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Hundreds of thousands of workers in India went on strike, opposing Prime Minister Narendra Modi's privatization plans and economic reforms
As job-seekers look for work in an challenging environment, an increasing number are falling victim to scams that promise good pay for completing easy online tasks
Iranian clerics invoking "mohareb" charge against President Donald Trump face potential sanctions, as group demands threats against Americans should meet the full force of law.
Esta palabra ha aparecido en 553 artículos en NYTimes.com en el último año. ¿Puedes usarla en una frase?
This word has appeared in 553 articles on NYTimes.com in the past year. Can you use it in a sentence?
Last month’s deadly church bombing outside Syria’s capital is raising fears among the country’s minority Christians. Some are thinking about leaving for good.
Two people have died in Guatemala after falling rocks crushed their vehicle during a series of earthquakes
Red Bull says Christian Horner has been released from his role as longtime team principal of its Formula 1 team
Rescuers are searching for survivors after Yemen's Houthi rebels attacked a Liberian-flagged cargo ship, Eternity C, in the Red Sea
A Turkish court has banned Elon Musk’s AI chatbot Grok from operating in Turkey
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will travel to North Korea in the latest sign of the countries’ deepening ties during Russia’s war in Ukraine
A former Bath & Body Works store manager in Utah filed a complaint with the EEOC after she was allegedly fired after refusing to use a transgender co-worker's preferred pronouns.
The Justice Department alleged a team of Chinese hackers tried to access a Covid-19 vaccine being developed by the University of Texas in 2020.
The latest on the deadly floods in Texas, foreign policy dominates President Trump's week, Supreme Court allows Trump to resume mass federal layoffs for now.
NPR's A Martinez talks with "All Things Considered" colleague Juana Summers about her reporting on the catastrophic floods in Texas that has left more than 100 people dead and more than 160 missing.
Senior Pastor Jasiel Hernandez Garcia talks with NPR about his experiences after his First Presbyterian Church in Kerrville became a reunification center in the deadly central Texas floods.
President Trump is hosting Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu this week as they work on a ceasefire in Gaza. He's also resuming military aid shipments to Ukraine after they were temporarily halted.
At least 13 people were thought to have taken their own lives as a result of Britain's Post Office scandal, in which almost 1,000 postal employees were wrongly prosecuted or convicted of criminal wrongdoing because of a faulty computer system, a report said Tuesday.
Some MAGA supporters expressed outrage after the DOJ and FBI said they found no incriminating Jeffrey Epstein "client list" or blackmail scheme. NPR talks with Axios reporter Tal Axelrod.
Recent years have seen an upswing in people playing tennis (or at least dressing like it). But it's not just a phase. The sport — at least some version of it — has been around since medieval times.