Friday Briefing
One year since Russia jailed a U.S. reporter.
By Daniel E. Slotnik
One year since Russia jailed a U.S. reporter.
By Daniel E. Slotnik
In a time when global 24-hour news coverage can engender feelings of powerlessness, the sense of control that online sleuthing generates is potent. But those same impulses can take a dark turn.
By Amanda Taub
A human rights committee that examined a range of concerns called on Britain to abandon its controversial plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
By Nick Cumming-Bruce
President Vladimir V. Putin said that claims Russia planned to invade other countries were “nonsense,” but warned them against hosting warplanes meant for Ukraine.
By Ivan Nechepurenko
A tireless Hungarian advocate of contemporary music, he adapted literary sources both modern and classic, instilling his work with “inimitable character and pathos.”
By A.J. Goldmann
A Paris school principal received online death threats after he was involved in an “altercation” with a Muslim student over her head scarf, sparking outrage in a country still scarred by the killing of two teachers.
By Aurelien Breeden
The bill would strengthen laws around dog breeding, but Germany’s kennel club worries that the legislation could lead to bans on several breeds.
By Derrick Bryson Taylor
Alessandro Michele, the designer who brought profits and plenty of buzz to Gucci, was just named creative director of Valentino.
By Vanessa Friedman
Nicholas Cullinan will take over the London institution as it faces the fallout from a theft scandal and calls for the return of objects in its collection.
By Alex Marshall
The factors behind the failure to prevent a terrorist attack include a distrust of foreign intelligence, a focus on Ukraine and a distracting political crackdown at home.
By Paul Sonne, Eric Schmitt and Michael Schwirtz
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