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Live Updates: Israel Pummels Lebanon as Ministers Prepare to Discuss Truce With Hezbollah

Mexican President Mulls Retaliatory Tariffs After Trump’s Threats

President Claudia Sheinbaum of Mexico addressing supporters in October. On Tuesday, she pushed back against U.S. President-elect Trump’s threat of a tariff on Mexican exports.

Israeli Strikes Threaten Lebanon’s Archaeological Treasures

The ruins of a building close to the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Baalbek. The hotel and shops were destroyed in an Israeli airstrike earlier this month.

As Russia Advances in Ukraine, a Cop Has to Flee City After City

Russia Fires Record Number of Drones in Overnight Assault, Ukraine Says

After a Russian drone strike in Zaporizhzhia, southeastern Ukraine, on Monday.

Colombia and Venezuela Have a Beef: Who Owns the, or Makes the Best, Arepa?

Gustavo Zapata, a chef at the Sancho Paisa restaurant chain in Medellín, Colombia, prepares several types of arepas at the restaurant in September.

7 Still Missing After Tourist Boat Sinks in Egypt

Waiting for possible survivors of the accident in the Red Sea harbor town of Marsa Alam, Egypt, on Monday.

Pakistan Deploys Army as Deadly Clashes Erupt with Imran Khan Supporters

The police used tear gas against supporters of former Prime Minister Imran Khan in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Tuesday.

Fentanyl Rises Again, This Time as Trump’s Diplomatic Weapon Against China

China is the main source of chemicals used to make fentanyl.

A Misstep by Ireland’s Prime Minister Simon Harris Muddies Election

Simon Harris, Ireland’s prime minister and the leader of Fine Gael, met with women at a sewing club in Skerries, Ireland, on Thursday. He has apologized after a brusque exchange with a voter was caught on camera a day later and went viral on social media.

Hong Kong’s Top Court Upholds Rights of Same-Sex Married Couples

The plaintiff Nick Infinger outside the Court of Final Appeal in Hong Kong on Tuesday, after the court upheld earlier rulings granting public housing benefits and inheritance rights to same-sex married couples.

DHL Cargo Plane Crashes Near Airport in Lithuania, Killing 1

Rescuers at the site where a DHL cargo plane crashed near Vilnius Airport in Lithuania on Monday.

Surge of Gang Violence in Haiti Leads U.N. Workers to Flee

A clinic in Port-au-Prince run by Doctors Without Borders was closed after the organization announced that it was suspending operations in the capital.

UAE Arrests 3 in Connection With Murder of Israeli Rabbi

A kosher supermarket in Dubai managed by Rabbi Zvi Kogan, who was kidnapped and murdered. Three Uzbeks have been charged with his death.

Breyten Breytenbach, Dissident South African-Born Writer, Dies at 85

Breyten Breytenbach, who was also a painter, at his Paris studio in 1989. He lived in exile in Paris after his wife, who was from Vietnam, was barred from South Africa because of the country’s race laws.

Fury Unfolds in Pakistan

A supporter of Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party gesturing after tear gas was fired by the police in Islamabad on Tuesday.

FIFA President’s Bet on Club World Cup Meets Reality

Questions about funding still surround the Club World Cup, which is the signature innovation of Gianni Infantino’s tenure as FIFA president.

Helena Norberg-Hodge Wants a Local Focus to Have a Global Effect

Taxing Farm Animals’ Farts and Burps? Denmark Gives It a Try.

Rocket Engine Fire Stalls Japan’s Ambitions to Launch Satellites

A fire broke out at the launch site of the Japanese rocket Epsilon S at Tanegashima Space Center, Japan, on Tuesday.

Emergency Crews Walk 14 Hours to Save Sole Survivor of Costa Rica Plane Crash

Emergency workers near the crash site in Costa Rica on Monday night.

Tuesday Briefing

Smoke billowing over Beirut on Monday, after Israeli airstrikes hit the Lebanese capital. Israel and Hezbollah could agree a cease-fire this week.

Trump Plans Tariffs on Canada, China and Mexico That Could Cripple Trade

An aerial view of Port of Savannah, in Georgia, last month. Canada, China and Mexico account for more than a third of the goods and services both imported and exported by the United States.

Tuesday Briefing: Trump’s Criminal Cases Likely to Be Dismissed

Jack Smith, the U.S. prosecutor who investigated and charged Donald Trump.

Protesters Defy Pakistan Crackdown to Demand Imran Khan’s Release

Supporters of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan marched toward the Pakistani capital of Islamabad on Monday, after moving aside shipping containers placed by authorities to block them.

An A.I. Granny Is Phone Scammers’ Worst Nightmare

An O2 store in Lisburn, Northern Ireland. The company is taking a different approach to disrupting the operations of scammers who prey on its customers.

U.K. Man Fighting for Ukraine Is Said to Be Captured in Russia

A Ukrainian military vehicle passing into Russia in August, when the surprise assault in the Kursk region began.

Storm Bert Batters UK With Rain and Fierce Winds, Killing at Least 3

A mud-covered street after flooding from Storm Bert in Cwmtillery, Wales, on Monday.

Netanyahu Signals Openness to Israel-Hezbollah Cease-Fire, Officials Say

Smoke billowing after Israeli airstrikes in the Dahiya area south of Beirut on Monday.

Crowds Watch Israeli Airstrikes from a Beirut Hillside

Watching an airstrike on the cluster of Lebanese neighborhoods known as Dahiya. Crowds of civilians and news reporters gather on a hillside with phones and cameras to observe from a distance.

Philippines President Slams Vice President’s Assassination Plot

President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. of the Philippines with Vice President Sara Duterte in 2022, after their election victory. The alliance of their powerful political dynasties was supposed to be formidable, but it hasn’t lasted long.

Hard-Right Candidate Wins First Round of Romania’s Presidential Election

Calin Georgescu, a dark-horse candidate without a party, has denounced Ukraine, NATO and the European Union.

Monday Briefing

The entrance to the U.N. climate summit known as COP29, in Baku, Azerbaijan. The talks went deep into overtime.

Uruguay’s Center Left Reclaims Power in Presidential Election

Álvaro Delgado, the candidate of the incumbent National Party, conceded defeat in Uruguay’s presidential election on Sunday.

Israel Conducts Widespread Strikes Near Beirut

Smoke billowing over Beirut’s southern suburbs after an Israeli strike on Sunday.

Monday Briefing: U.N. Climate Talks End With a Deal

A demonstration at the summit in Baku on Saturday.

World Seeks an End to Plastic Pollution at Talks in South Korea

Volunteers collecting plastic waste in Manila last year. Nations around the world produce nearly half a billion tons of plastic each year, more than double the amount from two decades ago.

Hezbollah Fires Waves of Projectiles Into Israel After Deadly Strike in Lebanon

Residents in Petah Tikva near Tel Aviv check the damage after rockets were fired from Lebanon on Sunday.

Egypt Feuds With Travel Blogger, Issuing 1,100-Word Response to Complaints

Cairo International Airport in 2022. Egypt’s Civil Aviation Ministry said it had “nearly” four stars from an independent evaluator.

The Amsterdam Attacks and the Long Shadow of ‘Pogroms’

Demonstrators holding a Palestinian flag in Amsterdam on Nov. 7.

The Lyrics to “+57” Causes Backlash in Colombia, a Reggaeton Hot Spot

Medellín, Colombia’s second-largest city, has emerged as an epicenter of reggaeton, a genre with dance hall and hip-hop elements that was born in Panama and popularized by Puerto Rican artists.

Spain Flooding: Why Did It Take So Long to Warn Residents?

Emergency workers searching for bodies on the outskirts of Valencia, in eastern Spain, this month after the deadly floods.

Palestinians See Echoes of Israel’s Gaza War in West Bank Raids

A damaged road at the entrance to the Nur Shams camp in the West Bank.

Rabbi Found Dead in Dubai in What Israel Calls Terrorist Act

Rabbi Zvi Kogan worked in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, as part of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement.

What Two Acclaimed Female-Directed Movies Say About Indian Cinema

Payal Kapadia, right, director of “All We Imagine as Light,” at the Cannes Film Festival in May, where her movie won the Grand Prix.

Brazil Cracked Down on Corruption. Now It’s Undoing the Case.

A gas station and carwash in Brasília, Brazil’s capital, where a money-laundering operation prompted a vast corruption investigation that stretched throughout Latin America.

The Problem of Sorcery in Papua New Guinea

Korai, who was accused of killing a baby girl with black magic, at a shelter in Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea.

COP29 Climate Talks Get a Deal on Money, but Only After a Fight

A demonstration at the summit on Saturday. Experts have estimated the additional financing needs of developing countries at $1.3 trillion per year.

2-Year-Old Gorilla Dies After Being Struck by Hydraulic Door at Zoo

The entrance to the Calgary Zoo in Calgary, Canada, in 2023. A 2-year-old gorilla died after being struck by a hydraulic door at the zoo on Nov. 12.

Madeleine Riffaud, ‘the Girl Who Saved Paris,’ Dies at 100

What’s Behind Ukraine and Russia’s Missile Brinkmanship?

Ukrainian soldiers at a frontline position near Toretsk, Ukraine, last month.

In South Africa, Food Poisoning Kills at Least 23 Children

Six children died in Johannesburg’s Soweto township from food poisoning last month.

Sectarian Violence Kills at Least 25 in Northwest Pakistan

A mass burial on Friday for people killed a day earlier in an ambush in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province, Pakistan.

Your Heart’s Desire

Alberta Breaks With the Canadian Pension Model

Stephen Harper, the former prime minister, is volunteering as the chairman of Alberta’s pension fund.

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