World
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Carnage and Contradiction: Examining a Deadly Strike in Rafah
Fear plagued Saleh Mohammed al-Hila, 37, on that Sunday. “I was lying on the ground of the tent and told…
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South Africa Moves Closer to Electing a Leader, but Unity Is Elusive
Parliament was expected to elect President Cyril Ramaphosa to a second term. But his A.N.C. party is weakened, and he…
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Guilty Verdict for Chinese Activists Who Gave #MeToo Victims a Voice
Huang Xueqin, a journalist, and Wang Jianbing, a labor activist, were convicted of subversion, a vaguely worded charge long seen…
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Capturing a ‘Mosaic of Shifting Battle Fronts’ in Sudan
Declan Walsh, the chief Africa correspondent for The Times, reported from a country where few journalists have gained entry amid…
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Geneviève de Galard, French ‘Angel’ of Dien Bien Phu, Dies at 99
A nurse, she tended to the wounded as the French were under fateful attack by Viet Minh forces in 1954.…
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G7 Leaders, Expanding the Circle, Shift Focus to Migration and the South
Leaders from India, Brazil, the Middle East and Africa will join discussions on Friday, in a nod to the changing…
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Even Britain’s Finance Minister Is Fighting to Stay in Parliament
With picture-postcard villages, country pubs and an unmistakable air of affluence, there are few greater strongholds for Britain’s Conservative Party…
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The Most Important Man in Germany This Month Is Its Soccer Coach
Julian Nagelsmann was hired to win a European Championship on home soil. Can he restore a divided nation’s self-esteem at…
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Thomas Took Additional Trips on Harlan Crow’s Private Jet, Documents Show
A congressional committee released documents showing that Justice Clarence Thomas had not disclosed three private jet trips paid for by…
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How Baptists and the G.O.P. Took Different Paths on I.V.F.
The vote at the Southern Baptist Convention raising alarms about in vitro fertilization began with two conservatives at a seminary…