Global Dispatch

Uncovering Today's International Headlines and Top Stories

The Little Mountain Democracy That Sustains Tibet’s Refugee Nation

Lhakar Gorshey, a Tibetan circle dance performed on Wednesdays, which are considered a special day of cultural significance, near Tsuglagkhang, also known as Dalai Lama’s Temple complex, this past week in Dharamsala, India.

The River Seine Reopens for Public Swimming, After a Century

Albert Ojwang Was Killed in Police Custody. Kenyans Are Not About to Let It Go.

Young men carried Albert Ojwang’s coffin at his funeral in Kakoth village, Kenya, on Friday.

Netanyahu Heads to Washington as Trump Pushes for Israel-Hamas Cease-Fire

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel visited the site of an Iranian strike in Rehovot, Israel, last month during the 12-day Israel-Iran war.

Why the Dalai Lama’s Succession Is Complicated

Can Australia Pull Off Barring Children From Social Media?

Australia hopes, by December, to remove more than a million young teens from social media.

Israel to Send Delegation to Qatar for Talks on Gaza Truce

A man inspecting damage after an Israeli strike in central Gaza on Friday. The war has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and reduced much of the territory to rubble.

Khamenei Appears in Public for First Time Since Israel War Began

A photograph released by Iran’s state media on Saturday showing Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The Cost of Victory: Israel Overpowered Its Foes, but Deepened Its Isolation

Demonstrators outside the headquarters of the governing Likud party in June in Tel Aviv demanding the return of hostages held in Gaza.

Violence at Synagogue and Restaurant Unnerves Jews in Melbourne

Rabbi Dovid Gutnick walking past fire damage to the exterior of the East Melbourne Synagogue on Saturday.

Canada’s Indigenous Groups Demand a Say in Carney’s Race to Build

Iran Looks to BRICS for Allies, Testing a New World Order

Valiasr Square in Tehran last month. Analysts expect Iran to use the BRICS summit as an opportunity to shore up more explicit support from the group.

Russia Hits Ukraine With Large Air Barrage Hours After Trump-Putin Call

Smoke rising after a Russian strike on Kyiv, Ukraine, on Friday.

Pro-Palestinian Activists Lose Appeal Against U.K. Government Ban

A Palestine Action activist, Lisa Luxx, outside the High Court in London on Friday.

China and Russia Keep Their Distance From Iran During Crisis

An ambulance burned in an Israeli attack in Tehran last month. Despite the appearance of unity, Russia, China and North Korea did not rush to Iran’s aid during its war with Israel or when U.S. forces bombed Iranian nuclear sites.

Europe’s Dilemma: Build a Military Industry or Keep Relying on the U.S.

A large-scale NATO military exercise involving nine allied nations, earlier this year.

Caught Between Tariffs and China, Mexico Adapts to an Unpredictable U.S.

Assembling refrigeration and air-conditioning units at a factory for the Danish company Danfoss, in Apodaca, Nuevo Leon, Mexico.

As a Tourist Influx Makes Prices Soar, Hundreds Protest in Mexico City

Demonstrators damaged a dining area at an anti-gentrification protest that turned violent in Mexico City, on Friday.

As the World Warms, Extreme Rain Is Becoming Even More Extreme

A person overlooks flooding at the Guadalupe River in Kerrville, Texas, on Saturday.

Celebrating the U.S. in Canada During Turmoil in the Two Countries’ Relations

The crowd was smaller than usual for the Fourth of July party hosted by the U.S. ambassador to Canada.

The Interview: Mark Rutte, the Head of NATO, Thinks President Trump ‘Deserves All the Praise’

Antarctica Faces Tense Future as U.S. Science Budget Shrinks

The National Science Foundation’s McMurdo Station in Antarctica.

A Lifetime After Fleeing the Nazis, They Tell Their Stories

A Napoleon From Long Island Meets His Waterloo

Hamas Says It’s Ready to ‘Immediately” Return to Truce Negotiations

Palestinians in the wreckage of a building in central Gaza after Israeli aircraft bombed a building in Gaza City.

Wildfires Sweep Syria’s Coast as Drought Strains Fragile State

Syrian firefighters sprayed burned trees with water in a forest outside the village of Rihaniya in the Latakia province, Syria on Tuesday.

U.K. F-35B Jet Takes Unplanned Vacation in India, Is Embraced by Locals

A British F-35B fighter jet in Singapore last month.

Man Attempts to Set Fire to a Melbourne Synagogue

Tributes at the Adass Israel Synagogue after it was set on fire in Melbourne, Australia, in December.

As Fire Videos Compete With Beach Photos, Greeks Who Rely on Tourism Are Worried

Firefighters trying to put out flames on Thursday in Ierapetra on the island of Crete, a popular tourist destination in Greece.

Nuclear Inspectors Leave Iran After Cooperation Halted With U.N. Watchdog

Reza Najafi, Iran’s ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, speaks to journalists shortly after an extraordinary I.A.E.A. board of governors meeting at the agency’s headquarters in Vienna last month.

Heat in Eastern Europe Fuels Fire, Fish Deaths and Tensions Over Protests

A water mist machine, installed to help people cool off on hot days, in Bucharest, Romania, on Thursday.

Nobel Prize-Winning Physicist Is Stripped of Dutch Citizenship

Andre Geim received the Nobel Prize in Physics in Stockholm in 2010.

Vietnam Aches for Its M.I.A.’s. Will America Stop Funding Science to Identify Them?

Filling in the grave of an unidentified soldier after bone samples were collected at Tra Linh Cemetery in northern Vietnam.

How New DNA Science Could Help More Families of the Missing

Researchers processing bone samples from an unidentified soldier missing in action collected at Tra Linh Cemetery in northern Vietnam, for DNA testing at the Center for DNA Identification at the Institute of Biotechnology of the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, in Hanoi, Vietnam.

U.S. Leaves Vietnam’s War Dead Unidentified

A Space-Out Competition in Seoul Was Harder Than I Expected

Gas Station Explosion Rattles Rome, Injuring Several

A fuel tank exploded in an eastern neighborhood of Rome. Firefighters and police officers had already been called to the gas station after an earlier incident involving a truck.

Manila’s Returning Mayor Has a Mountain to Climb. It’s Made of Garbage.

A road in Manila on Tuesday.

Why China Isn’t Lecturing Trump About His Costly Bill

The House passed a sweeping bill to extend tax cuts and slash social safety net programs. The budget office reported the measure would increase U.S. national debt by at least $3.4 trillion over a decade.

From Cooking on TV to Feeding the Front Line in Ukraine

Teenage Aviator Detained After Landing in Antarctica, Chile Says

Ethan Guo last summer in Geneva, where he began his attempt to fly solo to the seven continents.

Russia Becomes First Country to Recognize Afghanistan’s Taliban Government

Overlooking Kabul, Afghanistan, after the Taliban takeover in 2021.

David Mabuza, Former Deputy President of South Africa, Dies at 64

David Mabuza’s behind-the-scenes maneuvering helped elevate Cyril Ramaphosa to the presidency.

Julio César Chávez Jr. Expected to be Deported, Sheinbaum Says

The Department of Homeland Security said in its statement that Julio César Chávez Jr. was “also believed to be an affiliate of the Sinaloa Cartel.”

Friday Briefing: House Passes Trump’s Big Bill

Hamas Has a New Leader in Gaza. His Next Test: Cease-Fire Talks.

The primary obstacle to getting a deal between Hamas and Israel has been the permanence of any cease-fire.

How the G.O.P. Bill Will Reshape America’s Energy Landscape

President Trump’s policy bill could remake American energy by slashing tax breaks for wind and solar power, and for electric cars, while maintaining federal support for fossil fuels as well as nuclear reactors and geothermal plants.

Top Russian General Killed in ‘Combat Operations’ Near Ukraine

Flowers are placed in front of a poster with a photograph of Major General Mikhail Gudkov, in Vladivostok, Russia on Thursday.

Trump Says Call with Putin Yields No Progress on Ukraine Cease-Fire

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Moscow on Wednesday. He discussed Ukraine and Iran with President Trump by phone on Thursday, the Kremlin said.

Vatican Publishes a New Mass on Caring for the Environment

Pope Leo XIV presiding over Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica on Sunday. The idea for a new Mass began under his predecessor, Pope Francis, who made care for the environment a cornerstone of his papacy.

Sandy Gall, Reporter Who Covered a Half-Century of Wars, Dies at 97

Sandy Gall in 1994. He was seen on ITN’s popular “News at Ten” for more than two decades.

E.P.A. Employees Are Invited to Adopt Soon-to-Be Homeless Lab Rats

An albino rat at a medical test facility. Critters like rats and zebra fish are commonly used to test the toxicity of chemicals.

​North Korea Beach Resort Opens With Fanfare but No Foreigners

The Wonsan Kalma tourist area in North Korea this week. Kim Jong-un, the country’s leader, had hoped it would bring in foreign currency.

Where Do Israel-Hamas Cease-Fire Negotiations Stand?

Displaced Palestinians at a tent camp in Gaza City in June.

Greece Wildfire Forces Evacuation of 1,500 People From Island of Crete

More than 200 firefighters battled a blaze in the Greek island of Crete, but their work was made more difficult by heavy winds and rugged mountain terrain.

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