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World
For the first time, the world's food crises authority announces a famine in Gaza
Oil prices set for weekly gains as Ukraine peace process stalls
UK's top diplomat gets a warning for illegal fishing with US vice president
Fishnets and fortifications: Troops on Ukraine’s southern front dig in as peace talk hopes fade
How Nvidia's chips became central to the U.S.-China trade war
Former Thai leader Thaksin Shinawatra says he has been acquitted of royal defamation
Iran talks with European nations on its nuclear program as sanctions deadline nears
Photos show 2,000-year-old artifacts pulled from waters off Egypt's coast
"Angry" Trump sends Orban handwritten note over Ukraine oil pipeline attack
Sri Lanka's former President Wickremesinghe remanded over alleged misuse of state funds
French leisure park manager detained over alleged religious discrimination against Israeli children
Attack on police helicopter and explosion near air base leave at least 19 dead in Colombia, officials say
Home Office to stop using hotel for asylum seekers
Kim Jong Un acknowledges deaths of 100 North Korean soldiers he sent to fight for Vladimir Putin
U.K. trans woman found guilty of sex assault after not disclosing gender identity to partner
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Thailand’s former leader acquitted in royal insult case, but the list of those ensnared by lese majeste laws keeps growing
Thailand’s billionaire former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was acquitted of insulting the kingdom’s powerful monarchy Friday. Here’s what to know about the law that has ensnared hundreds
9 min read
Why South Korea's AI rollback in classrooms is a cautionary tale for the US
South Korea tried to enforce AI textbooks in all classrooms. Parents and teachers pushed back.
5 min read
Serbian Drama ‘Who Are We' Tackles Bullying and Peer Violence, Wins Big at Sarajevo Industry Awards
Serbian filmmaker Miroslav Terzić ("Stitches") is wrapping post-production on his third feature, "Who Are We," which explores the world of teenagers and the dynamics of peer violence. The film took home the top prize Thursday among Works in Progress in the industry strand of the Sarajevo Film Festival.
4 min read
Congo Has Astronomical Rates of Sexual Violence. Now Victims Have Lost Access to Care.
The conflict that has put rebels in control of much of the east of the country has left victims with no legal recourse and dismantled many of the clinics that offered care.
10 min read
The 95-year-old Korean POW who wishes to return to the North to die
There were dozens of activists and police officers, their attention fixed on one man: Ahn Hak-sop, a 95-year-old former North Korean prisoner of war who was making his way home, to the other side of the border that divides the Korean peninsula.
6 min read
Netanyahu’s Endless Endgame
Yonatan Touval argues that Netanyahu's goal of taking over Gaza is not plan to end the war, but a plan to never end it.
7 min read
US and China Are Thwarting India’s Shot at $7 Trillion Solar Prize
To seize its opportunity to become a global force in solar power, nation must address tariff tensions and fix a supply chain still hugely reliant on Beijing.
8 min read
What Killed the Two-State Solution?
How deceit, delusion, and the inexorable pull of the past have transformed an idea once seen as a possible means to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict into a dangerous gimmick.
29 min read
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