WORLD NEWS

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In Syria, Being Wanted Went From Something to Fear to a Badge of Honor

Syrians visiting their local passport offices can check to see if their names were included on lists of people wanted by the ousted Assad dictatorship.

Trump Wants to Take Over Ukraine’s Nuclear Plants. What Would That Mean?

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in 2022.

Netanyahu Expected to Fire Shin Bet Chief Despite Protests

The Shin Bet chief, Ronen Bar, has had a tense relationship with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Viktor Orban Is a Conservative Lodestar. Now He Wants to Fix the Price of Eggs.

Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary speaking at an economics conference in Budapest this month.

Hamas Fires Rockets at Tel Aviv as Israel Expands Gaza Ground Operations

Europe Delays Tariffs on U.S. Whiskey to Make Time to Negotiate

American liquor in a store in Berlin this month.

How the High-Stakes Arrest of Rodrigo Duterte Unfolded

Former President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines made his first appearance, by video link, at the International Criminal Court in The Hague on Friday. He is being held at the court’s detention center.

Russian Public Is Ready to End War but Skeptical of Concessions, Analysis Finds

An analysis of internet and social media posts from Moscow, St. Petersburg and Russian border regions showed weariness with the war, but also skepticism toward potential cease-fire agreements.

Ukraine Attacks Air Base Deep Inside Russia

Violence Flares as Hindu Group Calls for Removal of Muslim Ruler’s Tomb

Vehicles burned after communal clashes in Nagpur, India, on Monday.

Kirsty Coventry Is Elected President of the I.O.C.

As an Olympic swimmer, Kirsty Coventry twice won gold medals for Zimbabwe.

U.S. Denied Entry to French Scientist Over Views on Trump Policies, France Says

Philippe Baptiste, the French minister for higher education and research, said the treatment of the scientist, who has not been identified, was worrying.

Doug Ford Defends Canada as He Steps Up to Take On Trump

Doug Ford, premier of Ontario, has been leading the charge in Canada against threats by the Trump administration.

Wealth and Warfare Empower a Rwanda-Backed Militant Group in Congo

An M23-organized event at a Goma stadium last month.

Taliban Frees an American, George Glezmann, Held in Afghanistan Since 2022

George Glezmann, center, with American and Qatari diplomats on Thursday in Doha.

What to Know About Nowruz, the Persian New Year

People celebrated Chaharshanbeh Suri, the festival of fire, on Tuesday, before the start of Nowruz, in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Trump’s Judicial Defiance Is New to the Autocrat Playbook, Experts Say

President Trump at the Kennedy Center on Monday.

Iran Releases French Citizen After 2 Years in Detention, Officials Say

A photo released by France’s foreign minister on Thursday showed Olivier Grondeau aboard a plane after his release from Iran.

Indonesian Parliament Passes Bill That Critics Say Evokes Authoritarian Past

Lawmakers, including the speaker of the House of Representatives, Puan Maharani, right, on Monday.

Thursday Briefing

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said a partial cease-fire would have to be monitored by the U.S.

How George Lewis Made Comedy Gold Imagining Two Toddlers Chatting

George Lewis, a bard of British parenting comedy, is on his first tour as a headliner, and his shows keep selling out.

Canada Condemns China’s Execution of 4 Canadians on Drug Convictions

Canada’s foreign affairs minister, Mélanie Joly, during a news conference last week.

Trump Says Houthis in Yemen Will Be ‘Annihilated,’ as U.S. Keeps Up Strikes

Smoke plumes rose Wednesday above the Houthi-controlled Yemeni capital, Sana, after it was bombarded.

Astronomers Get ‘More Than a Hint’ That Dark Energy Isn’t What They Thought

Thursday Briefing: Ukraine Agrees to a Strike Pause

A power plant in eastern Ukraine that was hit by Russian strikes this week.

Videos of Shackled Venezuelan Migrants Have History in El Salvador

After Israeli Strike Kills More Than 400, Palestinians Tally the Dead

More than 400 Gazans were killed in Israeli airstrikes on Tuesday.

Greenpeace Is Ordered to Pay Energy Transfer, a Pipeline Company, $660 Million

Demonstrators against the Dakota Access Pipeline near Cannon Ball, N.D., in 2016.

Donald Trump Jr. Mixes Business and Politics in Serbia, as Protests There Rage

Donald Trump Jr.’s visit immediately became national news in Serbia, apparently showing that the Trump administration supported the current government despite the growing protests.

Menaced by Trump, Canada Prepares to Join E.U. Military Industry Efforts

An armored personnel carrier being made for export to Ukraine in 2023 at the Canadian manufacturer Roshel in Mississauga, Ontario.

Race for IOC Presidency Turns Increasingly Harsh as Decision Day Looms

The International Olympic Committee will elect a new president on Thursday at a meeting in Costa Navarino, Greece.

Israeli Ground Forces Seize Part of Gaza Corridor, Raising Pressure on Hamas

The rubble of a building that was destroyed in an airstrike on Wednesday in Gaza City.

Zelensky Agrees in Call With Trump to Halt Strikes on Russian Energy Targets

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine agreed to a mutual pause with Russia in attacks on energy infrastructure.

Congo and Rwanda Called for a Cease-Fire in Their Deadly Conflict. What Now?

Soldiers from the M23 rebel group in January in Goma, one of two key cities in eastern Congo that the group has seized.

Israelis Take to Streets a Day After Gaza Strikes

Israelis marched into Jerusalem during a demonstration against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday.

In Call With Trump, Putin Concedes Little on Ukraine

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, the Kremlin said, identified his “key condition” for settling the conflict more broadly: a complete cessation of outside military and intelligence support for Ukraine.

What Pausing Strikes on Energy Sites Would Mean for Ukraine and Russia

Workers inspecting a power line restored after it had been destroyed in a Russian strike in Kyiv, Ukraine.

As Pope Francis Ails, Outlandish Rumors Run Wild

Outside the hospital in Rome where Pope Francis is being treated, a drawing of him has been hung from a statue of Pope John Paul II.

Trump Has Hinted at a Xi Visit. China Is Still Wondering What He Wants.

President Trump leaving Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on Monday.

Can Europe’s New Military Spending Help Its Economies?

Assembling Leopard 2A4 battle tanks at a Rheinmetall plant in 2023. Since the war in Ukraine began, the German defense company has grown into one of the West’s largest arms makers.

As Children, They Fled the Nazis Alone. Newly Found Papers Tell Their Story.

Armed Rohingya Group’s Leader Is Arrested in Bangladesh

More than a million Rohingya are confined to a series of tent settlements in Bangladesh, like this one in Cox’s Bazar, seen on Saturday.

Turkey Arrests Istanbul Mayor, Key Rival to President Erdogan

Ekrem Imamoglu, the mayor of Istanbul. Opposition figures have accused the Turkish government of trying to exclude him from politics so he cannot run for president.

Wednesday Briefing

President Vladimir Putin of Russia is demanding an end to Western military and intelligence support for Ukraine.

Six Women Were Elected. So Why Were Their Husbands Sworn In?

Lining up to cast votes in the state of West Bengal in an election for a local panchayat.

Trump Administration Ends Tracking of Kidnapped Ukrainian Children in Russia

A regional children’s home in Kherson, southern Ukraine, in 2022. Russian authorities have been accused of abducting hundreds of Ukrainian children to Russia or Russian-held territories during its occupation of the area.

Mexico City Bans Traditional Bullfights for Violence-Free Option

A bullfight at La Plaza México, the largest bullfighting arena in the world, last year in Mexico City.

Earth’s 10 Hottest Years on Record Are the Last 10

Pedestrians took a break on the Brooklyn Bridge during a heat wave last year.

Parents of Student Missing in the Dominican Republic Believe She Drowned

The Dominican authorities deployed drones, helicopters, divers, boats, police dogs and other resources to search around Punta Cana after Ms. Konanki was reported missing earlier this month.

Son of Jair Bolsonaro Says He Will Seek Political Asylum in the U.S.

Eduardo Bolsonaro during a visit to the White House in 2019, during President Trump’s first term.

Wednesday Briefing: Russia Agreed to Halt Some Strikes

A Ukrainian thermal power plant damaged by Russian missile strikes last year.

South Africa Will Not Remove Antarctic Team After a Reported Assault

Antarctica’s harsh conditions have routinely made it difficult for countries to scrutinize researchers’ behavior there.

Israeli Strikes on Gaza Kills Over 400, in Breakdown of Cease-Fire

Palestinians at a hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday with the body of someone killed in Israeli airstrikes.

Putin Agrees to Limited Cease-Fire on Ukraine Energy Targets

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia held a call with President Trump on Tuesday.

Canada Announces Arctic Radar Deal With Australia Amid Trump Threats

The northern lights illuminating the sky above a former Distant Early Warning radar station in the Canadian Arctic, a legacy of the Cold War.

As France Sours on Trump’s America, De Gaulle Is on the Rise

John “Paddy” Hemingway, Last Surviving Pilot of the Battle of Britain, Dies at 105

Mr. Hemingway posed in 2022 in front of a Hurricane fighter plane, the kind he flew in the Battle of Britain.

Hamas Does Not Respond Militarily to Renewed Israeli Attack on Gaza

Hamas fighters during a handover of Israeli hostages last month.

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