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Hier — 28 mars 2024NYT > World

Israel and Hezbollah Trade Fire, With Deaths Reported on Both Sides

The exchange came as a U.N. cease-fire demand appeared to be having little effect on the war in Gaza, and pressure increased on neighboring Jordan to sever ties with Israel.

The aftermath of an Israeli strike on Wednesday in al-Habbariyeh, in southern Lebanon. Lebanon’s Ministry of Health said it hit an emergency medical center and killed seven people.

Security Forces Clash With Pro-Palestinian Protesters in Jordan, Video Shows

Protesters gathered near the Israeli embassy in Amman, the capital, calling for the country to cancel its agreements with Israel.

Demonstrators protesting in support of Gaza near the Israeli Embassy in Amman, Jordan, early on Wednesday.
À partir d’avant-hierNYT > World

Kremlin Treads Carefully After Moscow Attack Over Fears of Ethnic Strife

Anti-migrant rhetoric in the aftermath of the attacks at the concert venue outside Moscow has spurred fears that the tragedy could cause ethnic strife inside Russia.

Crowds in Moscow, including men wearing traditional Kyrgyz hats, leaving floral tributes at the concert hall that was the site of the attack.

Rose Dugdale, Heiress Turned Irish Independence Fighter, Dies at 82

Par : Clay Risen
Born into English wealth and Oxford-educated, she left it all behind for a life of radical and often violent activism.

Rose Dugdale in 1974 after being sentenced to nine years in prison for crimes including art theft. Born an English heiress, she left her wealth behind to join the Irish Republican Army.

How a Small Irish Town Was Divided by Anti-Immigrant Anger

A continuing protest in the town of Roscrea symbolizes a surge in hostility toward migrants in Ireland that is fueled by a housing crisis and far-right influencers.

Maria Phelan, right, chatting last month with locals at a protest camp outside the Racket Hall Hotel in Roscrea, Ireland. Demonstrators have gathered there since January to protest the housing of immigrants in their town.

What to Know About Hong Kong’s Article 23 Legislation

Par : Mike Ives
The legislation marks another significant erosion of freedom in a former British colony once known for its relative autonomy from Beijing.

Pro-democracy activists at a candlelight vigil at a downtown Hong Kong park in 2003. Public pressure that year forced city leaders to back down on a package of security laws known as Article 23 legislation.

Navalny’s Widow Votes in Berlin

Yulia Navalnaya, who has vowed to carry on her husband’s work, waited in line for hours with voters outside of the Russian embassy.

Long Lines of Russian Voters Signal Discontent With Putin’s Tenure

Many appeared to be heeding a call by the opposition to express frustration by showing up en masse at midday. “We don’t have any other options,” said one woman.

Voters lined up outside a polling station in Moscow on Sunday.

Dancing and Jumping Over Fire, Iranians Use Holiday to Defy Rules

Large crowds packed the streets to celebrate the tradition of Chaharshanbeh Suri. Iran has banned dancing in public, which has also been a way to protest.

Iranians celebrating of the eve of the last Wednesday of the year, Chaharshanbeh Suri, before Norouz in Tehran.

India to Enforce Citizenship Law Criticized as Anti-Muslim

The law sparked lethal riots when it was passed. Now, after a four-year delay, it has come into force on the eve of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s re-election campaign.

Police block students trying start a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act in India’s Assam State on Tuesday.

Navalny’s Heirs Seek a Political Future in Russia

Aleksei Navalny’s team has found a new leader in the opposition leader’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya. But Navalny’s death has so far brought little change to their insular tactics.

Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of Alexei Navalny, has presented herself as the new face of the Russian opposition.

The Crisis in Haiti, in Photos

A photographic narrative of the growing upheaval.

A motorcyclist driving through a street set aflame in Port-au-Prince last week.

Iran’s 2022 Protest Crackdown Included Killings, Torture and Rape, U.N. Finds

A fact-finding mission looking into the demonstrations that followed the death of Mahsa Amini found brutality and rejected Iran’s version of Ms. Amini’s death.

Iranian police officers confronting protesters at a demonstration over the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini in 2022 in Tehran.

In Parliamentary Vote, Iranians Vented Their Rage With the Ruling Elite

Whether handing in blank ballots or voting for fringe candidates, analysts say, citizens registered their frustration with the status quo.

Voters in Tehran preparing to cast their ballots in parliamentary elections on March 1. Many voters expressed their disgust with the ruling elite, analysts said.

Haiti Crisis: Who Are the Gangs That Have Overrun the Capital?

The Caribbean nation has plunged into disorder and violence with gangs controlling access to the main airport and seaports, and taking command of many parts of Port-au-Prince.

Jimmy Chérizier, right, seen in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, this week, has become the public face of a newly formed gang alliance.

Blasphemy Is a Crime in Pakistan. Mobs Are Delivering the Verdicts.

Being convicted of the charge can bring a death sentence in the country. But simply being accused of disrespect toward Islam can also be enough to get a person killed.

A crowd in Peshawar, Pakistan, last month protesting a blasphemy ruling by a top judge.

Bohemians: The Irish Team Selling Soccer With a Side of Activism

Par : Rory Smith
The Dublin club Bohemians has made support for social causes a crucial part of its identity. Critics say the hipsters have taken over, but the approach has attracted fans around the world.

Causes and cheers exist side by side in the stands at Bohemian F.C.

Many Iranians Boycott Elections, Despite Pleas and Roses

Ordinary Iranians, fed up with a faltering economy and the government’s oppressive rules and violent crackdowns on peaceful protests, heeded calls to stay home.

Women casting their vote in parliamentary elections at a mosque in Tehran on Friday. Voters also cast ballots for the Assembly of Experts, an 88-member clerical body that is responsible for naming, advising and supervising the supreme leader.

Calls for a Boycott Roil Iran’s Parliamentary Elections

Voters enraged by a violent crackdown on protesters and disaffected by the failure of elections to yield substantive changes are vowing to make a statement by staying home during Friday’s elections.

A large billboard in Tehran encouraging people to vote in parliamentary elections this week. With widespread disaffection, turnout could be as low as 15 percent, one government poll said.

In Britain, Shockwaves From Israel-Hamas War Are Jolting Domestic Politics

The United States and several European nations have been caught up in toxic debates that have altered election campaigns and led to eruptions of inflammatory language over the conflict.

Protesters in London calling for cease-fire in Gaza this month.

As U.N. Warns of Famine in Gaza, Cease-Fire Remains Elusive

With the approach of Ramadan, as well as protests by hostage families and a threatened Palestinian march on the Aqsa mosque, pressure is rising to reach a deal.

Children in Rafah, on the southern Gaza Strip on Wednesday. Food shortages in the enclave are dire.

Iran’s Parliament Election 2024: What You Need to Know

Iran is holding Parliament elections on March 1, the first general vote since an uprising swept across the country in 2022 calling for an end to the Islamic Republic’s rule.

A rally for a conservative party on Tuesday in Tehran.

Airman Dies After Setting Himself On Fire Outside Israeli Embassy in Washington

Aaron Bushnell, an active-duty senior airman, repeatedly shouted, “Free Palestine!” as he filmed and livestreamed his protest against Israel’s deadly military actions in Gaza. He had been taken to a hospital on Sunday with life-threatening injuries.

The protester filmed his self-immolation in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington.

Farmers Clash With Police and Macron at Paris Agricultural Fair

At the annual show where the French countryside comes to the capital, President Emmanuel Macron’s efforts to calm a monthlong confrontation were met with anger.

The Salon International d’Agriculture in Paris is a rite of passage for French presidents. Emmanuel Macron’s visit on Saturday had an exceptionally rough start.

For Many Ukrainians, It’s a 10-Year Anniversary of War

Russia’s invasion came in two phases, many Ukrainians say: the first a decade ago, when it sent soldiers over the border in an unacknowledged military intervention, and the second when it began its full assault two years ago.

In 2014, Ukrainians took to Kyiv’s main square to protest the decision by President Viktor F. Yanukovych to forgo closer ties to Europe and instead more closely align Ukraine with Moscow.

1974: 5 More Miners Hurt in South Africa Riots

It was the latest outbreak of intertribal unrest at a gold mine in Free State. The situation was under control at midnight, officials said.

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.

What a Tel Aviv Plaza Means to Hostage Families and Supporters

A plaza in Tel Aviv has become a home away from home. “If I don’t know what to do, I come here,” one relative said.

A model tunnel in a square outside the Tel Aviv Museum of Art on Saturday has been built to simulate situations described by some hostages taken on Oct. 7.

Shaken by Grisly Killings of Women, Activists in Africa Demand Change

The continent has the highest rate of gender-related killings of women in the world, according to the United Nations. Activists accuse officials of ignoring the issue and blaming the victims.

A photograph of Grace Wangari Thuiya, a 24-year-old beautician who was killed in Nairobi, Kenya, in January. Her boyfriend assaulted and repeatedly stabbed her, police told her mother.

Hundreds of Navalny Mourners Detained Across Russia

At least 400 people have been detained across Russia since Aleksei Navalny’s death, a rights group reported. Those who came to lay flowers found solace in the company of others.

Laying flowers at a memorial for Aleksei Navalny in Moscow on Saturday.

Tel Aviv Protesters Show Anger Toward Netanyahu and Israel’s Government

Par : Adam Sella
The demonstrations took a pause after the Oct. 7 attacks, but the anger at the Israeli leadership never went away.

Demonstrators expressing their anger toward the Israeli government in Tel Aviv on Saturday.

Why Indian Farmers Are Protesting Again

This time they want a stronger guarantee that they can make money selling their wheat and rice crops.

Farmers taking cover from tear gas about 150 miles from New Delhi on Tuesday.

How Imran Khan Used Social Media to Rise Again in Pakistan

Mr. Khan’s success was fueled by social media, which drove Pakistan’s young people to turn out to vote and rebuff the country’s powerful military.

Imran Khan in Islamabad in 2019.

‘It Is Suffocating’: A Top Liberal University Is Under Attack in India

A campaign to make the country an explicitly Hindu nation has had a chilling effect on left-leaning and secular institutions like Jawaharlal Nehru University.

A statue of India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, on the campus of the university that bears his name in New Delhi.

In Private Remarks to Arab Americans, Biden Aide Expresses Regrets on Gaza

In a closed-door meeting, the aide offered some of the administration’s clearest notes of contrition for its response to the Gaza war, a sign of rising Democratic pressure on President Biden.

A protest outside the Henry Hotel in Dearborn, Mich., where Biden administration officials met on Thursday with Arab American leaders.

Demolition of Muslim Properties Sets Off Deadly Violence in India

When officials arrived to raze a mosque and seminary ruled to be illegally located on public property, they encountered hundreds of protesters.

Police officers near burned vehicles after protests in Haldwani, in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand on Friday.

The Land of Ferrari and Lamborghini Has a New Speed Limit: 30 K.P.H.

Bologna has become the first major Italian city to impose the limit on most streets, citing safety and livability. But it’s too slow for some: “A city has to move,” one cabby complained.

Near the Piazza Maggiore and the tower of the Palazzo del Podestà, Bologna, Italy. Critics of the new speed limit say that traffic in the city has been slowing to a standstill since it started to be enforced.

Making Farming More Climate Friendly Is Hard. Just Ask Europe’s Politicians.

Farmer protests across the continent have triggered a rollback of ambitious rules aimed at cutting greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture.

Farmers blocked a highway in Spain to express anger at rising costs and European Union policies.

French Farmers Are Urged by Unions to End Roadblocks

The call from two main farmers’ unions came after President Emmanuel Macron’s government announced new financial aid and plans to loosen regulations to end the nationwide protests.

French farmers standing next to their tractors as they block the road during a demonstration at the French-German border.

French Farmer Was Spark Behind Widespread Protests

Jérôme Bayle had enough of the hardships of French farming, so he blocked a highway with friends. Hundreds of other farmers have followed suit.

Jérôme Bayle, a farmer, rallied friends and fellow farmers to block a highway near Carbonne, France, in response to what the group has called the hardships of growing food to feed the French nation.

Catalan Separatist Party Shuns Amnesty Bill, in Setback for Pedro Sanchez

A hard-line Catalan separatist party argued that the legislative shield against prosecution for alleged crimes linked to a failed bid for independence is weak and has to be broader.

Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of Spain during a plenary session in Spain’s lower house on a vote on the amnesty law in Madrid on Tuesday.

Farmers Block Traffic Near Paris With Tractors Before Macron’s Speech

Protesters blocking roads in and out of Paris, who say farms are squeezed by low prices and excessive regulation, seemed unmoved by promises from Prime Minister Gabriel Attal.

A protest blocking a highway near Jossigny, east of Paris, on Tuesday.

French Farmers Block Roads Around Paris in Growing Standoff

The authorities warned residents to brace for disruptions as farmers converged on the capital to press a wide range of grievances.

Karine Duc and José Pérez of the Rural Coordination farmers group at the start of a tractor procession to Paris from Agen, southwest France, on Monday.

Protesters at the Louvre Hurl Soup at the Mona Lisa

Two women from an environmental group threw pumpkin-colored soup at the artwork, which is behind bulletproof glass at the Louvre and did not appear to sustain damage.

Environmental activists hurling soup at Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa at the Louvre in Paris.

On Holocaust Memorial Day, Germans Rally Against Far Right and for Democracy

Large crowds have protested since it was revealed that members of the far-right Alternative for Germany party had met with neo-Nazis and those calling for a mass deportation.

A demonstration against the Alternative for Germany party and right-wing extremism, and for democracy, in Düsseldorf on Saturday.

A Collective ‘No’: Anti-Putin Russians Embrace an Unlikely Challenger

Long lines have popped up in Russia and beyond to get Boris B. Nadezhdin, an antiwar candidate, onto the ballot for Russia’s presidential election in March.

Boris B. Nadezhdin is trying to gather enough signatures to be on the ballot for Russia’s presidential election — if the authorities let him.
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