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The World: Latest Stories

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Updated 2025-07-05 00:32
How to stop 'crypto,' a deadly disease so neglected it's not even on the 'neglected' list
Crypto, a fungal infection of the brain and spinal cord, is a threat primarily to people living with HIV/AIDS. A so-called opportunistic infection, it preys on those who lack access to the antiretroviral therapy that can keep HIV in check.
Direct line of communication was key in release of US sailors held by Iran
US officials said on Wednesday that Secretary of State John Kerry and Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif spoke at least five times in the span of 10 hours on Tuesday. Their discussion led to the quick release of the American sailors.
Obama, in his final State of the Union, confronts those stoking fear of terrorism
President Barack Obama in his final State of the Union address made a serious effort to calm fears about terrorism. He acknowledged the danger was real, but also stated that in no way did terrorism threaten America’s national existence. In the Republican response, Governor Nikki Haley of South Carolina talked of the most dangerous threat to the US since September 11. So where does the truth lie?
It took a generational effort to record Kandia Kouyaté's new album — and it was worth it
Here’s the story of how legendary Malian singer Kandia Kouyaté’s new album got made. It took the dedication of two producers, Ibrahim Sylla and his daughter, Binetou.
Is the US or Europe more welcoming to immigrants?
The US is much more tolerant of different religions than in Europe, which tends to be more secular.
Men of Arab descent not finding Germany as welcoming as they used to
After reports of women being harassed and groped on the streets of Cologne, Germany, on New Year's Eve, mostly by men of Arab descent, German officials are promising changes. They've beefed up the police presence in public areas and vowed to deport migrants convicted of serious crimes. And Arab and Muslim migrants in Germany say the welcoming atmosphere is starting to change.
It's not Hugo Chavez's Venezuela anymore, or is it?
Venezuela's late Socialist leader Hugo Chavez picked his own successor as the country's president and left his party firmly in control of the National Assembly. That allowed the Chavistas to stifle the opposition for a long time. But that changed in December, when voters handed the opposition a majority in the National Assembly.
These men say they're leaving Syria because they don't want to fight anyone
People in Europe and the US worry that Syrians fleeing the war will bring violence with them. But some young Syrian men say they want no part of the violence. That's why they're leaving.
Aid worker shaken by severity of starvation at Syrian town of Madaya
Help finally arrived in the Syrian town of Madaya, where residents are reportedly starving to death. A convoy led by the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross arrived Monday, bringing desperately needed food and medical supplies.
Ala'a Basatneh gets icy stares on Chicago streets, but hopes for more civility at the State of the Union
An invite to the State of the Union address boosted the spirits of this Syrian activist.
How a dummy US Hellfire missile wound up in Cuba
In 2014, the US sent a dummy Hellfire missile to Europe to be used in training. But once the training was over, instead of the missile being shipped back, somehow it wound up in Cuba.
This evangelical Christian professor might lose her job for the way she reached out to Muslims
Larycia Hawkins is a political science professor at Wheaton College in Illinois who wanted to show her support for Muslims on Facebook. Now, she might loose her job.
US soccer star Carli Lloyd is named FIFA's Woman Player of the Year
It's been a big year for US Soccer star Carli Lloyd. First she helped the US Women's National Team win the Women's World Cup this past summer. Then Monday night, she was awarded one of soccer's biggest honors: 2015 FIFA Woman Player of the Year.
ISIS attack targets Western tourists in Turkey
An alleged ISIS suicide bombing has killed 10 people in Istanbul, with more injured. The target appears to have been foreign tourists: most of the victims were German visitors, and the blast took place in the Sultanahmet area, a major tourist attraction.
VW's CEO is expected to end his US apology tour with a proposed fix
VW head Matthias Mueller is expected to propose a fix Wednesday to a fleet of diesel cars that have been cheating emissions tests.
From the Internet's founders, a warning
More than three decades after the worldwide communications network was born, David Clark and Yochai Benkler say they’re deeply concerned that the Internet is headed in a dangerous direction that its founders never intended.
Anger in Haiti over misspent aid, six years after the 2010 earthquake
It's six years since a massive earthquake devastated Haiti. Americans poured out their hearts to help. But it seems that after the clean-up and rescue mission, much of the development assistance has been wasted.
Some Haitians fleeing the Dominican Republic are finding themselves pulled back
Many Haitian migrants fled the Dominican Republic under threat of violence. But some continue to commute back across the border because they can't make a living in Haiti.
What's keeping smart, poor kids from attending America's best schools?
Only 3 percent of students at top colleges come from the lowest 25 percent of incomes — and that's largely because of schools' admissions processes. In comparison, 72 percent of the students come from the top 25 percent.
David Bowie — Japanese fashion icon
David Bowie might sing the song, "Fashion," but it's Japanese designer Kansai Yamamoto who influenced David Bowie's fashion sense.
Why Mexico realizes it must extradite Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman
Mexico has agreed to extradite notorious drug kingpin Joaquin Guzman, also known as El Chapo, to the US. Guzman was captured, for a third time, on Friday. Mexican officials have said contacts between actor Sean Penn and the notorious drug lord helped in the recapture. But Penn's interview and article in Rolling Stone have infuriated Mexican journalists.
'David Bowie's biggest Iranian fan' recalls growing up listening to his music
Maziar Bahari was a teenager in Iran when he first learned about David Bowie. He was hooked as soon as he heard "Five Years" for the first time. But being a fan of Bowie in there had its challenges.
Think twice before bringing an avocado into the United States
US customs agents are looking for illegal food at US ports of entry. Every day, in one terminal alone at New York's JFK Airport, more than 400 pounds of illegal food is seized and crushed.
How one affluent town helps its neediest students get into (and stay in) college
When English is not spoken at home, and parents have not even been to college themselves, their children can get lost in the college application process.
Should we remove racist and offensive words from historical records?
A museum in Amsterdam has begun changing the names of its paintings to avoid offensive words like “negro” and “dwarf.”
A tale of two fates: Tamir Rice and Ethan Couch
Callie Crossley asks whether the cases of Tamir Rice and Ethan Couch answer the debate about the power of fate versus free will.
Was Truman Capote wrong about creativity?
Can creativity be taught?
A series of cartoons that capture science’s 'rich diversity of weirdness'
“Findings” author Rafil Kroll-Zaidi combs the journals for science’s most fascinating — and flummoxing — facts. Now he has combined the best of the best into one illustrated book
Why scientists are so interested in studying this jumping rodent that looks like a furry t-rex
Scientists are studying the jerboa, which has been described as “fuzzy rodent t-rex,” to learn about the evolution of our own bones.
Who’s driving Saudi Arabia’s aggressive policies and why?
Saudi Arabia has spent the past year taking actions that have alarmed and angered some of its neighbors, especially Iran. There have been warnings this could provoke a war. So who's driving these policies, and why?
South Korea turns K-Pop up loud in its propaganda war with North Korea
South Korea began blasting K-Pop music, and anti-Pyongyang propaganda out of loudspeakers along its border with North Korea. Loudly.
Residents of the besieged town of Madaya in Syria are suffering from acute malnutrition
Residents of Madaya in Syria have been under siege since July. The last time food entered the town was back in October. Now horrific images of children suffering from acute malnutrition have left the world in shock.
The quest to create the first dumpling emoji
Emoji is a Japanese term for the cute little symbols you can text and tweet from your phone and PC. There are emojis for pizza and taco and apple but recently writer Jennifer 8 Lee discovered that there is no official dumpling emoji. Dumplings are one of the world's most ubiquitious foods, why no dumpling emoji? She decided to change that. The World in Words podcast talks Lee about her quest to create the dumpling emoji and writing a proposal to the mysterious Unicode Consortium, the entity that encodes emoji and makes them "official."
London's forgotten network of massive underground air raid shelters is being found again
In World War II, London was a dangerous place. That's why the government launched a plan build a huge network of subterranean air raid shelters far below ground, each with the capacity to hold thousands of people.
Delivering newspapers is tough work, but it allows this immigrant to work two jobs and keep his kids in a good school district
Forget the image of the newspaper delivery boy of old — these days it's more likely to be an adult driver throwing the paper on to your porch. It's part-time work so it's good for people who need more than one job to get by, and immigrants often fit the bill.
When a policeman was shot after the Charlie Hebdo attacks, this Paris man held his hand
A Paris neighborhood remembers the cop who was killed the day of the Charlie Hebdo attacks.
This transgender officer's soldiers still have to call her 'sir'
The US military is getting ready to accept transgender servicemen and women, but the military's policies haven't caught up.
Would photos of violence — actual violence — be enough to change US laws?
Despite violent crimes, any changes to US gun laws remains stubbornly out of reach. But what if people saw the damage wrought with these guns?
Here's how undocumented families might prepare for a worst-case scenario
Immigration agents have been knocking on doors in Texas, Georgia and South Carolina. Many deported parents don't have time to even say good-bye — which has led them to prepare in advance should that come to pass.
Can we make a little room for World War II's female pilots in Arlington National Cemetery?
The ashes of World War II veteran aircraft pilot Elaine Harmon belong in Arlington National Cemetery, according to her family and supporters. Harmon was a WASP, a member of the Women Airforce Service Pilots. The Army says there's no space for them in the national cemetery.
Charlie Hebdo’s aftermath looks a little different on the very French island of La Réunion
The diverse French island of La Réunion watched the Charlie Hebdo attacks from more than 5,000 miles away. A year later, a reporter who was working there explains what it was like to watch that horror surrounded by that community.
Eric Holder: Sandy Hook was 'the worst day'
"To see the bodies of these little angels." The former attorney general speaks of gun control to the financial crisis.
China’s stock markets are plummeting, but that’s only part of the story
The markets in China are tanking and the pain spread quickly to other parts of the global economy. But the bigger worry is what happens with the Chinese currency.
Ghana. That's how desperate Obama was to find a home for Gitmo detainees.
Two prisoners who were held at the Guantanamo Bay prison have been sent to Ghana. It's part of a deal that the United States government made with Ghana. They will be in Ghana for two years before they can decide to either remain there or move onto another country.
North Korea's hydrogen bomb claims strain Beijing-Pyongyang relationship
North Korean officials declared this week that they'd detonated a hydrogen bomb — to the consternation of their only ally, and patron, China.
Her magazine's Charlie Hebdo cover will endure. Here's what she was thinking.
It's been one year since two masked gunmen opened fire in the offices of Charlie Hebdo. Francoise Mouly of The New Yorker still recalls how she felt after hearing that cartoonists had been murdered for simply drawing a picture.
Muthoni the Drummer Queen rules Kenya's music scene
Her parents hoped she'd be an economist. And in a way, that's what Muthoni the Drummer Queen became. Just in the music world...
In Flint, Michigan, a crisis over lead levels in tap water
After testing discovered high levels of lead in the Flint, Michigan, public water supply, the Michigan declared a state of emergency.
Author asks us to consider what would happen if the protesters in Oregon were Muslims?
Author and journalist Wajahat Ali ponders what if the armed group occupying a wildlife reserve in Oregon were Muslims.
Was it an H-bomb? Seismic analysis, sniffer planes and time will tell.
Experts are scrambling to find out exactly what kind of bomb went off in North Korea on Wednesday. The detective work could take days or weeks as seismic waves are more closely analyzed and US and Japanese sniffer planes try to test atomic plume particles.
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