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President Trump expressing growing frustration with Russia’s Vladimir Putin

For several days now, President Trump has expressed growing frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the slow progress towards ending the war in Ukraine.

World financial markets welcome court ruling against Trump’s tariffs

Financial markets welcomed a U.S. court ruling that blocks President Trump from imposing sweeping tariffs on imports under an emergency-powers law.

Morning news brief

Federal trade court blocks many of Trump’s tariffs, Trump expressing frustration with Putin and Russia’s continued war on Ukraine, Conservative Political Action Conference begins in Hungary.

Rubio says U.S. will ‘aggressively’ revoke visas for many Chinese students

The announcement to revoke visas most drastic move yet to curtail the numbers of international students studying in the U.S.

Tate brothers face rape and trafficking charges in U.K.

British prosecutors have approved 21 charges against self styled misogynist influencers, brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate, including rape, assault, and human trafficking.

Children of ISIS fighter find new life in Minnesota

When ISIS was at its height, its ranks included several hundred Americans. They were often young men radicalized online by savvy marketing that promised free housing and the chance to meet a wife.

When the Islamic State collapsed, some of them ended up in huge detention camps in Syria, and the U.S. has been trying to bring them home.

NPR’s Sacha Pfeiffer reports on one American family coping with the aftermath of the child they lost, and the children they found.

What happened to the families of the Americans who joined ISIS? Not just the families they left behind in the U.S., but the ones they formed overseas?

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Healthcare System Collapses in Sudan’s Capital

The civil war in Sudan has been ongoing for more than two years causing some fifteen million people to be displaced and the collapse of the country’s healthcare system in many places. In the capital Khartoum, there were once nearly 100 public and priva…

Peruvian farmer loses landmark climate case against German energy giant

A Peruvian farmer has lost a decade-long legal climate case against Germany energy giant RWE. Saúl Luciano Lliuya claimed the company’s emissions had contributed to glacial melt threatening his Andean hometown.

Greetings from the Galápagos Islands, where the blue-footed booby shows its colors

Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly series in which NPR’s international correspondents share snapshots of moments from their lives and work around the world.

Netanyahu says Hamas leader Mohammed Sinwar has been killed by Israeli forces

Speaking on Wednesday in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, Netanyahu said that Sinwar was killed in an Israeli airstrike, but did not provide specifics.

In ‘The Party’s Interests Come First,’ Joseph Torigian tries to understand Xi Jinping through his father

In his forthcoming bookThe Party’s Interests Come First, American University professor Joseph Torigian writes about Xi Jinping’s father, Xi Zhongxun, a noted Chinese politician himself.

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