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À partir d’avant-hierNYT > World

Millions of Girls in Africa Will Miss HPV Shots After Merck Production Problem

The company has told countries that it can supply only 18.8 million of the 29.6 million doses it was contracted to deliver this year.

On the way to class in Freetown, Sierra Leone. The delayed vaccines means that girls in countries such as Sierra Leone, Burkina Faso and Mozambique who are now 14 will no longer be eligible for vaccination when these campaigns finally start.

Ex-Leader of South Africa Legislature Is Arrested on Corruption Charges

The legal problems of Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula expose the governing African National Congress to one of its biggest weaknesses — corruption allegations — before a crucial national election.

Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula in court in Pretoria, South Africa, on Thursday. She stepped down as speaker of the country’s National Assembly this week.

Ugandan Court Upholds Draconian Anti-Gay Law

The law, which includes the death penalty as a punishment in some cases, has been strongly condemned, including by the United States.

The five-judge panel of Uganda’s Constitutional Court at a hearing in Kampala, the capital, on Wednesday. “The upshot of our judgment is that this petition substantially fails,” one judge said.

Russia Has No Formal Death Penalty. Some Want to Change That.

Some prominent Russians are calling for the execution of those responsible for the massacre at a concert hall near Moscow, and an end to Russia’s 28-year moratorium on capital punishment.

Saidakrami Murodali Rachabalizoda, one of the men accused of the attack at a concert hall near Moscow that killed 139 people, in a Moscow courtroom.

Netanyahu Allies Reject Schumer’s Criticism of Israeli Leader

In response to Senator Chuck Schumer’s call for new leadership in Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing party countered that Israel was a democracy, “not a banana republic.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is facing increasing international criticism of Israel’s military strategy in its war with Hamas.

Human Rights Atrocities Mount in Sudan as War Spirals, U.N. Says

Rape, killing, torture: A stark report offers new evidence of horrific abuses carried out by Sudan’s military and its enemy, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

Refugees from the fighting in Sudan line up to board a barge in Renk, South Sudan. A United Nations report documents horrors by both warring sides.

Bowing to Fan Revolt, German Soccer Rejects $1 Billion Investment

A proposed marketing partnership with a private equity firm was abandoned after weeks of protests that disrupted matches across the country.

Dortmund fans brought banners to the fight against a proposed private-equity investment in Germany’s top league.

A Divided France Splits Over Death of Robert Badinter

Robert Badinter, the former minister who abolished the death penalty, was honored in Paris after his death on Friday, but members of the far left and right were told they were unwelcome.

Members of the Republican Guard carrying the coffin of Robert Badinter, a former French justice minister, during a ceremony in his honor in Place Vendôme in Paris on Wednesday.

Rome’s Ancient Grandeur Towers Anew With a Copy of a Colossus

A 1:1 facsimile of the statue of Constantine shows how modern technology can help recreate the past, and offers new ideas for scholarship.

Arsonist Sentenced to Death for Killing 36 People in 2019 Kyoto Studio Fire

Shinji Aoba was charged with murder in 2020 after dousing a studio with gasoline and lighting it on fire. On Thursday he was found guilty.

Firefighters battling a fire at the studio of Kyoto Animation in 2019.

Sudan’s Mohamed Hamdan, Often Rumored Dead, Takes Victory Tour

Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan was greeted by African leaders as if he had already won Sudan’s civil war. His forces have secretly been armed by the United Arab Emirates, an as-yet unpublished U.N. report found.

Lt. Gen. Mohamed Hamdan of Sudan, left, poses for a handshake with President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa in Pretoria, in a photograph posted on General Hamdan’s account on the social media platform X.

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.

Sudan’s Army Faces Scrutiny After Major City Falls to Rival Forces

The capture by paramilitary forces of Wad Madani, a strategic city in the country’s agricultural region, marks a watershed in the civil war that has upended life in the northeast African nation.

Sudanese army soldiers patrolling in Gedaref, in eastern Sudan, on Monday. Many people fled to Gedaref from Wad Madani to escape the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

A Sudanese City Took in Many Fleeing War. Now, Fighting Has Spread There.

Clashes on the outskirts of Wad Madani threaten a city that is the center of aid operations and home to tens of thousands of people displaced in an eight-month war.

Riding atop a truck along a road in Wad Madani, Sudan, on Friday, when witnesses and aid workers said heavy gunfire could be heard in several parts of the city’s suburbs.

Mexico Shootout Kills 14 After Town Fights Back Against Cartel

At least 14 people were killed in a clash between the gunmen and members of a small farming community in central Mexico, an episode that the state authorities cast as a gang extortion attempt that backfired.

W.H.O. Asks China for Details on Surge of Respiratory Illness in Children

Reports of overcrowding at pediatric hospitals in China have raised concerns about a jump in respiratory illnesses affecting children.

Children and their parents waiting at an outpatient area at a children hospital in Beijing on Thursday. The World Health Organization has asked China on Thursday for more data on a respiratory illness spreading in the north of the country, urging people to take steps to reduce the risk of infection.

Israel’s Opposition Leader Says Netanyahu ‘Must Go Now’

Yair Lapid says that he would join a coalition without Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid, center, arriving at a polling station last year. “Israel has lost faith in the prime minister,” he said on Wednesday.

Seizing Darfur Region, Paramilitary Forces Are Accused of Atrocities

Seven months into Sudan’s civil war, the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and its allies are ransacking and capturing the Darfur region. An aid worker said, “People are dying like insects.”

A Sudanese woman mourning a relative she said was killed by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. She had fled from El Geneina in the Darfur region in July, across the border into Chad.

Megan Rapinoe, Emma Hayes and a Women’s Soccer Crossroads

Par : Rory Smith
Rapinoe, who helped define U.S. soccer for a decade, is retiring after this week’s N.W.S.L. final. Hayes, the Chelsea coach, will try to put her stamp on it next.

Megan Rapinoe will play her final club game on Saturday, for OL Reign in the N.W.S.L. final.

300 Arrested on Capitol Hill in Call for Cease-Fire in Israel-Hamas War

Rallies over the Israel-Hamas war have continued to be held across the country and in world capitals.

Hundreds of protesters asked for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war, inside the Cannon House Office Building on Wednesday.

‘Start-Up Nation’ Is Tested as Israel’s Reservists Leave Their Desks

The tech industry in Israel, including many small firms, is trying to adjust as a big military mobilization cuts their work force.

Israeli soldiers patrolling a residential neighborhood in Sderot, Israel, a city near Gaza. Israel has called up about 360,000 reservists for duty.
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