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About usWorld
A decade after lifting one-child policy, China struggles to boost populationDespite Beijing’s campaign to encourage couples to have more children, new data shows China’s population decline is accelerating.
After thousands died in crackdown, Iran is trying to change the narrativeAmid an internet blackout, Iran is blaming outside “agents” and “terrorists” for the death toll. Says one rights lawyer, such “denial and distortion” has been heard before.
Syria’s army is dimming Kurds’ dreams of autonomy, as the US looks onAfter a lightning military advance in northeastern Syria, Damascus is demanding that the Kurdish-led SDF, a key U.S. ally in the fight against ISIS, agree to integrate into the national army. The United States has thrown its support behind a unified Syria.
Soggy tents, freezing children: Harsh winter taking a toll on GazaIn Gaza, winter has been an added hardship for displaced Palestinians, particularly the tens of thousands living in tents and pushed alongside the windy and frigid coast. Tents are too few, and too flimsy.
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At Davos, a loss of trust was evident. Can NATO survive Greenland dispute?Disagreements over Donald Trump’s claim to Greenland have eroded mutual trust within NATO and weakened the Western alliance, perhaps fatally.
As China’s retirement age rises, ‘perceptions of unfairness’ growTo support its rapidly aging population and preserve its pension system, China is raising its retirement age for the first time in 70 years. At the same time, demand for broader pension reform is growing.
Nigeria had no shelter for returned male migrants. So, he built one.Osita Osemene’s organization works to restore the dignity of returned migrants from Nigeria and elsewhere.
To keep Trump out of Greenland, Europe asks itself: ‘How far can we really go?’Europe is at a crossroads. The tools it has to dissuade Donald Trump from acquiring Greenland are strong, slow to roll out, and potentially self-damaging.
Their glaciers shrinking, Central Asian nations find a way to share water wealthFive Central Asian nations once bickered over the water from regional glaciers. Now, with climate change looming, they appear set to share use.
Ukrainians want justice for Russian abuses. But they sense an era of impunity.Ukraine is investigating hundreds of thousands of cases of Russian war crimes and crimes against humanity – despite a backdrop of growing impunity in the international arena.
Investigation begins in Spain after fatal high-speed rail crashTwo high-speed trains collided in Spain, killing at least 40 people and shaking a nation at the forefront of rail transport.
Their power grid under attack, Ukrainians struggle with a long, cold winterRussian attacks are hitting Ukrainian energy infrastructure hard, leaving residents without power and heat in one of the coldest winters of the war to date.
In Iran, witness accounts of atrocities counter regime claims of calmA brutal Iranian crackdown has appeared to quash most protests, and officials are seeking to portray a sense of “national solidarity.” But images and witness accounts of shocking “atrocities” are accumulating and painting a different picture.
Musk reins in Grok from making provocative images. Is it a victory for Europe?AI chatbot Grok’s generation of provocative “deepfake” images of women and children has highlighted how differently Europe and the U.S. view online regulation.
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To keep Trump out of Greenland, Europe asks itself: ‘How far can we really go?’
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In one year, Trump has shaken up everything. With what effect?

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