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Felix Baumgartner, Skydiver Who Jumped From the Edge of Space, Dies Paragliding at 56

Nicknamed “Fearless Felix,” Mr. Baumgartner jumped from the edge of space in 2012.

© Red Bull Content/Red Bull Stratos, via Reuters

Mr. Baumgartner saluting before jumping toward Earth over Roswell, N.M., in 2012.

Bolsonaro, Brazil’s Former President, Ordered to Wear Ankle Monitor Before Trial

Brazil’s Supreme Court ordered Jair Bolsonaro, the former president, to stay home most hours, defying President Trump’s demands that charges against Mr. Bolsonaro be dropped.

© Luis Nova/Associated Press

Jair Bolsonaro, former president of Brazil, outside the Senate in Brasília, Brazil’s capital, on Thursday.

Floods and Heavy Rain Kill Dozens in Pakistan

Relentless rain began on Wednesday, causing flooding in several cities and across vast rural stretches in the province of Punjab.

© Aamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A flooded village in northern Pakistan on Thursday.

UK, France and Germany Plan for a Post-U.S. Future

The leaders of France, Germany and Britain are building parallel diplomatic institutions to defend Europe as President Trump retreats from the continent.

© Pool photo by Leon Neal

From left: President Emmanuel Macron of France, Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain and Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany at a summit in Tirana, Albania, in May.

Who Are the Druse? The Religious Minority at the Center of Israel and Syria’s Tensions

Spread across Syria, Lebanon and Israel, the secretive religious minority has long balanced integration and independence. Now, members are at the heart of the region’s shifting power struggles.

© Shadi Al-Dubaisi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Clerics praying during a funeral for people killed during clashes between Druse fighters and Bedouin tribes in Sweida, Syria, on Monday.

Extra! Extra! Read All About Last Newspaper Hawker in Paris

Ali Akbar started selling papers on the streets in 1974. He is still at it, winning over Parisians and presidents with persistence, humor and his signature catchphrase: “Ça y est!”

© Dmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times

Ali Akbar, 72, has been hawking newspapers in the streets of Paris for more than a half-century.

Musk Clears Final Hurdles for Tesla and Starlink in India

In the first tangible inroads Elon Musk has sought for years in India, Starlink passed a final regulatory hurdle and Tesla opened its first India store.

© Rafiq Maqbool/Associated Press

The first Tesla showroom in India, in Mumbai, on Tuesday.

Iran’s Fordo Nuclear Site Was Badly Damaged by U.S. Strikes, New Assessment Finds

A clearer picture begins to emerge of what the Israeli and U.S. attacks on Iran’s nuclear sites achieved.

© Maxar Technologies, via Reuters

A satellite image of the Iranian nuclear facility at Fordo after the U.S. attacks last month.

5 Charged in U.C. Berkeley Professor’s Killing in Greece, Including His Ex-Wife

Przemyslaw Jeziorski, who taught quantitative marketing at the Haas School of Business, was shot several times on July 4 outside Athens, the authorities said.

© Reuters TV/Reuters

An image from video showing police officers arresting five people over the killing of a University of California, Berkeley, professor in a suburb of Athens.

Interior Dept. to Put Wind and Solar Projects Through Stricter Political Review

Industry groups said the directive could create new delays and bottlenecks for renewable energy projects across the country.

© Scott Olson/Getty Images

Wind tower components on a lot in Newton, Iowa, this month.

Blood in the Streets and Death in the Air: Residents Survey Damage in Syrian City

In the southern city of Sweida, residents describe the aftermath of a wave of sectarian violence.

© Getty Images

Buildings that were burned and looted near Sweida, Syria, on Tuesday.

Israeli Strike on a Gaza Church Kills Three

As cease-fire talks stalled, a deadly strike on a Catholic church in Gaza City prompted Pope Leo XIV to call for an immediate end to the fighting.

© Omar Al-Qattaa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Transporting a person who was injured in the strike on the Holy Family Catholic Church to Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City on Thursday.

The UK Plans to Lower the Voting Age to 16. Here’s What to Know.

The plan has been described as the largest expansion of voting rights in Britain in decades.

© Carlos Jasso/Reuters

A polling station in Brighton, England, last year. Britain has set the minimum voting age for general elections at 18 since 1969.

Prominent Human Rights Group Flees El Salvador

The group, Cristosal, has investigated prison deaths and torture under President Nayib Bukele. Its employees were threatened and surveilled, its director said.

© Jose Cabezas/Reuters

Ruth López, the anti-corruption director of Cristosal, leaving a courthouse in June, following her May arrest.

Rescuers Seek American Hiker Missing for Days in the Pyrenees

Cole Henderson, 27, was last heard from on July 9, when he told friends he was putting his phone into airplane mode ahead of a mountain hike in Spain.

© Sergi Reboredo/VW Pics, via Universal Images Group, via Getty Images

Ordesa y Monte Perdido National Park, in the Pyrenees mountains of Spain.

Prince Harry Follows Diana’s Footsteps in Angola as Specter of Land Mines Returns

Harry walked through a minefield in Angola, retracing a journey by his mother, Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997. Several countries plan to revive use of the weapons.

© Ampe Pedro/The Halo Trust, via Reuters; Tim Graham Photo Library, via Getty Images

Prince Harry, left, walking through a minefield in Cuito Cuanavale, Angola, on Wednesday, in a photo released by The Halo Trust. He repeated the journey that his mother, Diana, took in 1997.

Why Israel Attacked Syria

For weeks, Israel has engaged in back-channel talks over a diplomatic agreement with the Syrian government. Its strikes on Damascus this week highlight a lack of strategic clarity.

© Ali Haj Suleiman/Getty Images

An Israeli airstrike damaged the entrance to Syria’s defense ministry headquarters on Wednesday.

They Grew Up on Mexican Coke. Trump’s Cane Sugar Plan Makes Them Uneasy.

After President Trump announced that Coke will be made with cane sugar in the U.S., as it is in Mexico, foodies of Mexican heritage said in interviews that they weren’t excited.

© Isabelle Souriment/Hans Lucas, via Reuters

A Coca-Cola truck driving through Izamal, Mexico, last year.

Israel, Mixing Force With Diplomacy, Takes ‘Discordant’ Approach to Syria

For weeks, Israel has engaged in back-channel talks over a diplomatic agreement with the Syrian government. Its strikes on Damascus this week highlight a lack of strategic clarity.

© Ali Haj Suleiman/Getty Images

An Israeli airstrike damaged the entrance to Syria’s defense ministry headquarters on Wednesday.

Samsung Chairman Lee Jae-yong’s Decade of Legal Woes Ends

​The South Korean Supreme Court’s ruling dispels uncertainty​ over Lee Jae-yong’s leadership as the tech giant faces challenges from tariffs and chip making rivals.

© Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters

Lee Jae-yong, the chairman of Samsung Electronics, arriving for a court appearance in Seoul in February.

Syria’s President Condemns Israeli Strikes on Damascus

President Ahmed al-Shara said the airstrike on Damascus threatened to escalate sectarian violence, in his sharpest criticism of Israel since he came to power.

© Ali Haj Suleiman/Getty Images

Debris in Damascus, the Syrian capital, on Wednesday, after an Israeli strike.

Trump’s Brazil Tariff Threats Rekindle Support for President Lula

Once called the planet’s most popular politician, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil faced long odds in next year’s election. President Trump’s tariffs are changing that.

© Evaristo Sa/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil has seen a surge in popularity after confronting President Trump over tariffs.

Lauren Southern, Former Right-Wing Commentator, Says Andrew Tate Assaulted Her

Ms. Southern’s account of a 2018 encounter, made in a self-published memoir, adds to the allegations against Mr. Tate, the online influencer. “She is lying through her teeth,” Mr. Tate’s lawyer said.

© Josh Edelson/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Lauren Southern during a rally in 2017.

China’s Aircraft Carriers Push Into Waters Long Dominated by U.S.

Recent drills near Japan reflect China’s ambitions to extend its navy’s reach and exert greater influence, in the Pacific and beyond.

© May James/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Fighter jets could be seen on the flight deck of China’s first domestically built aircraft carrier, the Shandong, as it was anchored in Hong Kong this month.

Germany’s Merz and UK’s Starmer Sign Mutual Defense Pact as U.S. Steps Back

The new treaty includes a pledge by both countries to regard a threat against one as a threat against the other, in the latest sign of European nations uniting amid growing instability.

© Pool photo by Leon Neal

The Anglo-German accord, signed by Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain and Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany covers energy, economic cooperation and migration, in addition to defense.

K-Beauty Fans Stock up on Cosmetics After Trump’s Tariff Threat

American consumers of Korean cosmetics and skin-care products are bulk buying, as President Trump threatens 25 percent tariffs on imports.

© Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters

Shoppers at an Olive Young store in Seoul in April.

Trump Has Promised More Tariffs on Mexico. What Happens Next?

President Trump has threatened to increase Mexico’s tariff rate to 30 percent starting Aug. 1, claiming the country hasn’t sufficiently tackled drug cartels.

© Meridith Kohut for The New York Times

Vehicles lining up on the Tijuana side of the U.S.-Mexico border to cross into Southern California last year.

Eswatini Says It Will Repatriate Migrants Deported by the Trump Administration

The Trump administration sent five deportees to Eswatini, an African kingdom, saying that their own countries would not take them. But Eswatini says it will send them home.

© Dave Sanders for The New York Times

Mswati III, King of Eswatini, addressing the United Nations General Assembly in New York in 2023.

Why So Many Afghans Have Been Forced Out of Iran

More than 1.4 million Afghans have been forced out of Iran since January amid a governmental crackdown. Elian Peltier, an international correspondent at The New York Times, reports from the Afghanistan-Iran border. There, he met with Afghans grappling with an uncertain future, as they return to a country with widespread poverty and severe restrictions on women’s and girls’ rights.

London’s Kew Gardens Will Renovate Iconic Glasshouses

The Palm House and the Waterlily House, two hulking greenhouses built in the Victorian Era, will close in 2027 for four years of major renovations.

© Andrea DiCenzo for The New York Times

The Palm House at Kew Gardens will close for major restorations in 2027.

Carney Moves to Reduce Canada’s Chinese Steel Imports in Response to Trump’s Tariffs

Canada’s steel industry fears that Chinese steel facing steep tariffs in the United States will be sent north and overwhelm the Canadian market.

© Carlos Osorio/Reuters

Prime Minister Mark Carney announced steps on Wednesday intended to reduce steel imports from China at a steel plant in Hamilton, Ontario.

Mosaic of Lovers, Taken by Nazi Officer, Is Returned to Pompeii

The mosaic, which depicts a couple in an intimate bedroom scene, is among thousands of artifacts stolen from the ancient Roman city.

© Gregorio Borgia/Associated Press

Archaeologists believe the mosaic may have once decorated the bedroom floor of a villa or another private residence belonging to one of Pompeii’s wealthier families.

The Air India Plane Crash Took His ‘Everything’

His son and daughter-in-law brought love to his home and represented the family’s hope for a better life.

Anil Ambalal Patel kissing a photo of his son, Harshit, and his daughter-in-law, Pooja, on the morning of their funeral.

Israel Strikes Syria’s Capital, Sending Warning to Government

Israel threatened to escalate attacks on Syrian government forces unless they withdrew from Sweida, a southern province dominated by the country’s Druse minority.

© Rami Al Sayed/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Smoke rising from the Syrian Defense Ministry in the capital, Damascus, on Wednesday.

Russia Appears Unfazed by Trump’s Ukraine War Ultimatum

Russian officials and commentators have shown little indication that Moscow is about to change course under new pressure.

© Mohd Rasfan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, center, in Malaysia this month. He said Moscow wanted to understand what was behind Mr. Trump’s remarks.

Mike Huckabee Visits Netanyahu’s Trial in Israel

A highly unusual appearance from Mike Huckabee comes as President Trump has called for the long-running legal case to be canceled.

© Itai Ron/Reuters

Mike Huckabee, the U.S. ambassador to Israel, arrived on Wednesday at the court where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is on trial for corruption.

At Least 20 Killed in Stampede Outside a Gaza Aid Site

There were conflicting accounts from Palestinian and aid officials over what happened at the food distribution hub run by the Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

© Hatem Khaled/Reuters

Casualties were brought into Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza on Wednesday after a stampede at a food distribution site.

U.K., France and Germany Threaten to Reimpose Tough U.N. Nuclear Sanctions on Iran

“Snapback” sanctions will be triggered by the end of August if Tehran fails to make concrete progress to limit its nuclear program.

© Maxar Technologies, via Reuters

A satellite image released by Maxar Technologies last month showed damage at an Iranian nuclear complex after U.S. strikes.

Trump Administration Initiates Trade Investigation of Brazil

The United States has begun investigating Brazil’s trade practices and “anti-corruption interference,” after the president’s criticisms of Brazil’s treatment of Jair Bolsonaro, a Trump ally.

© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Jamieson Greer, the U.S. trade representative, said he was beginning the investigation “into Brazil’s attacks on American social media companies as well as other unfair trading practices that harm American companies, workers, farmers and technology innovators.”

Trump Announces ‘Great Deal’ on Trade With Indonesia

President Trump said the agreement would partly walk back some of the steep tariffs he threatened on the country last week. Indonesia’s president called Mr. Trump a “tough negotiator.”

© Doug Mills/The New York Times

President Trump called a trade agreement with Indonesia a “great deal for everybody.”

The West’s Megadrought Might Not Let Up for Decades, Study Suggests

Clues from another dry spell 6,000 years ago are helping scientists understand what’s driving the latest one, and why it’s been so unrelenting.

© Rebecca Noble/Getty Images

Lake Powell in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Arizona, where July water levels are only at a third of capacity.
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