Global Dispatch

Uncovering Today's International Headlines and Top Stories

As Xi and Biden Meet, Trump and Uncertainty Loom Large

President Biden and Xi Jinping, China’s top leader, in California in November 2023, the last time they met in person.

Young Gazans Reach Global Audiences With Videos of Everyday Life in War

Bitter Infighting Divides Russian Opposition

Infighting and accusations between Russian opposition groups seem to be threatening the legacy of government opposition that Aleksei A. Navalny had long nurtured.

North Korea Blasts Unbearable Sounds To South Korea

Large speakers in North Korea seen from from Ganghwa Island, Incheon City, South Korea in October. The residents of Dangsan village claim they can’t sleep due to the strange, uncomfortable and mysterious sounds from the speakers.

Israel Strikes Near Beirut as Two Medics Killed in South Lebanon

Smoke billowing south of Beirut after an Israeli strike on Saturday.

Ten Newborns Die in India Hospital Fire

A woman rushing to an emergency ward after a fire broke out in a neonatal intensive care unit at Jhansi Medical College hospital in Jhansi, India on Friday.

Biden Discusses With Allies ‘Dangerous’ Cooperation Between Russia and North Korea

President Biden during a meeting with the leaders of Japan and South Korea at a summit of Asian Pacific leaders in Lima, Peru, on Friday.

Iran Told U.S. That It’s Not Trying to Kill Trump

A demonstration in Tehran for Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani in 2020. U.S. officials have said that Iran sought to kill Donald J. Trump for ordering the drone strike that killed General Suleimani.

Trump Will Encounter a Very Different Middle East in His Second Term

President-elect Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago on Thursday. The world has changed greatly since his first term.

Israel Pounds Area Near Beirut Amid Signs of a Widening Offensive

Residents searched for their belongings in the rubble of a destroyed apartment building after an Israeli airstrike in central Beirut, Lebanon, on Friday.

Lebanese Fear That Wherever the Displaced Go, Israeli Bombs Will Follow

The aftermath of an Israeli strike in the Christian village of Aitou, northern Lebanon, in October.

Putin Talks With German Chancellor, Breaking Ice With the West

President Vladimir Putin of Russia at the Kremlin in Moscow on Thursday, in a photo released by Russian state media. Mr. Scholz called on Mr. Putin to end the war, saying that Russia had not achieved any of its goals.

Gaza War Strains Europe’s Efforts at Social Cohesion

Pro-Palestinian protesters opposing Israel’s participation in this year’s Eurovision Song Contest in Malmo, Sweden, in May.

Taylor Swift to Tour in Canada After Trudeau Issues Plea on Social Media

Taylor Swift fans taking photos in front of the Rogers Center on the Thursday in Toronto, Canada before Ms. Swift’s sold out show.

South Africa Police Try Siege Tactics on Illegal Mining, Igniting Debate

A disused mine where hundreds of men accused of illegal mining are hiding in Stilfontein, South Africa, on Friday.

Satisfying vs. Productive

Conversations With Murray Sinclair

Murray Sinclair at his home north of Winnipeg in 2021.

Democrats’ Message at COP29 Climate Talks: Don’t Panic

The conference venue in Baku, Azerbaijan. The focus of this year’s U.N. climate summit is financing to help lower-income countries cope with global warming.

Super Typhoon Man-yi Brings ‘Life-Threatening’ Storm to Philippines

Residents securing a fishing boat ahead of Super Typhoon Man-yi’s arrival in Legazpi City, the Philippines, on Saturday.

Princess Yuriko, Oldest Member of Japan’s Imperial Family, Dies at 101

Princess Yuriko of Japan in 2023, a few days before observing her 100th birthday.

A Whole New Ballgame

A Tiny Gladiator Tells of the Reach of Roman Empire Celebrity

Nuclear Power Was Once Shunned at Climate Talks. Now, It’s a Rising Star.

Cooling towers at the shuttered Three Mile Island nuclear power plant near Middletown, Pa., last month. One reactor will be brought back online in 2028.

Moldova Uncovers Fraudulent Scheme to Get Criminals Off Interpol Blacklist

The Interpol office in Chisinau, Moldova’s capital. Prosecutors say corrupt officials working there assisted a scheme to remove fugitives from a wanted list.

Sri Lankan Leader’s Leftist Coalition Wins Elections

Court Hears New York Times Case Against European Commission Over Vaccine Deal

A spokeswoman for The New York Times said a lawsuit by the company raised key issues about democratic oversight in the European Union.

Engineers Discover a 132-Year-Old Message in a Bottle in a Scottish Lighthouse

Can These Ex-Hollywood Chimps Find a Place Among the Apes?

Zachary, raised at a roadside zoo, out of the public eye at the Lincoln Park Zoo in September.

Fire in Retirement Home in Spain Leaves at Least 10 Dead

Residents were evacuated from a retirement home where a fire broke out in Villafranca de Ebro, northern Spain, on Friday.

New Zealand Parliament Suspended as Maori Lawmakers Perform Haka to Protest Bill

Māori members of the New Zealand parliament speak to the media.

Why North Korea Is Building Drones

Kim Jong-un, North Korea’s leader, in a photo released by state media, which said it showed him supervising drone tests on Thursday.

Friday Briefing

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. campaigning with Donald J. Trump in October.

In Moscow, Trump’s Victory Is Welcomed, But Warily

A cardboard cutout depicting Donald J. Trump in the window of a bar in St. Petersburg, Russia, three days after he was re-elected.

Argentina Mulls Exiting Paris Climate Deal

President Javier Milei of Argentina is considering withdrawing from the Paris climate agreement, according to the country’s foreign minister.

Stress From Fireworks Killed Baby Red Panda, Zoo in Scotland Says

Murray Sinclair, 73, Who Reframed Indigenous Relations in Canada, Dies

Murray Sinclair in 2021. “We needed individual Canadians to understand not only were Indigenous people mistreated throughout history, but you were lied to as well,” he said.

Yiannis Boutaris, Vintner, Animal Defender and Greek Mayor, Dies at 82

Yiannis Boutaris, the mayor of Thessaloniki, Greece, outside his office in 2012. He said he never thought of himself as a career politician.

Elon Musk Met With Iran’s U.N. Ambassador, Iranian Officials Say

Elon Musk after a meeting in Washington on Wednesday.

Friday Briefing: Dismay Over Trump’s Picks

Former Representative Matt Gaetz.

France-Israel Soccer Match is Overshadowed by Amsterdam Attack

President Emmanuel Macron of France (front row, second from the right), Prime Minister Michel Barnier (front left), and former presidents Nicolas Sarkozy and Francois Hollande (behind Mr. Macron) attended the France-Israel soccer match amid heavy security.

New York Joins a Global City Club, With a Deal on Congestion Pricing

New York City is joining many other global cities that have congestion pricing. In most, those fees have become an ordinary part of city life.

Chemist Identifies Mystery ‘Blobs’ Washing Up in Newfoundland

Pope Francis Wants to Save the Environment. He Can Start With a Tree.

Pope Francis appearing before crowds from the window of his office overlooking Saint Peter’s Square in December 2023.

Israel Strikes Humanitarian Zone in Gaza

Norway Apologizes for Forced Assimilation of Sami and Other Minorities

Gathering for a reindeer sleigh ride at a Sami Easter Festival in Kautokeino, Norway, in 2018. Norway long had an official policy of suppressing Sami culture.

Israel Bombs Targets in Syria, and Keeps Up Strikes in Lebanon

Rescuers evacuating bodies from the site of an airstrike that targeted a house in the eastern Lebanese city of Baalbek on Thursday.

Investigators Assess if Netanyahu’s Aides Forged Oct. 7 Phone Records

The inquiry is seen as sensitive in Israel, where the question of what the prime minister knew in advance of Hamas’s invasion could prove crucial to his political future.

Typhoon Usagi Slams Into the Philippines

A fisherman trying to secure a boat during a storm in Santa Ana, the Philippines, on Thursday.

Thursday Briefing

Donald Trump with President Biden, in the Oval Office yesterday.

Explosions Outside Brazil’s Supreme Court Leave 1 Dead

Police officers near the site of an explosion at Three Powers Plaza in Brasília, Brazil’s capital, on Wednesday night.

Haiti’s Gang Violence Worsens as FAA Suspends Flights From the U.S.

Despite the deployment of a Kenyan-led international police force, many parts of Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital, remain deserted because of the fear of gangs.

Mexican Officials Arrest Top Security Official in Mayor’s Beheading

The funeral for Alejandro Arcos Catalán, 43, last month. He was newly elected as the mayor of Chilpancingo, Mexico, when he was killed six days after taking office.

Thursday Briefing: Trump’s Victory Lap

Italy’s President Rebukes Musk for Chiming In on Country’s Immigration Debate

President Sergio Mattarella is Italy’s head of state but not part of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government.

Canadian Teenager Is Country’s First Human Bird Flu Case

A colorized electron microscope image of avian influenza grown in cultured cells.

India’s Top Court Bans ‘Bulldozer Justice’ Often Used Against Muslims

Shops were razed by the state administration after violent clashes between Hindus and Muslims in Nuh, India, last year.

Trump’s Input in Russia-Ukraine Peace Talks May Put Kyiv on New Timetable

A Ukrainian soldier repelling a Russian attack at a frontline position near Toretsk last month. Ukrainian forces have been losing ground in the east.

Israeli Court Rejects Netanyahu’s Bid to Delay Corruption Trial Testimony

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel near Mitzpe Ramon, Israel, last month.

Notre-Dame Cathedral Is Ready to Reopen in December

Taking pictures outside Notre-Dame last year. The cathedral will be reopened on Dec. 7, five years after a devastating fire.

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