All World
- Facing Trump 2.0, Palestinians voice rising concern: What’s our plan?
U.S.-Palestinian relations under the first Trump administration ran aground over the relocation of the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, among other issues. A flurry of diplomacy is not dispelling the notion of postelection Palestinian disarray.
- 50 years ago, the UK expelled Chagos Islanders. A court ruling may mean they can go home.
Evicted to make way for a U.S. military base in the 1970s, residents of the Chagos Islands may soon return, though many critique the terms of the deal.
- First LookHow wind and solar is restoring Ukraine’s energy and resisting Russian missile attacks
Russia has consistently targeted Ukraine’s energy facilities, forcing companies to constantly rebuild and go weeks without power. Clean energy has begun to replace damaged coal and gas power plants, and it is proving more reliable and harder to destroy.
- Points of ProgressSaving lives with reduced pollution, fewer pesticides, and less worker exploitation
Progress roundup: Governments around the world protect workers from exploitation, poor air quality, and pesticides that harm people.
- In wartime Gaza, turning meager olive harvest into oil is an act of defiance
Farming by its nature puts people in touch with their land and their traditions. In besieged Gaza, after more than a year of war, the olive harvest and production of its oil are a source of resilience.
- Hong Kong court locks up a generation of pro-democracy leaders
A Hong Kong court has imprisoned 45 pro-democracy leaders for as much as 10 years, striking a heavy blow at a generation of activists.
- First LookEurope nations investigate cut cables in the Baltic Sea. Was it Russian sabotage?
Communication cables linking Finland to Germany and Sweden to Lithuania have been cut. European governments say Russia did it, which it denies. “No one believes that these cables were cut accidentally,” says German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius.
- First LookNow UK farmers have a reason to protest. They say a tax hike will destroy family farms.
Thousands of farmers flooded the streets of London protesting an inheritance tax on agricultural land that they say would devastate family farms. The U.K. government says the tax would mainly affect rich individuals who bought farmland as an investment.
- First LookUkraine has been waiting to strike deep into Russia. Is Biden’s approval too late?
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy can now use U.S.-built long range missiles to strike deep into Russia. The Biden administration gave him permission as North Korean troops come to Russia’s aid and Donald Trump prepares to take over the presidency.
- First LookSenegal votes as leaders work to cement majority, push reforms
People in Senegal are voting in a parliamentary election that will decide whether the country’s president can carry out ambitious reforms, six months after he was elected on an anti-establishment platform.
- When Hezbollah rockets are incoming, and you can’t reach the shelter
Hezbollah’s intensified rocket barrages against northern Israeli communities have created conflicting impulses among residents: supporting war, yet eager to end it.
- Trump prepares for ‘economic warfare’ with China
President-elect Donald Trump readies for a new tariff war with China, making balanced trade books, not free trade, the leitmotif of his presidency.
- First LookMost Australians favor banning kids from social media sites. But will it work?
While the planned social media ban has broad support, more than 140 technology and child welfare experts signed an open letter to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese calling it “too blunt an instrument” to be effective. The specifics will be unveiled next week.
- Ukraine’s Pokrovsk was about to fall to Russia 2 months ago. It’s hanging on.
The story of the grinding Russian-Ukrainian land battle is one of an imbalance of forces and supplies, mostly in Russia’s favor. Yet Ukraine finds ways to defy the odds, at least for a while.
- Trump leaves European allies fearing for their future
Donald Trump is set on weakening Western support for Ukraine and weakening Europe’s economy with tariffs. Can the continent withstand a dual assault?
- In Lebanon, Hezbollah pays high political cost for its war with Israel
In peace, Lebanon’s stability depends on a frail political balance. Now for many Lebanese enduring war with Israel, Hezbollah’s unique status as a heavily armed state-within-a-state is increasingly a problem.
- A British ‘culture warrior’? Kemi Badenoch sets Conservatives on populist path.
After a record defeat in Britain’s last election, many Conservatives decided that they needed to be more populist. Their selection of Kemi Badenoch as party leader locks in that agenda.
- Difference MakerAbandoned ‘ghost gear’ kills sea life. A Myanmar nonprofit is turning the tide.
In 2018, Thanda Ko Gyi launched the nonprofit Myanmar Ocean Project, Myanmar’s first registered marine conservation organization.
- Points of ProgressMost of the world wants action on climate change. Here’s what’s going right.
Progress roundup: Most of the world wants action on climate change, and would be willing to pay for it. Here’s where clean energy is making gains.
- They took up arms to fight Russia. They’ve taken up pens to express themselves.
Ukrainian soldier-poets are springing up all along the front lines of their war against Russia, feeding a literary renaissance.