Ouster of South Korean President Could Return Liberals to Power
The opposition leader, who could become the next president, wants dialogue with North Korea and is skeptical about the new American antimissile shield.
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The opposition leader, who could become the next president, wants dialogue with North Korea and is skeptical about the new American antimissile shield.
By CHOE SANG-HUN
The events of 1917 reshaped the country and the world, but the idea of celebrating an uprising of any sort is unwelcome in the Kremlin.
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR
Though in its early stages, Donald J. Trump’s presidency has already called into question what kind of role the United States aims to play in the world.
By ALISSA J. RUBIN
Thousands fled from their homes, offices and schools six years ago after a meltdown at a nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan. Few have returned.
By MOTOKO RICH
A single road near the border in upstate New York helped a reporter gain insights into the surge of migrants into Canada.
By IAN AUSTEN
The American homeland security secretary, John F. Kelly, discussed the issue with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet.
By IAN AUSTEN
The pope said he was not advocating an end to celibacy, and sees little possibility for allowing women to be priests. But his openness about ordaining married men was unusually explicit.
By JASON HOROWITZ
Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
By KAREN ZRAICK and LISA IABONI
Ambassador Vitaly I. Churkin died suddenly after collapsing in the Russian mission on the East Side of Manhattan, and police said they did not suspect foul play.
By SOMINI SENGUPTA
The search for the Malaysia Airlines jetliner helped create 3-D maps of the ocean’s topological complexity, at a level of detail never before achieved.
By NICHOLAS ST. FLEUR
A day after the killing, thousands of Nepalis gathered and chanted anti-Indian slogans, demanding that construction of a culvert continue and that the land be returned to Nepal’s control.
By BHADRA SHARMA
Supporters and opponents of President Park Geun-hye of South Korea took to the streets on Friday after the court issued a ruling to remove her from office, capping months of turmoil.
By REUTERS
Three people died and dozens of demonstrators and police officers were injured as rival crowds took to the streets of Seoul.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Just days after President Trump signed his first travel ban, Sardar Hussain “did something about which I still shake my head and chuckle: He decided to get on the airplane anyway.”
By JOE COCHRANE
The resignation was the latest in a series of events that have raised questions about how sexual assault cases are handled in Canada.
By IAN AUSTEN
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
By SEAN ALFANO
Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
By KAREN ZRAICK and LISA IABONI
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
By SEAN ALFANO
Vancouver, Canada, is taking a controversial approach to drug treatment: prescription heroin. Go inside a clinic where drug users inject diacetylmorphine under the supervision of a medical professional.
Still, there is little consensus about what sort of government voters in the Netherlands want, with the electorate described as “fragmented.”
By ALISSA J. RUBIN and CHRISTOPHER F. SCHUETZE
The threat posed by Russia to Europe could give the president and the German chancellor a bit of common ground during their Oval Office meeting.
By MARK LANDLER
Turkish security forces also caused 500,000 people to be displaced in a campaign of torture, rape and destruction, a new report says.
By NICK CUMMING-BRUCE
Even as it moved to end legal action in the United States over its efforts to illegally evade emissions standards, the German carmaker faces mounting legal woes in Europe.
By JACK EWING and NEAL E. BOUDETTE
Two children interrupted a political-science professor live on the air while he was trying to explain the South Korea impeachment scandal.
By CHRISTINE HAUSER and DANIEL VICTOR
The Louvre is building a new storehouse for its own collection, and has also offered the space as a safe-haven place for art and antiquities in war zones.
By CLAUDIA BARBIERI
The statue is just the type of artifact archaeologists hoped to recover before further building in a teeming neighborhood makes such treasures impossible to find.
By DECLAN WALSH
Bilal Abdul Kareem is a Muslim convert and former comedian from New York. In the last few years, he’s made hundreds of news reports from Syria.
By YARA BISHARA
Bilal Abdul Kareem, an African-American from Mount Vernon, N.Y., has interviewed jihadists and covered the siege of Aleppo from inside the city.
By BEN HUBBARD
Attorney General Jeff Sessions said he would advise President Trump to send new detainees to the wartime prison rather than bring them to civilian courts for prosecution.
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
Our reporter and photographer took an aerial look at lands devastated by the country’s war with militants.
By DIONNE SEARCEY and ASHLEY GILBERTSON
Mr. Buhari, 74, had been gone for seven weeks after a trip to London was extended for medical treatment, leaving doubts about the country’s stability.
By SEWELL CHAN
In a letter to the United Nations secretary general, the country cited a recent court ruling that declared an exit would be “unconstitutional and invalid.”
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
Ms. Stewart, who was convicted of aiding terrorism in her representation of Omar Abdel Rahman, was also known for defending a member of the Weather Underground and other violent activists.
By JOSEPH P. FRIED
Secretary General António Guterres has warned that millions of people in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen are at risk from deadly hunger.
By HUSSEIN MOHAMED and SEWELL CHAN
Images of a hot-pink lake in Melbourne have taken over the internet this week. The coloration is the result of a salt-loving microbe’s attempt to make its own sunscreen.
By JOANNA KLEIN
In this week’s Oz newsletter, the search for audience loyalty, in journalism and right-wing populism.
By DAMIEN CAVE
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
By CHARLES McDERMID
The police in Australia said the 42-year-old man had pretended to be the pop star as a way to lure explicit images from children online.
By DAN BILEFSKY
The accusation that a Muslim family helped the Islamic State echoed Australians’ worst fears over immigration and homegrown links to terrorism.
By JACQUELINE WILLIAMS
The right-wing populist Geert Wilders is set to overturn the Netherlands’ liberal reputation.
By IAN BURUMA
The diesel emissions fraud case exposed in America in 2015 is finally being acted on by European officials.
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
A cult of martyrdom reminiscent of post-revolution Iran is being manufactured in Turkey.
By BUSRA ERKARA
Many think he’ll come around to the value of working with Europe. But they don’t know his supporters.
By ANNA SAUERBREY
Requests for a new troop surge in Afghanistan must be met with skepticism.
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD