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Yahya Sinwar Helped Start the War in Gaza. Now He’s Key to Its Endgame.

Yahya Sinwar, center, Hamas’s leader in Gaza, in Gaza City last year. He is now believed to be hiding in a tunnel network in the enclave.

Ahead of Olympics, World Anti-Doping Agency Faces a Trust Crisis

The World Anti-Doping Agency president, Witold Banka, has defended his organization’s handling of a doping case involving 23 Chinese swimmers.

Russian Forces Push Deeper Into Northern Ukraine

A person being evacuated to Kharkiv city on Saturday.

Ukraine’s Seaborne Grain Exports Bounce Back to Near Prewar Levels

A 700-foot Liberian-flagged ship carrying corn bound for Bangladesh leaving the Ukrainian port of Odesa in March.

Middle East Crisis: Fighting Rages in Northern Gaza, an Area Israeli Troops Had Left

The Controversy Over K-pop Band NewJeans

Min Hee-jin, who developed the band NewJeans and is embroiled in a dispute with her employer, at a news conference last month in Seoul.

Bus Crash in Indonesia Kills 11, Including Students, After Graduation Celebration

Police officers and rescuers inspecting the wreckage of a bus after a crash on Saturday in Subang, Indonesia.

Burkina Faso Accused of Massacring Civilians

Isolated and Defiant, Israel Vows to ‘Stand Alone’ in War on Hamas

On Friday, in a largely symbolic gesture, the United Nations General Assembly backed Palestine’s bid for U.N. membership.

British Colleges Are Handling Protests Differently. Will It Pay Off?

Cyclists and pedestrians pass a student encampment set up to protest Israel’s action in Palestine, on a lawn outside the Natural History Museum, at Oxford University on May 9.

Will an Authoritarian Government in Venezuela Allow a Fair Election?

People line up to vote at an improvised voting center in a football court in Catia, a former stronghold of Nicolas Maduro’s party.

Flooding Kills Dozens in Afghanistan

Flash flooding in northern Afghanistan has killed more than 300 people, U.N. officials said.

Big, Smoggy Bangkok Gets a Badly Needed Breath of Fresh Air

Trees and wetlands thrive in the newly expanded Benjakitti Park in central Bangkok, where a factory complex once churned out cigarettes.

Jacob Zuma, Once Leader of the A.N.C., Becomes Its Political Rival

Supporters of former South African president Jacob Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MK) protested over the lack of service delivery in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu_Natal province where they delivered a memorandum to the city’s mayor’s office, on Wednesday.

Mona Lisa, Smile: You’re in Lecco, After All

A geologist said the shape of the lake and the gray-white limestone in the background of Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa helped identify the setting of the portrait.

About 300,000 Gazans Have Fled Rafah, U.N. Says

Tents housing displaced Palestinians in Rafah, in southern Gaza, on Saturday.

Can Parrots Converse? Polly Says That’s the Wrong Question.

Elon Musk’s Diplomacy: Woo Right-Wing World Leaders. Then Benefit.

As Israel Steps Up Attacks, 300,000 Gazans Are on the Move

Fleeing Rafah, in southern Gaza, on Saturday. Around 150,000 have left Rafah in the past week, after the Israeli military ordered an evacuation.

Russian Attacks Open a New Front in Ukraine

Olha Melnichuk, an 85-year-old resident of Liptsi, near the Russian border, was evacuated to a shelter in Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest city, on Saturday.

When Travel Plans Go Awry

Canada’s Public Sector Unions Threaten Disruption Over Return to Office

Return to office was a major issue during last year’s public service walkout.

South Africa Again Asks the ICJ to Order Israel to Withdraw From Rafah

Naledi Pandor, South Africa’s foreign minister, left, and the South African ambassador to the Netherlands, Vusimuzi Madonsela, at the International Court of Justice at The Hague, in January.

Northern Lights Photos: Aurora Borealis Lights Up the Night Sky

The northern lights flared in the sky over a farmhouse in Brunswick, Maine.

What We Know About Where Aid Can Enter Gaza

Trucks waiting to go into Gaza on a road blocked by a protest on Thursday.

Kuwaiti Emir Dissolves Parliament for Up to Four Years

Members of the Kuwaiti Parliament in Kuwait City in January. On Friday, the emir, Sheikh Mishal Al Ahmed Al Sabah, announced that he would suspend Parliament and several articles of the Constitution.

Northern Lights Forecast: How to See the Aurora Borealis This Weekend

Northern lights hung over the Lofoten Islands in Norway in March.

Aiming for Rosier Ties, Xi Wraps Up Europe Visit

President Xi Jinping of China and Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary in Budapest on Thursday.

Cease-Fire Talks Hit Snag Over Hostages and Permanence, Officials Say

Families and supporters of hostages march Wednesday in Tel Aviv, calling on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to make a deal to free their loved ones.

U.S. Defends U.N. Voting ‘No’ on Palestinian Membership

John F. Kirby, a national security spokesman, briefing reporters at the White House on Monday.

U.S. Criticizes Israel Over Conduct in Gaza

President Biden ordered a State Department report on Israel’s use of American weapons and compliance with humanitarian law.

Israel and Egypt Spar, Squeezing Gaza Aid Routes

Palestinians lined up for food in Deir al Balah, Gaza, on Friday. A virtual cutoff in humanitarian aid is threatening to devolve into famine if shipments are not quickly restored.

U.S. Military’s Plea to Israel: Do More to Protect Gazans in War Zone

The United States wants Israel to move Palestinian civilians in Rafah out of the way, and to do more to help humanitarian aid get in, before launching any incursion into the city.

Actions by Israel and Egypt Squeeze Gaza Aid Routes

Trucks loaded with aid for Gaza are lined up in El Arish, Egypt, on Tuesday.

A Global Lesson from Britain’s Crumbling Conservative Party

Keir Starmer, Leader of the Labour Party, right, and Mayor Claire Ward of the East Midlands, celebrating at a post election rally in Mansfield, England, on Sunday.

U.S. to Announce New Tariffs on Chinese Electric Vehicles

The Biden administration is expected to raise tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles in order to protect domestic manufacturers.

People Leaving Rafah Describe Fearful Flight From Israeli Assaults

Palestinians fleeing Rafah on Thursday.

U.N. General Assembly Votes to Back Palestinian Membership Bid

A United Nations General Assembly vote to declare that Palestinians qualify for full-member status was approved, 143 to 9, with 25 nations abstaining.

U.N. officials warn that aid efforts face imminent threat from lack of fuel and food.

An employee with fuel tanks at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Friday.

Satellite Images Reveal Where Russian Nuclear Weapons Could Be Stored in Belarus

From Ancient Charcoal, Hints of Wildfires to Come

Biden Is Not the First U.S. President to Cut Off Weapons to Israel

President Ronald Reagan used the power of American arms several times to influence Israeli war policy, at different points ordering warplanes and cluster munitions to be delayed or withheld.

Russia Mounting New Border Assaults in North, Ukraine Says

Fighting a fire on Friday after an overnight strike in Kharkiv. Russia has stepped up its bombardment of the northern Ukrainian city in recent weeks.

An English Town Drops Apostrophes From Street Signs. Some Aren’t Happy.

Using a marker, someone drew an apostrophe onto a new street sign that had omitted it.

What Did P.S.G.’s Money Buy?

How Pro-Palestinian Students Pushed Trinity College Dublin to Divest

Students at Trinity College Dublin staging a campus protest against Israel’s actions in Gaza last Saturday. The students said they were inspired by similar movements in the United States.

Kherson Residents Rebuild and Brace for New Russian Attack

After Her Sister Wed at 11, a Girl Began Fighting Child Marriage at 13

Memory Banda’s activism against child marriage began in a small village in Malawi she was just 13.

How a Remote Australian Town Nearly Ran Out of Food

The road to Lajamanu in the Northern Territory in Australia.

UK Shakes Off Recession as Economy Grows Faster Than Expected

Customers shopping at a record store in London. Consumer spending has been a key aspect of Britain’s economic resilience.

Friday Briefing

Israeli military vehicles near the border with Gaza.

U.S. Ship Carrying Aid for Gaza Departs From Cyprus

The container ship Sagamore, right, docked in Cyprus on Wednesday.

UNRWA Says It Closed East Jerusalem Headquarters After Fire and Attacks

A demonstration outside the UNRWA offices in the West Bank in March.

Japanese American Civil Rights Group Pushes for Gaza Cease-Fire

David Inoue, the executive director of the Japanese American Citizens League, next to a painting that depicts a Supreme Court case during the World War II incarceration of people of Japanese descent.

Chad’s Military Ruler Is Announced as Winner of Disputed Election

President Mahamat Idriss Déby of Chad at a campaign rally in Ndjamena, the capital, last week.

Bernard Pivot, Host of Influential French TV Show on Books, Dies at 89

Bernard Pivot in 1980. His weekly show, “Apostrophes,” ran from 1975 to 1990.

As Gaza Talks Falter, Negotiators Look for a Deal or a Scapegoat

President Biden has long objected to an assault on Rafah, where more than one million Palestinians have taken refuge, because he has seen no war plan that would not result in extensive civilian casualties.

Rafah Invasion Tests Biden’s Relationship With Israel

Israeli military vehicles near the border of the Gaza Strip on Thursday at an undisclosed location.

Friday Briefing: Stormy Daniels, Day Two

Stormy Daniels, 45, leaving court yesterday.

Israel ‘Smashing Into Rafah’ Will Not Eradicate Hamas, Biden Aide Says

Smoke rising over buildings after an airstrike near Rafah, southern Gaza, on Tuesday.

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