Known as the conscience of St. Petersburg, the painter has been arrested multiple times for protesting against the Kremlin’s invasion. ‘This will end badly,’ she tells EL PAÍS from her modest apartment
The five people killed on Monday were Tommy Elliott, Joshua Barrick, Juliana Farmer, James Tutt, and Deana Eckert
The Florida governor’s approach displays his willingness to leverage the powers of his office to notch political wins and punish political enemies
The country’s parliament is discussing accountability for long-troubled Credit Suisse, state emergency funds for the merger with UBS and what it will mean to have one giant bank
The Emirati government dismissed the allegations that the UAE had deepened ties with Russia as ‘categorically false’
World economic body reduces growth forecast by one tenth of a point to 2.8% due to persisting inflation and recent banking turmoil
‘1923’, ‘Alaska Daily’, ‘Three Pines’ and ‘The English’ are among many recent series to have addressed the past and present suffering of American Indians
The annual drills by the longtime treaty allies called Balikatan — Tagalog for ‘shoulder-to-shoulder’ — will run up to April 28 and involve more than 17,600 military personnel
Moscow is exploring all possible ways to survive European and American reprisals for the invasion of Ukraine
The Spanish scientist, who is responsible for Amazon Web Services’ quantum networks, says that not all the possibilities are understood, nor is the effect of the intersection with artificial intelligence
The Nicaraguan leadership banned processions and other traditions during Easter with the police presence redoubled ahead of the April 18 fifth anniversary of widespread social protests
The main advice is to not sit still in the same position for too long and to keep regularly active
Meteorology experts warn that we are ‘entering an unknown climate frontier’ as human action continues to alter the cyclical warming and cooling of the oceans
The unanimous vote by the Nashville Metropolitan Council restores Representative Justin Jones to office just four days after Republicans stripped him of his seat
Daniel Perry faces up to life in prison after being convicted of murder last week in the fatal shooting of a 28-year-old protester. But Abbott has made clear that he believes Perry should walk free
Sexologists have begun to see more youth patients than ever. Experts say it could be because of unrealistic standards about sexuality
In a rare move, a judge ordered a jury trial to weigh in on a complicated constitutional matter — whether developers have a vested right to complete the 145-mile transmission line project
A writer, E. Jean Carroll, sued Trump in November, saying he raped her in early 1996 after a chance meeting at an upscale store. The former president denies it
Massachusetts has purchased enough doses of the drug mifepristone to last for more than a year, while California has secured an emergency stockpile of up to two million pills of another abortion medication, misoprostol
Families filed into a basketball arena in Portland as Maine’s largest city deals with a months-long surge in immigration that has taxed its already limited housing market
The boy shot his first-grade teacher, Abby Zwerner, on January 6 inside her classroom at Richneck Elementary School. Police say the boy’s mother legally purchased the gun
The Brazilian president’s return to power has been marked by efforts to reinstate his past social policies and undo what his predecessor Jair Bolsonaro did
The designation elevates the case of Evan Gershkovich in the U.S. government hierarchy and means that a dedicated State Department office will take the lead on securing his release