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It seemed to be an abrupt capitulation by Mr. Mugabe, who had refused to step down only two days earlier.
The app still functions in China, but its fate there is unclear as the government moves against foreign-run tools for online communication.
In Syria’s capital, those who remain wonder why they’re still there when so many friends have packed up, died or vanished.
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Tuesday: Reactions to The Times investigation, shows at the Swedish Cottage Marionette Theater, and Thanksgiving travel tips.
The United States is pushing women to join the Afghan security forces, without providing them with support. By doing so, it’s putting them at risk.
The collapse of coalition talks on Sunday doesn’t mean the country is collapsing. But it does show how much the far right has changed German politics.
A program that let 59,000 Haitians remain in the United States after a 2010 earthquake will end in July 2019.
Well, not everything, but his ideas are no better than his behavior.
A federal judge on Monday permanently blocked President Donald Trump's executive order to cut funding from cities that limit cooperation with U.S. immigration authorities.
As Democrats grapple with a short bench of possible candidates in 2020, the Los Angeles mayor is offering himself as part of “an impatient next generation” ready to lead.
Allegations by women who worked with Mr. Rose over a dozen years led CBS to suspend him from its morning program and PBS to stop distributing his interview show.
Six days after the ARA San Juan lost contact, with hopes raised and dashed, families of its 44 crew members are growing increasingly anxious.
Start-ups, including one from sharing-economy company WeWork, try to shake up the staid, and pricey, status quo of New York’s independent schools.
A Justice Department lawsuit to block the merger sets up a showdown over the first blockbuster acquisition to come before the Trump administration.
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