain.

Thursday Briefing: A Fragile Cease-fire in Lebanon

Residents of the Dahiya, south of Beirut, celebrated the cease-fire announcement yesterday.

Who Is Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing of Myanmar?

Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, chief of Myanmar’s military junta, at a meeting in Moscow in 2022.

Pakistan’s Capital Is Turned Upside Down by Unending Protests

Supporters of Imran Khan marching toward Islamabad on Monday after clearing shipping containers placed by the authorities to block them.

Moscow Expels 2 German Journalists Over Allegations of Closing Russian TV Bureau

The logo of ARD, the German public broadcaster, on the facade of its studio in Berlin.

French Intellectuals Decry Dissident Writer Boualem Sansal’s Arrest in Algeria

Boualem Sansal in Paris in 2015. The Algerian-born writer became a French citizen this year.

Israeli Forces Keep Striking in Gaza Alongside Cease-Fire in Lebanon

A damaged site in Nuseirat, in central Gaza, on Wednesday after an Israeli strike.

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