Thomas Buergenthal, who said his survival in a Nazi death camp when he was 10 years old equipped him to become a human rights lawyer
Month: June 2023
Ukrainian Shelling in Russia’s Belgorod Region Forces Evacuations
About 2,500 people have been evacuated in Russia’s Belgorod region after days of Ukrainian shelling and incursions, according to the local governor, underscoring the rapid
After Mass Shootings in Serbia, Few Want to Give Up Their Guns
He learned how to shoot a gun from his grandfather before he started school, and he fought in three wars as a soldier in the
How KIRAC Trailed Michel Houellebecq From the Bedroom to the Courtroom
On Saturday night, an eclectic art crowd was gathering outside an industrial garage in Amsterdam East, where Michel Houellebecq, the celebrated French author, was set
Your Thursday Briefing – The New York Times
Russia denounces West over drone strike on Moscow A day after the first military strike to hit civilian areas in Moscow, Kremlin officials jumped on
U.K. Government Refuses to Give Boris Johnson’s Texts to Covid Inquiry
The British government refused on Thursday to hand over former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Covid-era text messages to a committee investigating the handling of the
‘Prayer for the French Republic’ Heads to Broadway
Joshua Harmon’s “Prayer for the French Republic,” a play about a family grappling with contemporary and historical antisemitism in France, will transfer to Broadway this
U.S. Adds Aid to Ukraine to Deliver Ammunition for Drones and Artillery
WASHINGTON — The Biden administration on Wednesday announced $300 million in military aid for Ukraine, the latest package of weapons and other military equipment that
At the French Open, Djokovic Storms the Court and Into Controversy, Again
After everything that Novak Djokovic had put himself through over the past few years, the French Open began with the possibility, finally, of a Grand