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À partir d’avant-hierNYT > World

Bolsonaro Faces New Legal Jeopardy After Stay at Hungarian Embassy

Par : Jack Nicas
The Brazilian Supreme Court and the federal police are demanding answers from former President Jair Bolsonaro after a New York Times investigation.

Jair Bolsonaro speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland in March 2023.

Why Britain’s Lords Are Clashing With Sunak Over Rwanda

The government’s contentious Rwanda policy, which has been championed by the prime minister, has prompted a rebellion in Britain’s unelected second chamber.

Migrants crossing the English Channel this month. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain says his government’s Rwanda policy is the best way to deter migrants from making the perilous crossing.

Bolsonaro and Allies Planned a Coup, Brazil Police Say

Par : Jack Nicas
Brazilian federal police raided former government officials and ordered the former president to hand in his passport over accusations that they tried to overturn the 2022 election.

Jair Bolsonaro campaigning for a second term in 2022 in São Paulo, Brazil.

Iran Tries to Avoid War With U.S. After Stoking Mideast Conflicts

After Iran-aligned militants killed three American soldiers, Iran’s leaders sensed a line was crossed, and are sending more conciliatory signals while awaiting President Biden’s promised response.

Gen. Hossein Salami, the commander in chief of the Revolutionary Guards Corps, during the funeral ceremony of guard members who were killed in an airstrike in Syria last month.

French Lawmakers Vote to Enshrine Abortion Rights in Constitution

Most of France’s political parties broadly support the right to abortion. But the proposal still has to undergo a long and complex legislative process before it comes to fruition.

Lawmakers voted overwhelmingly in favor of protecting abortion rights, at the National Assembly, on Tuesday.

FIFA Convictions Imperiled by Questions of U.S. Overreach

Two Supreme Court decisions and a lower court’s ruling have cast doubt on the legal basis for a host of prosecutions. Several defendants want their records cleared and their money back.

The FIFA corruption case burst into public view with the arrests of top soccer officials at a Zurich hotel in 2015.

Sunak’s Rwanda Plan Fails First Test in House of Lords

In the latest setback to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda policy, the upper house of the British Parliament voted to delay a crucial treaty with the African country.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak during a visit to Britain’s National Film and Television School on Monday in Beaconsfield, England.

India’s Court System Is Hopelessly Backed Up

With 50 million criminal and civil cases pending, it would take 300 years to clear the country’s judicial backlog.

Lawyers outside the Delhi High Court. The number of pending cases in the Indian judicial system has doubled over the past two decades, to more than 50 million.

Pakistani Justices Reject Ban for Politicians With Past Convictions

The decision by the Supreme Court paves the way for a former prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, to run in parliamentary elections in February.

Nawaz Sharif, former prime minister of Pakistan, addressing his supporters during a rally in Lahore in October.

Aharon Barak Is Israel’s Choice of Judge for Genocide Case in U.N. Court

Aharon Barak, a retired Israeli Supreme Court president, fought the government’s judicial overhaul plan. But it chose him for the panel hearing a case against it in a United Nations court.

Aharon Barak, former president of Israel’s Supreme Court, in Tel Aviv last year.

Two Capitol Riots. Two Very Different Results.

Par : Jack Nicas
Why has Brazil united in rejecting last year’s insurrection, while the United States remains deeply divided over Jan. 6?

On Jan. 8 of last year, a mob ransacked Brazil’s Congress and other offices, claiming an election had been stolen. Unlike the Jan. 6 rioters in Washington, the Brazilian protesters have almost no support now.

India’s Top Court Reverses Early Release of 11 Men Convicted of Gang Rape

The case of Bilkis Bano, who was three months pregnant when she was attacked, became a powerful symbol of communal bloodshed and of the widespread violence against women in the country.

A rally in 2022 in Kolkata, India, in support of Bilkis Bano, who was raped in 2002.

Israel Supreme Court Delivers Setback to Campaign to Remove Checks on Netanyahu

The country’s Supreme Court ruled to postpone the adoption of a new law making it harder to designate a sitting prime minister unfit for office, a direct blow to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, in December.

Netanyahu Allies Signal No Immediate Countermoves to Supreme Court Ruling

With Israel fighting in Gaza, people on both sides of the judiciary debate appear unwilling to return to the domestic upheaval that preceded the war.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, left, and Justice Minister Yariv Levin in the Knesset, in March.

Israel’s Supreme Court Strikes Down Judiciary Law

The Supreme Court, by the narrowest of margins, rejected a law pushed by Netanyahu allies that limited its authority to review government decisions.

Israelis watching a broadcast of the Supreme Court considering a challenge in September to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s judicial overhaul.

Israel Expresses Regret for Civilian Casualties in Gaza Airstrike

The Israeli military said it was “working to draw lessons” from an attack in central Gaza that was reported to have killed dozens of people.

Palestinians mourning their relatives, killed in an overnight Israeli strike on the Al-Maghazi refugee camp, during a mass funeral at Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, on Monday.

Russia Asks Court to Label Gay Rights Movement as ‘Extremist’

Activists said the designation could put L.G.B.T.Q. people and their organizations under threat of criminal prosecution for something as simple as displaying the rainbow flag.

Russian police officers blocking L.G.B.T.Q. protesters in St. Petersburg in 2019.

India’s Top Court Rejects Gay Marriage, While Voicing Sympathy

Though it expanded the definition of discrimination, the ruling was a sharp setback for petitioners seeking a landmark victory on marriage equality.

India’s Supreme Court ruled that it was up to Parliament to approve same-sex marriage.
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