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World
Air Canada, flight attendants resume talks as days-old strike continues
North Korea's Kim calls for rapid nuclear buildup amid U.S.-South Korea exercises
Live Updates: European Leaders to Discuss Protections for Ukraine After White House Talks
Son of Norway's crown princess charged with rape and abuse
Gaza ceasefire proposal agreed by Hamas is "almost identical" to Witkoff's plan, Qatari official says
A New Zealand soldier admits attempted espionage in the country's first spying conviction
A Gaza-bound ship that left Cyprus with 1,200 tons of food aid nears Israeli port
Canada opposition leader Poilievre wins seat, to take on Carney over tariffs
A record number of aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, the U.N. says
What to know about Bolivia's election that elevated a centrist shaking up the political landscape
Busan Film Festival Expands Vision Section, Launches Innovation Platform
Harmful bacteria 'highest in summer' in Windermere
Enten: 69% Of Ukrainians Want To Negotiate An End To The War As Soon As Possible, Only 32% Want To Join NATO
Ukrainian-Language Documentary ‘Sanatorium' Selected as Irish Oscar Entry
How do you move a beloved Swedish church down the road? With prayer, engineering and some Eurovision
Deep read
Highlighting immersive reporting and narrative writing
Margaret MacMillan on the promise—and perils—of wartime summits
Summits so often promise more than they can deliver. The Russians have spun the Anchorage summit as a great victory, and perhaps it is for them, but the Americans have been suspiciously quiet about what was decided on ending the war in Ukraine.
6 min read
Young People of Color Flocked to This Show. It Made Them Feel Seen.
The exhibition “Beloved Suburbs” drew more than 150,000 visitors to France’s Museum of the History of Immigration. “We really recognize ourselves in the exhibition,” one said.
7 min read
'No-one comes for us': The women trapped in Afghanistan's mental health system
The women's wing of a mental health centre run by the Afghan Red Crescent Society (ARCS) is the largest of only a handful of facilities in the country dedicated to helping women with mental illnesses.
5 min read
How Trump 2.0 is galvanizing European AI and defense tech
Europe is embracing AI sovereignty and doubling down on defense spending in response to the Trump administration.
5 min read
China tells businesses to embrace AI. Where does that leave humans?
Marketplace’s Jennifer Pak asks Chinese AI companies what they think about the humans who will lose jobs to their AI products.
7 min read
Is collapsing fertility really the end of the world?
Steep population declines in most countries are expected to have negative impacts over the next several generations, but adaptation is possible.
9 min read
Could you do nothing for 90 minutes? In South Korea, it’s a sport.
A Korean champion of stillness reveals why giving your brain blank space can spark creativity, clarity, and calm.
6 min read
Analysis-China's Overcapacity Crackdown Faces Litmus Test in Solar Sector
A general view of solar panels at the Dunhuang Photovoltaic Industrial Park, during an organised media tour to Dunhuang, in Gansu province, China October 16, 2024. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo BEIJING (Reuters) -China's efforts to curb industrial overcapacity face their first test in the indebted and bloated polysilicon sector,
5 min read
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