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World News

Highlights

  1. What to Know About the Bulgarian Election

    The Black Sea country is holding its eighth election in five years, with Bulgarians yearning for the kind of prosperous life enjoyed by other Europeans.

    By

    Former President Rumen Radev of Bulgaria speaking on Thursday during the last pre-election event of his coalition, Progressive Bulgaria. Most polls show the coalition leading, but not necessarily with enough support for a majority.
    Former President Rumen Radev of Bulgaria speaking on Thursday during the last pre-election event of his coalition, Progressive Bulgaria. Most polls show the coalition leading, but not necessarily with enough support for a majority.
    CreditNikolay Doychinov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  1. Why Iran’s ‘Mosquito Fleet’ Remains a Potent Threat in the Strait of Hormuz

    Although much of the regular Iranian navy is destroyed, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps can still deploy small, speedy boats to disrupt shipping.

    By

    An Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps speedboat and navy ship in the Persian Gulf in 2024.
    CreditMorteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto, via Getty Images
  2. Pope Says News Outlets Misread Some of His Remarks as Criticism of Trump

    Pope Leo responded directly on Monday to a presidential attack. But since then, he said, some of his statements during his Africa trip have been misconstrued.

    By

    El papa León XIV en Yaundé, capital de Camerún, el sábado.
    CreditPatrick Meinhardt/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  3. Maduro Is Gone, and the Purge Has Begun

    The successor to Venezuela’s captured President Nicolás Maduro is purging the people who kept him in power.

    By Anatoly Kurmanaev and

    Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s former vice president, in January in Caracas, the capital.
    CreditThe New York Times
  4. How a Fight With Trump Threw Spain’s Leader a Political Lifeline

    To leftists abroad, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of Spain is a hero for standing up to President Trump. At home, Mr. Trump is seen as Mr. Sánchez’s political savior from thorny domestic challenges.

    By

    Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of Spain addressing Parliament in March.
    CreditThomas Coex/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  5. Carney’s Liberal Majority Reshapes Fortunes to the Left and the Right

    Mark Carney’s brand of centrist politics and his invitation to floor crossers with conservative convictions into the Liberal Party’s ranks have reshaped the country’s political economy.

    By

    Prime Minister Mark Carney with new members of the Liberal caucus, from left: Tatiana Auguste (Terrebonne), Danielle Martin (University-Rosedale) and Doly Begum (Scarborough Southwest) on Wednesday in Ottawa.
    CreditAdrian Wyld/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press
  1. In Angola, Pope Faces the Legacy of Colonialism

    His visit includes a trip to a shrine where enslaved Africans were baptized before being forced into the treacherous voyage across the Atlantic Ocean.

    By Cláudio C. Silva and

    Pope Leo XIV in Luanda, Angola, on Saturday. Angola’s is the oldest Catholic community in southern Africa, dating back more than 500 years.
    CreditThemba Hadebe/Associated Press
  2. Trump Wants to Stop Drugs Coming From South America. Is That Possible?

    Authorities are using drones, troops and A.I. to crack down on cocaine smuggling. But gangs are finding new ways to move record amounts of drugs across the world.

    By Ana IonovaMax Bearak and

    Credit
  3. A Mild-Mannered Pope Finds His Voice

    Leo XIV has had a reputation for being cautious. But since President Trump attacked him at the start of his Africa trip, he has been more combative.

    By

    Pope Leo XIV in Cameroon on Friday. His strident speeches in Africa this week have marked a shift in his rhetoric.
    CreditAndrew Medichini/Associated Press
    News Analysis
  4. The 27-Year-Old Diplomat Waging Trump’s Cultural War With Europe

    Five years out of college, Samuel Samson has driven the Trump administration’s push to upend America’s postwar relationship with Europe.

    By Michael D. ShearCatherine PorterJane Bradley and

    Samuel Samson, left, at a meeting in December with a senior Hungarian official. Posted on Facebook by the U.S. Embassy in Hungary, the image illustrated Mr. Samson’s influence on American policy in Europe.
    CreditU.S. Embassy Budapest
  5. ‘I Just Want to Be Back’: Thousands Rush South in Lebanon Under Cease-Fire

    Lebanese people who had been displaced by fighting expressed a mix of excitement and uncertainty about a pause in Israel’s campaign against Hezbollah.

    By Christina GoldbaumHwaida Saad and

    CreditDavid Guttenfelder/The New York Times

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The Global Profile

More in The Global Profile ›
  1. ‘I Would Rather Be a Dwarf’: A Comic in Botswana Prizes His Difference

    Johnson Masase has found local fame, and self acceptance, through performances that play on people’s ignorance about his genetic condition and his 3-foot-4 inch frame.

    By John EligonYvonne Mooka and

    CreditJoao Silva/The New York Times
  2. Dodging Bombs and Drones, This Postman Still Delivers

    Oleksiy Klochkovsky has driven mail and parcels around the front line in Ukraine for four years. He keeps one ear tuned for danger from above.

    By Cassandra Vinograd and

    Oleksiy Klochkovsky, a driver for Nova Poshta, a private postal service in Ukraine, in the back of his truck in the Kharkiv region in January.
    CreditBrendan Hoffman for The New York Times
  3. Jailed for Love Songs? Yes, and Still Singing.

    Nguyen Van Loc was persecuted for performing Hanoi’s old romantic music during (and after) the Vietnam War. He can’t stop. He won’t stop.

    By Damien Cave and

    CreditLinh Pham for The New York Times
  4. He Changed How Blackness Was Viewed in South Africa. Now He Gets Personal.

    Mfundi Vundla spent 21 years in exile and created the popular television show “Generations.” His latest project is a play that explores the imperfections of the fight against apartheid.

    By

    Mfundi Vundla, South African activist and writer, at the Johannesburg Theater after a performance of his new play, “Man With No Surname,” in March.
    CreditJoao Silva/The New York Times
  5. In a Muzzled Russia, He Still Speaks His Mind

    While hundreds of other journalists fled into exile after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Dmitri A. Muratov stayed. But he did not stay quiet.

    By

    Dmitri A. Muratov at his office at Novaya Gazeta in Moscow in December.
    CreditNanna Heitmann for The New York Times

Dispatches

More in Dispatches ›
  1. How War in the Middle East Paralyzed an Asian Food Giant

    Vietnam, the world’s No. 2 rice exporter, cut production as power prices surged. Even with a temporary cease-fire in Iran, worries linger over the world’s food supply.

    By Damien Cave and

    A boat transporting newly harvested rice in My Thanh Ward, Dong Thap Province, Vietnam, in late March.
    Credit
  2. ‘City of Parasites’ or ‘Glamorous Metropolis’? China’s Cosmopolitan Contradiction.

    Shanghai’s many layers of architecture, culture and politics have made it a difficult fit for the Communist Party’s preferred narrative of Chinese victimhood and Western sins.

    By Andrew Higgins and

    The Shanghai History Museum, housed in the former Shanghai Race Club.
    Credit
  3. ‘Nowhere Else to Go’: The Squatters in the Richest Part of Seoul

    The city wants to redevelop a shantytown in Gangnam district, where hundreds are defying eviction, fighting for a right to own a home in an area notorious for the exorbitant cost of housing.

    By Choe Sang-Hun and

    CreditChang W. Lee/The New York Times
  4. Halfway Through Lent, a Small Quebec Island Celebrates With Masks and Jigs

    Few islanders still observe Lent, but they cling to a tradition once seen as defying the all-powerful Roman Catholic Church.

    By Norimitsu Onishi and

    Credit
  5. In Sleepy Town on Strait of Hormuz, War Rages Just Over Horizon

    For centuries, an Omani exclave has been defined by a peculiar duality: rugged isolation and proximity to one of the world’s most important trade routes.

    By

    CreditIsmaeel Naar/The New York Times

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Read The Times in Spanish

More in Read The Times in Spanish ›
  1. Su devoción por las canciones de amor lo llevó a la cárcel, pero no lo silenció

    La prisión no pudo conseguir que Nguyen Van Loc, perseguido por interpretar la vieja música romántica de Hanói durante la guerra de Vietnam, dejara de cantar.

    By Damien Cave and

    CreditLinh Pham for The New York Times
  2. La guerra en Medio Oriente frenará el crecimiento económico mundial, advierte el FMI

    El Fondo Monetario Internacional también planteó la posibilidad de una recesión mundial y otro brote de inflación.

    By

    Las nuevas proyecciones del Fondo Monetario Internacional muestran una economía mundial frenada en seco por la guerra de EE. UU. en Irán.
    CreditMartin Bernetti/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  3. Trump quiere bloquear Irán para abrir el estrecho de Ormuz. Los expertos tienen sus dudas

    El anuncio del presidente Trump de un bloqueo estadounidense a Irán es su esfuerzo más reciente por presionarlo para negociar, después de que en las conversaciones del fin de semana no se llegara a un acuerdo.

    By

    Una nueva valla publicitaria en Teherán el lunes con un texto que se traduce como “Para siempre en manos de Irán” y “Trump no podrá hacer nada. Irán tendrá el control del estrecho de Ormuz para siempre”.
    CreditArash Khamooshi para The New York Times
  4. La industria eléctrica de China podría salir beneficiada de la guerra en Medio Oriente

    Un grupo de empresas chinas está a punto de ganar a lo grande con la crisis energética desencadenada por la guerra en Irán, gracias al auge de la inversión en inteligencia artificial.

    By Meaghan Tobin and

    Un centro de transmisión de electricidad en la estación terminal, en el centro-sur de China, de la línea eléctrica de ultralta tensión más larga y potente del mundo. Las empresas chinas dominan la fabricación de casi todas las piezas de una red moderna.
    CreditGilles Sabrié para The New York Times
  5. La visita de los reyes de los Países Bajos a la Casa Blanca crea polémica

    El rey y la reina de los Países Bajos se alojarán en la Casa Blanca el lunes por la noche. En un momento de tensión transatlántica, los neerlandeses no están seguros de cómo se sienten al respecto.

    By Koba Ryckewaert and

    El rey Guillermo Alejandro y la reina Máxima de los Países Bajos viajan esta semana a Washington para reunirse con el presidente Trump.
    CreditNicolas Tucat/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  1. Here’s the latest.

    This was featured in live coverage.

    By Lynsey Chutel, Euan Ward, Leily Nikounazar and Somini Sengupta

  2. TimesVideo

    Iran Says the Strait of Hormuz Is Closed Again

    Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they were closing the Strait of Hormuz until the U.S. blockade was lifted. Two Indian-flagged ships reported being hit as they tried to cross the passage.

    By McKinnon de Kuyper

  3. More Displaced Lebanese Head Home as Cease-Fire Is Tested

    The truce appeared to mostly hold even as Israel said it had carried out strikes on what it called “terrorists” approaching its forces in southern Lebanon. Separately, a U.N. peacekeeper was killed.

    By Euan Ward, Sarah Chaayto and Christina Goldbaum

  4. Trading Spaces

    With spring comes the urge to spring-clean. It’s about so much more than just organizing your closet.

    By Melissa Kirsch

  5. TimesVideo

    Who Is the New Leader of Hungary?

    Our reporter Andrew Higgins describes why Hungary’s voters chose Peter Magyar over Viktor Orban in a landslide, ending Orban’s 16 years in power.

    By Andrew Higgins, Christina Thornell and Leila Medina

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