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The World: Latest Stories

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Updated 2024-11-25 17:00
My sins are cleared for the year, but the chicken wasn't so lucky
This is a personal tale of atonement and chickens: Sarah Birnbaum and her mom went to Brooklyn to take part in a Jewish ritual called Kaparot.
The Russian hackers going after Clinton also tried to destroy a French TV network
News has emerged that a sophisticated cyber-attack that aimed to destroy a TV network in France was the work of the same Russian hacking group that has targeted the Hillary Clinton campaign.
China's atheist leaders issue some striking new rules on religion
The Chinese Communist Party is officially atheistic. But it now recognizes the role that religion can play in building social harmony. Will this be good or bad for the faithful?
How ISIS adapts and innovates on the battlefield
ISIS appears to have weaponized drones. It's the latest example of the terror group's ability to adapt and innovate on the battlefield.
Explaining Muslim diversity through music
Composer Mehmet Ali Sanlikol is a Turkish-born Muslim American. He says his latest album is "Sufi-influenced contemporary jazz."
When half a million drug users surrendered in the Philippines, authorities sent some of them to Zumba
When President Rodrigo Duterte took office in June, he promised mercy for drug addicts who turned themselves in. But there are very few drug rehab programs in the Philippines, and now some of the users who surrendered are being killed by masked gunmen.
Five ways to talk with anyone about depression
Depression shouldn't be stigmatized — it should be spoken about openly and with respect.
Terry Anderson's daughter comes face-to-face with her father's kidnapper
Her mother was pregnant when assailants bundled her father into the back of a car in Beirut in 1985. Six years later he was released, but the family's life would never be the same.
Trump vows to take on Chinese steel, but he also buys it
Donald Trump brought up China dumping steel in the US, to which Hillary Clinton responded, “And Donald Trump is buying it to build his buildings.”
Cholera spreads in Haiti in the wake of Hurricane Matthew
More than one million people in Haiti need urgent help after Hurricane Matthew smashed homes, crops and infrastructure last week. Now the deadly water-borne disease of cholera is spreading.
A French eatery in London adapts to Brexit by buying local
The UK government won't start the process of leaving the EU until early 2017, but businesses are already feeling the effects.
Samsung halts production of exploding phone due to explosions
Samsung tried to fix the problem. But it didn't work.
Middle-aged Colombians want to experience peace for the first time
There's still hope. Many middle-aged Colombians, who have never experienced their country at peace, remain hopeful that the government can come to another peace deal with the guerrilla group, FARC.
WATCH: Inside the awkward US-Saudi alliance against ISIS
This is part of why Obama’s plan to “degrade and ultimately destroy” ISIS is taking so long.
The war over wine, water and fuel in New York’s Finger Lakes
A plan to store natural gas and propane in caverns beneath Lake Seneca, in the heart of New York’s Finger Lakes wine region, has some local residents and wineries concerned.
Denver recognizes its Native American past, present, and future
Native American activists say they have a lot history to correct, teach and re-learn. They hope Indigenous Peoples Day will start a public conversation.
Post debate, Trump and Clinton are both pretty unpopular in Turkey
"I’m not really sure sure that either candidate is really going to comfort the Turks," says one reporter based in Istanbul.
Environmentalists to millennials: Donald Trump's climate policies are dangerous
One new group is trying to motivate young people to go to the polls to protect the planet and fight climate change by voting against Donald Trump.
Trump made history in threatening to jail Clinton if he becomes president
Trump made history Sunday night at the second presidential debate when he threatened to jail his opponent if he were to win. Is that legal?
Why a tour for refugees is a 'no-brainer' for Steve Earle and Emmylou Harris
Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle and others are taking part in an 11-date tour that they hope will raise money and awareness about global refugee crises.
President Obama just created the Atlantic's first national marine monument. What is it?
Think of it like an (underwater) national park, off the coast of Massachusetts
Can a lawsuit against the EPA help solve ocean acidification?
The lawsuit says that the Environmental Protection Agency hasn’t set appropriate standards to protect US coastal waters.
One of the largest ‘test tubes’ in science is an 8,000-acre forest in New Hampshire
The Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest is best known for breakthroughs in acid rain research. And it is still helping scientists learn — now about the effects of clear-cutting and climate change.
Is 'last-chance tourism' good or bad for endangered places?
Planning a visit to see retreating glaciers, the Great Barrier Reef or Machu Picchu? Tread lightly, one travel reporter says.
Scientists try to save this frog species from being wiped out by fungus
In recent years, chytrid fungus has devastated hundreds of amphibian species around the world, like the mountain yellow-legged frog. Can inoculating them against the fungus help?
It’s OK if you only hit 8,500 steps today — and sit while you work. Fitness myths, debunked.
What makes 10,000 daily steps the magic number? Why does everyone at the office suddenly have a standing desk? Both have less to do with scientific evidence than you may think.
A reminder from Arizona Latinos: ‘Immigration is not the only issue that moves us.’
November’s election is set to be a wake-up call for both major parties. Arizona, long a red state, just might swing for Clinton. And the Latino vote will matter.
5 challenges facing the next president — whoever it is
Some of the problems that will have to be solved by the next president will require innovation and ingenuity.
The US just condemned Israeli settlement building. What Israel’s former foreign minister thinks.
Last month, America Abroad spoke with former Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, to discuss the relationship with the US and the stagnated peace process. The settlement issue came up quickly.
Meet a 'Dreamer' who started his own company to get out the vote
As an undocumented teenager, Antonio Valdovinos couldn’t become a Marine. He went on to start a civic engagement organization instead.
A digital comic book tells the real-life tale of a heroic mom in besieged Syria
Marvel Comics has illustrated the almost super-human skills needed to be a parent in the Syrian town of Madaya.
Britain's undergoing an identity crisis
As the dust settles, post-Brexit vote, conflicting views remain of what it means to be British, and on what enhances and what threatens that identity. Host Mary Kay Magistad visited London, and chats with people on different sides of the issue, with takes on identity, immigration and borders that defy stereotypes.
At least 100 are dead in Haiti after Hurricane Matthew passes by
Hurricane Matthew hasn't even hit Florida yet and the death toll is already climbing. More than 100 people died in Haiti, with nearly two dozen more on other Caribbean islands.
Korean baseball can teach the MLB a thing or two about bat flipping
Major League Baseball looks down on bat flips. But in South Korea, bat flips are common, beautiful and righteous acts of baseball awesomeness.
Drug users are presumed criminals in Ukraine. New police training is aimed at changing that.
Ukraine has one of the fastest-growing HIV/AIDS epidemics in the world. One of the main reasons: intravenous drug use. But just outside the capital Kiev, a group is working with police to change their approach toward drug users — to treat addiction as an illness, not a crime.
Go Cubs! (Sort of. My heart really belongs to the White Sox.)
The Chicago White Sox didn't make the playoffs, but the loveable Cubbies did! And that leaves this diehard White Sox fan feeling conflicted.
Farmers continue to wait (and wait) for relief on immigration reform
This election, immigration reform has often been reduced to sound bytes. For example, Donald Trump’s repeated call to “build the wall.” That simplified argument is disappointing for American farmers who rely heavily on immigrant labor.
Siberia's coffee king is setting up shop back home in California
The first time Chris Tara-Browne ordered a cappuccino in Siberia, it tasted terrible. So he started a nationwide chain of American-style cafes.
These Iraqi immigrants revere John the Baptist, but they're not Christians
Not all recent immigrants from the Middle East are Muslims. Iraqis who practice the Mandaean religion have settled in and around Worcester, Massachusetts. And they're trying to keep their ancient religious tradition alive.
A former executioner has become a leading advocate for ending the death penalty
Vengeance, he says, does not make good public policy.
After quick action, the Paris climate deal is set to go into effect way earlier than expected
The historic global climate change plan negotiated last year in Paris is set go into effect in mid-November, years earlier than anticipated. The World's environment editor Peter Thomson reflects on how it happened and why it matters.
In besieged Aleppo, death from above can come at any moment
Abdul Kafi Al Hamdo says when the revolution began, he just wanted a better life for the next generation.
Warsaw protests put an end to a proposal for an absolute ban on abortions in Poland
The thousands of women who hit the streets in Warsaw recently can claim a victory. But it comes with mixed emotions. Abortions, in most cases, are still illegal in Poland.
Britain remembers a massive riot against fascism in London in 1936
Eighty years ago, the East End of London had one of the biggest riots in the city's history. Tens of thousands of Londoners clashed with police after right-wing extremists attempted to march through a Jewish neighborhood.
An American soccer coach takes on England's Premier League
Bob Bradley is the first American coach ever to land a job in the best soccer league in the world: England’s Premier League. And Bradley thinks he’s got the skills to succeed.
This Syrian American says Western media puts too much faith in 'moderate' Syrian rebels
It's a fair question: Does media coverage of Syria adequately acknowledge the suffering rebels cause civilians?
Nobel winners get cash, a gold medal and a piece of original art
At awards ceremonies in December, Nobel winners will receive their share of each million-dollar prize and a gold medal. Most will also get something more obscure: a piece of original artwork.
This FARC victim in the US voted against Colombia’s peace deal
Milton Sanchez fled Colombia due to the armed conflict. Years later, he’s voting against the peace agreement. Here’s why.
US politicians say they hate the TPP. But farmers love it.
President Barack Obama is strongly pushing for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which would create the largest free trade zone in the world. Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are falling over each other to distance themselves from the agreement. American farmers don't get that.
Sadness prefaces the closing of the world's biggest fish market, Tokyo's Tsukiji
Tokyo's famous fish market has been slated to close for decades. But now it really has to go to make way for the 2020 Olympics.
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