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Exploring the Latest in International Breaking News and Features

After M23 Takeover, Goma Carries Violent Memories and Signs of Hope

One year ago, M23, a rebel militia, violently charged into the city of Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo and took it over from the government.

Jimmy Lai’s 20-Year Sentence Follows Beijing’s Playbook on Dissent

Jimmy Lai at his home in Hong Kong in 2020.

In Pakistan, a Kite Festival Returns to Troubled Skies

Olympians Love Pasta. They’re in the Right Place.

Pasta dishes at Trattoria Pizzeria in Milan.

Vietnam’s Leader Has New Power, and He’s in a Hurry

To Lam, Vietnam’s top leader, at a news conference in January in Hanoi after the 14th National Congress of the Communist Party of Vietnam.

Five Years After Myanmar Coup, ‘Even Hope Has Become a Risk’

The downtown of Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city. Urban areas in the country have been plagued by issues like soaring inflation, high unemployment and shortages of goods.

Apple Daily Sentences Show a New Era of Media Peril in Hong Kong

Law Wai-kwong, center right, and his colleagues sitting in Apple Daily’s newsroom in 2020. The newspaper was shuttered the following year.

Japan’s Sanae Takaichi Wins Snap Election in a Landslide

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan received a resounding mandate for her economic policies and tough stance on immigration and China after snap elections on Sunday.

Portugal Elects a President, With Leftist Beating a Surging Far Right

António José Seguro, who decisively won Portugal’s presidential election, on Sunday evening.

Iranian Nobel Laureate Gets Second Prison Sentence and Ends Hunger Strike

Narges Mohammadi in an undated photo provided by her foundation in 2023.

Thailand’s Conservative Party Claims Surprise Election Victory

Anutin Charnvirakul, the leader of the conservative Bhumjaithai Party, in Bangkok on Sunday.

Starmer’s Chief of Staff Resigns, Citing Role in Hiring Friend of Epstein

Morgan McSweeney in December. He served as Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s chief of staff until Sunday.

Cuba’s Communist Government Has Lasted 67 Years. Will It Fall Under Trump?

Fidel Castro, who led Cuba from the 1959 revolution until he formally stepped down in 2008, speaking in Santa Maria Del Mar in 1964.

At the Winter Olympics, Team USA Can’t Escape the Politics at Home

Politics inevitably encroaches on the Olympics, despite the International Olympic Committee’s best efforts to cast the Games as an athletic interlude free from conflict.

How Japan’s Leader, Sanae Takaichi, Rescued Her Party from the Abyss

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan at a news conference in Tokyo on Monday.

Jimmy Lai’s 20-Year Term Follows a Familiar Chinese Pattern

Lai has been held in solitary confinement for more than 1,800 days.

Mr. Lai walking through the Stanley Prison in Hong Kong in 2023.

Jimmy Lai’s children have led a global campaign for him.

Sebastian Lai, center, son of Jimmy Lai, held a news conference outside Downing Street in London last year.

Jimmy Lai’s conviction was years in the making.

Jimmy Lai was arrested under the national security law in Hong Kong in 2020.

Here’s the latest.

Venezuela Frees Key Opposition Figures, Then Rearrests One

Juan Pablo Guanipa, center, a Venezuelan opposition politician, outside El Helicoide detention center in Caracas after his release on Sunday. He was later taken back into custody.

How Ilia Malinin and Team U.S.A. Held Off Japan to Win Gold Medal

On the Brink of a New Arms Race

Takaichi is poised to push Japan further to the right.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan is poised to push the country even further to the right on issues like immigration, defense and the economy.

Breezy Johnson’s Olympic Gold Medal Celebration Muted By Lindsey Vonn’s Crash

Heavy Snow Disrupts Japan Election, Forcing Polling Stations to Close Early

People walking past campaign posters in Tokyo on Sunday.

Shortages of posters and trucks add to candidates’ challenges.

Ryuichi Yoneyama, a candidate from the Centrist Reform Alliance, campaigned for Japan’s lower house election in Nagaoka on Saturday.

Here’s the latest.

China’s Presence Looms Large in Japan’s Election

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi of Japan shaking hands with President Xi Jinping of China on the sidelines of a summit in Gyeongju, Korea, last October.

A Curling Champion Is Italy’s Hometown Hero at the Olympic Games

Stefania Constantini practicing before a mixed doubles curling match between Italy and South Korea on Thursday in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy.

Trump’s Oil Grab in Venezuela Shatters an American Taboo

Venezuela’s Cardon oil refinery. Critics say President Trump’s plan for the country’s oil industry revives bitter memories of colonial exploitation and flagrantly violates international law.

Japan’s Leader Is Set for a Big Election Win. Here’s What to Know.

Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi standing atop a vehicle during an election campaign in Tokyo on Saturday.

What to Know About Thailand’s Election

A polling station on Sunday in Bangkok during Thailand’s general election.

In Bid to Lead Thailand, a Progressive Party Softens Its Image

Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut, the leader of the People’s Party, speaking to supporters in Bangkok on Friday.

Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ Sets Date to Meet in Washington, Officials Say

President Trump during a Board of Peace event at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last month.

6 Fishermen Reel In a 244-Pound Atlantic Halibut, Setting a Local Record

Ilia Malinin, the ‘Quad God,’ leaves an ace up his sleeve.

Saudis Announce New Investments in Syria, a Sign of Deepening Ties

Construction workers repairing a section of castle walls inside the citadel of Aleppo, Syria, in August. The deals announced on Saturday include the rehabilitation of the city’s airport.

Roland Huntford, Lore-Debunking Historian of Polar Exploration, Dies at 98

Roland Huntford in 2008. South African by birth, he nevertheless spoke Norwegian fluently and spent 15 years as the Scandinavian correspondent for The Observer, a British newspaper, developing a keen interest in polar expeditions.

A Mosque Bombing Undercuts Pakistan’s Bid for Security

A funeral on Saturday for victims of a suicide bombing at a mosque on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, the day before. The attack killed at least 31 people.

Trump Reverts to Diplomacy With Iran, but the Road Is Narrow

Steve Witkoff, President Trump’s special envoy, center, and Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, with Oman’s foreign minister, Badr Albusaidi, in a photograph released on Friday by Oman’s Foreign Ministry.

Russian Strikes Pummel Ukraine’s Power Grid

Sheltering in a metro station in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Saturday. Damage from overnight strikes prompted the Ukrainian government to request emergency electricity assistance from Poland.

Vanity Fair

At the Olympics, the Canada-U.S. Hockey Rivalry Heats Up

Canadian athletes during the opening ceremony at Livigno Snow Park on Friday.

These Mathematicians Are Trying to Educate A.I.

Martin Hairer, a mathematician at the Swiss Federal Technology Institute of Lausanne. He splits his time between there and the Imperial College London.

Trump’s Greenland Threats Rattle the Faroe Islands

Olympics Officials Signal Sanctions on Russia in Sports May End

Athletes competing for the Russian Olympic Committee in the men’s ice hockey gold medal match at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. The team won a silver medal.

Philippe Morillon, General Who Made Fateful Protection Promise, Dies at 90

Gen. Philippe Morillon in 1993, as commander of U.N. forces in what was then Bosnia-Herzegovina.

How Is Security Different at These Olympic Games?

JD Vance Is Booed at Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony in Milan

Vice President JD Vance and Usha Vance at San Siro stadium for the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics in Milan on Friday.

Haiti Reaches ‘Full Crisis’ as Transition Government Expires

A view from inside an armored police vehicle showing cars burned by armed gangs and used as a barricade on a deserted street Port-au-Prince, Haiti, last month.

Saalumarada Thimmakka Dies; Planted and Nurtured Thousands of Trees

A dozen U.S. figure skaters march in the ceremony, some fresh off competing.

Alysa Liu, the reigning world champion, is among the members of the U.S. Figure Skating team marching in the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games.

The U.S. flag bearers are a renowned speedskater and a bobsledder, both previous Olympians.

France and Canada Open Consulates in Greenland, Following Trump Threats

The opening of the Canadian Consulate in a building shared with the Icelandic consulate in Nuuk, Greenland, on Friday.

Flying Solo: Some Olympic Athletes Are Their Country’s Whole Team

Four years ago, at age 17, Aruwin Salehhuddin became the first female athlete to represent Malaysia at the Olympics. But there was a male athlete, too, and they carried the flag together. This year, she will be carrying it alone.

Haiti Just Won the Fashion Game at the Opening Ceremonies

Stella Jean, center, a Haitian-Italian designer based in Milan, designed the looks of Haiti’s national team.

In Talks, Trump Won’t Allow Iran to Have Any Enriched Uranium

Workers at a uranium conversion facility in Isfahan, Iran, in 2005. Analysts say Iran’s position on enrichment reflects the country’s intense pride in a nuclear program that has become a symbol of Iranian independence.

The ghost of Giorgio Armani hovers over the Games.

Three lines of models in red, white and green Armani looks walking the stadium “runway” during the opening ceremonies.

China Reverses Death Sentence for Canadian in a Small Win for Carney

Robert Lloyd Schellenberg in 2019 during his retrial on drug-trafficking charges in a court in Dalian, China.

Scattered protests occur in Milan before the ceremonies begin.

In the hours leading up to the Winter Games, demonstrators protesting in the San Siro district of Milan.

2026 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremonies Performers: Mariah Carey, Andrea Bocelli and More

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