More than three years into its full-scale invasion, Russia’s demands of Ukraine and the West remain virtually unchanged.
When the Taliban retook Kabul in mid-August 2021, the hard-line militants promised to respect women’s rights within the framework of Islamic law. That wasn't the case, and what everyone who remembered the previous Taliban regime had feared soon became a reality. Here are just some of the restriction
The data is updated every five minutes and is available for 30 days, with the following exceptions: Earthquakes of magnitude less than 4.5 are kept for seven days Earthquakes with a Significance field value of 600 or higher are kept for 90 days
The Middle Corridor -- a 6,500-kilometer trade route connecting China to Europe through Central Asia and the Caucasus -- has expanded since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But can countries work to overcome the problems that have long plagued trade between Europe and Asia?
The lines of authority in the Islamic republic all stem from the supreme leader.
Getting a plum government gig in Russia is a lot easier if you’ve served in the Kremlin’s presidential bodyguard agency, the Federal Protection Service (bonus points if you’ve saved Vladimir Putin from a bear). At least seven former Putin bodyguards now hold various top jobs in government.
The Kakhovka Dam on Ukraine's Dnieper River was destroyed on June 6, 2023, causing unprecedented flooding and endangering the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant. Using satellite images taken before, after, and a year later, we look at how the landscape near the dam and the power plant has changed.
The upheaval in Russia's military leadership continued as a top general was arrested shortly after the appointments of a new defense minister and a new deputy.
Over 300 journalists are imprisoned worldwide. Journalists are imprisoned on charges ranging from violating censorship to insulting religions and defamation. Explore the map to discover the number of journalists behind bars in each country and the charges (if any) they face.
Here's where the money would go if the U.S. Congress approves the latest package of aid for Ukraine -- and what's currently holding up the legislative process.
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